News:

How did you even find this place?

Main Menu

iTunes Plus

Started by Ender, July 07, 2007, 06:15:41 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.

Ender

iTunes just came out with iTunes Plus, which when enabled allows you to buy certain songs and albums without DRM. Woohoo! Just bought a non-DRM M83 album ;-)

No more time-consuming burning and ripping half an album at a time lol...

Killer360

Hmm, there is a program called.... uhh.... LimeWire -- lot's of people use it. ;)

trust

And they're higher quality, but the songs are limited. And by "just" you must mean like a month ago. :P

Towelie

Quote from: Killer360 on July 07, 2007, 11:55:36 PM
Hmm, there is a program called.... uhh.... LimeWire -- lot's of people use it. ;)
Or... go and buy your own CD's for better quality. LimeWire has to be one of the worst ways of getting music online

iago

Quote from: Towelie on July 08, 2007, 02:51:45 AM
Quote from: Killer360 on July 07, 2007, 11:55:36 PM
Hmm, there is a program called.... uhh.... LimeWire -- lot's of people use it. ;)
Or... go and buy your own CD's for better quality. LimeWire has to be one of the worst ways of getting music online
CDs aren't necessarily non-DRMed, and they won't necessarily work in non-Windows computers. If you want non-DRMed music from an RIAA-affiliated artist, the only way is generally to pirate it. Let somebody else crack the DRMing :)

Sidoh

Quote from: Killer360 on July 07, 2007, 11:55:36 PM
Hmm, there is a program called.... uhh.... LimeWire -- lot's of people use it. ;)

The RIAA is really cracking down on piracy, I guess.  I'm sure this is a common tactic, but they'll list a popular song, log the IPs that download it and then prosecute them.  I met a guy from Oklahoma who ended up settling out of court for $3,000 after they logged him (his daughter actually) downloading nine songs. :-\

I'm definitely going to lay off the pirating for a while.  NBC already whined to my ISP when I downloaded some movie Ender said was good.

trust

In the rare event of me downloading from a p2p client like that, I use Blubster. I generally buy it though from iTunes and I have a subscription to a DJ music pool but it's limited genre, or from private uploads on rapidshare or whatever.

Sidoh

Quote from: Trust on July 08, 2007, 02:05:44 PM
In the rare event of me downloading from a p2p client like that, I use Blubster. I generally buy it though from iTunes and I have a subscription to a DJ music pool but it's limited genre, or from private uploads on rapidshare or whatever.

Yeah, I've just been downloading from iTunes.  I really hate the program, but the store is pretty convenient.

iago

Just stop listening to music from RIAA-affiliated bands. Boycott them!

Of course, if everybody starts boycotting RIAA-affiliated bands, their sales will go down, and they'll blame piracy. So really, there's no way to protest.

I'm glad Canada hasn't knelt down to the RIAA yet :)

Sidoh

Plus, RIAA represents something like 90% of the recording industry doesn't it?

rabbit

What, you guys don't have an RIAC or anything?

CrAz3D

Quote from: Sidoh on July 08, 2007, 02:32:17 PM
Plus, RIAA represents something like 90% of the recording industry doesn't it?
thats what i'm thiknking

it'd be like suggesting a boycott of gas ::)

iago

Quote from: Sidoh on July 08, 2007, 02:32:17 PM
Plus, RIAA represents something like 90% of the recording industry doesn't it?
Probably more than that, I would imagine. So?

Sidoh

From wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RIAA:
QuoteThe Recording Industry Association of America (or RIAA) is a trade group that represents the recording industry in the United States. Its members consist of a large number of private corporate entities such as record labels and distributors, who create and distribute about 90% of recorded music sold in the US. It is involved in a series of controversial copyright infringement legal actions on behalf of its members.

I agree with crazed.  It's pretty much like "boycotting gas."  If you believe in something strong enough (like hating the RIAA) and wish you boycott things they represent, then I have no problem with that.  That's great.  However, I think it's pretty silly to think it will make a non-trivial difference.  Almost everyone listens to music, almost all of those people (in US, Canada, UK, etc) listen to bands that are represented by the RIAA and almost all of those people are ignorant or apathetic towards the RIAA.  The few exceptions have negligible effect on the rest.

Plus, I'm not going to stop listening to the bands I love just because they're represented by the RIAA!

Hitmen

A lot of what I listen to is non-RIAA, stuff from:
Nuclear Blast
Century Media
Razorback Records
Earache
Relapse

That makes up a good chunk of my collection.

The only real 'metal' label I can think of that is RIAA affiliated is Metal Blade. And Roadrunner.... if you can even call them a metal label anymore.

Either way, the majority of my music collection is from record labels that don't exist anymore, and lots of the albums have been out of print for two decades or more. How else am I supposed to get it?? :)
Quote
(22:15:39) Newby: it hurts to swallow