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Music Media Your Rights Online

Alltunes.com Lets Users Download AllofMP3 Songs 168

Stony Stevenson writes with word that, although AllofMP3.com was shut down by the Russian Government this week, customers from the site who have existing credit can still purchase songs through its downloadable windows desktop and smartphone client, allTunes.com. From the article: "A former AllofMP3.com user, who spoke to Computerworld on the condition of anonymity, purchased songs with his existing credit from the allTunes software client today and experienced no trouble doing so... AllofMP3's six million users will no doubt be delighted they can use their leftover credit to purchase songs, but the site's longevity hangs in the balance. Just days after the Russian Government shut down AllofMP3.com, its sister site, MP3Sparks.com, suffered the same fate."
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Alltunes.com Lets Users Download AllofMP3 Songs

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  • Slashdot posters are traditionally link-happy. Where is the link to the article about AllofMP3.com's takedown? I didn't know about this.
  • It had nothing to do with Iraq, Iran or the "missile shield", it was about IP rights.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by jeevesbond ( 1066726 )

      It had nothing to do with Iraq, Iran or the "missile shield", it was about IP rights.

      No, I think that was sorted out a long time ago (conditions on Russia joining the WTO). I believe the only reason they went fishing was so Bush could regail Putin with some crap jokes he found on Slashdot:

      1. In Soviet Russia fish catch YOU!
      2. All your allofmp3 are belong to us!
      3. In Soviet Russia missiles shield YOU!
      4. ???
      5. International Diplomacy!

      Putin would have been pissed off with all this, but whilst George W

    • No, someone just forgot to pay their bribe.


  • Well, they've gone and shut down ALL the sites where you can buy reasonably priced mp3s! There are NONE LEFT. Darn. I guess the Russian government can go on some other kick now that we're thoroughly beaten... Yep, none left. They don't have to worry or be vigilant any more. *hopes they're using slashdot as their sole source to find these sites*

  • Regardless of ethics (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Control Group ( 105494 ) * on Thursday July 05, 2007 @02:09PM (#19756691) Homepage
    Whether or not you believe what AllOfMp3.com was doing was illegal or unethical, it has got to be at least a little worrisome that a group of American corporations can effectively control the legal system of another major nation.

    In my more paranoid moments, I might consider this evidence for an upcoming shift from nation-state to corporation-state as the global political unit. Then again, I'm also prepared for the inevitable zombie outbreak, so perhaps you oughtn't listen to me.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by sinij ( 911942 )
      >>> it has got to be at least a little worrisome that a group of American corporations can effectively control the legal system of another major nation

      Nothing is free in Russia, 'group of American corporations' paid dearly to get it shut down, be it in political power or 'sponsorship' funds or likely both.
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by TubeSteak ( 669689 )

        Nothing is free in Russia, 'group of American corporations' paid dearly to get it shut down, be it in political power or 'sponsorship' funds or likely both.

        For those of you who aren't aware: Russia is only making this concession because it wants to join the WTO.

        I hope everyone going "zomg teh American Corporations" realizes that any payment for this was made during Clinton's Administration and Allofmp3 was shut down using Clinton era treaties.

        American foreign policy under Bush and Clinton, with regards to 'intellectual property' has always had the same restrictive goals. The only difference is that Clinton was willing to accept the foreign patent process whil

        • I wasn't indicting a particular administration - I was attempting to indict the political environment of the current world, and a trend towards corporations increasingly being the "power behind the throne" - or at least, seeming to be.
    • it has got to be at least a little worrisome that a group of American corporations can effectively control the legal system of another major nation.

      And not just because it speaks to ever-increasing amounts of corporate power, unrestricted by legal restraint.

      What does it do to the notion of rule of law in those countries where foreign corporations come in and throw their weight around? It was bad enough when Adobe, an American corporation, engineered the arrest of Dimitry Skylarov for acts that didn't break

    • Company does business in a country, company seeks legal protection from the courts in that country. All corporations from all countries do that. BFD.

      Besides, "effectively control the legal system" in the context of RUSSIA? That's a legal system in need of MAJOR work. Frankly, I'd rather the RIAA give a helping hand with getting it up to snuff than most of the local talent.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Besides, "effectively control the legal system" in the context of RUSSIA? That's a legal system in need of MAJOR work. Frankly, I'd rather the RIAA give a helping hand with getting it up to snuff than most of the local talent.

        You're presuming that our legal system represents being "up to snuff" from the point of view of the citizens of Russia. Which calls into question the whole notion of national sovereignty.

