Legal Music Streaming Site Launches In France 161
An anonymous reader writes "The French website Deezer.com has struck a deal with the SACEM (the French equivalent to the RIAA) and is now legally providing Internet users around the world with more than 100,000 full songs, streamed on demand and without restrictions. The site, formerly named Blogmuzik.net, had had to close down last March under pressure from the recording industry."
it's cool i've tried it (Score:4, Informative)
Re:it's cool i've tried it (Score:5, Informative)
I tried a couple of albums at work late last week and then at home on Friday morning. Both connections (work routinely allows for 3MB/s from Apple -- just for reference and I have a 4200/500 DSL connection at home) were laggy with the music frequently pausing during the stream. I felt like I was using RealAudio back in 1999.
I wasn't impressed at all. My co-workers all use free.napster.com which works much better. YMMV.
Re:it's cool i've tried it (Score:4, Insightful)
This is the problem with the internet bottleneck. There is lots of complaints that BitTorrent is sucking all the bandwidth. A file downloaded can and often is played many times. Think of the internet meltdown if you switched all the BitTorrent downloaders to 100% streaming instead.
To fit the bandwidth now requires very high lossy streaming formats or a serious boost in bandwidth.
Welcome back to the days of Buffering............Buffering...........Bufferin
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Possibly so, but the bandwidth impact of on-demand streaming isn't among them.
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While they both use MP3 format, Napster uses only 22 kHz mono 32 kbps MP3's. Deezer on the other hand has some at 22 kHz stereo 64 kbps, but also has some at 44.1 kHz stereo 256 kbps. It even has some VBR with 44.1 kHz stereo and about 240 kbps average.
My guess would be that while Napster standardizes (undoubtedly reencoding from some high quality original), Deezer just gets an MP3 from the artist and streams it, without messing with
Re:it's cool i've tried it (Score:5, Informative)
I suspect that since they just scored this licensing agreement after a long legal struggle under new french obligatory licensing laws, they haven't had time to upgrade their servers or get better load offset architecture in place. Paying lawyers who saved their asses probably is a high priority for them.
I need to clear up the trollish flamebaiting headline, as the SACEM is nothing like the RIAA. They are the only group that collects royalties for authors and songwriters in France, and by law most of the money collected has to be distributed, despite their legendary corruption and incompetence. The SACEM has been forced to provide licensing to anyone who wants it, and I think Deezer was one of the first test cases for internet distribution. By signing a deal with SACEM, Deezer can now play any and all French artists, and any other country's artists who register with SACEM. This doesn't cover performance royalties, which are separate, all the songs on Deezer are performed by the original author. Since the Wu-Tang Clan (who I just saw on the site to use as an example) has registered with SACEM, ODB and MethodMan will get quarterly or yearly royalty checks directly from SACEM. Bands covering other author's songs can't be played under this agreement, at least according to the French press covering this.
It remains to be seen if Deezer can make enough to cover the royalties they've negotiated with SACEM. They were really over a legal barrel and if they hadn't signed they risked prison time for piracy. They could be a dotbomb2.0 fizzle, since they haven't dropped all the extraneous vowels from their name.
the AC
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-Tom
P.S. 8 MB/s over internet2 is nothing to brag about. Hell, it's not even something to really brag about on the plain old internet.
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I for one (Score:1, Funny)
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Re:it's cool i've tried it (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:it's cool i've tried it (Score:5, Funny)
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You'll notice that you hardly ever see that anymore. Mostly because they finally had to get jobs and live in the real world...
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Ummm... Flash Player is NOT free for many Operating Systems... it's NON-EXISTANT
In the Linux and OS/2 world, Gnash and numerous other (non-Adobe) Flash Players have yet to reach the latest release level compatibility with the actual Flash Player. While that isnt always a problem, I am running into more and more sites that check for and require a higher level Flash version (ie: 8 or 9).
Not everyone runs Windows ya know...
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We the Free people of the world thank France (Score:2, Funny)
Information and music just wants to be free.
