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25 new of 46 responses total.
keesan
response 2 of 46: Mark Unseen   Mar 29 17:29 UTC 2006

Linux already has players for WMA and Realaudio formats.
kingjon
response 3 of 46: Mark Unseen   Mar 29 18:48 UTC 2006

... but the RealAudio one is provided by the Real corporation. It's free as in
lunch, not free as in freedom -- just because the Linux operating system is
free doesn't mean everything that runs on it is free, any more than everything
that runs on Windows has to be proprietary because Windows is proprietary.

mcnally
response 4 of 46: Mark Unseen   Mar 29 20:10 UTC 2006

 Linux codecs are available which can handle a *subset* of the WMA format,
 but that's not the same as being able to play all WMA material.  

 In particular the material from on-line music stores is likely to use
 security features which are not (fully) supported in Linux players.
gull
response 5 of 46: Mark Unseen   Apr 1 09:12 UTC 2006

Re resp:1: Apple has apparently blasted the bill that would require them
to open up their DRM scheme as "state-sponsored piracy":
http://www.reghardware.co.uk/2006/03/22/apple_attacks_france/

Frankly, I don't think it would hurt much except maybe iPod sales.  It's
already trivial to circumvent the iTunes DRM by burning a bunch of
tracks to a CD, then ripping it.
krj
response 6 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 2 23:25 UTC 2006

Here's an interesting lawsuit.  Cheap Trick and the Allman Brothers 
Band are suing Sony Music claiming that they are being underpaid
for online music song sales through sites like iTunes.

The bands have an interesting argument.  In the old, pre-Internet 
world, music contracts described two different types of financial
transactions.  A "sale" is governed by a lower royalty rate, about
4.5 cents per track; a "license" to use the music should net the 
artist roughly half of the money collected by the label, which 
works out to 30-40 cents per track.
 
The bands argue that the technical and legal encumberances on
online track purchases mean those are really licenses, and not 
sales of product.   Heh.   Stereophile magazine says that should a 
court rule that a paid download is a sale of product, then all sorts
of legal rights for the consumer kick in, such as resale and loan.

http://stereophile.com/news/050106ABB/
tod
response 7 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 2 23:49 UTC 2006

That's an earthquake for the RIAA.
mcnally
response 8 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 3 03:55 UTC 2006

 Note that under the terms of the "sale" category, the record
 companies are apparently deducting their contractual charges
 for "packaging" (20%) and "breakage" (15%), or so various 
 write-ups of the story report..
other
response 9 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 5 01:46 UTC 2006

Yup.  The RIAA is in the position of having to defend download sales as
licenses to the consumers and as product sales to the artists.  Either
way, the labels have to pay out, but the conclusion is that the artists'
interests are pitted against the consumers'.
krj
response 10 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 6 03:36 UTC 2006

I now have confirmed the story that the British music licensing authority
PPL has forced most/all commercial UK stations to terminate webcasts
outside the UK borders.   Reportedly this already happened.  It does not,
as yet, affect the BBC.
 
Links:  from March 17:
http://www.kurthanson.com/archive/news/031706/index.asp

from the last few days:
http://www.kurthanson.com/archive/news/050506/index.asp
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,,1766532,00.html
  (Guardian headline:
   "Will licensing kill the radio star?")

The Guardian story says the PPL wants the radio barrier to work 
both ways; PPL's spokesman says they are prepared to sue to stop 
USA webcasters from sending streams into the UK.  

I will miss Britain's light-classical station "Classic FM," which always
brought back nostalgia for our 1995 trip over there.  And, which sometimes
sent me off to amazon.co.uk to buy a CD they were playing...
krj
response 11 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 11 05:20 UTC 2006

A press release reports that Green Linnet Records, the leading American
record label for Celtic music, has been sold to Digital Music Group, 
"the online aggregator and distributor of music to online music 
stores."   

DMGI's business appears to be ALL about sales of digital files through
online stores, though they mention the possibility of licensing out 
the manufacture of physical CDs.   But, it sounds to me like there is 
a good chance that the Green Linnet artists and recordings are going to 
be departing the world of tangible, manufactured CDs.

If there were any Green Linnet recordings I coveted in those old-fashioned
silver discs sold in stores -- especially older catalog titles -- I would
not put off getting copies.

Green Linnet has been in financial difficulties for a while and a 
number of their artists were publically protesting non-payment a 
while back, so a sale of the label is not a surprise.
krj
response 12 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 11 05:24 UTC 2006

Forgot the source links:

http://www.paidcontent.org/digital-music-group-acquires-celtic-music-catalo
g
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/060510/law049.html?.v=54
happyboy
response 13 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 11 17:20 UTC 2006

forget

wilt
response 14 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 16 23:45 UTC 2006

HACKED BY GNAA LOL JEWS DID WTC LOL
wilt
response 15 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 16 23:59 UTC 2006

HTTP://WWW.GNAA.US/
jesuit
response 16 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 17 02:13 UTC 2006

HTTP://WWW.GNAA.US/
jesuitx
response 17 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 18 02:24 UTC 2006

http://www.jewsdidwtc.com/
tarbaby
response 18 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 18 23:17 UTC 2006

TROGG IS DAVID BLAINE
gull
response 19 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 19 02:29 UTC 2006

The MPAA is supporting an effort to train dogs that can sniff out DVDs.  
The problem, of course, is that a pirated DVD smells the same as a 
legitimate one. 
 
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/05/11/gogs_hunt_dvds/ 
 
jep
response 20 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 19 13:43 UTC 2006

Maybe they can train monkeys or Ohio State grads to watch them.
garyn
response 21 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 19 23:41 UTC 2006

this board is impossible to trlol
gaynigger
response 22 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 21 02:48 UTC 2006

I NEED SKYKE CREDIT
camwhorejax
response 23 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 22 07:54 UTC 2006

hi it's me i'm a camwhore
gayniggerassociation
response 24 of 46: Mark Unseen   May 23 20:50 UTC 2006

GNAA GNAA GNAAGNAA GNAA GNAAGNAA GNAA GNAAGNAA GNAA GNAAGNAA GNAA GNAAGNAA
GNAA GNAA
krj
response 25 of 46: Mark Unseen   Jun 9 20:06 UTC 2006

Here's a detailed story about the fading of independent CD retail in
St. Louis and elsewhere:

http://www.riverfronttimes.com/Issues/2006-06-07/news/feature_full.html

Here's the numbers quote:

> "According to Nielsen SoundScan, which tracks sales data in the
> music industry, sales at independent retailers in 2006 are down 27
> percent from the same period from last year. In 2000 as many as 5,500
> independent music stores spanned the nation. At the end of last year,
> that number had shrunk to 2,600." 

*** 27% decline from last year !?!?!?! ***   

The industry as a whole is reporting 
"only" a 10% decline, so the indie stores are seeing a sales decline 
over 2.5 times worse.  I don't see how the independent part of the
music retail market survives in more than a few choice outlets.
And even if a few famous outlets like San Francisco's Amoeba and 
Austin's Waterloo survive, what happens to the wholesale and 
distribution system that keeps them stocked?
tod
response 26 of 46: Mark Unseen   Jun 9 20:21 UTC 2006

I like ampitheater concerts.  The death of low priced casino hotels and low
priced CDs does not bother me.
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