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Music Media

Canadian Recording Industry Ass'n Lets DJs use MP3s 171

Yannick writes "Wired is reporting that Canadian [mobile] DJs are now (legally) permitted to use MP3s in their 'performances'. Seems that there's CA$200 cover charge (and further fees per additional hard disk). The whole thing has some interesting implications for the music industry in general..."
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Canadian Recording Industry Ass'n Lets DJs use MP3s

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  • Usually Canada follows what the States does in situations like this; it's nice to see us doing this. I didn't hear anything about it...

    Maybe that's how it happened. Does RIAA have any influence in Canada? I wouldn't be surprised if some industry group showed up here and tried to mess things up.

    - Steve
  • It's nice to see some law coming into place that makes sense. I hope the U.S. can see how much of a benefit passing "common sense" laws would help out our economy.

  • Here's what I'm wondering about--being as the US music industry has repeatedly denied the legitimacy of MP3s because of their lack of copy-protection, doesn't it kind of cut down their case to have a relatively major organization condone them?

    Here's the real question, though--what do you do you do when a Windows using DJ gets a BSOD in the middle of a party?

    ~=Keelor

  • Affect me as an American. If the goog ol' US of A decides to prevent MP3 use they can and will with or without the premission of any world wide authority.
  • by crow ( 16139 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @10:32AM (#1521118) Homepage Journal
    Uck.

    Why do they need some special law for this? If they own the CDs, they should be able to repackage the data anyway they want, as long as they're only using it the way they would use the original media.

    In the United States, a DJ can already do this, and he won't have to pay any special licensing fees. It's only illegal if he distributes copies, or if he doesn't retain the originals.
  • Here's the real question, though--what do you do you do when a Windows using DJ gets a BSOD in the middle of a party?

    Hand him a CD of your favorite Linux Distribution and your next song request?! :)
  • I don't know where you get your information, but ANY reproduction of copywritten media is illegal in the US. You are not even legally allowed to make a copy of a CD to tape so that you can listen to it in your car, you are supposed to by in on Tape as well.
  • I actually heard that most radio stations use file servers with some kind of audio file format already. Why is this revelent? Can you use .wav .au .ras instead?
  • Hate to be a nationalist but how does the policy..Affect me as an American.

    It doesn't, but not everyone who reads slashdot is american.

    -- iCEBaLM, Proud Canadian
  • by PickldPlur ( 96141 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @10:39AM (#1521123)

    i'm curious as to what kind of equipment (hardware and software) they're using.

    there are pro sound cards i would trust to do the audio out, but i've never seen anything but 1/8" and POS d/ac's on laptops. the d/ac doesn't matter THAT much for live playback, but i don't trust those 1/8" cables in a mobile situation at all.

    i've done it before with some success, but not at the level they're talking about. and every 1/8"->RCA cable i've ever used has flaked. i do suppose a pro 1/4" stereo to RCA or just a 1/4" stereo to dual 1/4" mono would work and be convertable... but something still strikes me wrong about it

    oh yeah: yes, pro vs consumer cables REALLY matter for this stuff. not for audio quality, but for durability. even heavy duty 1/4" cables short sometimes when you move them around that much, and have dancing people around.

    i'm also curious as to what software he's using. the only dj software i've seen for windows in virtual turntables.. which has been kinda iffy with me... a big problem is that you can't cue (listen to one song while playing another) unless you do a setup where the right channel out gets the cue and the left channel out gets the signal, which just isn't acceptable to me. anyone found anything better?

    ps. i'm sticking with my 1200s ;)

  • ...the RIAA get the .mp3 of "Blame Canada!" ? I'm sure they'll need it in a few hearings :)

    Dan
  • by jdube ( 101986 )
    This is very cool... the MP3 hate slackens in good ole Canada. My friends and I in the US are making something that can play MP3s on our school radio (not just plugging in a laptop... bringing in a CD/disk [not sure which just comin in in the middle of the project :P] for which we will build a player for...) so that'll be cool.


    If you think you know what the hell is really going on you're probably full of shit.
  • by Chemical Serenity ( 1324 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @10:45AM (#1521126) Homepage Journal
    The RIAA doesn't have a problem with mp3's per se, just what people are doing with them.

    I'm working on a project right now to stream .mp3s while remaining in RIAA guidelines (quite a steaming pile of some nasty-ass legalese... I've been on the phone with them and my contractor's lawyer more than a few times trying to get it all straight).

    What appears to be the RIAA's biggest worry (as evidenced by thier legal stuffies) is not that people have .mp3s, or even that they're broadcasting them over the net (or at a party or dance or whatever), but that their use is allowing people to bypass buying CDs. Take, for example, this snippit from the Digital Millenium Copyright Act [riaa.com] (one of the documents one must adhere to for compliance), which states:

    Sound recording performance complement. A Webcaster may not play in any three-hour period (1) more than three songs from a particular album, including no more than two consecutively, or (2) four songs by a particular artist or from a boxed set, including no more than three consecutively.

    This is designed so that people can't simply set up a recording device of some sort and 'recreate' an album just by tuning in an pushing the button with the red dot. Other entries in there also seem geared towards non-copying things (some outright, others more hidden).

    Under the circumstances, it seems pretty unlikely that DJs using mp3s in the field are going to be doing so for copying/trading purposes, so the RIAA probably wouldn't really give much of a care... and even if they did, the ability to police every kegger, rave and school dance is an impracticality of enormous proportions.

    BTW - The site is at www.quicktracks.com [quicktracks.com]. Please note that in its current incarnation we're *not* compliant. I'm working on that software right now, so the beastie will be up and down a bit over the next week or so as I poke at it.

    --
    rickf@transpect.SPAM-B-GONE.net (remove the SPAM-B-GONE bit)

  • by fishbowl ( 7759 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @10:46AM (#1521127)
    Unauthorized duplication and distribution is illegal. But the doctrine of "fair use" creates
    a situation where certain rights of the consumer
    are not taken away by license, and they cannot be
    taken away. This is why it's ok to backup your
    music by copying it to tape, or backup your book
    by writing it out longhand, but not ok to broadcast the copy (e.g., in a jukebox in your bar, or as a pro DJ) for profit.

    Law in the USA is not a binary state, it's an interpretive struggle between the letter and the spirit of the laws, with great latitude tending towards individual rights.

