Dec 15, 2005, 18:27
Online music stores have only just recently come to Australia (and I'm talking about mp3 downloads, not physical cd ones), and I've been investigating...
I personally prefer to listen to and use only music which I've purchased or obtained legally, but the idea of DRM (digital rights management) that most of the major companies use really sux. DRM basically means that you need a license to play the music, but the catch is that the license is usually locked to one computer. So if say I wanted to play it on my work computer as well as my home computer, I'm out of luck.
Unfortunately, I won't be purchasing any of that music with that sort of DRM.
I can't see why the companies can't follow a similar model offered by ereader.com (my favourite ebook store) - which encrypts the books, but uses your name and credit card number to unlock it. So I can use it on any machine I like, but I'd be hesitant to share the books with other people for obvious reasons.
Anyway, I did some research this morning, and came across this very useful page with lots of links and tips
http://www.goingware.com/tips/legal-downloads.html
Amongst them was this site - www.allofmp3.com, which amazingly, offers paid, legal music downloads for all of the mainstream music, sans DRM! How can they do it? Well, they're based in Russia, which has relaxed laws with regards to this area. And another boon - they charge 0.02 per megabyte downloaded - not on a per-song basis. Quality as well is selectable and encoded on the fly for you - ranging from mp3 to wma to various lossless formats (although the higher quality, the higher the size of the download, and hence the higher the price). Anyway, I might seriously consider signing up to that service.
Another piece of software I found on that goingware page:
http://irate.sourceforge.net/index.html
This is a "collaborative music filtering" system, which basically downloads a random selection of open source / free music, and allows you to rate it. It then uses some logic to match your preferences with other people's ratings, to find more similar music. Apparently the longer you use the software, the better the "quality" of music will get as it learns your preferences.
I think this is pretty cool, as I've been wanting to get into the scene of free / independent music, but don't know where to start. This way, I can listen to stuff which other people already like, which has a higher chance of me liking it too.
Anyway, just thought I'd share that... does anyone have any experience with online music downloads? Thoughts? Rants? Tips?
I personally prefer to listen to and use only music which I've purchased or obtained legally, but the idea of DRM (digital rights management) that most of the major companies use really sux. DRM basically means that you need a license to play the music, but the catch is that the license is usually locked to one computer. So if say I wanted to play it on my work computer as well as my home computer, I'm out of luck.
Unfortunately, I won't be purchasing any of that music with that sort of DRM.
I can't see why the companies can't follow a similar model offered by ereader.com (my favourite ebook store) - which encrypts the books, but uses your name and credit card number to unlock it. So I can use it on any machine I like, but I'd be hesitant to share the books with other people for obvious reasons.
Anyway, I did some research this morning, and came across this very useful page with lots of links and tips
http://www.goingware.com/tips/legal-downloads.html
Amongst them was this site - www.allofmp3.com, which amazingly, offers paid, legal music downloads for all of the mainstream music, sans DRM! How can they do it? Well, they're based in Russia, which has relaxed laws with regards to this area. And another boon - they charge 0.02 per megabyte downloaded - not on a per-song basis. Quality as well is selectable and encoded on the fly for you - ranging from mp3 to wma to various lossless formats (although the higher quality, the higher the size of the download, and hence the higher the price). Anyway, I might seriously consider signing up to that service.
Another piece of software I found on that goingware page:
http://irate.sourceforge.net/index.html
This is a "collaborative music filtering" system, which basically downloads a random selection of open source / free music, and allows you to rate it. It then uses some logic to match your preferences with other people's ratings, to find more similar music. Apparently the longer you use the software, the better the "quality" of music will get as it learns your preferences.
I think this is pretty cool, as I've been wanting to get into the scene of free / independent music, but don't know where to start. This way, I can listen to stuff which other people already like, which has a higher chance of me liking it too.
Anyway, just thought I'd share that... does anyone have any experience with online music downloads? Thoughts? Rants? Tips?
