Microsoft Creates Static With New Webcast Feature 346
An anonymous reader writes "Radio stations are upset because Microsoft is cloning their playlists -- creating sounds-alike internet radio stations without the commercials."
This is now. Later is later.
Static... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Static... (Score:4, Funny)
Then they'll "give back" E and D major as "see, we contribute back to the community" PR.
Re:Static... (Score:3, Funny)
that's enough for most pop these days *grin*
They'll have to create a new chord... (Score:5, Funny)
That way, they can give back "F", "U", and "D".
Re:Static... (Score:3, Funny)
That kid Billy... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:That kid Billy... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Static... (Score:3, Insightful)
(heres someone who's lived in a cave,never watched news media and probably used a macintosh all his short naiive life)
Re:Static... (Score:3, Interesting)
Instead, using somebody elses playlist and advertising the service as a substitute for the original radio means that the original radio loses the option to broadcast over the internet as its difficult to compete with somebody who can
Radio Stations Playing the same stuff (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Radio Stations Playing the same stuff (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe if you RTFA (Score:5, Informative)
Brand MSN, Just like Brand X, Only Less Stuff (Score:2, Insightful)
That strikes me as utterly walking into a law office and screaming, "Sue me!" .. but then, Microsoft has enough money to fight or even intimidate, but it seems completely pointless. It's hard to believe MSN could be so blatant, normally there's some craftyness to their attempts to lose money, but this... geez.
"It results in a more pleasant experience because you don't have the ads or the DJs,'' Rob Bennett, senior director for MSN Entertainment, s
Re:Brand MSN, Just like Brand X, Only Less Stuff (Score:2)
How is this any different than "ksuxless plays more music than ksuxmore" spots that radio stations themselves run? These "if you you like them you'll love us" type of ads are nothing new.
Re:Brand MSN, Just like Brand X, Only Less Stuff (Score:3, Insightful)
If they want to get into the media game (and they do in a big way), its also a way to find out which independent stations are ripe to be bought out.
Re:Maybe if you RTFA (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe if I finish my sentence, I'll confuse less people like you.
Maybe if all the radio stations across the US didn't sound exactly alike....
you would be able to switch stations in a major market and hear different playlists.
Maybe if all the radio stations across the US didn't sound exactly alike....
people would actually listen to the radio instead of complaining that it all sounds the same.
Maybe if all the radio stations across the US didn't sound exactly alike....
there wouldn't be the need for Microsoft to introduce a service like this.
Re:Maybe if you RTFA (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Maybe if you RTFA (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Maybe if you RTFA (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Maybe if you RTFA (Score:3, Informative)
Being that none of the radio stations are in Germany, you forsee criminal prosecution where there can be none. German courts have no more jurisdiction over this than they do over a seller of Nazi artifacts in Idaho.
Re:Maybe if you RTFA (Score:3, Insightful)
Case 1: A US company, using US-based servers, is comparing itself to another US-based competitor, in violation of German advertising laws.
Case 2: An Australian in Australia ran a warez group whose active membership contained a number of Americans and which used a number of US servers for what it was doing.
It'd be naive not to recognize that there are several significant factors in the second case th
Re:Maybe if you RTFA (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Maybe if you RTFA (Score:3, Interesting)
Or the radio stations could add an EULA spoken every hour to remind people that 'it is a contract violation to create a radio station which plays the same songs while branding it as representative of the selection of this radio station,
Re:Radio Stations Playing the same stuff (Score:4, Funny)
Damn it all. There you people go again, complaining about the programming we broadcasting executives give you.
Do you have a freaking clue how hard our work is? Spend an hour... JUST ONE STUPID HOUR... with an artist. Do you have any idea how maintenance-intensive these people are? As if we need more artists!!! We've worked hard to narrow our list and after twenty years with the current crew, we think you all should be as happy as slugs in a pan of beer with quality choices like:
o Michael Jackson
o Madonna
o Ace of Base (yea, we don't like them either but some idiot at their label renewed their contract)
o John Tesh
Oh and don't miss the hot new release of the great 'green' artist, Dave Matthews Band, in their new album "Smells Like Greyhound Spirit" - a nickle from every album purchase goes to the environmental and/or legal defense fund of Dave's choice.
