Grateful Dead Clarify Stand on Live MP3s 56
Maver1ck writes "Seems things weren't as stange as they
appeared last week. The Grateful Dead will, under strict guidelines
prohibiting commercial use, still allow free MP3 downloads
of live performances taped by fans. They just won't allow banner ads, sales
of user data, sponsorship or any other "profit" from the
exchange. Law firm press release is at PR Newswire.
Still begs the question of paying for all that bandwidth..."
Is it wrong to pay S&H to have a friend mail you a tape?
Or to send him a couple bucks to cover a blank CD-R to have
him burn you a concert? Bandwidth is a bit more expensive
than postage though...
Dead Worship. (Score:1)
Bandwidth ain't expensive... (Score:2)
The reason that bandwidth seems expensive to CmdrTaco is that he has to pay for all the leaches like me that come and visit his site and use his bandwidth. And he has a lot of leaches - so he needs a lot of bandwidth. The problem isn't one so much of cost of the bandwidth, but instead the economic model that the Internet uses... (i.e. everybody pays for their inbound and outbound bandwidth). That is great for a peon like me with my personal DSL line. I got bandwidth to spare and I can visit, for free, great sites like
And there is the problem, the Internet infrastructure does not allow a consumer of information to easily compensate the distributor of information for the bandwidth used to transport the data off their site. And I'm not sure I want it to be easy... think about what that would lead to.
S&H, Media costs, etc. (Score:3)
When using the snail mail this is usually handled by one trader sending the other blank media and return package with the postage already paid.
This method covers everything but time and resources withouth any money being exchange, but time and resources simply can't be compensated for.
I think this is pretty fair. I think the bands that allow taping of there live shows are doing a very cool thing for the fans. But, I don't believe anybody should profit off those recordings unless the band is getting a piece of the action.
Bands generally benefit from tape trading - especially smaller/lesser-known bands, b/c the tapes allow a wider audience. I think the internet could increase this benefit by orders of magnitude.
The problem of course being paying for the bandwidth.. I wish I had a solution, but I don't. The bands that could afford to distribute their live shows themselves off there site, would be large enough that they wouldn't need the exposure. And, the small bands probably couldn't afford to do it themselves. Fans will do it, but as this GD has pointed out, the have to do it without any financial gains.
(sorry, that turned in to a rant - and sorry about the AC posting - I'm at work, and don't remember my password
MP3 doesn't cut it (Score:1)
The best MP3 can do is still a lossy compression with extremely noticeable audio artifacts, primarily in the loss of dynamic range and dulling of the frequency extremes. It's fine for what it is - people were really glad to have the Phil & Phriends Warfield shows up so quickly - but realistically, it's not a suitable trading medium for anyone of an even moderately audiophile persuasion.
I do download and listen to MP3s for fun at work, but I'd never burn a CDR of any of it, unless it was very cool and completely unobtainium otherwise. A few simple blind listening tests convinced me completely.
I'm interested in this discussion; tape/CDR trading and OSS culture have always seemed similar to me in many ways. For example, I'm burning at total of 350 CDRs of those April Warfield shows - 35 copies of 10 disks each - none of them for trade. My motivations are exactly the same as most OSS programmers.
Re:GPL Meets Deadheads (Score:1)
I'm working on an article for PauseRecord [pauserecord.com] on exactly this issue. While I don't think the parallels are exact, I think the music trading community stands to learn a lot about intellectual property rights issues from the OSS community, which has obviously already thought about this a little...
jeeeeezzz.... (Score:1)
As usual, a bunch of people with axes to grind have to change the subject. You don't like the Grateful Dead, Phish, MMW, String Cheese Incident, or other jam bands? Fine. Don't listen. So what? This is an intellectual property rights issue, and your opinion of the music is irrelevant; and your emotional repsonse is very psychologically revealing.
I don't get along with most Deadheads (or especially Phish fans). I find them boring. But I am a HUGE Deadhead and Phish fan myself, and I have a large number of Deadhead friends who fit no stereotype whatsoever. I listen to classical, avant jazz, trance, ambient, dub, folk, acoustic, and ska musics in addition to jam band stuff...