    Regardless of what you read on slashdot or alt.redneck.conspiracy-theorists, individual rights are alive and well protected in the USA
    for the most part.
  • There's a plugin called PitchFork for WinAmp that lets you do this sort of thing. Basic beat counting/synching etc. Although to do it right you need a mixing board and 2 sound cards.. I suppose you can use DirectSound if you really wanted to ;) For linux, I dunno (although I'm sure some others out here might have some idea :). By the way, is playing MP3's instead of cd/vinyl while DJing explicitly illegal here in the US?
  • by Denor ( 89982 ) <denor@yahoo.com> on Thursday November 18, 1999 @10:49AM (#1521129) Homepage
    It's nice to see that there's at least some company that's not completely in the dark about MP3s (*cough*RIAA*cough*). But if I were a DJ in this situation, I'd hardly be happy. In fact, I'd probably see it as yet another way for the rather greedy record industry to line their pockets. Why? Some quotes from the article:
    DJs can buy a license giving them the right to burn their own compilation CDs of "useable tracks," ... The license allows them to reproduce music as MP3s to be used at their gigs
    and...
    The CN$200 fee gives DJs a blanket license to make one reproduction of music released by most of the major record companies.
    In other words, the AVLA is charging you for the priveledge of copying onto your hard drive songs that you already own!
    It's a step forward for recognition of MP3s as not-just-pirated-material, but it's not exactly a great thing altogether.
  • I don't know where you get your information, but ANY reproduction of copywritten media is illegal in the US. You are not even legally allowed to make a copy of a CD to tape so that you can listen to it in your car, you are supposed to by in on Tape as well.

    Well, I don't know where you get your information, but it is perfectly legal for an individual to make copies of digital recordings for personal, non-commercial use (assuming the original recording was obtained legally). http://www.bitlaw.com/source/17usc/100 8.html [bitlaw.com] even indicates this ("... or based on the noncommercial use by a consumer of such a device or medium for making digital musical recordings or analog musical recordings."). The obvious difference in this case is that, in the case of some DJs, this is a commercial use. Thus the recording industry's magnanimous offer.

    logan

  • Same question here. Is it possible to scratch an MP3?

    ------------------
  • i'm also curious as to what software he's using. the only dj software i've seen for windows in virtual turntables.. which has been kinda iffy with me... a big problem is that you can't cue (listen to one song while playing another) unless you do a setup where the right channel out gets the cue and the left channel out gets the signal, which just isn't acceptable to me. anyone found anything better?

    the better way to do it is with multiple soundcards. one device pipes to your headphones, and the other out the speakers. vtt can do that, i believe.

  • Of the DJ's I knew, some swear by vinyl and others use CD's. But all of them want mixing control, and I don't think MP3 will have that for a while.

    As for sound quality, vinyl doesn't have as high a frequency range as CD, but MP3 worsens the problem by aliasing in some cases.

  • There's a plugin called PitchFork for WinAmp that lets you do this sort of thing. Basic beat counting/synching etc. Although to do it right you need a mixing board and 2 sound cards.. I suppose you can use DirectSound if you really wanted to ;) For linux, I dunno (although I'm sure some others out here might have some idea :).

    By the way, is playing MP3's instead of cd/vinyl while DJing explicitly illegal here in the US?

  • "Laptop Rockers" nowadays use various techniques to avoid the 1/8" curse. One of them is PC Card audio cards, which do exist but not in the mainstream. One good example is the Kyma box, which can interface to a PC Card or PCI card and has an upgradeable amount of 1/4"/XLR outputs and inputs, plus multiple special-use DSPs. Not a bad deal.

    The other avenue many take is the newer USB audio route, which was only recently supported on the Laptop Rocker Laptop of Choice, the Wallstreet Powerbook, but is making headway. Check out http://www.usbstuff.com for some products in that range.

    Finally, they don't have to use laptops-- I for one have a rackmount system that has a breakout 1U space audio box with 1/4" balanced connectors, preamps, the whole works.

    As far as software, I would imagine that some of the newer DirectSound enabled ones (for Wintel) allow different tracks to go out of different outputs on your card. So if you have 8 outputs, 1/2 go to broadcast, 3/4 for vo, 5/6 for monitor, etc...

  • by Plasmic ( 26063 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @10:54AM (#1521136)
    It seems the key difference between the American music industry and the Canadian music industry is the existance of Canada's Audio Video Licensing Agency (AVLA). It's run by the CRIA (similar to RIAA). The AVLA can license music for specific uses if the record companies will agree.

    I assumed that major record companies would be opposed to DJs' use of MP3s, as I always held the RIAA's opposition to MP3s as a projection of major record companies' opposition. However, the article says:

    Most of the major record companies have signed on to AVLA's licensing scheme, although Universal Music -- which owns Polygram -- continues to hold out.

    What does this mean? Well, for starters, it means that every major record company that sells music in Canada thought it was worth mentioning that MP3s even existed. In addition, they thought that it was just fine for some people to commercially use licensed music in MP3 format.

    What does this mean?

    The RIAA is more evil than the record companies they allege to represent.

    The RIAA web site says:

    Consumers, retailers and replicators can report suspected music piracy to the RIAA by dialing a toll-free hotline, 1-800-BAD-BEAT or sending e-mail to badbeat@riaa.com.

    So call them and tell them that you spotted a geeky-looking DJ with a laptop possessing licensed copies of Top 40 MP3s run across the US-Canadian border to avoid capture by authorities. He's probably armed and dangerous.
  • All you naysayers about Vinyl vs. MP3 should take a look at this...

    http://www.n2it.net/finalscratch/ [n2it.net]

    There.

  • by FFFish ( 7567 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @10:58AM (#1521138) Homepage

    It's important to remember that the Canadian government is still well on its way to imposing the asinine 50-cents-for-15-minutes tax on digital recording media.

    The supposed rationale is that the tax will make up for the revenue lost by recording artists who have their works pirated. The monies collected are supposed to be distributed to those starving artists.

    Unfortunately, the distribution will be based on the artists volume of media sold. The truly starving artists won't receive bugger all, while Celine Dion and Bryan Adams rake in yet more dough.

    And never you mind that the tax is indiscriminate. You might never use your CDROM for music; you use it as data backup. You'll be paying the artists tax anyway, unless there's some sort of language that lets "For Data Use"-labelled CDROMs be sold taxless, while "For Music Use"-labelled ones be sold taxed.

    It's a right cockup, in any case, and you can register your protest at http://www.sycorp.com/levyinfo.htm [sycorp.com]. Please do!

