1 - Posted by
handrail
on February 19, 2007 - 9:08 am
well if the stupid music industry would just lower the cost of buying a CD to something reasonable AND allow you to rip the music to MP3, they would most likely take a bite back out of the Apple.
if CDs were only $5 instead of $10 or $15 and users could easily rip them to MP3, think of what that would do to sales. i'd certainly buy more CDs...if i cared about the crap pop music that is driving the whole issue in the first place.
i typically buy indy music on CD or MP3 from emusic.com so i've never had an DRM issue because the RIAA never enters into the picture.
$0.99/song is such a rip off for iTunes or on CD format. there is no reason why it should still cost $10+ per album. i could see if iTunes offered a special for something like $7.99 an album or $0.99/song...at least cut us a better deal for buying the whole album. but no, the industry wants their last little bit of cash to bleed the consumer dry. but then they complain when people take advantage of technology to seek free music.
personally i love what the digital music revolution has done for independent music. it has made it easier for small labels to push out new material with less cost. i hope the larger companies loose even more money, they deserve to. DRM is just one more way for large music labels to waste money on ridiculous measures to protect their already overly priced product. and that wasted money ends up getting tacked onto the cost of the CD you purchase at best buy.
buy more vinyl.
2 - Posted by
Max Slowik
on February 19, 2007 - 5:41 pm
"well if the stupid music industry would just lower the cost of buying a CD to something reasonable AND allow you to rip the music to MP3, they would most likely take a bite back out of the Apple."
Ah, but CDs don't use any encryption for content protection, and as such, it is perfectly legal to rip your CDs into .mp3s. One the remaining ways "fair use" seems to still count.
What would be really great would be if there was a directory on the audio CD with all the tracks already ripped to a high-bitrate .mp3/ ogg/ something-else-non-DRMed-to-Hell right there, with the album art, lyrics. . .the works. Then iTunes would drop a dozen pegs immediately. (Not that I'm saying that's a great thing, but it would do good things for the record labels.)
The best thing is that they could watermark the music, and then have a specific file to search for in piracy lanes. Best of both worlds.
3 - Posted by
Kurtis
on February 19, 2007 - 5:47 pm
4 - Posted by
handrail
on February 19, 2007 - 11:22 pm
i was referring to the various copy-protections attempts that companies have tried using on CDs.
5 - Posted by
Rich
on February 20, 2007 - 8:02 am
The name Sony seems to come up....
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