And please, quit listening to all that industrial european stuff. As if we need more forms of music. We all know the Elvis discovered it all and there is no more new music, so quietly go to a Best Buy near you and buy your favorite RIAA products there.
Re:Radio Stations Hiring Fucktards as DJ's (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, self-same DJ's are not shy of threatening to "bury" bands who are rude to them - see this very interesting transcript [outwiththenew.com] which touches on threats made by a bunch of syndicated radio commentator wankers and Australian punkers Frenzal Rhomb.
Also touches on some of the other issues being discussed here with 'taste consolidation'. A good read, in my opinion.
Who cares (Score:2)
I wish (Score:5, Interesting)
It's just different crap. DJs with their stupid jokes, stupid callers with their stupid jokes, etc. etc. In fact, I'd rather listen to commercials than that junk.
We do have several stations that play 45 minutes of music without commercial interruption, unless of course you count the interruption to tell you that you're listening to 45 minutes of music without commercial interruption.
Even though, it's till not 80-20 by any stretch of the imagination...although those screaming car ads do seem to last hours.
Re:I wish (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I wish (Score:2)
Maybe the Apes were onto something dubbing it the "Forbidden Zone."
Re:I wish (Score:2)
If I ever hear the "radio laugh" I switch again fast and don't come back soon. And I have a steering-wheel mounted tuner so don't think my hands will be too busy to change stations.
Re:I wish (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I wish (Score:2)
Re:Who cares (Score:3, Interesting)
It would be a shame to see such a great station (a lot of people I know say it's the only
Re:Who cares (Score:2)
They play almost every kind of music at various points throughout the week, and it's a pretty good mix - you're not going to hear the same pop garbage repeated over and over. If you appreciate the station, you can send them a donation, too, as they're 100% listener supported (thus the lac
Should there be (Score:5, Interesting)
What's next? Accusing someone of copying the order of items on a store shelf?
Re:Should there be (Score:3, Funny)
"Waaah!"
Re:Should there be (Score:2)
Re:Should there be (Score:4, Informative)
If they have an owner at all, its you and me (the taxpayers -- yes, both of us! :-)
The only thing you are not allowed to do with a radio station call sign is to use it on another radio station - it is required identification, not a marketing tool, and not "IP" of the radio station.
Re:Should there be (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Should there be (Score:2)
Re:Should there be (Score:5, Informative)
I'd say no, but if you click on over there [msn.com], there are some much more questionable elements to the page. In particular, they list the station's callsign and slogans in a way that someone could make a compelling argument is confusing to the average person (the average person being a dolt
Off to the left, you get this non-confusing bit:
"Like 96.5 FM"
But then separated into another column, it says this:
"96.5 KOIT LITE ROCK LESS TALK"
Now, it may not be a clear-cut case of trademark infringement, but I can guarantee that if Microsoft own these stations and someone else tried this, there'd be a cease-and-desist in the mail already.
Re:Should there be (Score:5, Informative)
What's next? Accusing someone of copying the order of items on a store shelf?
Actually, the folks who own the Dewey Decimal system have done just that [wikipedia.org].
Re:Should there be (Score:5, Insightful)
If MS took a station's playlist and played it, exactly as the radio station did, then the radio station could probably sue MS for violating its "compilation copyright" - the general look and feel by which the radio station presented the music.
But MS apparently isn't doing that. They're apparently aggregating playlists in order to get a sense of a station's music genre, then using it to select from the songs it has the right to broadcast. The aggregation and selection process probably gets MS around the compilation copyright problem, especially if MS presents at least one song that is *not* on a station's playlist. So I'd guess that if they do what the article claims they do, then they're fine.
Diversity in radio (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Diversity in radio (Score:2)
Re:Diversity in radio (Score:4, Insightful)
It's not the Programming or Music Managers that make radio the repetive drivel it is, it's the listeners. Start advocating and turning your friends onto some good music, fill out the damn ratings books (and nobody can listen to 180 hours of NPR a week, I've seen this.) and stop listening to "the best hits of the 80's and 90's" chanells with 500 songs in rotation, and you might end up with a good radio station due to market pressure.
