Real Cuts Prices for DRM-Restricted Music 633
Flint Dragon writes "A story on MSNBC details RealNetworks' next step in converting iPod users from iTunes to their own online music store. Not only can you play music downloaded from their site on your iPod now, you can, for a limited time, purchase music for 50% cheaper (.49/song, 4.99/album)! This is the price that I'm willing to pay for. Too bad it won't last..."
Still not enough (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Still not enough (Score:5, Insightful)
Yup. (Score:3, Insightful)
AllOfMP3.com (Score:4, Informative)
I just found out about this place yesterday. I haven't bought anything from them yet, but music by the pound in nearly any damned format I want sounds good to me!
Check out the Sydney Morning Hearld [smh.com.au] article for more info. I really can't believe we here at /. missed this in April!?
Yeah (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yeah (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Yeah (Score:5, Funny)
So I hear, by unsolicited email, about ten times per day...
except no fullscreen in linux (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, why would you trust them less than Apple? (Score:3, Insightful)
If I bought an iPod, and someone offers to sell me songs that will play on my iPod, and Apple then does something so that the iPod will no longer pl
Re:Well, why would you trust them less than Apple? (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple has done nothing to stop you from playing songs from other sources. I have tons of MP3's on my iPod that didn't come from Apple.
If all I could play on my iPod with FairPlay DRM'ed tunes, then I would be upset. However as it stands I'm free to not use iTMS as much or as little as I please and still have a wonderful iPod experience.
Remember Real can make their own music store anytime they want w/o violating an Apple held copyright, and by the same token it isn't Apple's responsibility to make sure they succeed.
It's one thing to complain about companies who lock out competition and make their own products worthless. I would say Apple is not one of them.
Re:Well, why would you trust them less than Apple? (Score:4, Insightful)
Not too hard to find, unless you're blind.
(for all the blind people out there, I apologize)
Step 3 (Score:5, Interesting)
No Mac support for MUSIC STORE. (Score:5, Interesting)
Pretty sure there's no Mac OS X version of this whole Harmony thing.
Does anybody know how this Harmony thing works? Does it import the songs into iTunes so you can play them in iTunes/sync them to iPod as normal? Or does it make you do a separate sync to put the Real songs on the iPod, restricting you to playing them only on the iPod and RealPlayer?
Losing Money (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Losing Money (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't think it was a very smart move, to tell the truth, but I suppose I could say it's gutsy.
D
Re:Losing Money (Score:3, Interesting)
The truth is 0.50 a song sounds about right to me now. with expected inflation rates, I would expect it to stay that way for the next 7 years.
Re:Losing Money (Score:4, Interesting)
Since selling digital music requires no manufacturing and only moderate amounts of hosting and bandwidth, the ongoing costs should be as minimal as the initial production costs.
Anyone who tells you they can't make money selling you digital music at $0.50 each is lying. Movies cost between 10-100 times as much to make as any album of music, yet the studios all recoup their costs (including manufacturing and distribution) from a measly $20 charge.
Re:Losing Money (Score:3, Interesting)
Real is trying to get eyeballs to justify their advertising space. Their clientele? BMG, Warner, Sony, EMI, you get the idea. You think they make money from kids buying mp3s? No? Well do you thi
Re:Losing Money (Score:3, Informative)
For a more specific example, let's say they make 30 cents per 99 cent transaction with the 70 cents remaining going into care and feeding their servers, bandwidth costs, RIAA fees, etc. If they sell that same song for 49 cents, they're going to be in the hole 21 cents per transaction.
Bottom line: Twice as many songs at half the price would
ipod problems (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:ipod problems (Score:3, Insightful)
Why not? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think the majority of people would blame Real, not Apple - they know where they bought the songs from. It has the potential to be a huge blunder for Real with very little risk for Apple should they decide to counter.
Re:ipod problems (Score:3, Interesting)
'Stunned' Apple rails against Real's iPod move [com.com]
Apple threatened to block access to the iPod using Harmony the next time it updates the software used to run the device. The company last week unveiled the fourth generation of the trend-setting music player.
"It is highly likely that Real's Harmony technology will cease to work with current and future iPods," the company said in its statement.
Re:ipod problems (Score:3, Interesting)
Result? People can't play any of the music they paid for, and Apple can shrug their shoulders. "That's what you get for trusting a hack."
And nobody will ever use Real's service again.
I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:4, Insightful)
ANY system that interferes with those rights is unacceptable to me.
Re:I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not without jumping through hoops it doesn't. (Score:5, Insightful)
What was so hard about that?