  • There's a DJ software for the iMac Megaseg [megaseg.com] that allows mix/cue etc.
    It started out as AIFF/CD play, but added QT4 and MP3 support as well.
    Personally, I think this is great! Not only as a Canadian, but as a wanna-be DJ.
    I like the idea of not having to carry crates of vinyl and/or CDs around with me to a gig. Just think! You can MP3 your favourite vinyl, and it doesn't wear out, get dirty or stolen.
    You'd still need some removavble media, like CD-R or Orb/Jaz to me more flexible, but those new iMacs have like 10Gb harddrives, so you'd get a LOT of milage off anything you put on there.
    OTOH, do DJ's have to pay licenses for commercial clubs? If not, then why the fsck should we pay just for the format? What if I keep all my files as compressed AIFF? or QT4? What then?

    Pope
  • Hate to be a nationalist but how does the policy.. Affect me as an American

    Is it meant to affect you in some way?


    If you don't find the story interesting/relevent then just don't read it. You're not the only person who reads /. you know. Nor are we all American...


  • by Signal 11 ( 7608 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @11:02AM (#1521141)
    You may read, view, or otherwise observe the contents of this post. You are also granted the non-exclusive right to copy this post to a information storage device such as a 'PC', however at no time may there be more than one copy of this post be viewable from the information storage device through any medium. Reader is further warned that poster hereby disclaims any responsibility that will result from reading this pseudo-legalise. Author of this post does not offer any warranty, either implied or otherwise....

    Any fool can create legalise and obscure things, and any fool will mind it. Information has been, and always will be... free. The RIAA would spend it's resources better trying to make water run uphill.


    --
  • ...completely unregulated, and now the recording industry isn't blinded by hatred of MP3s. It's nice to know that those in power aren't completely clueless up here in Canada.
  • Imagine it. DJ MusicDealer caries around his magic machine with gigs of music, dodging the law. He goes to a party to deal out his music with a serial port board which interfaces with the Diamond Rio devices. They don't wanna pay $50 a cd (it's the future -- inflation). The cops break in, people scatter. </joke>

    ---
  • Not that I have ever done anything like this ever. But I think it would happen like this...

    Unless you're on crack there is a table of some sort set up for all your equipment and the cables run along it somehow. No-one should be touching your cables, much less dancing on them. The real worry should be if the cable will be given a sharp tug in the wrong direction, not it's transmission quality. You give the RCA a quick yank and you can break/crack the connection solder within your mixer or soundcard. To damage a cable requires cutting it or bending it so sharply as to crack/cut the metal wire within the sheath.

    Standard 1/8th to RCA work perfectly fine. They should be treated as well as you treat the rest of your equipment. But they're still cheap. Always carry a spare.

    As for laptop sound cards, good, cheap, 16bit DACs have been standard for years. If you can find 20 or 24 bit DAC, even better.

    Cueing is a serious issue. Linux can support multiple sound devices. I do not know if other OS's do. Worse comes to worse you use two laptops connection to a mixer. Cueing by default.


    "You want to kiss the sky? Better learn how to kneel." - U2
    "It was like trying to herd cats..." - Robert A. Heinlein
  • is why anyone needs "permission". If you own the actual CD's and can present them when provided with a legally binding request I don't see why one would NEED anyone's permission to use them.

    LK
  • by Cplus ( 79286 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @11:04AM (#1521147) Homepage Journal
    I'm a dj in Canada and one of the great things about djing up here in the past has been that you can buy collections of licenced songs. You may have 600 albums that you've scraped pennies for but you probably don't have all of the songs that people would request (if you take em). I bought a collection of 200 cd's with my selection of songs on them. Covered everything and now when I n4eed neew music I only have to get singles updates. They're not for general distribution and are only available through dj supply companies, but sweet to have. THis mp3 licence is basically a revamping of the law that allows this in Canada.
  • This can be viewed two ways: one, a major international organization is making a step in a productive manner that could, hopefully, get other countries to move in that direction, and two, they made a law to charge you for something that was already free. To my knowledge, it has always been free to rip music from CDs for your personal use, granted that you own the CD as well. There is a whole website devoted to mp3s [mp3.com] that promotes a product, MusicMatch [musicmatch.com], that is available at www.download.com [download.com].
  • Finalscratch [harmonycentral.com] looks kind of cool. I can't get to the n2it site, though. Not sure if it's still available or not.

    -beme
  • by MtnMan1021 ( 47935 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @11:09AM (#1521150)
    The concept of limiting the license to one hard drive is quite limited, to say the least.
    How does one define a hard drive?
    Does a RAID count?
    IBM now has 73.4GB hard drives (Ultrastar 72ZX). What is the point of limiting the storage to one physical hard drive?
    Does the license apply to mp3's stored on other media?
    How is the hard drive license enforceable and how are partitions dealt with?

    Just a rant, ignore me.
    ----- --- - - -
    jacob rothstein
  • by Anonymous Coward
    A neato software program for windows that is use is Foxplay. It is great for organizing music files .. from mp3s to midis to real audio to mods ... etc .. The author even considering a Linux port (with possibilities of releasing the source!) http://descent2.com/dorsola/ [descent2.com] is the url. I don't know much about the equipment djs use, but this tool is certainly nifty and my proove to be so for djs :)
  • TerminatorX [fht-esslingen.de]

    I'm having compile issues with it, but most people get it to work.


    "You want to kiss the sky? Better learn how to kneel." - U2
    "It was like trying to herd cats..." - Robert A. Heinlein
  • by Coward, Anonymous ( 55185 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @11:12AM (#1521153)
    Is it possible to scratch an MP3?

    You can use FinalScratch [n2it.net]. You can use a turntable-like device hooked up to your machine to get the same effects you'd get with a normal turntable (scratching, speed up, slow down, etc.). It's only available for BeOS.
  • so far, it seems that the RIAA is so short sighted, that its making them totally paranoid of any use of music without having each person who's going to be hearing it pay them.