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Je suis fier d'être le premier à déclarer bienvenue à nos nouveaux legal streaming suzerains Français!
Ok, it could use some work
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But...this doesn't make sense! (Score:5, Funny)
Are these the same innovation-stifling, reactionary French I keep seeing on Fox News and in the business press?
I mean, free music? That REEKS of socialism. I, for one, am enough of a proud American to do whatever the music lobbyists of this greatest country in the world demands of me.
Caesar's to caesar (Score:1)
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And I bet you could use a little more ability to detect sarcasm. I was ragging on Fox, the WSJ editorial page (same thing now, I suppose) and their eager consumers, not the French.
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What? (Score:4, Funny)
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Nope, but the fact they are streaming Beatles songs is an indicator they are using the local copyright laws and not going along with international copyright law which would block Beatles songs until they were officially released for internet distribution.
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789
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Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
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We are deeply, deeply sorry to say that due to licensing constraints, we can no longer allow access to Pandora for most listeners located outside of the U.S. We will continue to work diligently to realize the vision of a truly global Pandora, but for the time being we are required to restrict its use. We are very sad to have to do this, but there is no other alternative.
We believe that you are in Canada (your IP address appears to be XX.XXX.XXX.XXX). If you believe we have made a mistak
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It's really sad for the RIAA, since Pandora was the only way they could bleed any money from me (from Pandora's pocket, of course). I thought about finding a proxy server to bypass their filters, but decided that if the music industry was going to be that obtuse about people giving them money
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Lot's of buzz, but it won't last (Score:2, Informative)
They have a temporary agreement with the SACEM [wikipedia.org], till December 2007, with the SACEM having the ability to make it stop even sooner if they want. What makes me think this thing won't last, is the fact their agreement is based on the promise that their service is the first
32kbps MP3 (Score:4, Informative)
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Sweet mama ! it really works well (Score:4, Informative)
its fast also.
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Well, aside from a full webbrowser with a modern version of flash and enough resources to pull off audio decoding at the same time. Yeah, doesn't sound like much, but kind of rules out streaming this from any kind of embeded device (i.e nintendo ds with homebrew, a cellphone, pda, etc.)
If I'm at my desktop I might as well just listen to all the music I have stored on it. I suppose this could be useful for using other peoples machines or maybe laptops wher
one important benefit (Score:2)
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(Still, another torrent-rationalization bites the dust.)
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My library is half downloaded half iTunes.
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And of course, once they've decided they like it they'll buy a legitimate copy.
With this service, however, that excuse disappears. (Not like they can't hear the whole thing at a friends, on TV or radio, or in a music store, but I digress.)
But like I said, it'
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That's an observation I've made of my own past behavior, and it correlates well with the sales and piracy statistics released by the RIAA. First they report piracy is at a high, then they report sales have reached a high. Later, they report piracy is down, and after that, sales follow.
I never spent more mone
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Spare me the party line, please. For every person who's "excited" about music there's ten who could care less as long as they have the most popular background music. I know too many students who download and who use the money they could have spent on music on more beer and clothes.
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If you don't think it's true, how do you explain sales following piracy, as reported by the RIAA? They, of course, never made the connection, but I noticed that each time they issued a press release about piracy levels they followed in a couple months with a press release about sales that went in the same directio
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About the uploads, though... Are they saying if you upload an album they don't have, they'll share it with others? I really have to question the legality of that... And if -I- upload an album that I've bou
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Could me more secure... (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, and after you've clicked the link they email you your password in the clear.
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Friendly to what browser(s)? (Score:1)
Maybe the content will increase in the future. The songs I was looking for were in french so I thought they might have them.
I hope this is the start of a trend.
