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Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek

23 messages · 15 participants · spans 5 days · search this subject
◇ merged from 2 subjects: four tet (new single & album) · life after soulseek
2003-02-07 22:00Jan! [idm] Life after SoulSeek
└─ 2003-02-08 00:10lance rocker Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
└─ 2003-02-08 03:40Brandon Smith Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
└─ 2003-02-08 04:18EggyToast Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
└─ 2003-02-08 13:45Muffin Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
2003-02-07 22:08julia m Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
2003-02-08 00:33James Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
2003-02-08 00:37Sean Horton Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
└─ 2003-02-08 13:14Muffin Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
2003-02-08 23:14julia m Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
└─ 2003-02-09 02:54EggyToast Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
└─ 2003-02-09 14:25Muffin Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
└─ 2003-02-09 17:08ben gill Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
└─ 2003-02-09 17:17chiquitaqueen Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
2003-02-09 20:24Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
├─ 2003-02-09 22:21ben gill Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
└─ 2003-02-10 20:27andrij Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
2003-02-10 20:29Brandon Tallent Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
2003-02-11 03:26Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
└─ 2003-02-11 05:23ben gill Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
└─ 2003-02-11 10:48William Samuels [idm] Four Tet (new single & album)
2003-02-11 07:57Mark Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
2003-02-13 00:08Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
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2003-02-07 22:00Jan!Even though SoulSeek was supposed to be offline for a couple of days tops, it's been a who
From:
Jan!
To:
idm-l
Date:
Fri, 07 Feb 2003 23:00:07 +0100
Subject:
[idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <3E442C67.9000700@jeugdhuisx.be>
Even though SoulSeek was supposed to be offline for a couple of days tops, it's been a whole lot more now. (I'm even starting to believe those nasty RIAA rumours.) I read all the available info, went to the IRC channels, weeped a little in a dark and cold corner of my room, and am thinking of moving on. What is the best alternative to SoulSeek? I'm looking for a network with decent idm content, preferably with a similar community feeling to it. Any suggestions? -- Jan! http://jan.moesen.nu/ --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2003-02-08 00:10lance rockerI have a sugestion.Start buying records and or cds.I know this may sound wierd,but try it!
From:
lance rocker
To:
Date:
Fri, 7 Feb 2003 16:10:16 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
Reply to:
[idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <20030208001016.4137.qmail@web14707.mail.yahoo.com>
I have a sugestion.Start buying records and or cds.I know this may sound wierd,but try it! lanceR --- Jan! <jan_idm+spamtrap@jeugdhuisx.be> wrote:
quoted 20 lines Even though SoulSeek was supposed to be offline for> Even though SoulSeek was supposed to be offline for > a couple of days > tops, it's been a whole lot more now. (I'm even > starting to believe > those nasty RIAA rumours.) I read all the available > info, went to the > IRC channels, weeped a little in a dark and cold > corner of my room, and > am thinking of moving on. What is the best > alternative to SoulSeek? I'm > looking for a network with decent idm content, > preferably with a similar > community feeling to it. Any suggestions? > > -- > Jan! > http://jan.moesen.nu/ > > >
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2003-02-08 03:40Brandon SmithBefore soulseek and other p2ps came around, I bought cds that I liked and cds that I didn'
From:
Brandon Smith
To:
lance rocker ,
Date:
Fri, 7 Feb 2003 19:40:36 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <20030208034036.32615.qmail@web12508.mail.yahoo.com>
Before soulseek and other p2ps came around, I bought cds that I liked and cds that I didn't care for. After Soulseek etc. I bought cds that I liked. Period. The reason should be fairly clear - its a pretty simple concept. Brandon --- lance rocker <lance_rocker666@yahoo.com> wrote:
quoted 6 lines I have a sugestion.Start buying records and or cds.I> I have a sugestion.Start buying records and or cds.I > know this may sound wierd,but try it! > > lanceR > >
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2003-02-08 04:18EggyToastDefinitely. How else are you supposed to know what you like? derek At 07:40 PM 2/7/2003 -0
From:
EggyToast
To:
Date:
Fri, 07 Feb 2003 23:18:56 -0500
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <5.2.0.9.0.20030207231835.00b51258@mail.eggytoast.com>
Definitely. How else are you supposed to know what you like? derek At 07:40 PM 2/7/2003 -0800, you wrote:
quoted 25 lines Before soulseek and other p2ps came around, I bought>Before soulseek and other p2ps came around, I bought >cds that I liked and cds that I didn't care for. >After Soulseek etc. I bought cds that I liked. >Period. >The reason should be fairly clear - its a pretty >simple concept. > >Brandon > >--- lance rocker <lance_rocker666@yahoo.com> wrote: > > I have a sugestion.Start buying records and or cds.I > > know this may sound wierd,but try it! > > > > lanceR > > > > > >__________________________________________________ >Do you Yahoo!? >Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now. >http://mailplus.yahoo.com > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
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2003-02-08 13:45MuffinDouble edged sword innit. If labels believed that people weren't going to rip off their mu
From:
Muffin
To:
IDM
Date:
Sat, 08 Feb 2003 13:45:57 +0000
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <BA6ABA95.2010C%muffin@signmytits.com>
Double edged sword innit. If labels believed that people weren't going to rip off their music if they put it up as MP3s then they would. [well, the numerous independent labels I work with would]. Unfortunately that's not the case. MP3=piracy is a stigma which exists and which concerns a lot of labels and artists. This is niche music we are talking about, not Pop. We should be trying to encourage it to behave in a better way, rather than getting caught up in the politics of major labels. Fuck thinking that way. When you buy a CD, rip it, and return it it costs the label money. Ever think of that? Most record stores don't re-stock them [if they are of a decent calibre] instead it is returned to the label and disposed of. After a certain number of returns [allowed for faulty goods] they are no longer written of, and so the label has paid for manufacturing and distribution on an item it's not made any money on. I'm all for previewing of music [I've done a lot of work with labels encouraging it] but if a label [such as Warp or Ninja Tune] provides 2 minutes of RealAudio of 1/3 of the tracks on their releases then why do you need to get MP3 versions to 'preview' it? Encourage the labels to provide previews in a more accessible format. Then, if you are honest, you don't need soulseek for 'previews'. I know I'm going over old ground, but all that happens with MP3 trading is that you piss off the people who are genuinely trying to get new, interesting music out into the world. There is always going to be a balance between those who feel they can give away what they produce, and those who want to make money with