    For example... the idea that it is bad for a radio station (or webcaster) to play an entire album over the air is absurd. First, it's unlikely that many people are going to have the forsight to record a whole show, let alone have their finger on the trigger, so to speak. If they were that excited to get the album, they'd eventually go buy it when they get fed up with the low quality indicative of home made recordings. the biggest thing tho, is that most people buy CDs after hearing them or at least a big piece of them on the radio. If you are only allowed to play a few songs on the air, the listener isnt going to get the 'big picture' of the album and isnt going to know whether or not they want to buy it. I mean, I dont make a habbit of buying CDs for 1 song. Not for 20 bucks... and I KNOW that it doesnt cost the RIAA even close to that to print and market the CDs (per disc)

    So, really, the RIAA should not have such a big nose in such things. It'd be better for them, and everyone for radio djs to play whatever they want, in whatever order, whenever. Most DJs on smaller stations, where its more common to play a whole album arent likely to care about this little clause in the law. Nor do I think that anyone will really care if they break it.
  • as a dj... i would put together "bathroom dats" for when i really needed to go and didn't have an assistant to keep spinning while i was gone. just shove the puppy in the dat, and let it roll. when i asked a copyright lawyer type person about it, they said it was okey dokey as long as i retained the originals and had them present at the gig. seems to me, this would go for mp3s as well... hmm... methinks a laptop with an external scsi array might be in the works.
    ------------------------------------------
    the amazing bc
    latin/funk flugelhorn & trumpet
    webnaut, music junkie, sysadmin from hell
  • It serves to demonstrate to you that counter productive political forces in the United States are holding back important technologies. Watch as the rest of the world embraces MP3 and strong crypto meanwhile American companies, restricted by powerful special interests, fall behind.
  • I dont make a habbit of buying CDs for 1 song. Not for 20 bucks... and I KNOW that it doesnt cost the RIAA even close to that to print and market the CDs (per disc)

    I believe the number is something around $0.80 per CD (according to a Wired article - dead tree version- I saw a while back).
  • I just wanted to know how this could effect possible movements in the US. Policy makers take cues from different places around the globe not just what people dream up here.
  • What's ironic here is that while Canada is actually taking the lead in this to legitimize mp3s, the only hold-out company from the Audio Video Licensing Agency, Universal Music, is actually a Canadian owned company (owned by Seagram of Montreal).....
  • What I don't understand is why one has to pay $200 for every hard drive they use to store MP3s. I don't know about Canada, but in the U.S., is there not a law that allows you to make backup copies of copyrighted materials (that you have legally acquired, of course)?

    If the DJs have already purchased the CDs, and therefore have paid the companies (and, supposedly, the artists) why should they have to pay additional fees just to convert the music into a different format?

    --

  • It's possible that the only software he's using is for the player (ie WinAmp or equivalent), and is just sending the sound card output into a mixer. In which case it's essentially the same situation as with a CD as source; this way you just don't have to bring all sorts of CDs.
  • i'm assuming this is in addition to the "standard" gear that one carries. if it were me, i'd rackmount a fullsize computer with a 200 cd-rom jukebox, use a multi-channel soundcard (of the variety from hollywood sound) with a seperate external, rack-mount DAC to the analog mixer and out to the amps. all of it in road-cases with shock-protection, of course. use a small 14" monitor with whatever mp3 playback software you prefer, and you'd be in business (hell... winamp supports playing two files to two different sources at once). of course, you're gonna have to be up on your ASCAP and BMI dues to be legal, but that's another story entirely.

    1200's sure are a lot cheaper and more fun, though. *grin*
    ------------------------------------------
    the amazing bc
    latin/funk flugelhorn & trumpet
    webnaut, music junkie, sysadmin from hell
  • But DJ's don't own the songs, they own a round piece of plastic.

    The $200 CAN fee buys business users of the song the right to transfer it into a form that they find more convienent or efficient. I don't think it's too unreasonable to expect copyright holders to receive payment from businesses for making copies of their works.
  • There's nothing stopping a DJ from taking the sound output from the sound card and sending that into a mixer. Chances are the DJ isn't going to be relying solely/at all on the computer for mixing (it's just much simpler to use a hardware mixer than try to do all that with a mouse). But using MP3 can make the DJ's job a bit easier so that rather than shuffle through hordes of CDs, it's a quick couple of clicks.
  • Your fine use of the English language clearly shows you to be of alternate extraction. However, one US-centric comment need not raise your ire to a stage such as this. Comments like that only serve to perpetuate the sterotype that we as 'foreigners' are stupid, insensitive, nose-in-the-air cads. Besides, most /. posters are 'American', as is the site itself. Don't like the company? I'm sure Argentina has an equivalent, perhaps even in a more familiar tongue. Go there, and leave us to /.
  • Why can't the DJs just play the MP3s anyways, as long as they have bought the CD in the first place?

    Is there a reason why a DJ here in the US can't buy a CD, MP3 it, and then take that somewhere to play it? He's already paid the record company (and thus the RIAA) and now he is just using his music.

    Where's the problem? Why does he need a license?

    (And yes I know this law exists in Canda, but the wired article implied US DJs can't use MP3s. I don't understand why.)
  • I don't it's so much that the RIAA is short-sighted as self-sighted. They're thinking of how much money it's going to cost them in lost record sales. I agree though, the people who would record and copy are probably not affluent enough to buy an 'atom-collection' of thier music. I personally think they're also reeling from the idea that people can just scoop the tracks they want from a CD and chuck the rest... how many times have you bought a disc which only had 2 decent songs on it? Ya gotta wonder how much they make off the 'single-driven buyer', ie: the customer who hears a couple singles on the K-RAD, the local top50, and thinks "COOL! I gotta have!"

    FYI, radio stations are allowed to air an entire record (within certain guidelines). They're exempt from a lot of these rules, and for good reason... radio stations are the most effective advertising media for new music the RIAA and the individual recording studios have. I believe radio stations are also completely exempt from limitations on storage methods (.wav, .au, .mp3 or whatever) as long as they destroy those units within a 6 month period.

    --
    rickf@transpect.SPAM-B-GONE.net (remove the SPAM-B-GONE bit)

  • The thing that really gets me is that most of the Canadian labels are subsidiaries of American labels (ie. EMI Canada, Sony Canada). If you take into account that these companies are generally controlled by the same execs and policies (adjusted to Canadian law) then you see how the RIAA really shapes American policy without taking into account the wishes of the consumer, the artist, or the record company.
  • by Kartoffel ( 30238 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @11:37AM (#1521171)

    Since when were Canadian DJs NOT allowed to use MP3s in their performances? As long as the DJ legally purchased the original record or CD that the mp3 came from I see nothing wrong with spinning mp3s. What an absurd law.

    The article in Wired gives the impression that it was previously illegal to use anything other than the original media when DJ'ing for money...as if! Even the most backwards RIAA toad would agree that it's OK for DJs to create compilations for use in performances, as long as they own the originals and never distribute the compilation.