Re:Not without jumping through hoops it doesn't. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not without jumping through hoops it doesn't. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not without jumping through hoops it doesn't. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:5, Insightful)
IANAL, but sharing music, regardless of charging anything or not is still a copyright violation. you are, however, permitted to make backups of my music
Re:I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:3, Interesting)
However, it is specicificallly talking about taped copies and doesn't deal with digital works.
The digital stuff is a whole different ball game.
However, I can legally tape some stuff and give it to you.
Re:I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:4, Interesting)
That assertion is the heart of the matter. But, it is only an assertion. WHY is it a whole new ball game? If analog tape tech had progressed to the point that perfect copies were possible, I would give good odds that the assertion would not be made. The courts had decided that tapes were legal, and people were familiar with the right to make a copy.
The assertion is based soley on the premise that digital copies are perfectly reproducible, and therefore a greater threat than lossy tape. I call that premise specious: few people made so many generational copies of a tape that the loss of quality became onerous. The taped audio was adequate.
The assertion of a difference between digital and analog copying is an artificial one designed to reopen the debate about copying we had thought dead as canasta twenty years ago. And it has been a successful one, but not on the merits. Twenty years ago, politicians didn't require the vast amounts of cash they must use today to get elected and stay that way, and twenty years ago the lobbyists were nowhere near as professional and formidable as they are now.
I deny their assertion, so the only argument they have left is this: support us, or we come after you and rip you from office. It's an effective one. L. Ron would be proud.
Re:I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:5, Insightful)
I will point out, though, that the DRM conditions of iTunes music are not as ardurous as you think. You can, in fact, burn a CD with your music on it and that CD is then free of restrictions. You can copy the music to any number of iPods. You can also play the music on up to five different computers, so making a backup of your music is not an issue at all.
I play my music on my home computer, work computer and laptop, and I'm happy as a clam.
D
Re:I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:5, Insightful)
Grandparent has a point . . . a sound file produced with lossy compression is of lower quality than the same song purchased on CD. This is a fact, not a matter of opinion.
In other words, the digital vs. analog argument is a COMPLETELY DIFFERENT discussion from the compression vs. no compression argument.
Re:I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:3, Interesting)
http://hymn-project.org/
Re:I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:5, Informative)
1. YOu can back it up as many times as you like. Right now i have 1 bought DRM song on 3 different computers.
2. YOu can make compilations. iTunes even provides a nifty little playlist generator
3. iTunes lets you also burn copies of your play lists TO CD!~!!! or you can hook up your stereo out to a tape deck and go old school with mixed tapes!!!! The DRM does not prevent you from doing this.
It does prevent you from sharing the raw source of the file with your friends. Since there is no digital compilation format you can't exactly send an mp3 digital compilation to people unless it was one giant file. But who wants to do that?
You're an idiot.
Re:I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:3, Insightful)
A non-copy protected CD allows me to do all this, plus the music is non-los
Yeah but it's the smart minority (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yeah but it's the smart minority (Score:5, Insightful)
It doesn't sound like it. You said it involves, "a little extra digging, sampling, and detective work."
Now using iTunes is easy. I don't see how that point can even be debated, the interface is awesome, the songs are what they say they are, the downloads are fast, you can sample 30 seconds of a song before buying (more than most CD stores allow), etc.
Yet you try to marginalize it by pretending all the music in itunes is "Very Popular Radio Hitz." I'm sorry, but that is just plain old horseshit.
Then you say that iTunes is "useless yet encumbering software designed around the premise that I am a thief."
It obviously is not useless. For one thing, it saves me from having to do "a little extra digging, sampling, and detective work." It lets me buy music in a setting where the legality is not in doubt. It makes it easy to do all of this. Useless?
iTunes doesn't have a "premise that [you are] a thief." iTunes is there to make it easy to organize, buy, and use your digital music.
It may be a minority but who's spending smarter money?
In your case, what with all your detective work, digging, etc for music, I would say you're only spending your money smarter if your time is worthless.
Mine isn't, so I use iTunes.
Re:I'm sure I'm in the minority... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'll join you in the minority, and say that I'd refuse to take DRM music even if it were free, not only because I want to copy music (preferably beyond that which is allowed by the home recording act, for those of us with MP3 jukeboxes), but also because I want to be able to play it using Free Software. What's the point of having to have a windows computer to play your music on? Why can't I play the music on the same computer that I'm working at?