it. If you have a problem with this why do you think it is fair to take control of their decisions into your own hands. How do I hear new music : I listen to Radio, go and hang out in shops, go to clubs and ask DJ's what tracks are, and have friends into the same music. It works pretty well for me as I'm not a totally compulsive record buyer any more. It seems like there are a lot of kleptomaniacs on this list. I know the argument that the album format is dead, and I concur. I don't like spending £14 on a CD which has 4 tracks I want on it. But I make a value judgement and think "Hell, not everything I do is perfect, but I still get paid for it". Are all of you 100% grade students or something? If those 4 tracks are 90% good, and the other 6 are 40% good that gives me an average of [fuck, maths, ugh (90*4 + 40*6)/10] 60% good. Which is a pass in most books. I mean, what gives you the right to think that you 'deserve' music. As BOC said "Music has the right to children". Children can only be brought up with the right nurturing environment. Spoil a child and it grows up greedy [like the major labels], but don't give it enough and it won't achieve anything. There is balance in between. And no, I'm not a proponent of Copyright, or the pricing policies that record labels have. I believe in the creative commons [ http://www.creativecommons.org for those who don't know about it, check out the flash animation, it's really nice and enlightening ]. I'm about to try releasing my own software works in a new form, which should enable a lot of the things to happen that I want. I'm actively trying to change the way it works, for small independent labels because I know how hard it can be for them to survive. These are marketplaces where 100 sales make a big difference, and where manufacturing limited runs is only practical because of cashflow, because the major players have been on the playing field for a long time and they've mashed it up so it's all uneven and slippy for the smaller labels to get used to playing on it. All that things like soulseek are doing is making the divide bigger, and making it harder for new small labels to survive. I mean, who's going to contemplate giving their lives to promoting new interesting music if they can't afford to eat? I'd like to look upon soulseek as the new radio, something where people do use it to find out about new music and then go off and buy those releases, but experience has shown that record sales for the labels that soulseek tries to support have gone down. There are many many many reasons for this, and P2P software may make an easy target, but to say it has not effect is stupid. It has an effect, and we can't tell accurately what that is. What is assured is that none of the money that is contributed by people for the software makes it back to the artists who produce the majority of the music downloaded on it. Is this fair? If you are tech savy enough to know how to rip audio and stuff maybe we can all do this ourselves. Maybe we should each approach a record label we know and say "Hey, if you give me your CD's I will encode the first 2 minutes of half of the tracks an put them up on a web page for you, so people can preview them, and direct them towards you for sales." It wouldn't take much of your time, and you'd get the CD's in exchange for doing something for the label. Fuck it, I'll even build a CMS to manage the upload of this audio if you enough of you can get on board. I've got half of it in place already. A web orientated contributed musical resource for the promotion of new music. That's what soulseek should be about, but because it doesn't involve the labels actively it's not favoured. It can then be P2P'd across servers on the internet to provide a resource, but kept out of people pockets so the labels don't think of it as 'giving away' there music. There's an angle in this somewhere. Troll over. Not that I want a fight. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2003-02-07 22:08julia mI am planning on stalking certain people with my mp3 player and some firewire cables. ;) B
From:
julia m
To:
,
Date:
Fri, 07 Feb 2003 14:08:58 -0800
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <F42MjiGwYt7yiGh05YF000062ff@hotmail.com>
I am planning on stalking certain people with my mp3 player and some firewire cables. ;) Beware some of YOU could be next on my stalking list.
quoted 21 lines From: "Jan!" <jan_idm+spamtrap@jeugdhuisx.be>>From: "Jan!" <jan_idm+spamtrap@jeugdhuisx.be> >To: idm-l <idm@hyperreal.org> >Subject: [idm] Life after SoulSeek >Date: Fri, 07 Feb 2003 23:00:07 +0100 > >Even though SoulSeek was supposed to be offline for a couple of days tops, >it's been a whole lot more now. (I'm even starting to believe those nasty >RIAA rumours.) I read all the available info, went to the IRC channels, >weeped a little in a dark and cold corner of my room, and am thinking of >moving on. What is the best alternative to SoulSeek? I'm looking for a >network with decent idm content, preferably with a similar community >feeling to it. Any suggestions? > >-- >Jan! >http://jan.moesen.nu/ > > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
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2003-02-08 00:33Jamesi do, but sometimes its not that easy getting hold of rarities, and not everyone has the c
From:
James
To:
Date:
Sat, 8 Feb 2003 00:33:59 -0000
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <000a01c2cf09$c5e4d9c0$76d80050@james1>
i do, but sometimes its not that easy getting hold of rarities, and not everyone has the cash to do so. ----- Original Message ----- From: "lance rocker" <lance_rocker666@yahoo.com> To: <idm@hyperreal.org> Sent: Saturday, February 08, 2003 12:10 AM Subject: Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
quoted 47 lines I have a sugestion.Start buying records and or cds.I> I have a sugestion.Start buying records and or cds.I > know this may sound wierd,but try it! > > lanceR > > > --- Jan! <jan_idm+spamtrap@jeugdhuisx.be> wrote: > > Even though SoulSeek was supposed to be offline for > > a couple of days > > tops, it's been a whole lot more now. (I'm even > > starting to believe > > those nasty RIAA rumours.) I read all the available > > info, went to the > > IRC channels, weeped a little in a dark and cold > > corner of my room, and > > am thinking of moving on. What is the best > > alternative to SoulSeek? I'm > > looking for a network with decent idm content, > > preferably with a similar > > community feeling to it. Any suggestions? > > > > -- > > Jan! > > http://jan.moesen.nu/ > > > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe, e-mail: > > idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > > For additional commands, e-mail: > > idm-help@hyperreal.org > > > > > ===== > i dream in circles > > __________________________________________________ > Do you Yahoo!? > Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now. > http://mailplus.yahoo.com > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org >
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2003-02-08 00:37Sean HortonYes!!!! Buy them > burn them > and return them the same day. Many big wig record chains (T
From:
Sean Horton
To:
Date:
Fri, 07 Feb 2003 16:37:03 -0800
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <F176CvqQ7SzE2NSAW4e0000178f@hotmail.com>
Yes!!!! Buy them > burn them > and return them the same day. Many big wig record chains (Tower, Wherehouse) allow returning open CDs for a full refund. At $15-$20 bucks a pop why not!!!! Just think of all the CDRs you could by buy :) *****As a side not I spend about a poop load of money on vynil each month, much of which I got to sample through before hand through SoulSeek and never would have purchased otherwise. Long live MP3 and vynil!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ^(|_|)^
