Oxfam Launches Music Download Service 117
rahaydenuk writes "The BBC reports that Oxfam is backing the Big Noise Music website, which launches on Wednesday and will offer 300,000 songs for download. 10p of the 75p or 99p charge to download the songs will go to Oxfam and the service will be available across Europe."
What about.. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:What about.. (Score:5, Funny)
can they compete with itunes (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:can they compete with itunes (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:can they compete with itunes (Score:4, Insightful)
Funny. I don't have an ipod. I don't even have a mac. I buy music with iTunes, and burn to cd's to play in my old fashioned "cd player".
Re:can they compete with itunes (Score:2)
Try doing that with your old fashioned "cd player."
The grandparent's argument is quite sound; WMA, despite being proprietary and Microsoft, is still the more open choice for most consumers, ironically.
Re:can they compete with itunes (Score:3, Insightful)
Unless the WMA you happend to buy forbade copying to a portable device, or burning CD's. Or until the service goes belly-up - taking ou tthe licence server, and leaving you a month or two to discover this fact and somehow save your music into some other format before the licence expires...
With iTunes and ITMS, I can use PlayFair (renamed to something I can
Re:can they compete with itunes (Score:3, Informative)
Yes.
ANY music file i have used so far can be converted to mp3.
1. Download Winamp [winamp.com]
2. Install and load up the files you wanna convert.
3. Go to Options > Preferences, under Plug-Ins > Output click on "Nullsoft Disk Writer plug-in" then click configure and
Of course, but directly? (Score:2)
One protection is stripped, conversion to other formats is very easy in iTunes - one menu item, and you have an MP3. I can batck convert my entire library from the command line with one find command. I don't need to screw with a WAV or third party plugins.
That's what I'm sayng, that all around WMV is a far more annoying protected format. To start with it's n
Re:Of course, but directly? (Score:2)
One protection is stripped, conversion to other formats is very easy in iTunes - one menu item, and you have an MP3. I can batck convert my entire library from the command line with one find command. I don't need to screw with a WAV or third party plugins.
...
With ITMS, I get a DRM file with predictable properties and restrictions. And if those restrictions are
No... (Score:2)
No, I consider your WMA conversion more annoying than clicking on a menu option to "convert to MP3", after I have already stripped the DRM from an AAC file (which involved no intermediate files and can be done in batch by an automated process, in seconds for any number of songs).
The DiskWriter plugin is not third-party. It comes with Winamp. Made by Nullsoft.
They shippin
Re:can they compete with itunes (Score:2, Interesting)
They should have the option to download in raw format then those who want to use compression can and the compression of their choice.
Re:can they compete with itunes (Score:1)
Re:can they compete with itunes (Score:3, Informative)
True, there's too much fragmentation already (Score:3, Interesting)
the British connection (Score:5, Funny)
Re:the British connection (Score:4, Funny)
75 / cup = 317006.461m-3
99 / cup = 418448.529m-3
but then again, thats US cups..
Re:the British connection (Score:5, Funny)
1 Cup of tea is equals to about 0.12 Big mac and fries, depending on the current market price of pigs testicles.
Re:the British connection (Score:2)
It's fairly typical for prices to get directly "ported over" when a US consumer stuff reaches the UK - such as a game console released in the US for $199 will end up being released in the UK months later for 199, which is roughly a third more in cost.
Dunno how much a cup of tea would cost (free in
Re:the British connection (Score:1)
Europe is a little better, since the Euro is closer to the $ than the pound is.
Re:the British connection (Score:2)
And uh... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:And uh... (Score:3, Insightful)
Blame the RIAA monopoly for the bands getting screwed.
Re:And uh... (Score:2)
Re:And uh... (Score:5, Informative)
Doubt the artists consent (Score:2, Informative)
Tracking down thousands of artists (some of which, I assume, are dead) to ask if they would donate songs or allow songs to be sold would be a huge project. If artists were donating, I'd expect maybe a few thousand songs.
To top it off, the labels own the recordings more than the artists in most cases (unless they get a sweet contract).
Re:Doubt the artists consent (Score:2)
The artists agreed to letting the labels make that decision, so same difference.
Re:And uh... (Score:3, Informative)
"Paying to download from BigNoiseMusic.com seems like a good idea when you know your money is going to help some of the world's poorest people."
Chris Martin, Coldplay
They launch in a couple of days, so the site is nearly void of FAQ-type information.
Re:And uh... (Score:2)
Oxfam administration costs?
Re:And uh... (Score:2)
I'm not suggesting that it's wrong to want to know the distribution of payment (I want to know too), just that the artists here will have donated their work in this case.
Re:And uh... (Score:2)
Formats? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Formats? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Formats? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Formats? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Formats? (Score:5, Informative)
However, from other sites using the same back-end system (OD2 [ondemanddistribution.com]), it doesn't look too promising - when I try any of them, I get a message saying "The site you have tried to enter requires Internet Explorer 5 (or better) with Windows Media Player 7 (or better) on Windows XP, 2000, Me or 98."