Many people won't have experienced this, but if you do ever get your hands on some good music which you can copy (I mean proper copying, without legal restriction or underhandedness), it's a totally different experience to having a CD that you can only play yourself, in your home, in one place at once, not in public, you can't send it to anyone, can't point your friends to a download of the music you're listening to, can't put it on your website to say "great music isn't it?"...
You've been told for too long that an artist would never make any money from such music, convincing evidence to the contrary notwithstanding. Don't believe it.
Apple & Real (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course this is of little interest to me since Real's not supporting Macs and I'm certainly not going to switch to Windows on their behalf.
I don't think Real stockholders are going to think much of the bleeding, and when prices go back to $ 0.99 each I doubt that most people will stay with Real, given their software's general level of obnoxiousness and hard-sell promotion. Apple, for all its faults, has a very classy and nicely done music store I think most people will prefer by a huge margin.
D
Re:Apple & Real (Score:5, Insightful)
Because they have to *support* Real's format. When Real's shit breaks on iPod, the users will view it as Apple's fault.
Ummm.. maybe idiots would... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ummm.. maybe idiots would... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ummm.. maybe idiots would... (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't count the number of times I've had to say something to the effect of, "No, Such-and-Such is a third-party package that's not supported by Apple," to customers.
Apple
Actually, I have... (Score:3, Informative)
People tend to blame the program running when it throws out an error message, in my experience.
Re:Ummm.. maybe idiots would... (Score:3, Insightful)
People will blame Apple.
Re:Ummm.. maybe idiots would... (Score:4, Funny)
That's what he said... "people."
Re:Apple & Real (Score:4, Insightful)
There's a much better article about this that was published a few weeks ago, but I'm too lazy to look it up.
Re:Apple & Real (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Apple & Real (Score:3, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Apple & Real (Score:3, Insightful)
But by then they'll be locked in to their drm system, unless they can find a way to move that music to another one. Of course this is true of ITMS as well, but at least they have the virtue of having the best interface with the widest selection.
There are two answers as to why Apple should be upset. The first is the long boring one about how Apple is maneuvering for a central position in online distibution of media of all kin
how ironic (Score:5, Insightful)
Its too bad their software was always ad-ridden garbage. They will have to do a lot more than a loss-leader sales ploy to get my trust back.
Oh no! (Score:5, Funny)
losing money? (Score:4, Interesting)
so these people are *losing* quite a bit of money on this; or maybe the music industry is pitching in? I am sure they are not really happy w/ iTunes getting as big as it is.
MS conspiracy theorists will have a feast.
*somebody* has to be pitching in... isn't real a fairly small company?
-Facun.Good Move (Score:4, Insightful)
This move will help increase competition in the market and I think will be beneficial to the consumers in the long run. As much as I like Apple, I like good old competition more cause it means better products at lower prices! Gotta Love Capatalism!
So you buy it because it is cheap... (Score:5, Insightful)
Until the dust settles I'd not buy anything from real in hopes of it working with my iPod. Not like they support my platform anyway (Mac)
Whatever. (Score:4, Insightful)
And is there an easy way of downloading your free player without you trying to get me to download your non-free player every step of the way?
Re:Whatever. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Whatever. (Score:4, Informative)
Capitalism works! (Score:4, Insightful)
How much are they losing? (Score:3, Interesting)
So what happens when... (Score:4, Interesting)
Real seems to be implying some kind of guarantee that their music will play on the iPod... Apple has already stated that won't be the case for much longer...
Will users with iPods who buy these cheapo songs be left holding the bag (a bag of useless songs), or will songs they buy and upload to their iPod now work no matter how Apple "updates" their iPod?
gnutella-still-free-for-all dept? (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, I'll NEVER install anything from Real on my system. It's as bad as Bonzi Buddy to get rid of.
Burn karma burn, slashdot inferno...
Re:gnutella-still-free-for-all dept? (Score:4, Funny)
That's right. And we should resist the efforts of the theives who write those contracts and suck all the value out of music...
Oh, wait. You meant that copying music was still stealing, not that music itself is stealing (in addition to being overpriced and largely crap). Oopsie. That's a different argument.
Re:gnutella-still-free-for-all dept? (Score:5, Funny)
Thanks!
-convert
Cue the "it's not STEALING" posts (Score:5, Insightful)
And don't give me that typical crap line of "I wouldn't have bought it anyway, so I'm not depriving them of a sale." If you don't really want it, or can't afford it, that doesn't justify copyright infringement. And I fully support the RIAA's actions against you, because by your own admission, you are not their customer.