quoted 51 lines From: lance rocker <lance_rocker666@yahoo.com>>From: lance rocker <lance_rocker666@yahoo.com> >To: idm@hyperreal.org >Subject: Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek >Date: Fri, 7 Feb 2003 16:10:16 -0800 (PST) > >I have a sugestion.Start buying records and or cds.I >know this may sound wierd,but try it! > >lanceR > > >--- Jan! <jan_idm+spamtrap@jeugdhuisx.be> wrote: > > Even though SoulSeek was supposed to be offline for > > a couple of days > > tops, it's been a whole lot more now. (I'm even > > starting to believe > > those nasty RIAA rumours.) I read all the available > > info, went to the > > IRC channels, weeped a little in a dark and cold > > corner of my room, and > > am thinking of moving on. What is the best > > alternative to SoulSeek? I'm > > looking for a network with decent idm content, > > preferably with a similar > > community feeling to it. Any suggestions? > > > > -- > > Jan! > > http://jan.moesen.nu/ > > > > > > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe, e-mail: > > idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > > For additional commands, e-mail: > > idm-help@hyperreal.org > > > > >===== >i dream in circles > >__________________________________________________ >Do you Yahoo!? >Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now. >http://mailplus.yahoo.com > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
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2003-02-08 13:14MuffinRearange the following four letters : a w t t > Yes!!!! Buy them > burn them > and return
From:
Muffin
To:
IDM
Date:
Sat, 08 Feb 2003 13:14:39 +0000
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <BA6AB33F.20103%muffin@signmytits.com>
Rearange the following four letters : a w t t
quoted 7 lines Yes!!!! Buy them > burn them > and return them the same day.> Yes!!!! Buy them > burn them > and return them the same day. > > Many big wig record chains (Tower, Wherehouse) allow returning open CDs for > a full refund. > > At $15-$20 bucks a pop why not!!!! Just think of all the CDRs you could by > buy :)
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2003-02-08 23:14julia mOh please, dont be so extreme. Most people don't have the time to sit there looking for ev
From:
julia m
To:
,
Date:
Sat, 08 Feb 2003 15:14:18 -0800
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <F69EreyQkAoXqfuale5000083d6@hotmail.com>
Oh please, dont be so extreme. Most people don't have the time to sit there looking for every latest and greatest release on soulseek; people who spend a lot of time buy a shitload as well, much more then an average consumer. I can spend a week every night obsessively downloading everything from soulseek for hours, (I go through these phases) and still I buy stuff I couldnt find or want more of or is on a certain label i like. There aren't that many anal fucks who go buy CD's and actually take the time to rip them and return them, and we all have a ton of music we have purchased with one or no good tracks that lays there in the dust. Something seems vaguely familiar... hasnt a discussion like this already occurred not too long ago? We go in cycles, yes we do. :)
quoted 123 lines From: Muffin <muffin@signmytits.com>>From: Muffin <muffin@signmytits.com> >To: IDM <idm@hyperreal.org> >Subject: Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek >Date: Sat, 08 Feb 2003 13:45:57 +0000 > >Double edged sword innit. If labels believed that people weren't going to >rip off their music if they put it up as MP3s then they would. [well, the >numerous independent labels I work with would]. Unfortunately that's not >the >case. MP3=piracy is a stigma which exists and which concerns a lot of >labels >and artists. > >This is niche music we are talking about, not Pop. We should be trying to >encourage it to behave in a better way, rather than getting caught up in >the >politics of major labels. Fuck thinking that way. > >When you buy a CD, rip it, and return it it costs the label money. Ever >think of that? Most record stores don't re-stock them [if they are of a >decent calibre] instead it is returned to the label and disposed of. After >a >certain number of returns [allowed for faulty goods] they are no longer >written of, and so the label has paid for manufacturing and distribution on >an item it's not made any money on. > >I'm all for previewing of music [I've done a lot of work with labels >encouraging it] but if a label [such as Warp or Ninja Tune] provides 2 >minutes of RealAudio of 1/3 of the tracks on their releases then why do you >need to get MP3 versions to 'preview' it? > >Encourage the labels to provide previews in a more accessible format. Then, >if you are honest, you don't need soulseek for 'previews'. > >I know I'm going over old ground, but all that happens with MP3 trading is >that you piss off the people who are genuinely trying to get new, >interesting music out into the world. There is always going to be a balance >between those who feel they can give away what they produce, and those who >want to make money with it. If you have a problem with this why do you >think >it is fair to take control of their decisions into your own hands. > >How do I hear new music : I listen to Radio, go and hang out in shops, go >to >clubs and ask DJ's what tracks are, and have friends into the same music. >It >works pretty well for me as I'm not a totally compulsive record buyer any >more. It seems like there are a lot of kleptomaniacs on this list. > >I know the argument that the album format is dead, and I concur. I don't >like spending ?14 on a CD which has 4 tracks I want on it. But I make a >value judgement and think "Hell, not everything I do is perfect, but I >still >get paid for it". Are all of you 100% grade students or something? If those >4 tracks are 90% good, and the other 6 are 40% good that gives me an >average >of [fuck, maths, ugh (90*4 + 40*6)/10] 60% good. Which is a pass in most >books. > >I mean, what gives you the right to think that you 'deserve' music. As BOC >said "Music has the right to children". Children can only be brought up >with >the right nurturing environment. Spoil a child and it grows up greedy [like >the major labels], but don't give it enough and it won't achieve anything. >There is balance in between. > >And no, I'm not a proponent of Copyright, or the pricing policies that >record labels have. I believe in the creative commons [ >http://www.creativecommons.org for those who don't know about it, check out >the flash animation, it's really nice and enlightening ]. I'm about to try >releasing my own software works in a new form, which should enable a lot of >the things to happen that I want. > >I'm actively trying to change the way it works, for small independent >labels >because I know how hard it can be for them to survive. These are >marketplaces where 100 sales make a big difference, and where manufacturing >limited runs is only practical because of cashflow, because the major >players have been on the playing field for a long time and they've mashed >it >up so it's all uneven and slippy for the smaller labels to get used to >playing on it. All that things like soulseek are doing is making the divide >bigger, and making it harder for new small labels to survive. > >I mean, who's going to contemplate giving their lives to promoting new >interesting music if they can't afford to eat? > >I'd like to look upon soulseek as the new radio, something where people do >use it to find out about new music and then go off and buy those releases, >but experience has shown that record sales for the labels that soulseek >tries to support have gone down. There are many many many reasons for this, >and P2P software may make an easy target, but to say it has not effect is >stupid. It has an effect, and we can't tell accurately what that is. What >is >assured is that none of