I have. (Score:3, Insightful)
How can they tell? (Score:5, Insightful)
Could they... (Score:4, Interesting)
With all due respect to WIOG, they have shitty music. If it weren't for the fact that their DJ/intern chatter is hilarious (most of the time), I sure wouldn't listen.
That's weird... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:That's weird... (Score:2)
Licensing? (Score:4, Funny)
This makes my brain hurt (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This makes my brain hurt (Score:2)
And where does the RIAA factor into this?
Re:This makes my brain hurt (Score:2)
If they are attacking something not close to our hearts, then their action is scored as a 0, rather than a negative.
The results of their attack are also taken into account. If it gives us more stuff, preferably for little or no cost, then that's OK. So MS cloning Clear Channel playlists is OK because even though CC playlists suck, if someone does want that sort of music, this gives them anoth
Re:This makes my brain hurt (Score:5, Funny)
Who do we hate the most?
- RIAA
- MPAA
- Microsoft
- Republicans
- Democrats
- Cowboyneal
I hope (Score:3, Funny)
Snicker, snicker, giggle, guffaw, and the gut rumbling belly laugh.
solution: cage match (Score:2)
I think you mean..... (Score:2)
No! Not our slogan! (Score:3, Funny)
What's this? They're misusing their four letters, and a slogan that any halfwit with a marketing degree signed in crayon could come up with? (And has, all across the country?) Oh, please stop, I'm gonna bust out cryin'.
Re:No! Not our slogan! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No! Not our slogan! (Score:2)
Best Article Quote of the Day (Score:5, Funny)
John Allers, you owe me a new keyboard. Mine is full of Dr. Pepper.
You might want to tell Clear Channel that. They've obviously not gotten the memo.
Yeah, well... (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, what this guy really does is receive oral sex from hot young record company... um... "representatives" and ensure that they don't need to pay royalties for ad jingles.
95% of commerical radio blows goats. Unfortunately, college radio is now so afraid of offending somebody and being sued, very few of the real ground breaking programs are permitted to exist.
Re:Yeah, well... (Score:2)
We actually have a good University station around here. CHRW 94.9
They have a huge variety of programs from jazz to foreign language talk to guys talking about having sex with fat girls to local bands and alternative music that isn't on other stations. It's also a station that will almost never be played in a workplace
We need to a resist a temptation to take sides (Score:5, Interesting)
NO! (Score:2)
I'm sorry, but I must disagree. Anyone remember in the Lord of the Rings (the books) when Aragorn, Gimli, and Legolas meet Gandalf in Fangorn forest and they are talking about the betrayals of Saruman?
Re:We need to a resist a temptation to take sides (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:We need to a resist a temptation to take sides (Score:2)
So how was that "cold war" thing that happened afterwords for you? Did it "work" too?
Re:We need to a resist a temptation to take sides (Score:2)
MS, you dirty hoebag (Score:5, Insightful)
it's one thing to play the same songs as the local stations and remove the idiotic DJ banter and brain-numbing commercials (a service i would consider paying for, if i actually listened to radio instead of CDs), but it's another to do it so blatantly that you even rip the fucking slogan.
Re:MS, you dirty hoebag (Score:2)
I just can't muster up the energy to glare at MS over it. Sounds to me like Clearchannel finally has a competitor. Oh the horror.
call letters (Score:3, Interesting)
Radio stations fight back with new slogan (Score:5, Funny)
compilation copyright (Score:5, Insightful)
And why are the stations surprised? (Score:5, Insightful)
There's an simple solution to this: don't limit your radio station to a freaking playlist!. If all your DJs do is provide inane chatter while they shuffle around stuff from the same list of 100 songs, how long do you expect to maintain any sort of competitive advantage?
Oh, that's right, with ClearChannel dominating the airwaves, they didn't need to compete. That's how the industry let itself slide into this playlist dominated model to begin with. So now Microsoft can come along and say "Hey, we're just like $YOUR_LOCAL_RADIO_STATION, except we suck less!"
Sigh. End Rant.
Cookie-cutter radio (Score:2, Interesting)
But if you'd like to leave the radio cookie cutters at home, may I suggest www.wfmu.org, which has been streaming RA and MP3 streams for years and now a Slashdot-friendly Vorbis stream as well. And if you don't like what's on now, you can listen to more than two years of archived programming as well.