    The CN$200 fee gives DJs a blanket license to make one reproduction of music released by most of the major record companies.

    And we're supposed to act like this is a good thing? DJs have used homemade cassette tape recordings in their performances for years without anyone making a fuss. Granted, most serious DJs use vinyl or CD these days, but there's nothing stopping them from using minidiscs or DATs if they wanted. It looks to me like Canada has lifted a restriction where no restriction ever existed, along with adding a convenient new source or revenuse (from the $200 license). However, IANAC (I am not a Canadian). Somebody please correct me if I'm wrong ;).

    Using re-recorded media is nothing new. DJs have also been able to use samples of copyrighted media (within certain limits) for ever.

    Better go turn myself in to the RCMP: one time I drove through part of Canada while listening to burned audio CDs made from mp3s. It's a good thing nobody else heard the music or offered to pay me for it, or I'd be in big trouble, eh!?

  • Sadly, the group developing the Final Scratch
    seems to have fallen apart over internal issues
    during the commercialization process -- hopes
    for final scratch production now hinge on a
    random large company picking up the idea and
    running with it, from what I've heard.

    I still want one, even if the label on the
    side says "Pioneer" :)
  • what if said dj does NOT use mp3, but rather vinyl. The dj's set is broadcast live over the 'net, as well as archived in digital audio (.mp3, .ra, etc..) later on. Will this be going against the RIAA? The audio itself is off of traditional media, but the end result is still in a digital format on a PC. Maybe I am not seeing the difference.
  • This isn't a law. It's a lisencing agreement from the Cadadian Recording Industry Association
    -
    <SIG>
    "I am not trying to prove that I am right... I am only trying to find out whether." -Bertolt Brecht
  • by Kaz Kylheku ( 1484 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @11:43AM (#1521175) Homepage
    People copy copyrighted material from CD's to hard disks all the time. It's called ``software installation''. Also, back in the days when software was shipped on floppies, it was acceptable practice to make backup floppies.

    Copies that are made for personal convenience or backup purposes don't amount to copyright infringement.

    The DJ already has legal master copies and is allowed to play them to the clients, so what does it matter by what means the music makes its way to the speakers?

    What's surprising to me is that this wasn't previously allowed.
  • Indeed it is!
    BeOS is the DJ OS.
  • either this laptop has a hundred serial ports or this is going to be a _really_ long party.
  • How does one define a hard drive? Does a RAID count? [...] How is the hard drive license enforceable and how are partitions dealt with?
    That's an interesting question. One us2them style translator [perl.com] notes that when technical neophytes say "hard drive", they can mean any of
    1. controller
    2. disk
    3. disk controller
    4. disk drive
    5. drive
    6. file system
    7. logical disk
    8. mount point
    9. partition
    10. physical disk
    And doubtless a good bit more. I have no idea what they think of a striped or concatenated filesystem. Well, yes I do. They don't. :-) Essentially, "hard drive" is nearly always used in a sloppy fashion by non-technical speakers to mean something rather different than its technical meaning. I would strongly avoid the term, if I were you, considering how messily overloaded it is.
  • they made a law to charge you for something that was already free.

    That's not what is happening.

    To my knowledge, it has always been free to rip music from CDs for your personal use, granted that you own the CD as well.

    Yes, this continues to be true. Nobody is charging for personal use. The point you're missing is that playing songs commercially at someone else's party isn't personal use; it's commercial use.
  • I believe that the idea is that you are allowed to make only one mp3 of a particular track per licence. That way a DJ company can't buy only one licence and do two or more events at the same time playing the same music. The DJ needs one licence per set of mp3s. If the licence does actually specify "per hard drive" as opposed to the reporter's interpretation of the licence, then it probably needs to be reworded to "per computer" or "per copy of an mp3 collection."

    You are correct that it dosen't make sense to licence per HD. Legally it would be foolish.

  • by In-Doge ( 116196 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @12:17PM (#1521188)
    As a local underground DJ here in Vancouver, it's going to be intresting to see where this goes. Over in Toronto the CRIA assisted the RCMP in the seziure of DJ mixtapes from the shelves of undergroud record stores, and the proesuction of some of the shop owners. This caused the pulling of mixtapes from at least 2 well-known underground music stores here in Vancouver. Personally IMO the CRIA has no place doing this as a lot of the record labels that are on those tapes have no association with the CRIA (a lot of the record labels that make the music come from the UK.) At the worst I see the CRIA taking a crusade against underground media (DJ Mixtapes, bootleg remixes) like the RIAA has taken against the MP3 scene. I definitely don't think we've seen the last of the CRIA tho, since the last 2 times the CRIA has been in the headlines that I've heard, the word "DJ" has been in the sentence.

    And anyways, personally again the CRIA should put thier hands in another cookie jar, this one may be tasty, but it's definitely not profitiable (at least on the level I'm on now.)
  • > Actually, DJ's are not allowed to play any
    > music they own copies of. They must obtain a
    > license to play their tunes. (Just like radio
    > stations .)

    Actually, the DJ doesn't need to have that license if the space he/she
    is performing in has one. And almost any club that a DJ would be in
    has such a license. I don't know a single DJ that has one.

  • I'm not sure if you're a Canadian or not, but for those who aren't, a small lesson in Canadian "Culture" (There is actually no such thing).

    The 50cents for 15minutes tax is an idea from beaurocrats (sp?) that seem to think that Canadian "Culture" (of which Heritage Minister, Shiela Copps, cannot define) is in danger of being overwhelmed by US commercialism. I'm not really sure if I disagree with the notion.

    Really, this law ranks up there with the 40% CanCon regulation (Broadcasters in Canada must have 40% Canadian Content) and Quebec's Bill 101 (a.k.a. The Illegal Language Law for which they have been crying "Notwithstanding Clause" forever..)

    Knee jerk reactions to problems which do not exist, IMO.

    Back to my point, if Canadian Content is good enough, then it should be able to stand on its own merit. I understand that when they first brought in the 40% CanCon reg it was necessary. I do not believe it is now. The same goes the for the 50cents-for-15minutes tax. I am already paying way too much tax (50%) and I don't want to pay anymore. The only difference between this tax and income tax, is that some lousy musician my be living off me when I didn't even buy their disc.
  • Usually Canada doesn't follow the states, take a look at encryption, while the US restricts import of encryption tools, Canada is encouraging it and informing people about higher encryption. It's the United States that are starting to be left behind in the technological revolution
  • I am wondering how the Government is taking all these "phillips Cd recorders" commercials. There was one where a guy burned a CD and brought it to a huge party, and gave it to the DJ. Isn't that illegal?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Eh! Don't forget the whole $0.50 to $1 the artist gets for their trouble.