the money that is contributed by people for the >software makes it back to the artists who produce the majority of the music >downloaded on it. Is this fair? > >If you are tech savy enough to know how to rip audio and stuff maybe we can >all do this ourselves. Maybe we should each approach a record label we know >and say "Hey, if you give me your CD's I will encode the first 2 minutes of >half of the tracks an put them up on a web page for you, so people can >preview them, and direct them towards you for sales." It wouldn't take much >of your time, and you'd get the CD's in exchange for doing something for >the >label. > >Fuck it, I'll even build a CMS to manage the upload of this audio if you >enough of you can get on board. I've got half of it in place already. A web >orientated contributed musical resource for the promotion of new music. >That's what soulseek should be about, but because it doesn't involve the >labels actively it's not favoured. It can then be P2P'd across servers on >the internet to provide a resource, but kept out of people pockets so the >labels don't think of it as 'giving away' there music. > >There's an angle in this somewhere. > >Troll over. Not that I want a fight. > > >--------------------------------------------------------------------- >To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org >For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
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2003-02-09 02:54EggyToastAt 03:14 PM 2/8/2003 -0800, you wrote: >Oh please, dont be so extreme. Most people don't h
From:
EggyToast
To:
Date:
Sat, 08 Feb 2003 21:54:46 -0500
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <5.2.0.9.0.20030208215222.00b51718@mail.eggytoast.com>
At 03:14 PM 2/8/2003 -0800, you wrote:
quoted 13 lines Oh please, dont be so extreme. Most people don't have the time to sit>Oh please, dont be so extreme. Most people don't have the time to sit >there looking for every latest and greatest release on soulseek; people >who spend a lot of time buy a shitload as well, much more then an average >consumer. I can spend a week every night obsessively downloading >everything from soulseek for hours, (I go through these phases) and still >I buy stuff I couldnt find or want more of or is on a certain label i like. > >There aren't that many anal fucks who go buy CD's and actually take the >time to rip them and return them, and we all have a ton of music we have >purchased with one or no good tracks that lays there in the dust. > >Something seems vaguely familiar... hasnt a discussion like this already >occurred not too long ago? We go in cycles, yes we do. :)
Very much so. Usually whenever Soulseek has an outage and those reliant on it overreact :) Granted, it started as an IDM-centric network and still sports quite a bit of chat-based activity, so at least there's a community. But yeah. I don't buy a lot of music lately, and the music I download reflects that. Meaning that I hardly ever download anything. For every person who uses it to pad their collections and feels that everything should be free, there are likely 2 people who use it for research and buy a large portion of what they enjoy. (taht reminds me that i need to buy those prefuse releases!) derek ------- eggytoast.com ------- coming soon: eggtastic.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2003-02-09 14:25MuffinGroan. Did you actually read past the beginning of my email? I was suggesting building a c
From:
Muffin
To:
Date:
Sun, 09 Feb 2003 14:25:32 +0000
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <BA6C155C.2018D%muffin@signmytits.com>
Groan. Did you actually read past the beginning of my email? I was suggesting building a community using the combined power and strength of the individuals involved AND the record labels, rather than using something which they are inherently against because of stigma. First impressions count and therefore labels are going to think MP3=Piracy. I know this first hand as I've had a painful time persuading several labels that putting MP3 previews up would be better than RealMedia as the audience are more receptive to them. And the amount of labels who will let you stream audio in Flash [which is just MP3 encoded audio, and can easily be ripped out] because they aren't savy is huge. I don't think I was being extreme, I was presenting an argument for developing something new which works for both parties. I think this has been missed on lot of the P2P software for various reasons. I don't believe P2P is killing music, but I believe that it will take a long time before it can be proven that it's benefiting the labels. I was suggesting building something which provided that feedback. If a label or artist can see [amongst other things] A) what people think of a track B) how many people have listened to it C) what the sales they get of the back of it directly Then the system provides them with something back. I think if a tool like this existed that could help labels predict what would or wouldn't sell, or how many to manufacture, whilst giving people the ability to check out new music, we'd all be in a better position. It's sort of what's talked about in this article: http://shirky.com/writings/music_flip.html I guess that implies I didn't explain it clearly. I'll get back to my code and you'll see what I mean when it's done. on 9/2/03 2:54 am the person going by the name EggyToast at eggy@eggytoast.com spake :
quoted 42 lines At 03:14 PM 2/8/2003 -0800, you wrote:> At 03:14 PM 2/8/2003 -0800, you wrote: >> Oh please, dont be so extreme. Most people don't have the time to sit >> there looking for every latest and greatest release on soulseek; people >> who spend a lot of time buy a shitload as well, much more then an average >> consumer. I can spend a week every night obsessively downloading >> everything from soulseek for hours, (I go through these phases) and still >> I buy stuff I couldnt find or want more of or is on a certain label i like. >> >> There aren't that many anal fucks who go buy CD's and actually take the >> time to rip them and return them, and we all have a ton of music we have >> purchased with one or no good tracks that lays there in the dust. >> >> Something seems vaguely familiar... hasnt a discussion like this already >> occurred not too long ago? We go in cycles, yes we do. :) > > Very much so. Usually whenever Soulseek has an outage and those reliant on > it overreact :) Granted, it started as an IDM-centric network and still > sports quite a bit of chat-based activity, so at least there's a community. > > But yeah. I don't buy a lot of music lately, and the music I download > reflects that. Meaning that I hardly ever download anything. > > For every person who uses it to pad their collections and feels that > everything should be free, there are likely 2 people who use it for > research and buy a large portion of what they enjoy. > > (taht reminds me that i need to buy those prefuse releases!) > > derek > > ------- > eggytoast.com > ------- > coming soon: eggtastic.com > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org > For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org > >
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2003-02-09 17:08ben gill> I was suggesting building a community using the > combined power and strength > of the i
From:
ben gill
To:
Date:
Sun, 9 Feb 2003 09:08:46 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <20030209170846.76936.qmail@web41504.mail.yahoo.com>
quoted 8 lines I was suggesting building a community using the> I was suggesting building a community using the > combined power and strength > of the individuals involved AND the record labels, > rather than using > something which they are inherently against because > of stigma. First > impressions count and therefore labels are going to > think MP3=Piracy.