Please get over yourself, and pay attention to what's actually being discussed.
Postage *is* bandwidth! (Score:1)
In fact, a lorry full of tapes has far better bandwidth than a T1 line. The Latency sucks though
--
It's OK. (Score:1)
Would they object to your posting of an mp3 on your "free" geocities site? I doubt it. So long as "you" aren't "geocities".
If you have a private, corporate site or personal one that is partly or wholly banner supported, then go ahead and post the GD mp3 on the server, just don't put any links to it on your sponsored page. Only give out the URL that goes direct to the GD page and let it stand alone.
Re:Compromize on Bandwidth Costs? (Score:1)
Question: by "warez" site, do you mean those sites with endless porno consoles and blink tags that never actually go anywhere (aka warez.com), or are we talking about an unpublished ftp server that someone's running out of their basement? The former would probably never carry Grateful Dead mp3's, but the latter is probably much more likely to comply with the Dead's licensing than mp3.com.
This is more to the point, I think. I would say that an ideal solution would be for commercial mp3 sites to simply not carry Dead tunes. Leave it up to the amateurs, who have more of a vested interest in keeping it real.
--Alex
This makes sense (Score:2)
I think that the Grateful Dead were pretty revolutionary in their treatment of "bootlegging". Instead of considering it a loss of revenue, they called it free promotion. If only Fox would do the same thing with Simpsons fan sites!
You know... (Score:1)
gd trader etiquette (Score:1)
postage would be absolutely ok. handling I would say absolutely not. the media is reimbursable, the time to burn it, no.
bandwidth? uncharted territory....
shameless promo on...
Kuli Loach [halcyon.com]
shamless promo off
Re:Similar to DMB (Score:1)
Sounds fair to me...
The difference is plain and simple (Score:1)
"Gee, I asked for money to recompense charges for my connection, but I got so much that I have my ISP payed off for a year. Cool!"
sound quality of MP3 for DAT- and CD-R heads (Score:2)
I wonder if the band will have the same policy for good ol' PCM. You can squish a full CD-R to about 300 MB with shorten (roughly the wav equivelant of gzip). With cable modems/xDSL getting cheaper fully lossless online digital trading is becoming more of a reality, 'cept when everyone else on your subnet is doing the same thing and you're getting modem-fast transfer speeds.
Banner ads implies commercial volume (Score:1)
If you do it in your spare time for friends, your production is naturally limited. It should be the same for MP3s - if you can't afford it out of your own pocket, it's not a spare time hobby for a few friends any more.
--
Thank you! (Score:1)
Sometimes you get shown the light in the strangest of places if you look at it right!
---Anonymous Deadhead since 1990
Similar to DMB (Score:1)
Some people feel that trading for the cost of the tapes is fair. So you send me a 2-tape show, I send you $11 -- $4 / tape and $3 for shipping. Is that sales? Probably not, if you're just breaking even.
So now we have the wonderful world of MP3s. I have an MP3 website. You want MP3s. I pay $50 / month for hosting (all that storage, dontcha know), I get 50 downloads a month, so I figure that I want to show 5000 ads and get $0.01 each. That way, I break even. Just like when trading those tapes.
Oooh, but what if I show 5001 ads? Then I'm profiting. But is that wrong?
I dunno. But I've got the DMB site [nancies.org] anyhow, complete with ads. :)
Re:Dead Worship. (Score:1)
Standard Oil might not be interesting, but their effect on the stock market is always worth watching.
Re:Level of quality (Score:1)
You may or may not agree with this philosophy, but that's our goal. It's what DAT trading has always been about. People who spend $20,000 and up on recording equipment aren't really interested in compromises.
Compromize on Bandwidth Costs? (Score:2)
Reading the document it isn't really clear to me if this is allowed or not, but couldn't sites which have banner advertising simply have no banners on the pages where Dead mp3's are downloaded from. In other words, folks going to download other mp3's would see ads, as would those seeing the main page with, say, the letter indexes ("Bands whose names start with A", "B", "C", etc.), but once on the "grateful dead" page no advertising would appear. This might allow sites to pay for bandwidth, but still be in keeping with the spirit of what the Grateful Dead are trying to achieve.