Re:Cue the "it's not STEALING" posts (Score:3, Insightful)
Or is only immoral by some puritanical "you shouldn't get something without working for it" ethic?
There is a word for "getting something without working for it", and it's not "puritanical". It's called "freeloading".
The most telling part of this story... (Score:5, Interesting)
Take a look at their stock price today too and see what investors are thinking about this. (see it on the MSNBC link page). While I like the idea of cheaper music, this really smacks of desperation.
Offer won't last long... Music might not either (Score:5, Insightful)
Their ads should say...
RENT AN ALBUM FOR $4.99
ACT NOW, THIS FUNCTIONALITY WON'T LAST
All of mp3 (Score:3, Interesting)
And their legality is just 'questionable'.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
this is more on the right track (Score:4, Interesting)
lowering the price to $.49 or less per song seems more reasonable to me. people dont understand that by purchasing music online in mp3 (or equiv) format that they are ok with crap sounding music and if they are ok with that, what is going to keep record companies from spending less money on production when they know the music is headed for a compressed format anyway?
Hogwash (Score:4, Insightful)
Audiophiles similarly have become accustom to all sorts of crazy arguments about what you can and can't hear. CD's arn't as "warm" as LP's, tubes are better than transistors, high quality MP3's don't sound like the CDs. However I'm quite sure that if you were to sit down two people who had not heard any given track that was played on a CD and then on a very high quality compressed format they would be hard pressed to pick which was which. (Given that it's a 50/50 chance a more controlled method of testing would have to be done but I think you get my point.)
Now I still personally will never pay for any stripped down, DRM crippled, poorly encoded music but I don't think that using a compressed format, done right, is a bad thing at all.
Almost makes sense (Score:4, Insightful)
Then I RTFA and changed my mind. This isn't giving the people a choice of an inferior product for a lower cost, this is a "sale" to try and win people away from iTunes. It's only supposed to last an undefined "limited amount of time." Probably until they feel they've won enough customers from apple. I guess it still makes sense business-wise, but I don't like it as much.
Audio Quality (Score:5, Interesting)
It's MPEG 4 AAC (Score:5, Informative)
allofmp3.com (Score:4, Insightful)
Instead of 99 cents a song, you pay a penny per megabyte. Often you can pay as little as 5 cents for a 128 bit MP3. Other formats and bitrates are available.
Best part? Since it's a Russian "broadcast", the RIAA doesn't get any of it. Tasty!
Re:allofmp3.com (Score:3, Informative)
Thus any CD sold in Russia usually has "For sale in Russia" label on it, since technically the music is not licensed to be distributed outside of the market. Once the service becomes popular (mp3search.ru is another
Questions.. (Score:5, Interesting)
1. Can we copy the file we bought to different devices (i.e. PC/ipod/mp3 player)?
2. Will it allow us to modify the format to/from mp3/wma/ogg/etc?
3. What is the quality compared with "normal" downloads (from gnutella/limewire/etc)?
4. Can we "re-download" a song if our copy get destroyed/lost/mangled?
5. What other advantages/dis-advantages are there?
Re:Questions.. (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Can we copy the file we bought to different devices (i.e. PC/ipod/mp3 player)?
This is the beuaty of ripping the songs straight from the CD. I can rip copies to AIFF or WAV and then convert these high-quality versions to any format I want, even copies of the original CD so you can keep the original safe.
2. Will it allow us to modify the format to/from mp3/wma/ogg/etc?
Why would you want to convert a lossy format to another lossy format? Again
Good for consumers? (Score:5, Interesting)
While I have no intention of buying anything from Real (they don't support Mac OS X with this scheme), and I've never bought anything from iTMS (as I live in Canada), as an iPod owner I'm still somewhat excited -- this may be good for me as an iPod owner inn an indirect way.
Apple has in the last few weeks released two iPod firmware updaters (one of which was released in the past week) -- but both have contained updates only for the 4G iPods. I bought my iPod two months too soon, and thus own the 3G iPod, for which Apple appears to have no interest in providing any software updates for.
However, if things go as many here predict, Real may force Apples hand in pushing out firmware updates for the older iPods to ensure they don't work with Real's system. And to ensure users actually apply these updates, they'll have to offer some form of incentive in the form of new features or other improvements beyond breaking compatible with Real's Harmony.
So if Apple does do something about this, iPod owners (particularily hose of us who don't have the new 4G iPod) may end up winning anyhow :).
Yaz.