It's interesting how equal opportunity you are, or rather how label-centric your stance is. I know someone has to stand up for the providers of music, because without them, we'd all be walking around listening to leaves falling to the ground in a musicless society, with attuned ears keen at identifying types of bird due to their characteristic calls. It's clear from your two lengthy emails that you're basically speaking from the point of view of a concerned label boss, but your ingenious ideas place you more in the marketing department, or r+d. Look Muffin, I'm sorry, but I don't give a toss about conveniencing the labels. If they wanted me to fill out a 3 question survey before I could listen to 2 minutes of a sneak preview of a new track, I'd go to Kazaa or another file sharing program to find the file (in its entirety) there. I make no apologies for this, it's simply another way of operating that's possible now because of technology. Why is the traditional system better than the emerging one? Why shouldn't labels accept this new state of affairs and embrace it? (For instance www.irdial.com). I know they're used to getting money from the public for their product, but there's nothing inherently correct about that process, it's just one of many--as is mp3 file sharing--as is the labels giving the product away and asking for donations--as is majors going back to the vinyl/tape formats and eschewing digital media in the most blatant greedy capitalist Luddite move ever. None of these is the inherently correct method. It seems that you want to cling to the traditional way of doing business, which is fine, but not necessary. Really it's just that the ball has rolled into the public's side of the court now, and the labels want it back. Maybe Muffin wants to pull up the dividing lines and create one big happy family. Something tells me that regardless of his intentions, his proposals won't change anything regarding p2p sharing, but might make the labels feel better about things via the smokescreen of the questionaire/preview mp3 idea. The thing that prevents us from being one big happy family is just as much that, because of the commerce involved, the public is being blamed for preventing label men (not even the artists themselves!) from eating/surviving, as it is that some people aren't paying for music as much as they used to. As in the following: ---------------------------------------------------- I mean, who's going to contemplate giving their lives to promoting new interesting music if they can't afford to eat? ---------------------------------------------------- You mean, "if they can't afford to eat by the profits they should earn off their product," right? Are we that unadaptable? The majority of labels/artists who make music I like (and I'm not alone here, list) work other jobs to fulfil those needs. Is that wrong? Why? As for promoting new interesting music, again, use the new tools at your disposal. Promotion via mp3 or online in another form is the most powerful method available. It will get music heard in nooks and crannies never before imagined. Is that the point of promotion, or is it only profit-oriented? If you feel you should be compensated with money for this, ask for it. Don't fuck people over in the old way. Most people who like you will support you, and if that doesn't cut it, then get into a more lucrative arena. There are a lot of money-making opportunities in the world, from the shite to the dope. Perhaps, though, your label can make money by selling material to advertisers, a la Low-Gap, Mogwai-Levis, various-Volkswagen. More and more IDM is popping up in the mainstream media--use those payoffs to support something positive like further label development or new releases. ---------------------------------------------------- That's what soulseek should be about, but because it doesn't involve the labels actively it's not favoured. ---------------------------------------------------- By whom? The labels, oh, right. It's important that p2p is in their favor. Next........ ----------------------------------------------------- I mean, what gives you the right to think that you 'deserve' music. As BOC said "Music has the right to children". ----------------------------------------------------- Muffin, this is the type of comment that provokes pages-long emails. Your antagonistic attitude against the lay music listener sounds like that of a threatened, cornered a+r man. Who said we deserve music? Is that really the question? People are going to create music, regardless of its effect on the industry. Presumably, they won't be opposed to its being heard by the public, if that's what they so intend. If every artist/label was vaporized today; or if all recorded music was vaporized; or every p2p system in the world was prohibited, I doubt people would be complaining about their rights being violated. You're focusing on the wrong side of the equation here: the public isn't to be chided for downloading music or exploiting Soulseek without an equally extended finger pointing toward frustrated, querulous label execs. It's they who cling to the rallying cry of "rights" in this situation. BOC's nonsensical title doesn't backup your claim. If anything, it backs up a connection between music and its audience--curiously omitting the exchange of cash. In a BOC sense, anyone's music can engulf far more children via p2p than otherwise. Ben __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. 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2003-02-09 17:17chiquitaqueenclearly i have joined this conversation too late. after a yr and a half of slsk, i'm now a
From:
chiquitaqueen
To:
Date:
Sun, 9 Feb 2003 09:17:01 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <20030209171701.67730.qmail@web20307.mail.yahoo.com>
clearly i have joined this conversation too late. after a yr and a half of slsk, i'm now at a loss as to what i should do to get that pesky idm and post rawk that i can't buy here. being in grad school i simply don't have enough money to pay for shipping from europe or japan etc to the US. i waited until today to resubscribe myself to the idm list in hopes that slsk would magically reappear and of course, it did not. so my question is: does anyone have any recs for other proggies like slsk? i'm mainly sad because i had a few buds on there who would always rip stuff/keep me updated as to good stuff to check out. and now i have no way to reconnect with them because i was too naive to consider that those audiogalaxy fucks would be the beginning of the (real) end of slsk. alas. can anyone help out a poor gal in need? -tweaker __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now. http://mailplus.yahoo.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2003-02-09 20:24info@noiseloop.com>Date: Sun, 9 Feb 2003 09:08:46 -0800 (PST) >To: idm@hyperreal.org >From: ben gill <gillet
From:
To:
Date:
Sun, 9 Feb 2003 20:24:19 -0000
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <002701c2d079$3a44e8d0$0201a8c0@chu>
quoted 6 lines Date: Sun, 9 Feb 2003 09:08:46 -0800 (PST)>Date: Sun, 9 Feb 2003 09:08:46 -0800 (PST) >To: idm@hyperreal.org >From: ben gill <gillette_foamy@yahoo.com> >Subject: Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek >Message-ID: <20030209170846.76936.qmail@web41504.mail.yahoo.com> >
<>
quoted 16 lines I make no apologies for>I make no apologies for >this, it's simply another way of operating that's >possible now because of technology. Why is the >traditional system better than the emerging one? Why >shouldn't labels accept this new state of affairs and >embrace it? (For instance www.irdial.com). I know >they're used to getting money from the public for >their product, but there's nothing inherently correct >about that process, it's just one of many--as is mp3 >file sharing--as is the labels giving the product away >and asking for donations--as is majors going back to >the vinyl/tape formats and eschewing digital media in >the most blatant greedy capitalist Luddite move ever. >None of these is the inherently correct method. It >seems that you want to cling to the traditional way of >doing business, which is fine, but not necessary.
You are ignoring copyright which is not a force of nature but a historically recent law constructed with the purpose of allowing businesses like record labels to exist. Your argument is logically no different to 'I can buy a gun so why shouldn't I shoot someone in the head - you can't stop me, I can do it and if I want to I will'. regardless of how easy it is, mp3 sharing of copyright material infringes people's legal rights. It's quite simple really. You may disagree with copyright in general which is fine, work to get the laws changed or move to someplace that doesn't have these laws. Your disagreement is not with the labels but with the way copyright law works. (And bear in mind that these rights belong to the artist and not the label who essentially administers them on the artist's behalf). While I don't agree that dling mp3's is stealing, it is clearly unauthorised copying. If copyright law is no longer enforceable (possible but not a done deal), then the only way the labels can embrace it is to shut up shop. Or they could become publishing companies as you suggest - a great improvement when the only way a band can survive is supporting car sales (really sticking it to 'the man'). But we are not quite there yet. The thing that worries me is that the proponents of freedownloading are not making a serious argument here and are just inviting all kinds of invasive tollgate-type technology where every tune you ever listen to will be on a giant corporate database and you'll only be able to play 'authorised' material. And talking of Luddites which you seem to despise, you are aware that there is already a neo-Luddite movement which will let you carry on p2ping? (http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/26740.html, http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/archive/26796.html) -- ed http://ww.noiseloop.com -now accepting submissions --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2003-02-09 22:21ben gillarg criticized begins here: >there's nothing inherently >correct about that process, it's
From:
ben gill
To:
Date:
Sun, 9 Feb 2003 14:21:03 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <20030209222103.32133.qmail@web41505.mail.yahoo.com>
arg criticized begins here:
quoted 10 lines there's nothing inherently>there's nothing inherently >correct about that process, it's just one of many-as >is mp3 file sharing--as is the labels giving the >product away and asking for donations--as is majors >going back to the vinyl/tape formats and eschewing >digital media in the most blatant greedy capitalist >Luddite move ever. None of these is the inherently >correct method. It seems that you want to cling to >the traditional way of doing business, which is fine, >but not necessary.
and now the criticism:
quoted 9 lines You are ignoring copyright which is not a force of> You are ignoring copyright which is not a force of > nature but a historically > recent law constructed with the purpose of allowing > businesses like record > labels to exist. Your argument is logically no > different to 'I can buy a gun > so why shouldn't I shoot someone in the head - you > can't stop me, I can do > it and if I want to I will'.