We won't know for sure for a few days, but it doesn't look promising.
Giving is good. (Score:4, Interesting)
It's OD2, that means... (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
p? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:p? (Score:5, Funny)
1. - pence - 100 of these make up 1GBP
2. - the size of your brain
Re:p? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:p? (Score:1)
-Rylfaeth
Re:p? (Score:4, Funny)
The word "merkin" is sometimes used as a shortened form of "american".
As for whether the later usage is meant to imply some form of link to the former usage, I couldn't possibly speculate on the matter.
Helping the poor and the not-so-poor too (Score:5, Insightful)
"Artists will see their music help some of the poorest people in the world," Oxfam's Adrian Lovett said.
10p for the poor, a large portion of 75p to 99p to the record companies, a itty bit of the rest to Big Noise and the artists.
In short, helping the poor helps the record companies. Just give 10p to the poors in your area, or to the local charity, you'll feel better...
I was going to say something like that (Score:5, Interesting)
Imagine you have 7.50GBP.
You could buy 10 songs from the service. Oxfam gets 0.75. The artists get hardly anything. You get a crappy WMA file infested with DRM.
or
You download 10 songs from the internet and donate half the money you were going to spend directly to oxfam. Oxfam receives 3.50GBP (500% increase). You recieve a high quality audio file which will work on a variety of systems and contains no DRM.
Which would you choose? For legal reasons, I will not provide an answer. Of course most people will choose option 2 and keep the money for themselves but that's not the point. If you really want to help a charity there is always a better option than bowing down to a company.
Re:I was going to say something like that (Score:1, Insightful)
How is the parent a troll post. The post does not attempt to condone music piracy or discourage donation to charity. It is merely a follow up on the grand parent topic which is expressing the disgust at the fact that companies use the promise of charity to maximise profits while the charities receive minimal amounts.
Re:I was going to say something like that (Score:3, Interesting)
That means you can download 10 tracks for 9.90
Many albums contain more than 10 tracks.
So I would rather go to the shop, but the physical CD for 9.99 (a massive 9p extra) and probably get more tracks for my money.
Re:I was going to say something like that (Score:2)
HTML entities dont seem to work either.. anyone know how to post a pound sign?
Re:I was going to say something like that (Score:1)
Re:I was going to say something like that (Score:1)
Re:Helping the poor and the not-so-poor too (Score:2)
Funny, I thought artists were some of the poorest people in the world...
I feel like a mineral resource. (Score:5, Interesting)
Make albums. Record other peoples. etc.
I support Oxfam, but I am starting to feel like some kind of object. Everything I make will probably end up in some kind of big discount sale. A few more years and it will be commonplace to get media with a thousand records on it. Probably as a free gift along with your petrol.
It makes records seem like the free coupons you get when you buy the right brand of detergant.
It's kinda sad.
Re:I feel like a mineral resource. (Score:3, Insightful)
And your point is....? (Score:5, Insightful)
Most people who labor in a "service" market leave no mark. Most of the software I have written in my life doesn't or will not have any hardware to run it on any more.
If you get paid for your work and not copies of your work you will be better off in the long run, since, (to paraphrase), in the long run, we are all dead anyhow.
Enjoy what you do. Make a living at it if you are lucky, get wealthy at it if you are absurdly lucky.
Re:And your point is....? (Score:1)
You did get paid for your work (that didn't leave a mark), did you not? If you laboured 40 hours a week for a year and wrote a piece of software, would you choose for it to have been included on a free software compilation if it meant that you got paid nothing for your work? Or would you pocket the money and let the software sit in profitable obscurity and enjoyed the fact you could pay your rent/mortgage?
If not for copies of their work, how do you propose artists get paid? Until you've done
Re:I feel like a mineral resource. (Score:2, Insightful)
Make programs. Review other peoples ones. etc.
I support OSS, but I am starting to feel like some kind of object. Everything I make will probably end up in some kind of big discount sale. A few more years and it will be commonplace to get media with a thousand programs on it. Probably as a free gift along with your petrol.
It makes programs seem like the free coupons you get when you buy the right brand of detergant.
[wait! It already does that! Guess what? The
Please be nice the oxfam box. - it runs on redhat (Score:5, Informative)
Unfortunatly the main server is scheduled for an upgrade - to a loadbalanced combo, rather than the current single box. (which has not happened yet) as it is currently quite heavily loaded. - especially when UK wakes up..
Dont forget there are nice big Donate Now buttons on all the pages. (It's a very good cause) - with great people who use open source alot..
Effecient software > Faster hardware (Score:2)
The main thing holding us [newzbin.com] back is the lack of decent URL rewriting support in
what about the kernel http daemon? (Score:3, Interesting)
I've never used it but it seems like a great idea. What do you think?