    Now we're at $1.80. And, you'd better let the store you buy it at have $1 profit to stay in business.

    That's $2.80. Plus tax... Of course, now the RIAA has to play for their 'net police:

    That's $2.80 + $15. Total $17.80. And don't forget the fatcat RIAA salary: $1. And, the distributors have to eat... $1.

    Now, we have the current price $19.80.

    If internet distribution was allows without the BS RIAA and the now not required distributors (sound could be sold by the people who make it), and no record store or media price... $1.

    At that price, I'd NEVER copy another tape, ever... I promise. I might even rat on the cheap ass who would (ok, I only said that to keep the RIAA happy, really)... There's no excuse at $1. It would never be worth the effort again.

    Here's my beef: A CD costs $20. Most pop-groups make a CD in about 5 months (or less). They sell more CD's than most of today's popular bestsellers (not including the Bible, etc...). And a CD is cheaper to make than a book. And many books take over a year to write (or so I hear) Sooo:

    Why does a CD cost $20, and a paperback $5?

    ANSWER: RIAA!
  • I hate to tell you but I have been out of the loop for both sound and enryption. Firstly I have never owned a computer that ever had sound support. Secondly I have never had the opportunity to really have access to a system that needed to have access to data that should have been encrypted. I have never been able to impliment enrypted e-mail in any shape or form due to the lack of a computer that I could secure with a real IP. Lastly I would love the chance to actually travel the world but there are several things stopping me: Language barriers, lack of a large ammount of petty cash, ability to obtain anything but suboptimal employment in said country as a foreigner. Barring these problems I would love to look at the rest of all else that is there but I am pretty much have not seen all of my country first. I know most other people can pretty much predict what their countries will hold for them due to size but I haven't left the part of mine that I am inhabiting now. Cultural diversity in the US is quite astounding and I would like to see more of it.

  • That remark is on the second page, at http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,32554-2, 00.html:

    "There are no collective industry organizations in the United States such as AVLA, which is empowered to collect license fees and disburse them among record companies. Consequently, American DJs have no legal mechanical reproduction rights at all, never mind the right to make MP3s."

    WTF is this? You should have the right unless some specific law says you don't. I'd like to know that specific law. My point is if the DJ drops in and plays and mixes mp3's and one of them is pirated, then if someone thinks it's pirated then do an audit. Mic-record what he is playing and then see if he has the actual music purchased on CD or vinyl. It's far simpler than all this 'licensing' crap.

    But that's the point..they want to make this into an extortion racket. You buy the music once and then pay again to play it. Bah. I'll just hold my own private parties.
  • I too found this rather odd. If anything I would think that they would be charging royalties or licence fees for performacerights, not copying. After all why should care whether you transfer the music onto tape, hard drives or wax cylinders? It's the fact that you are playing the music in public for profit that matters. Also, as the AVLA acknowledges in the article, these DJ's are doing record companies a favour by made new music a heard when they can't get played on any of the "classic" rock or golden oldies station that dominate the commercial radio spectrum. So who are they to complain (or creating extra charges) if they won't distribute songs in a format or package that is easily usable by professional (mobile) DJ's. When I was involved in radio a couple of decades ago, record companies supplied records for free to most radio stations, just to be sure that the song would get airplay. (Although they did charge royalties for each play.) Nowdays it seems to be the other way around. Sure clubs and DJ's are making a profit by playing these records, but they are also helping to sell them.I think record companies need to lighten up a little.

    TC

    (This comment posted using Mozilla M11)
  • And spin 'em at 78RPM with steel needles that cut right through 'em in no time. Not like those backward cylinder heads with their Edison players, by crackey!
  • From the article: But "with MPEG-3 compression you can get a lot of music on a hard drive," said Heindl

    Perhaps I'm mistaken, but isn't it MPEG-1 layer 3?

  • There was no change of law in Canada. What happened was this organization (AVLA) just changed their licensing to allow the DJs to make MP3s. It is still illegal to make unauthorized copies of music. Now, making MP3s is legal for DJs though. A small difference, but still significant. The legal system didn't decide that MP3s are okay (for DJs), the music industry did.
  • Alberta is the best province..
  • what do you do you do when a Windows using DJ gets a BSOD in the middle of a party?

    Easy: have a portable CD player standing by to take over during a reboot. Or, have another laptop ready to go. A laptop powerful enough to just play MP3s is cheap... I'd do this even if I was running Linux. Murphy's law that the one time it would crash would have to be in front of hundreds of people...

  • by Wah ( 30840 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @01:36PM (#1521223) Homepage Journal
    It's as simple as that. I've found it to be the best, most reliable, and open digital music option. Case in point, Real. I no longer use any Real products. I've also made it Company Policy (yup) that we not their products (that's also a bandwidth issue). Each site I visit that uses the format I send a concise, polite letter saying why I won't use Real and why I want MP3.

    I also use Sonique [sonique.com] and download MP3s streamed straight to 32mb files, which I then dump to a Rio. Simple, easy, open. Nobody messin' with my HD, nobody tracking me. And now I listen to a LOT more music (and NO fscking commercials), in wide ranging genres.

    What the RIAA (and others) needs to realize is that the Internet makes control of digital media impossible. Their products have become (like software) inherently infinite. Pricing based on scarcity will become more and more difficult to maintain. The entire business model needs to change to take this into account. This is not being done. Enough ranting, sorry this is a bit off-topic, but if you have the bandwidth and sit in front of or near a computer for much fo the time, there are vast fields of interesting tones awaiting your inspection, don't let them be taken away from you. (/offtopic rant)
  • Is this true? There was a recent Australian court case where it was ruled that you are allowed to make a copy of the original for the purpose of putting it on a different media, provided you retained the original and did not use it at the same time (like one for the wife on CD and one for the husband on MD).
    It was underpublicised over here but at the time I thought it was a pretty cool ruling. It made most of the software houses change their licenses to allow a 'backup copy for archival purposes'.
  • Perhaps the music was the guy's own.. it wouldn't be a copyright infringement if the guy made the music himself.. although, that does seem rather strange.. it had like "Phils(?) Music" and we can assume that Phil(?) was the dancer..
  • There's this program out now by Visiosonic called
    "Digital 1200SL".. and gee, doesn't that remind you of a certain brand of turntables..

    i'm sticking to my 1200's too
  • You mean like the Windows 98 demonstration where Bill Gates experienced a crash in front of millions of viewers? :)
  • I could be wrong on this, but I believe that the problem is that copyright law allows you to buy a cd (or movie) and play or show it only to you and your friends/relatives. Not to an public audience.