Although flooded by Mac fans (Score:5, Funny)
http://www.petitiononline.com/mod_perl/signed.cgi? r4apple [petitiononline.com]
This is a ploy to get their DRM into the public. (Score:4, Insightful)
Real and Virgin are going after Apple for "not licensing Fairplay to them". The more likely scenario is that Apple wouldn't license Fairplay to them unless they used it exclusively and both Real and Virgin have their own DRM schemes and that wouldn't help them to get their DRMs into the market. Apple licensed Fairplay to Motorola. I'm sure that it is an exclusive contract that means that more users will be using Fairplay.
Real wants people to use their DRM and so does Virgin. So, they both complain that Apple refused to license Fairplay to them, when the more likely scenario is that Apple refused to license Fairplay to them without them agreeing to the contract, like Motorola did.
So, Real releases Harmony, which will allow their DRM'd files to be played on the number one media player, the iPod, by faking out the Fairplay DRM software to think that the Real DRM is the same as the Fairplay DRM. Whether this is legal or not stands to be proven. Then Real undercuts the standard prices by half and sets about creating FUD about how Apple is evil and won't let them play together and starts a "freedom of music" site designed to attack Apple only. Seems far fetched.
Virgin meanwhile attacks from their end, in France, and says that they've been shut out by Apple, the obvious monopoly (hardly) that they are.
This is a DRM war. The one that has more media that supports their DRM out in the market is going to win in the long run.
A couple of points that the Real site is misleading about:
1. The price to burn a track to CD is $0.79 not $0.49.
2. The price per album is 1/2 of what it cost before, as low as $4.99, so not all albums are $4.99.
Seems that they are trying to open the iPod to their proprietary DRM format, which isn't really open at all either.
Also bear in mind that Apple is guaranteed to release an update to the iPod software that will disable the Harmony software from helpiong to keep the DRM working on the iPod too.
iTunes also has over 1 million songs in their library while Real has almost 7 hundred thousand.
Who will win? Only time will tell. Seems to me that Real is playing dirty to try and make a minor inroad that won't pay off in the long run. How long can they support losing money in order to try to bring people over?
Stop arguing - here's how it works (Score:3, Informative)
Re:For a LIMITED TIME only (Score:5, Informative)
Re:For a LIMITED TIME only (Score:5, Interesting)
Once those supporters are in power, the reign of RIAA terror may finally end. Or at least reach an equilibrium similar to the one that existed prior to MP3s.
On a different note, best 99 cents, ever! [macboy.com]
Re:For a LIMITED TIME only (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:For a LIMITED TIME only (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm suprised that the RIAA is allowing this. 4.99 an album is quite a bit less than the $12 or so that cds go for. If I am going to buy an entire album, I usually buy the cd. This might change that though.
Re:For a LIMITED TIME only (Score:3, Informative)
How about I support changing the law instead? They can't put ALL of us in jail. Remember, even prohibition lasted four years [wikipedia.org] in the US. NOBODY wanted prohibition, and lots of people DIED in the violence related to that little social experiment. I think we've come a long way as a society (some notable failures [whitehouse.gov] do exist) towards civilized discourse since those days, and I don't see any
Re:Here's FULL TIME (Score:5, Informative)
It would be faster and kinder to do it directly, rather than going through Russia to do it.
(AllofMP3 is a mafia organization that doesn't have the artists' permission to represent them. It's supposed to be okay because they mail a small percentage of the pennies they charge back to artists...but they're not required to do so and artists have no recourse if they don't. By supporting it, you're supporting "legal" rights infringement via a gray market loophole. And that's FAR worse than supporting the RIAA -- at least RIAA member artists get SOME of their royalties, damnit)
Re:Here's FULL TIME (Score:3, Insightful)
And we all know that the RIAA would never exploit a loophole, right?
RIAA Continues Distributing Dud CDs to Satisfy Settlement [slashdot.org]
Re:Here's FULL TIME (Score:3, Insightful)
Artist signs a contract with an RIAA member label, trading the exclusive copyrights to their songs for X dollars per CD sold and Y cents per radio play. The artist then receives X*CD + Y*play, so long as they're good about letting the RIAA know how to reach them.
There are a couple of key differences between this and the Russian method. First, the artist decides whether or not to sign the contract. They're in control of their rights, and how their songs are managed. It is completely within thei
Re:Here's FULL TIME (Score:3, Informative)
Re:...but they're compressed. why buy? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hypocrites (Score:4, Informative)
Quoted from Rhapsody:
"MINIMUM SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS:
Windows PC, 350 MHz, 350 MB HD Space"