I hope I didn't just
--- the webhamster at wfmu.org
Call Letters (Score:2, Interesting)
Microsoft will stop this nonsense (Score:5, Informative)
The court ruled that the fact that Welles a Playboy Playmate of the year is, well, a specific fact. And because she was exactly what she claimed to be, there could be no confusion in the marketplace.
Microsoft's use of stations' call letters, however, will obviously lead to confusion. It would be like Pepsi putting it's "like Coke" right on its labels. Sure, Pepsi does takes "like coke." but the confusion in the marketplace would be too great. Basically, the fact is too generalized.
This will never go to trial though. Some higher up at Microsoft will come to his or her senses and put a stop to this nonsense.
Purchase Price (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft will stop this nonsense (Score:2)
No, what will happen is: (Score:3, Insightful)
This will never go to trial though. Some higher up at Microsoft will come to his or her senses and put a stop to this nonsense.
I agree it'll never go to trial. What'll happen, though, is that Clear Channel and friends will get scared and negotiate with Microsoft; for example, will do an exclusive distribution deal through Microsoft's version of the iTMs. Then, Microsoft wins; Clear Channel wins; the RIAA wins.
Oh yeah, Real and Apple lose.
Microsoft surely doesn't want to be in a position of being a
Just wait (Score:2)
why is this a problem? (Score:2, Insightful)
Embrace and extend (Score:2)
I find this somwwhat ironic (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft: you can't have your cake and eat it too.
Maybe someone register a station called KMSN... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Maybe someone register a station called KMSN... (Score:2)
ms copied from others? say it aint so (Score:2)
but stealing playlists? what's so fucking criminal about taking the "top 20" and shuffling them ad nauseum? (well, yes it is criminal to be forced to listen to that playlist). of course all 1000000 clearchannel stations all use the same shitty playlist, are they all stealing from each other?
it's all so scary, so much shit music, so few playlists.
Competition is good. (Score:2)
If people like DJs and screaming ads, they'll listen to the radio. If not, they'll listen to Microsoft. If local stations would throw away the play lists and develop a personality, they'd have nothing to worry about.
"Compare to the ingredients in ..." (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, the question is why anyone would want a pay service that uses the playlists of mainstream stations.
I made the comment a few years back that broadcast radio is an enormous waste of bandwidth, because the content is so repetitive. It's far more efficient to download the content once and cache it locally. Then all the station has to broadcast is a playlist, using tiny bandwidth.
At the time, that was a joke. Now it's a viable business model.
This is hilarious (Score:2)
Leave it to MS to copy the most annoying feature of radio.
I am confused here... (Score:2, Funny)
BSOD (Score:2)
If radio didn't SUCK so bad, I'd almost care. (Score:5, Insightful)
And they're snagging the call letters of their carbon copy crapola stations?
As one poster noted, it's hard to know who to hate...
But the facts are simple: if radio stations had REAL DJs that were allowed to play whatever the fuck they wanted to, and then hired DJs on the basis of the depth and breadth of their musical selections and the cleverness of their song choices, there is No Way M$ could copy that, as each DJ would be regionally dependent on local taste. Example: the DJs of San Francisco might not fair very well in Oklahoma City. But it would all be by Sensibility, which is the most crucial marker of aesthetic choice.
But Bog Forbid anyone figure THAT one out... the closestthing you can do is get a live365 station but that's expensive and a bit of a rip off...
RS
Re:If radio didn't SUCK so bad, I'd almost care. (Score:3, Informative)
Legally they are in the clear....but if the anti-trust people are watching it's time to nail um to the wall!
Grudgematch (Score:3, Funny)
More power for the record labels... (Score:3, Insightful)
All this because we were in one of the top five markets in the country. One spin on our station reached more ears than one on a 50,000 watt college station in the middle of east bumfuck. So we got more attention than them.
The fact that a label only has to convince a single station somewhere to play their song in order to get it on Microsoft's copied playlist must be making them salivate as much as Pavlov's dog at a firehouse.
Maybe there'll be a fight between ClearChannel and MS, but the RIAA must be loving this... And they'll side with MS...
-bs
Re:iTunes (Score:2)
Re:this only goes to show.... (Score:2)
If MS habitually made a monopoly out of every product it sells, I might be inclined to agree.