    For example, a school teacher cannot rent Barney (the purple freak) and show it to his/her students. The idea being that each one of those kids may have been ready to rent the video themselves, but since the teacher just did, why bother?

    Not that I am for or against ripping purchased CDs, its just that the music industry wants to limit the possibility of lost revenue.

    Ozwald
  • by David Gould ( 4938 ) <david@dgould.org> on Thursday November 18, 1999 @02:27PM (#1521232) Homepage

    My only problem with this announcement is that the industry's "permitting" this use of MP3s implies that it's their decision, when in fact (well, in my opinion, anyway, which is the same thing) they don't have any authority whatsoever even knowing or caring about it in the first place, let alone permitting or forbidding it. Where would they even have gotten the idea in the first place, let alone how would they justify it, to think that this would be illegal?

    But DJ's don't own the songs, they own a round piece of plastic.

    IANAL, but this is my understanding: they own two things: the round piece of plastic, i.e., a physical medium containing a copy of the copyrighted work, and a license that permits them to use the work in a particular commercial setting. Does the license actually specify the physical process by which the work can be used? I.e., does it say "You may use the song in live performances by placing this and only this particular disc in a CD player and pressing 'Play'.", or does it say "You may use the song in live performances."? I can't imagine that it would be the former. I mean, why, except for them being typically heavy-handed? Even for them, this seems ridiculous.

    Here's a similar case: what if a DJ is at a party and someone requests a particular song. The DJ says, "Yeah, I have that," but then he looks through his pile of CDs and finds that, while it's true that he owns the disc and has a live-performance license for it, he has forgotten that particular one at home. Then the host interjects, "Wait, I have that album." He owns a CD of the album but he does not have a live-performance license for it. The question is, if the host lends his physical disc to the DJ, could the DJ then, under his live-performance license, use that disc to perform the song, even though it's not the same particular disc that he owns? I think the answer should be an obvious "Yes". Perhaps the industry sees thing differently, but I can't imagine what they could object to about this situation. Also, what if the DJ's disc is lost or destroyed? Does he have to pay for the license again, or just buy a new copy of the disc? What about the "for archival purposes" fair-use doctrine? (I realize that Canada != USA, so maybe the "fair use" thing is different.)

    As it is, in the process of performing it, the information passes through any number of intermediate formats as it is processed by various pieces of equipment, e.g., (note that I don't really know anything about professional sound equipment) bits get read by the CD player and converted to an analog signal and this goes through all sorts of mixers, equalizers, amps, etc., before going to the speaker, where the analog signal is converted from an electrical carrier to an acoustic one. Does the industry presume to have any authority whatsoever over exactly what steps the information goes through on its path from the DJ's round piece of plastic to the audience's ears? Of course not, as long as the DJ has paid for a live-performance license and no durable copies are given to anyone else. What's the difference of the bits make an extra stop (i.e., being compressed by Fraunhoffer's (sp?) algorithm and stored on a more convenient physical medium) along the way, all the while remaining in the DJ's possession and not being given to anyone else in a durable form? It sounds like they are just trying to continue to brand anything associated with MP3 as "illegal", while appearing magnanimous in this obviously-trivial case.

    From the article:

    DJs can buy a license giving them the right to burn their own compilation CDs of "useable tracks," instead of having to cart their whole CD collections around to their gigs.

    I don't see how this could possibly not be considered to fall under "fair use" (though, again Canada != USA), or why it would require a special license.

    Under Canadian law, a DJ convicted of making unlicensed reproductions with any technology could face serious fines and the confiscation of his equipment. Though there haven't been any such cases lately, Heindl points out that Canadian authorities have made examples of offenders in the past.

    I could see it if the concern were over such copies being passed around, but two points: first, why would it be any different for a DJ than for any person making bootleg (don't call it "Piracy" [fsf.org]) copies of normally-purchased albums. Second, here it is again: why are they so obsessed with how many copies exist, as long as they are all in his possession and not performed in any unlicensed fashion? What seems to matter is whether he has the right to possess and perform the song at all. The closest thing that seems reasonable to me would be if we were talking about DJs using songs off of albums that they just bought at the record store, without paying for a performance license, or, better yet, completely bootlegged copies that they downloaded or got from friends. of course that would be illegal, but nobody's talking about that.

    Although the record companies will welcome the license fees, the small amount of revenue they will generate isn't the point at all, Robertson said.

    "It's more a question of copyright control than generating revenues," he said. "It's important to keep things like copyright above board like this."


    Ah, here it is! They are still trying to perpetuate the illusion that they should rightfully have complete control over the proliferation of physical copies of the data, and the perception of themselves as the one and only legitimate source for anything related to it. This is a very nasty tool that they use consistently in their propaganda: the equivocation between the concepts of licensing rights to information and the physical act of duplicating it. The two concepts are very different, but these guys jump back and forth at will, using each to "refute" arguments that are really about the other. The difference was not so important back when physical duplication was difficult and expensive, since they had an almost-but-maybe-not-quite monopoly on the ability to create copies. It was a service that they provided, along with granting licenses. Now, though, it's very easy to copy things, and there is no reason why people should need that service from them. They have absolutely no grounds for objecting to other people performing the physical copying as desired, as long as their licenses are respected.

    They're acting as if they have both a patent on "a physical medium storing, in machine-readable form, the digital stream 0x6549cb5a67890f8460d..., or any data that represents the same audio signal", and a copyright on the song (both the composition and the performance) that is represented thereby. The patent would entitle them to control the creation of copies, and the copyright would entitle them to control the use of same. My sense is that they have the copyright but not the patent.

    David Gould
  • by Morgaine ( 4316 ) on Thursday November 18, 1999 @02:28PM (#1521233)
    You've got it back to front I think. Despite throwing the occasional olive branch as in this case, the RIAA has a massive problem with MP3s, because they're fighting for their very survival, even more so than the musicians. There are a lot of possible scenarios for the future of the music industry in which the RIAA ceases to exist utterly, along with the studios that they represent.