Re:what about the kernel http daemon? (Score:2)
I know where my money is going. (Score:5, Insightful)
10p each track to charity is all well and good if the songs were say 20-30p each, but 75p to 1 quid? I don't think so. I may as well just go into Oxfam and buy a couple of quids worth of old cloths or whatnot, then all the money goes to Oxfam.
Until a digital music service offers me MP3s at a reasonable price all my money is going to the Russians [allofmp3.com]
Your money is going to taxes... (Score:1)
Sales tax is rarely beyond 7% in the U.S. (and even that is too high). Some states have NO tax (NH, DE, AK, others).
Instead of complaining about the entrepreneurs or charities who want to make music available to you in a convenient manner, please vote por politicians who advocate lower taxes, or kindly shut up.
Re:Your money is going to taxes... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I know where my money is going. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I know where my money is going. (Score:1)
Europeans get a raw deal again (Score:5, Informative)
As a comparison, 79 pence is approx. $1.38, and 99 pence is approx. $1.74. With most UK digital music stores hovering around the 99 pence mark, that means Brits are being charged 74% more than Americans on average. Oh well, I guess nothing changes, and as typical we'll all keel over and accept it. If UK salaries were 74% higher than American ones you couldn't complain, but it seems to be the other way around, still.
Re:Europeans get a tax deal again (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Europeans get a tax deal again (Score:2)
Re:Europeans get a tax deal again (Score:2)
Probably about 30% of what goes to the artist also goes to the tax man (in income tax), another bit will go to the tax man in terms of the VAT the artist spends on items (don't forget his car tax!), some of the money that goes to the record company also goes to the tax man in corporation taxes, employer NICs, and taxes on interest on money in the bank
I'd love to see such statistics actually worked out properly and put int
Double taxes (Score:1)
So, when the chancellor says he's adding 2p to the price of a bottle of wine, he's really adding 2p+VAT.
Personally, I'd get rid of VAT. It's a real waste of businesses time. One part of a supply chain has to charge it and then the next part claims it back.
I'd vote for any government that would promise to simplify the tax system too. Get rid of National I
Re:Double taxes (Score:2)
The classic rebuttal to this is that increasing VAT and dropping income tax would hurt the poor. As someone who is poor(ish), I'd have to disagree, since the poor buy less goods anyway, so even though they'd gain less from an income tax cut, they'd also not be paying relativ
Re:Europeans get a tax deal again (Score:1)
Thanks, but I'd rather have my 17.5 pence back than see the government spend it on Yet Another Failed Computer System.
49, 99 - way of the psychology beast (Score:2)
The Straight Dope: Why do prices end in
To extrapolate slightly from the article, just imagine the sales pitch as being able to buy the track "For under a dollar!", "For under a euro!", "For under a pound!", or even "For under a Dinar!". For a Kuwaiti Dinar, this is approximately $3.35 - eek!
Only to the latter the expression would probably be recognized as being expensive. To the rest of us who hover around relatively low values, it seems cheap either
Re:Europeans get a raw deal again (Score:1)
The rumours I've read (here [macrumors.com] and here [appleinsider.com] for example) say the tracks will be EUR1.29, which is around GBP0.86, which is around USD1.54.
I hope you're wrong, and the tracks are going to be 13p cheaper than your 99p prediction, but it's still 30p more expensive than the US price.
really in europe ? (Score:4, Interesting)
And even can't tell us the price in euros ?
Or they start in GB and plan to expand later ? But why starting with a 60M people market when they are more than 250M people in euroland ?
good luck
If you really want to help: (Score:2, Informative)
Not only will you be getting clean MP3s, you'll be able to help more people with the money you save.
knock that shit off, AC (Score:3, Funny)
Re:knock that shit off, AC (Score:2)
Given the impact that a slashdotting would have on a site of this nature, and the presumably permenant increase in traffic I don't think they've done too badly at all
Re:knock that shit off, AC (Score:2)
RIAA (Score:1)
Not to mention I doubt many people wil
Re:RIAA (Score:1)
Personally, I wouldn't call George Michael or Colplay nobodies, but opinions differ, of course.
Another thing you would know if you had just RTFA, is that the RIAA gets it's share of all the music sold.
as they are a charity shop (Score:3, Interesting)
Feed the World (Score:2)
OD2 windows only? (Score:2)
I sure wish Apple would open up over the pond and give OD2 come decent competition for mutliplatform..
Re:OD2 windows only? (Score:1)
iTMS & OD2 both use consumer-hostile technologies, while there are other, consumer-friendly, possibilities to protect music against illegal copying.
DRM technologies like MS DRM, PlayFair, Key2Audio, etc. are useful for companies that want to sell you a different copy of the same song/album for every music device you own (CD player, PC, iPod,
Watermarking technologies are stronger than WMA or iTunes DRM but they
Poverty (Score:1)
This is nothing new (Score:2, Informative)