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July 9, 2006

Another article on musicians being screwed out of profits even with digital distribution schemes

Business 2.0 - Magazine Article - The MP3 Economy

"The going rate for downloading songs from online music services like Apple's (AAPL) iTunes Music Store, MusicNet, Pressplay, and Rhapsody is about $1 a pop. Yet the economics of recorded music sales haven't changed much since the vinyl era -- despite the fact that digital files cost very little to produce and distribute. So how much of your buck makes its way back to the artists? Not much, though it's clearly a better deal than they get from piracy. "

June 25, 2006

Artists and Consumers get screwed by the music industry

Passionate condemnation of the music industry:

[IP] MUST READ Courtney Love does the math The controversial singertak

[IP] last on this topic -- Does File Trading Fund Terrorism? Successful artists not seeing any profit.

http://www.marketplace.org/play/audio.php?media=/2003/03/12_mpp&start=00:00: 20:00.0&end=00:00:27:30.0

[IP] 2 more on Does File Trading Fund Terrorism?

And to round this out, a great interview with John Perry Barlow on the evils of Digital Restriction Management Wrapped up in Crypto Bottles

And to draw in a security angle to all of this:

Security Blog

Sony rootkit debacle highlights the failure of the security technology industry: The real story, as Bruce Schneier points out - why the hell didn't any Antivirus software (or IDS for that matter), detect this software sooner? Is corporate malware going to continue to be default allow by these products? We are collectively paying these companies billions of dollars for what?

November 20, 2005

Oh, the irony

Wired News: Tainted Sony CDs Used Open Source

In short: Sony's ill-conceived, ill-executed, and ill-handled copy protected CDs that inserted a rootkit on your Windows computer that were designed to supposedly protect artist's rights by preventing unauthorized copying of music ironically appear to have violated the copyrights of several open source software tools.

March 24, 2005

new bookmark: 15 Megs of Fame

I haven't poked around too much at what is on here, but it's supposed to carry on the torch of mp3.com for small, independent artists. Seems like a pretty cool site.

15 Megs of Fame | Artists and Fans unite!

October 27, 2004

Mosh the vote

the politics of Mosh is a great, in-depth review of Eminem's new video for the song "Mosh" that is now the top video at MTV. Whatever you may think of Eminem, his music is always forceful and powerful and this is no exception. The video is exquisite. You can watch it online at http://www.gnn.tv/content/eminem_mosh.html

If it rains let it rain, yea the wetter the better
They ain't gonna stop us, they can't, we're stronger now more then ever,
They tell us no we say yea, they tell us stop we say go,
Rebel with a rebel yell, raise hell we gonna let em know
Stomp, push up, mush, fuck Bush, until they bring our troops home

May 29, 2003

Reflections on DRM

Article on the restrictions imposed by the DRM inherent in Apple's AAC file format.

From my perspective, $1 per song is way too expensive, especially when the product you get is inferior to a track of a physical CD. A short list of the problems:

  1. It is in a lossy format. For most people this is not an issue from a quality perspective, but converting to another format is very likely to be necessary in the future and would either not be possible or would be suboptimal without the original. That is supposed to be the beauty of digital music--you can keep migrating it to the latest technology without having to pay for the "license" to listen again.
  2. It does not include liner notes or artwork. I point this out because from a value perspective, you are not getting the same deal as it is made out to be (you cannot simply divide the total CD cost by the average number of tracks to come up with the value of a single digital music file).
  3. It is encumbered by DRM. It is said that the real meaning of DRM is Digital Restriction Management. DRM-encumbered songs are surely not valued in the resale marketplace because many (these AAC files seem to be no exception) won't even let you resell them because of the platform restrictions. You can resell your CD just fine however.

None of these disadvantages appear to be reflected in the cost of much online music that I see.

I would think that the true value of a single digital, lossless-encoded, non-DRM-encumbered track to be more like $0.50/track. You do not have to pay for distribution costs or manufacturing costs or artwork costs, etc. The value of these new digital distribution models should lead to savings for the consumer, not less value for more money.

And don't get me started on how absurd paying $1-2 for monotonic ringtones is. Why don't labels give those away for free as a promotional tool, ala radio? They just don't get it.

TidBITS: Apple Changes the Face of Digital Music

May 19, 2003

RHP livejournal web board

Check out a new place to discuss the Red House Painters and get news.

a red house painters & mark kozelek community's Journal

March 21, 2003

Duk Koo Kim

koz-dukkookim.jpg

I recently purchased the one and only vinyl album that I own. I had to do so, even though I do not own a turntable, because it is a 1000 copy limited release single. It contains two versions of the same beautiful song, called Duk Koo Kim, by Mark Kozelek of the Red House Painters. This is one of my favorite RHP songs. Reading the history about Duk Koo Kim makes the song that much more poignant and sad.

Duk Koo Kim - Wikipedia

A tragic turn of events that reads more like Shakespeare than real life. One death leads to several others and radical changes to the world of boxing.

March 12, 2003

Music wish list

I've been compiling a text file with my queue of music to get next and thought that I should share. It would also be much nicer to manage through MovableType with the MTAmazon plugin and the MTMacro plugin.


Continue reading "Music wish list" »

March 3, 2003

Truth in music on its way?

Senator Ron Wyden (D) from Oregon is pitching a simple idea to lead to a market-driven solution to the DRM problems being imposed on consumers: to require music companies to disclose to consumers the restrictions they will impose on the consumer's use of the product.

"When customers know, for example, that the compact disc they're buying is technologically rigged so they can't rip MP3 files from it for use on a portable player, they won't buy it. Eventually, these informed customers will demand change in the copyright laws."

[IP] Truth in labeling

Senator Seeks Full Copyright Disclosures

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