    Their current actions are like the red flags that pressure groups walked in front of locomotives, and their mega-industry is every bit as collosal as the one that used to be centred on the horse for transport and which now does not exist at all except in tiny niches. The lesson of history is that even the most extensive and solid of institutions is not as permanent as it may seem in its heyday.

    In the case of music, that impermanence couldn't be more clear. Before the invention of recording, it wasn't possible to make money from replication of musical performances. Then recording was invented but replication required massive plants and capital, which created the opportunity for an industry to be born and collosal profits to be made. And now the wheel of technological progress has turned again: replication can be performed by anyone and costs almost nothing, and the window of opportunity for making profits from it has closed again.

    Despite their self-righteous rationalizations, there is no law of nature that says that the music industry will always be as lucrative as it has been for the last few decades. There are no fixed points where technology is concerned, and MP3s are a sign of that. This newest chapter in the empowerment of individuals effectively means that the time for massive profits from replication and controlled distribution is over, that the RIAA is in the throes of extinction or at least severe mutation, and that the relationship between musicians and their audience is in transition. And so be it.

    Bye bye RIAA. No one really expects you to die quietly, but die you will, just like other prehistoric giants who were too set in their ways to adapt to changing conditions. And that's not a bad analogy, because once again it's those pesky little creatures underfoot that are in the ascendency.
  • Seriously, Washington is becoming more oppressive, tax hungry, and legislation happy every day. What is required to become a citizen (or at least a legal resident) of Canada?


    Not much, just give up your right to freedom of the press and get ready for a shock anytime you try to bring your new Canadian money back into the U.S.

  • yeah, something like that... :)
  • "Not that I have ever done anything like this ever."
    Obviously. The less than perfect situation (within stumbling reach of drunks with requests) is the rule, not the exception.

  • That's right. Believe it or not, vinyl has better sound reproduction than CD's. It has to do with the fact that CD's are bandlimited at 22.05 kHz and produce greater amounts of distortion as the frequency approaches this figure. Records, however, when manufactured with premium HiFi in mind and when played back using ultra-high quality cartridges and styli can produce freq. up to ~30kHz!

    The damn things still get scratched much easier though, and would be a bitch to play in a moving vehicle ;-P
    --
    You're still using Windows?

  • Freedom of the Press?

    I don't think you realize just how not free the US media is. Check out Project Censored here [sonoma.edu]

    If you think Canada lacks Freedom of Press, it's obvious you've never heard of the CBC [www.cbc.ca], an insitution with far more freedom and far more honesty than anything public or private that exists in the US.
  • somebody please moderate this one up!
    I thought the same thing when I saw ass'n, but I just can't wax poetic like the above AC did

  • I don't know about most radio stations, but none of the three radio stations I've had contact with use any kind of file servers to play music from. They all use standard CD players, and possibly cassettes and vinyl.

    I don't see why the record companies aren't actively pushing such solutions. It seems like it would cut their distribution costs dramatically, as well as increasing their sales (since many of those promo-only CDs somehow end up in used CD stores...).
  • i stand corrected.


    it didn't used to support multiple sound cards, as far as i remember. or maybe i just didn't HAVE two soundcards and wasn't interested enough to buy another ;)


    for anyone that wants to check it out, go here: virtual turntables [prohosting.com]


    it is a neat program. just didn't seem to compare to a pair of technics when i looked at it before. i still think the interface can't compare to being able to move a record any way you want, though. i'm not talking about scratching here, just effective beatmatching and.. all that other hard to verbalize stuff that djs do.


    then again.. i don't mean this snottily at all, but "mobile djs" just don't do that much with the music. it's not the same as being a "rave dj", which is the perspective i'm coming from. maybe vtt's interface is just dandy for mobile peeps.

  • ya, I know all about those DJ tape-pullings in Toronto. I went to get my brother a mix tape in the city one day, and got it just fine. The next day I went back to buy him another (he forgot to tell me about) and it was a different guy at the store, and he told me they didn't have DJ tapes. They won't sell you tapes if they have any suspicion of you being an "informant".
  • I'm not trying to start a flame war here, but come on... no freedom of press? That's a little hard to justify, don't you think?
  • That's very inciteful - except the unlike the biblical Golaith, I don't see them toppling too easily. Money buys lots of power. Just look at the Cigarate companys, or Microsoft.

    From my experience with MP3.com, I'm quickly reaching the point where I will buy $5 CD's from them. The whole entertainment medium is being force to speed up and to cut costs.

    However I do agree that it's only a matter of time before BtoB distribution cuts out the middle man.
  • by Gray ( 5042 ) on Friday November 19, 1999 @01:12AM (#1521266)
    I'm a (radio) DJ on a collage station here in Ottawa.. IMO, AVLA is one of those self-feeding groups that has very little impact on your average working DJ.. Off the top of my head, I can't think of anyone I know who is a memeber, but I've never asked.. It's like the relationship between the RIAA to your average garage band.. And there are even less rich DJs then rich rock stars.

    This decision is just a way to score some ink and political fire for a otherwise tiny and powerless group.. Of course it's already legal to make comps out of CDs you already own, they know that..

    They seem to be addressing hardcore 'single' type DJing, where downloading the super fresh singles of the moment off the net and licencing them would be useful.. Maybe in the clubs in london or dancehalls in jamacia, but in canada that scene just isn't much of a factor. Besides, that style of DJing pretty much requires vinyl..

    Of course, you can just skip the fee and do it anyway.. The record companies want the exposure anyway, club plays lead to album sales.. That's why they make white labels (pre-releases for DJs).. Our station gets a boat load of free promo-only music every week.. They'd happly pay us $200 to download and play their song, but that's illigal.. Instead they have to give away free trips and prizes and crap.. "Win a trip to blah to see blah contest." Guess who pays for those I'm sure Chris Sheppards life is a non-stop orgy of record company financed sin.

    Labels don't care about DJs stealing their hot new singles.. On the other hand, DJs building up a few hundred gigs of mp3s by ripping every CD they can get their hands on and then using that for gigs, that might be a little worrying.. But still, there just aren't enough DJs in Canada for it to matter in term of sales.. DJs have been doing record pools forever..

    So basically, this is totally meaningless to everyone I can think of, but I will admit, a tiny step forward and that's still good..
  • Do you really think Queen Victoria would have encouraged people to talk context-free smack like that?

    Anyway, you guys played. It's obviously the output of the ubiquitous Automated Rant Generator, with one or two words changed. Somebody is having some fun seeing if you guys can tell the difference.

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