Of course, then there's the ethical issue of whether Grateful Dead trading should be subsidized by the work and efforts of other bands who are, after all, competitors in a sense, which is what is arguably happening if banner ads to pay for the sites are viewed when downloading their material.
For what its worth, I agree with the philosophy the Dead are trying to promote -- I'm just wondering if there isn't an economical compromize that would be in keeping with their requirements, yet allow sites to continue to finance their existence.
comments? other ideas?
jean
Re:S&H, Media costs, etc. (Score:1)
The bands that could afford to distribute their live shows themselves off there site, would be large enough that they wouldn't need the exposure.
I disagree. It's easy for a small band to distribute free .mp3s. I'm going to be setting up a site for a small "bar band" that wants to serve their whole CD from the site. It should be fairly cheap ($50/month) and allow downloads galore.
Bandwidth is alot cheaper than tapes & postage. Blank CDs are cheaper than audio tapes too.
-=Julian=-
Re:Dead Worship. (Score:1)
And just because it is the 90's now doesn't mean that all the concert tapes aren't any more desireable. There are a lot of high quality recordings available that can be distributed endlessly now without degradation thanks to digital technology. I've always lived with analoge and hiss, but with MP3s, the incremental cost is negligable (say compared to a DAT deck), so it's much easier to go digital.
And of course, tapes are all we got now. Life hasn't been the same since 1995.
All "Jam" Bands embrace MP3 (Score:1)
policy is the same as all their other music
trading policies, basically it's okay as long as
you don't make money on the deal.
Most all of the Jam-bands are using MP3, many of them provide them on their websites for download, providing both album cuts and live show outtakes for the fans.
Lauan Records [lauan.com] (pronounced loo-ahn>, a Jam bands startup label, has colaborated with the Athens GA group Day By the River [daybytheriver.com] (DBR), to put out an all MP3 compact disc. They are providing over 4 hours of MP3 music for $10.00. If that isn't embracing the idea, I don't know what is.
Re:Bandwidth ain't expensive... (Score:1)
I take exception to CmdrTaco's statement that bandwidth is more expensive then postage. It is far cheaper to send something digitally then to use sailmail. Not only to you have to pay USPS but there is all costs (and time) involved in packaging and creating/copying the media you are sending. You add all the up and you can see that sailmail is very expensive and very inefficient (unless you are sending massive amounts of data concurrently). Do the math... figure out how much effort and money it would take to send out 5000 copies of a Greatful Dead single via sailmail. But then everybody on
Depends on what format you're sending in, of course. If I'm sending out a Dave Matthews concert in 128Kbps MP3 files, we're talking 150MB per complete download. That's not too bad for a person with a reasonably fat pipe.
The problem is that a lot of us have picky ears - I can tell when music (especially live music) has been MP3'd. So, I get concerts using Shorten, which is a high-speed lossless algorithim. It compresses 1.75:1, so a 2.5 hour concert is roughly 1GB. When you talk about large scale distribution, (even 50 is large scale), that much bandwidth isn't cheap. I can stick 3CDs in a single jewel case and mail it for under $2.
MP3 is nice to preview music, but with the quality of a lot of these recordings, I wouldn't want to burn a CD from MP3s when there's something better.
GPL Meets Deadheads (Score:1)
Isn't this interesting ??
The same principles that "govern" the distribution of GPL-generated software "govern" the limitations of DeadHeads distributing GH concert tapes !!