        While I agree with you that the legal system in Russia isn't one I'd like to live with - and, I sus

        • The Russian government is fully capable of saying "no." This is a trait they exhibit quite often about things far more consequential than the price of a frakking MP3. To say that it is somehow "interventionist" for their regulatory bodies to sit down at the table with industry associations they'd like to do business with and came up with an agreement at the expense of poor, disenfranchised organized crime that wasn't let in on the meeting is astoundingly stupid.
    • No, the Canadian DMCA is an example of the US controlling other country's laws. In this instance, it's that Russia has agreed to respect our copyrights as long as we afford them the same hospitality. It's part of being a member of the WTO, if I remember correctly.
      • by jrumney ( 197329 )

        In this instance, it's that Russia has agreed to respect our copyrights

        It already respected the copyrights. AllOfMP3.com paid a statutory license for all the music that was downloaded from them, in accordance with Russian law until the government was coerced into changing that law to suit the RIAA. This is the same sort of statutory license that the RIAA collects from Internet radio stations in the US through its SoundExchange subsidiary. Meanwhile, the RIAA was refusing to pass this money on to the arti

    • by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve ( 949321 ) on Thursday July 05, 2007 @03:06PM (#19757379)
      Whether or not you believe what AllOfMp3.com was doing was illegal or unethical, it has got to be at least a little worrisome that a group of American corporations can effectively control the legal system of another major nation.

      I don't think that is the right way to look at the situation. What is worrisome is that a group of American corporations convinced the US government that issues that are unique to the entertainment industry were such a big deal that the US government better care about them and in turn they became such a big deal that they were able to force Russia to care about them. I can assure you that Russia does not give in to bullying. They acted because they either got something under the table for doing so or the government concluded that there was some benefit that they would gain by shutting down one website that would outweigh the perception of giving in to US pressure. Russia does not do something for nothing so they are getting something out of the deal, but what they are getting I don't know.
    • Look at the big companies in the RIAA, and you will realize that only one - Warner - is American. EMI is British, Sony BMG is Japanese, and Universal is French. This doesn't hurt your corporation-state argument, but is a significant detail.
      • by jrumney ( 197329 )

        Universal's head offices are in Santa Monica and New York, despite the fact that the parent company is French. Sony BMG is also run out of New York, despite the parent companies being Japanese and German. EMI is the only one of the big four that does not base its operations in the US.

    • Those corporations are (mostly) not American. Only one out of the big four, Warner, is completely American. Sony BMG is Japanese/German, EMI is English, and Universal is American/French.
  • Whack-a-Mole (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Nom du Keyboard ( 633989 ) on Thursday July 05, 2007 @02:22PM (#19756827)
    Looks like an ongoing game of Whack-a-Mole.
  • by caseih ( 160668 ) on Thursday July 05, 2007 @03:16PM (#19757529)
    Many Russian expats relied on allofmp3.com as the only real way to access a lot of the music they know and love from back home. You just can't buy CDs of Hi-Fi or even Russian folk bands in the US. The RIAA has now essentially stolen representation of russian artists whether the russian artists cared about allofmp3.com or not. I'm not saying that allofmp3.com supported Russian artists at all, nor am I saying that allofmp3.com wasn't pirating russian music (it appears not, due to russian copyright law). But rather that the RIAA has unilaterally declared themselves the owner of all copyrighted music material in the Russia as well as the US, whether or not they really do. That is the despicable part of their actions.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by caseih ( 160668 )
        What allofmp3.com wasn't illegal for russians in russia. If a bar on Romulus sells Romulan ale to federation members, it's still legal even if Romulan ale is itself illegal in the Federation. Now of course this is a different situation since a) allofmp3.com was operating within the rules of Russian copyright law, and b) it's not illegal to import music for personal use into the US from abroad, no matter how you bought it. CDs on the street in Bangkok may be pirated, but it's not illegal to buy them and b
  • Recently I was looking for some new patio furniture. I went to all the usual places - Kmart, Sears, Walmart, etc. - but couldn't find anything to buy. In one store I liked the chairs, but not the table; in another store I liked the table but the chairs lacked the necessary butt support; Walmart had the chairs and the table that I liked, but they came with an umbrella the size of a traveling circus. The problem was - everything was sold in sets. If you like the umbrella - you have to buy the table and the si
    • Although I understand your sentiment, you are in a very small percentage of knowledgeable users. Most people have no idea what DRM is, what its purpose is, or what lossless formats are. They jump on iTunes, see a song they like, and buy it. Beats going out to Walmart to pick up a $20 CD to just listen to one song over and over, doesn't it?
  • How about if I get a ship with a nice Liberian flag registration and park it about 20 miles off the coast of California. Run a microwave or fiber optic link to shore for Internet access. Several connections might be necessary for backup and greater bandwidth.

    As I doubt Liberia has any intellectual property treaties with anyone, this should be able to be a source for downloads according to whatever rules are determined by the Ship's Captain.

    That would of course be $0.01 per GB of source material. So, if t
    • by RuBLed ( 995686 )
      Sooner or later they would find out that they are in deep waters...
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by DoctorFrog ( 556179 )
      Remember, allofmp3.com was legal under Russian law. Your scheme also sounds legal, but they will find a way of defining this as "piracy on the high seas" one way or another.

      Off topic, that's what really annoys me about the new FBI "Anti-Piracy"warning on DVDs. I can understand the MPAA and similar organizations misusing words like "stealing" and "piracy" because they're more interested in polemical wattage than legal accuracy, but the FBI is a law enforcement agency for crying out loud; they have no excuse

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