Worshipping Lord Cthulhu pays off... (Score:1)
Phnglui Mglwnafh Cthulhu R'lyeh Wgah Nagl F'htagn!
imeem.com (Score:1, Informative)
Bitchin (Score:1)
SACEM != RIAA (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:SACEM != RIAA (Score:5, Informative)
"SACEM is the French performing rights organization, equivalent to either ASCAP or BMI in the US, or SOCAN in Canada. They're not a lobby group comprised of commercial record labels. They collect royalties from broadcasts and performances on behalf of French musicians."
This bears amplification.
SACEM, ASCAP/BMI, SOCAN, etc.: performing rights organizations which represent artists, composers and lyricists. THE GOOD GUYS.
The French equivalent of the RIAA is the IFPI. The RIAA and the IFPI represent the recording industry. THE BAD GUYS.
Performing rights organizations represent a potential revenue stream for artists, composers and lyricists that the record companies generally don't see and can't touch. You know how we all want the record companies to go away but for artists to be compensated, in a way which doesn't require us to pay for the music? Performing rights organizations are the way that can happen. The summary's statement that SACEM is the equivalent of the RIAA was dangerously misleading.
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SACEM
Hardly.
The really bad.
SACEM was created under the Vichy regime in France in 1941, and headed up by a group of six wealthy supporters and close friends of some of the ministers of the Vichy government. I've almost Godwined this thread at this point, so
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SACEM, ASCAP/BMI, SOCAN, etc.: performing rights organizations which represent artists, composers and lyricists. THE GOOD GUYS.
The good guys?. These good guys (the European performing rights organizations in europe: SACEM, SGAE...) try to collect a fee on every damn cdr, dvdr, printer, mp3 player or even hd sold. Oh, and on Internet access too.
Maybe the GP post was using "good" in a relative sense. As in, "Jack the Ripper" was a good guy. After all, he was never a member of the RIAA.
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Well, not only. Any music performed or broadcast in France gets their share. SACEM redistributes those royalties to their counterparts abroad (like BMI/ASCAP)
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Making my work day better already:) (Score:1)
imeem.com Has Been Doing This In The US For A Whil (Score:3, Informative)
Who the fuck cares (Score:2)
and all the stuff that the RIAA has bullied people about for years
with no consideration of fair use.
I could give a crap about little pussy agreements with governments.
Fair use is dead and thats killing the internet
Damn Universal.... (Score:3, Informative)
Excellent....pity it sucks (Score:2)
would've been cool 5 years ago, but . . . (Score:2)
The French equivalent to the RIAA???? (Score:2)
"The French website Deezer.com has struck a deal with the SACEM (the French equivalent to the RIAA) and is now legally providing Internet users around the world with more than 100,000 full songs, streamed on demand and without restrictions. The site, formerly named Blogmuzik.net, had had to close down last March under pressure from the recording industry."
Ummm... let me be the first to point out that SACEM is NOT the French equivalent of the RIAA... at least not if they are allowing "more than 100,000 full songs, streamed on demand and without restrictions."
But maybe the RIAA will take a lesson from this and come to their senses and convince their member companies (themselves) to come up with and/or support more viable Internet distribution methods as a business model instead of their current "Sue 'em all and then some more people for good measure" attit
The first nickel bag is free... (Score:2)
Nah, the RIAA wouldn't be that devious, would it?
Sounds fishy (Score:4, Interesting)
A better recap.. (Score:2)
It is the equivalent of the US-based BMI and ASCAP, and that makes a big difference : SACEM manages the rights of songwriters / composers / publishers, NOT the rights on actual recordings.
This means that what Deezer.com did is a first, necessary but not sufficient step, and at this point they would merely have the right to have someone perform those songs again and re-record them, then stream the result!
What they have yet to do, is to get a deal for the actual
Did anyone else read... (Score:2)
Perhaps it was too good to be true... (Score:2)
Re:So where is the money coming from? (Score:5, Informative)
-Give consumers a full and free access to all their favourite songs
-Pay artists and their producers through a revenue share based on our advertising revenues
- Help discovering new artists through a wide audience
from the about us [deezer.com] page on the site (emphasis mine)
Bah! (Score:2)
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Something smells fishy and its not his feet.
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