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From:
Mike Brown
To:
EggyToast
Cc:
Date:
Mon, 10 Feb 2003 13:20:35 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
Re: [idm] the only ones that win r...
Msg-Id:
<20030210212035.27409.qmail@hyperreal.org>
In-Reply-To:
<a05010401ba6dbbde5907@[128.220.50.51]>
Mbox:
idm.0302.gz
EggyToast wrote:
quoted 1 line ...there needs to be some level of permanence to the download.> ...there needs to be some level of permanence to the download.
I strongly agree. I'm not so sure that you should get a lifetime of free downloads of a track, just because you paid for it once, but certainly there should be a reasonable amount of repeat-download time to make up for the risk you take on when you attempt to retrieve and make permanent the material on your own, rather than just going to a store and picking up an object that is guaranteed to contain glitch-free (well, to the extent that IDM these days isn't glitchy ;) uncompromised audio on a relatively permanent storage medium. You should get a few months of support, at least. This raises the issue of security, though.. how do you prevent people from giving out their access codes? I also feel that if I am paying a couple bucks for a track, I should be able to get it in any quality, including entirely uncompressed or at least distributed using a lossless compression scheme. MP3 is fine for casual listening but if I'm buying something to keep and use permanently, I want my money's worth. However I have a feeling I am in the minority; most people are happy enough with inferior quality and don't really care too much if they have a "real" CD or not. I think this is in part because of the psychology of acoustics, which MP3 exploits: your brain tries to make sense of what it's hearing, so it sifts out the extraneous noise and focuses on hearing the musical information. An MP3 with artifacts and no frequencies over 16 kHz can sound just fine to someone until they hear it side-by-side with the original CD. So most people are probably willing to pay for it even if it isn't "perfect sound forever".
quoted 1 line And there's still no proof that mp3s are truly damaging sales.> And there's still no proof that mp3s are truly damaging sales.
The RIAA's figures are dubious, but there is strong anecdotal evidence from record shops, especially those that are near college campuses. 10 years ago, along the High St. strip next to Ohio State University, there were 9 record stores, all doing great business. Now there are about 3, and they all are struggling. Granted, the whole area is in decline, but I've talked with the owners of the store I used to work at, which sold both new and used/rare product, and they say they are making most of their money on eBay now -- not because they want to, but because every day there are kids coming in browsing but not buying anything. Sales are way down. The kids find things they want, then have their friends download and burn it for them (at least, this is what they say in overheard conversations and in the occasional interview in the local paper). People are only buying what they can't conveniently download. Mike -- Denver, Colorado, USA http://hyperreal.org/~mike/ --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org