In the words of the recent Wired magazine, when will the music industry realize that "Good Karma is good for business" ??
anybody want to convert my collection to mp3? (Score:1)
Re:sound quality of MP3 for DAT- and CD-R heads (Score:1)
On the other hand, full PCM audio is taking off on the internet. My cohorts and I employ a string of ftp sites to spread shortened CD-R images. Lossless trading is very much a reality for us and there is no direct compensation. But as with the Open Source Software community, most people involved contribute to the scene. People host disks (thanks proftpd), do DAT > CDR conversions (*nod* pinlinux) or they burn CDRs for those without fat bandwidth. Of course, just as with OSS, there are always those who do not give back (especially the newer, more mainstream crop) but these people are the exception. I would think slashdotters especially would be understanding of the costs and time involved in this endevor of love.
Why not make it easy? (Score:1)
This is basically the scheme that was suppose to underlie the micropayments boom on the internet a few years ago. It failed to take off, because consumers were uninterested in paying for content. But in a situations like the one we are discussing, where you have a captive fan base and no other option for financing, maybe bandwidth-based micropayments are the way to go.
Re:Plus ca change... (Score:1)
Compensation (Score:1)
Usually media is given directly. Its all about sharing. No handling charges because the band worked to give you the music, you're only copying the band's work.
....saving up for another DAT deck
Re:Can a Dead Dog Learn New Tricks? (Score:1)
Bandwidth (Score:1)
Bandwidth may be expensive, but you can do a lot more with it then with a tape. At least in my case, MP3s are the only way my music gets recorded. My tape recorder does not work near as well as my computer. ;) Maybe one day i will even post my MP3 files on a web site instead of email on demand when i actually have new stuffle.
Let's keep it on the road. (Score:1)
The big picture here is the more important one, no profit from distribution, Blanks & Postage are and always will be acceptable. I have been trading tapes (and now CDs) for the last 10 years and that was the guiding philosophy. I don't think that using adverts to pay for the bandwidth is breaking any rules, it sortof falls under the aforementioned 'philosophy'. Oh and the dead were more popular in the 90's (higher concert sales) thatn they were in the 60's, 70's or 80's. FYI
Re: Pearl Jam is quite irrelevant now. (Score:1)
Re:Can a Dead Dog Learn New Tricks? (Score:1)
Plus ca change... (Score:1)
If I went out and got a Nak dragon tomorrow for tape dubbing, I can't recoup costs through GD trading.
I wonder though, is it permissable to have banners elsewhere on the site, just not on the download pages?
Andy
Re:Plus ca change... (Score:1)
Interesting question. What defines a "site"? What if I set up a site with banners, etc, and link your free download site within a frame? Legally, I'd argue that I'm not providing the downloads, and you'd argue that you're not making money. You could perhaps sue me, but that wouldn't do the Dead any good.
Fact is, if anybody's looking for clear bright legal lines, they're going to have trouble finding them. This will evolve in a very informal manner. The Dead have expressed their support for trading in non-commercial settings. That gives them the moral authority to decide what's cool and what's not, and their fans have a history or more or less acceeding to what the band wants. For example, if they decided that a "framing" site as described above was not cool, they could take some action. But even if legal action were pursued against a few sites, and whether it were successful or not, the overall effect of the policy will be to keep the number of offending sites to a minimum.
It's a nice way to do business.
Re:Similar to DMB (Score:1)
Dude, if you're buying analog tapes for $4 a piece get in touch with me. I'll get them for about $2 a piece, and sell you them for $3, amd we'll both gouge people.
Of course, if you're talking DAT, forget I said anything.
George
Re:Postage, media (Score:2)
Nothing really, though if it gets out on r.m.gd, you get lots of flames and presumably it's harder to get nice tapes from 'heads with huge collections who buy into the no profit thing.
Curiously though, people selling off analogs for about $2.00 a piece (usually upgrading to DAT) get far fewer flames, $2 being the apparent marker price for blanks and postage.
George
Re:GPL Meets Deadheads (Score:1)
Personally, I don't have a problem with a site putting up banner ads or even charging for the download. I know that if a site charged, there would be another site willing to do it for free.
Re:Level of quality (Score:1)
Back when I was taping...my little DAT nearly broke the bank..lets just say i had to sell alot of baubles in the lot. I dont think that makes us less "hardcore" or serious...just enjoying it the best way we know how...