Huh? My arg is basically: 1. there is no inherently correct way to distribute music 2. therefore, no one way is "necessary," or the correct way. A little bit different from "I can buy a gun..." as you say. The principle there's more like "I can achieve the means to do damage--so why not do damage?" I'm not talking about doing damage to anyone or anything. I fail to see the meaningful correlation between what I said and what you say I said. As for copyright, I never once took issue with what was legal or illegal. I agree with your point that downloading mp3s might infringe on an artist's legal rights. I simply do not care about this aspect of copyright law, which is why that wasn't a consideration in my original post--or I guess more precisely, it wasn't a concern of Muffin's email (don't forget I was just replying to his post, to his points). As for working to relax the copyright law, since I don't care about how d/l mp3s infriges on it in the first place, I find it a slim probability that you'll find me wasting my time there. I hope you don't think it's too far to go to say that your points have a few fundamental assumptions (which don't compel me): 1. Because downloading mp3s breaks copyright law, it is wrong. 2. There is a cause/effect relationship between breaking copyright law and dwindling sales/the decline of record labels. I'd say point 2 is the more interesting, less moral question--and more susceptible to a few prods. Muffin didn't take this one on, for good reason--it's impossible to prove. There are too many factors for financial decline, it's just as easy to argue that p2p's brilliant virus-like spreading combats the financial decline of record labels by encouraging people to get the "real thing" down at the shop/through mail order. Some people buy the cds, some people don't. But is it the case that person X, who downloaded album Y, would have bought it if downloading weren't an option? Uncertain. I think that's just as likely a scenario as the obvious "leech" syndrome that everyone's so concerned about, and it does sweet F.A. to a record company's bottom line. As for "the proponents of freedownloading are not making a serious argument here and are just inviting all kinds of invasive tollgate-type technology..."--there's no argument to be made. P2p exists, and it'll keep going. Is it right? What will labels do? Neither of those questions requires an argument to be made to justify freedownloading. As for the tollgate thing, if you're saying that labels, due to declining sales/desperation/conniving are going to do away with all physically tangible music products and replace that with a public database, I highly doubt it. People will continue to make tangible music products because that's the tradition we've become used to. Djing will support vinyl. CDs are still incredibly popular. Some tollgate type thing might be instituted alongside the physical products as a new gimmick, but that doesn't preclude the idea of other p2p networks. Who the fuck wants to use a public database like the one you describe, when all it takes is one person to upload a given file into a program like soulseek and viola!, instant sharing. The alternatives will always exist. For the record, I have no issue with Luddites, I was simply employing the term because it was apt. I see no discrepancy between a neo-Luddite movement and the idea of p2p. Perhaps they're just revisionist Luddites? :) Ben ps - if I don't reply to each objection/email I receive on this post, it's because the last hour of my life was spent composing the above, and I'm not going to give up too many more on this topic. The disturbing thing is that I was going to work on music during that hour... __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now. http://mailplus.yahoo.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2003-02-10 20:27andrijOn Sun, 9 Feb 2003 20:24:19 -0000, info@noiseloop.com wrote: >You are ignoring copyright w
From:
andrij
To:
idm-l
Date:
Mon, 10 Feb 2003 15:27:15 -0500
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <k6hgvfe60ulruu1.100220031527@drij>
On Sun, 9 Feb 2003 20:24:19 -0000, info@noiseloop.com wrote:
quoted 3 lines You are ignoring copyright which is not a force of nature but>You are ignoring copyright which is not a force of nature but >a historically recent law constructed with the purpose of >allowing businesses like record labels to exist.
If copyright law was designed to allow for a business structure such as the current music industry to exist, copyright law is seriously flawed and should be wholely rethought from the ground up. -- andrij. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2003-02-10 20:29Brandon TallentHere's an apropos quote: There has grown up in the minds of certain groups in this country
From:
Brandon Tallent
To:
Date:
Mon, 10 Feb 2003 12:29:58 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <20030210202958.64721.qmail@web41306.mail.yahoo.com>
Here's an apropos quote: There has grown up in the minds of certain groups in this country the notion that because a man or a corporation has made a profit out of the public for a number of years , the government and the courts are charged with the duty of guaranteeing such profit in the future, even in the face of changing circumstances and contrary public interest. This strange doctrine is not supported by statute nor common law. Neither individuals nor corporations have any right to come into court and ask that the clock of history be stopped ,or turned back, for their private benefit. -- Life-Line, Robert Heinlein brandon http://www.resynthesize.com/
quoted 19 lines --- andrij <andrij@misrule.org> wrote:> --- andrij <andrij@misrule.org> wrote: > > On Sun, 9 Feb 2003 20:24:19 -0000, > > info@noiseloop.com wrote: > > >You are ignoring copyright which is not a force > of > > nature but > > >a historically recent law constructed with the > > purpose of > > >allowing businesses like record labels to exist. > > > > If copyright law was designed to allow for a > > business structure > > such as the current music industry to exist, > > copyright law is > > seriously flawed and should be wholely rethought > > from the > > ground up. > > -- > > andrij.
__________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now. http://mailplus.yahoo.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2003-02-11 03:26info@noiseloop.comHope you lot are ok with me replying digest style... >From: ben gill <gillette_foamy@yahoo
From:
To:
Date:
Tue, 11 Feb 2003 03:26:09 -0000
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <00a601c2d17d$52752000$0201a8c0@chu>
Hope you lot are ok with me replying digest style...
quoted 4 lines From: ben gill <gillette_foamy@yahoo.com>>From: ben gill <gillette_foamy@yahoo.com> >Subject: Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek >Message-ID: <20030209222103.32133.qmail@web41505.mail.yahoo.com> >
<>
quoted 7 lines Huh? My arg is basically:>Huh? My arg is basically: > >1. there is no inherently correct way to distribute >music > >2. therefore, no one way is "necessary," or the >correct way.
You can distribute music any way you like of course if you composed it. However, society has decided to create a mechanism for the distribution of music and make it universally available. It is absolutely not 'inherent' - it is artificial, but it exists and it has been popular and successful. <>
quoted 4 lines points). As for working to relax the copyright law,>points). As for working to relax the copyright law, >since I don't care about how d/l mp3s infriges on it >in the first place, I find it a slim probability that >you'll find me wasting my time there.
whether or not you agree, you are still subject to the law. Perhaps the reason you say this is because you think the chances of the mp3 police knocking on your door are extremely slim - so that it has become an optional, moral decision. But look at what happened in Denmark already - http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/archive/28325.html. If you don't want to face these kinds of possibility then maybe you should take an interest in the law before it ends up taking an interest in you. <>
quoted 20 lines 2. There is a cause/effect relationship between>2. There is a cause/effect relationship between >breaking copyright law and dwindling sales/the decline >of record labels. > >I'd say point 2 is the more interesting, less moral >question--and more susceptible to a few prods. Muffin >didn't take this one on, for good reason--it's >impossible to prove. There are too many factors for >financial decline, it's just as easy to argue that >p2p's brilliant virus-like spreading combats the >financial decline of record labels by encouraging >people to get the "real thing" down at the >shop/through mail order. Some people buy the cds, >some people don't. But is it the case that person X, >who downloaded album Y, would have bought it if >downloading weren't an option? Uncertain. I think >that's just as likely a scenario as the obvious >"leech" syndrome that everyone's so concerned about, >and it does sweet F.A. to a record company's bottom >line.
Yes it's an interesting question to think about (I think many of us have for quite a while). You are quite correct to say that that any claimed loss in sales is pretty much incalculable (though I think it's worth noting that sales have gone right down at the same time that cd ripping, broadband and p2p have become widely available and relatively cheap). However, this misses the point that once you accept freedling as a legitimate practise, you are necessarily throwing copyright away - they are completely incompatible. Since the recording industry is founded on copyright you can't try to fudge this by suggesting that they tweak their business model and adapt it to the new terrain - their business model begins and end with copyright and there is no middle ground for them. They may adapt the new environment to suit themselves if necessary...
quoted 22 lines As for "the proponents of freedownloading are not>As for "the proponents of freedownloading are not >making a serious argument here and are just inviting >all kinds of invasive tollgate-type >technology..."--there's no argument to be made. P2p >exists, and it'll keep going. Is it right? What will >labels do? Neither of those questions requires an >argument to be made to justify freedownloading. As >for the tollgate thing, if you're saying that labels, >due to declining sales/desperation/conniving are going >to do away with all physically tangible music products >and replace that with a public database, I highly >doubt it. People will continue to make tangible music >products because that's the tradition we've become >used to. Djing will support vinyl. CDs are still >incredibly popular. Some tollgate type thing might be >instituted alongside the physical products as a new >gimmick, but that doesn't preclude the idea of other >p2p networks. Who the fuck wants to use a public >database like the one you describe, when all it takes >is one person to upload a given file into a program >like soulseek and viola!, instant sharing. The >alternatives will always exist.
Looking more unlikely every day. p2p is not particularly robust as a distribution mechanism; it just took one independent artist to shut down slsk for over a week with a simple complaint to their host. If hosts can't be shut down, p2ps can be poisoned or ISPs can be persuaded or obligated to block/filter traffic. It also sounds like maybe you haven't heard of schemes like DRM or Palladium. Basically, largely due to p2p, there is now a lot of pressure on hardware manufacturers to build copyright protection into the hardware itself. What this could mean in practise is that your hard drive, router, cpu, soundcard, headphones, sound system, tv etc could reject 'unauthorised' material/programs or they might log to a remote database so that you can be charged per play (or prosecuted). You are also going to start to see appliance-type audio download/streaming devices which will be completely controlled environments - I can imagine if these reach critical mass, the labels will abandon physical product since selling below a certain threshold is just not worth it. This is not some sci-fi fantasy, these schemes are being specified right now.
quoted 8 lines From: andrij <andrij@misrule.org>>From: andrij <andrij@misrule.org> >Subject: Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek >Message-ID: <k6hgvfe60ulruu1.100220031527@drij> > >If copyright law was designed to allow for a business structure >such as the current music industry to exist, copyright law is >seriously flawed and should be wholely rethought from the >ground up.
Since there seems to be a pretty decent consensus on this I agree wholeheartedly. The law seems to be out of step with what people want and the measures suggested so far to keep it enforceable are appalling.
quoted 19 lines From: Brandon Tallent <djresonance@yahoo.com>>From: Brandon Tallent <djresonance@yahoo.com> >Subject: Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek >Message-ID: <20030210202958.64721.qmail@web41306.mail.yahoo.com> > >Here's an apropos quote: > >There has grown up in the minds of certain groups in >this country the notion that because a man or a >corporation has made a profit out of the public for a >number of years , the government and the courts are >charged with the duty of guaranteeing such profit in >the future, even in the face of changing circumstances >and contrary public interest. This strange doctrine is >not supported by statute nor common law. Neither >individuals nor corporations have any right to come >into court and ask that the clock of history be >stopped ,or turned back, for their private benefit. > >-- Life-Line, Robert Heinlein
In the case of copyright, it is supported by law of course so this wouldn't exactly apply. But I think it still expresses how a lot of people view this. However, it's not how things really work; governments apply all kinds of measures to suit various corporations, industry sectors and interest groups - some good, some bad. So we have licensing for tv and radio frequencies, speed limits on our roads or the DMCA for example. Also the record industry is not (just) 5 fat guys smoking hand-rolled cigars and drinking champagne from their shoes - we are talking about a lot of employees paying taxes with families, mortgages, votes. The only way I can see that p2p will be allowed to flourish is if it doesn't affect the existing industry _and they recognise this_ or if it spawns an equally large market - both unlikely with the current model. Let's enjoy it while we can ;) -- ed http://www.noiseloop.com - now voting best album 02 --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2003-02-11 05:23ben gilled sez: > whether or not you agree, you are still subject to > the law. Perhaps the > reas
From:
ben gill
To:
Date:
Mon, 10 Feb 2003 21:23:37 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <20030211052337.51782.qmail@web41510.mail.yahoo.com>
ed sez:
quoted 8 lines whether or not you agree, you are still subject to> whether or not you agree, you are still subject to > the law. Perhaps the > reason you say this is because you think the chances > of the mp3 police > knocking on your door are extremely slim - so that > it has become an > optional, moral decision. But look at what happened > in Denmark already -
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/archive/28325.html.
quoted 4 lines If you don't want> If you don't want > to face these kinds of possibility then maybe you > should take an interest in > the law before it ends up taking an interest in you.
Yes, I suppose if the industry is hit hard enough, they'll get their money somehow, dipping directly into the pockets of citizens if necessary. Sure would be a good idea, across the board--track down all people who have downloaded/uploaded a mp3, and demand copyright royalties. Why hasn't it happened already, in a larger country than Denmark, I wonder? One guess is that the Danish Anti Pirat Gruppen, the group referred to in the Register article, is an extension of the major labels themselves. They would have a copyright beef with those who have downloaded their products--and how many hardcore mp3 users are downloading this material? No, I mean HARDCORE, like 25,000 plus files. Not many, I would guess. When is Tigerbeat6 or Morr or Blah Blah going to form a coalition such as the APG and search out those who have downloaded their artists, to demand a payment due to copyright infringement? Essentially, we're talking about two different worlds--I'm talking about IDM-sized labels, if not IDM style music; you're talking about WEA and the like. This explains your doomsday-Orwellian tambor (and my indie "fuck em all" doggedness.... :)
quoted 1 line The alternatives will always exist.> >The alternatives will always exist.
quoted 1 line Looking more unlikely every day.> Looking more unlikely every day.
No matter how cynical you are, how hopeless you believe the situation is, or how powerless you think individuals are compared to the music industry, alternatives will always exist. If we take it to its logical end, and indeed your picture of the future is correct, I believe more and more artists will eschew the Big Brother reality you've illustrated, and revert to a model that abandons copyright as we know it altogether. Granted, p2p is not robust, but that's part of the deal. If it stays independent, what can you expect?--especially if the measures you outlined are implemented. Again, you're more concerned with majors whereas I'm not. Clearly our concerns are different, but I think I understand where you're coming from: it all comes down to the black and white of the law; downloaders are culpable and could be tracked down for violating copyright law; tracing devices are/can be installed in various technological components--it seems like the principle you're getting at is that those in charge will remain there, and will recoup their losses, no matter how underhanded the means. Agreed. Jump ship as soon as possible, to the largest extent possible.
quoted 4 lines Also the> Also the > record industry is not (just) 5 fat guys smoking > hand-rolled cigars and > drinking champagne from their shoes -
Amazing, haunting image, even if inaccurate :) Ben __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Shopping - Send Flowers for Valentine's Day http://shopping.yahoo.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2003-02-11 10:48William SamuelsFour Tet, the lush organic solo electronica project of Fridge?s (post rockers) Kieran Hebd
From:
William Samuels
To:
Date:
Tue, 11 Feb 2003 02:48:11 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
[idm] Four Tet (new single & album)
Reply to:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <20030211104811.37559.qmail@web41012.mail.yahoo.com>
Four Tet, the lush organic solo electronica project of Fridge?s (post rockers) Kieran Hebden, is to return on March 31 with a new single entitled ?She Moves She?, followed by a new album on ?Rounds?, on May 5. The album - the follow up to his acclaimed 2001 album ?Pause? ? is said to be ?an impossibly beautiful musical landscape that looks set to propel Four Tet into household name territory?. Meanwhile, Kieran Hebden is also about to begin work on Beth Orton?s new album ? his first full production credit. ______________________________________________________ Saturday, February 15 Nationwide Peace Protests. Get more info. http://www.legitgov.org/peaceprotests.html ______________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Shopping - Send Flowers for Valentine's Day http://shopping.yahoo.com --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2003-02-11 07:57Mark> > >Looking more unlikely every day. p2p is not particularly robust as a >distribution me
From:
Mark
To:
Cc:
Date:
Mon, 10 Feb 2003 23:57:26 -0800
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <3E48ACE6.1090101@ecst.csuchico.edu>
quoted 20 lines Looking more unlikely every day. p2p is not particularly robust as a> > >Looking more unlikely every day. p2p is not particularly robust as a >distribution mechanism; it just took one independent artist to shut down >slsk for over a week with a simple complaint to their host. If hosts can't >be shut down, p2ps can be poisoned or ISPs can be persuaded or obligated to >block/filter traffic. It also sounds like maybe you haven't heard of schemes >like DRM or Palladium. Basically, largely due to p2p, there is now a lot of >pressure on hardware manufacturers to build copyright protection into the >hardware itself. What this could mean in practise is that your hard drive, >router, cpu, soundcard, headphones, sound system, tv etc could reject >'unauthorised' material/programs or they might log to a remote database so >that you can be charged per play (or prosecuted). You are also going to >start to see appliance-type audio download/streaming devices which will be >completely controlled environments - I can imagine if these reach critical >mass, the labels will abandon physical product since selling below a certain >threshold is just not worth it. This is not some sci-fi fantasy, these >schemes are being specified right now. > >
throwing my hat in the politcal ring, if this does come true, the price of old 'inferior' technology would skyrocket. this won't stop people either, as a whole electronic infrastructure (the one currently in place) cannot be destroyed overnight. when you then attach a value to it (privacy, and unmonitored data transmission) in a new economy, suddenly old unprotected 40 Gb hard drives will double in value, even while new 500 gig drives are sitting shelves cheap (besides, who's going to be able to afford to fill up a 500 gig drive with purchased movies? that's like 100 movies... might as well buy the actual dvds). What is this going to do? slow the advancement of technology. the consumer backlash would also kill off a lot of profit from the manufacturing companies being pressured into this. this future you describe was lobbied last year in a bill that was quckly killed for those above reasons. why the bill? because the tech industry is WAY more powerful (in terms of cold hard cash) than the entertainment industry. i highly doubt the tech industry would ever succumb entirely to these "pressures". unless, of course, it is mandated by the government, and that didn't work. PS... filesharing has done NOTHING but improve my purchased record collection. for instance, I bought 4 records last week. the ONE record I hadn't already downloaded earlier was the new Nightmares on Wax album, which ended up being kinda poopy. long live filesharing. -Mark --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org
2003-02-13 00:08info@noiseloop.comdiscussion alert! you have been warned: apologies to shutthefuckupists for increasing the
From:
To:
Date:
Thu, 13 Feb 2003 00:08:03 -0000
Subject:
Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek
permalink · <02a301c2d2f3$fae2d210$0201a8c0@chu>
discussion alert! you have been warned: apologies to shutthefuckupists for increasing the text/spam ratio - to return to the commercial broadcast just activate yr killogfile/antiantispam shield, press button on keyboard with 'delete' written on it or keep eyes shut tight for the duration of this message.
quoted 4 lines From: ben gill <gillette_foamy@yahoo.com>>From: ben gill <gillette_foamy@yahoo.com> >Subject: Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek >Message-ID: <20030211052337.51782.qmail@web41510.mail.yahoo.com> >
<>
quoted 5 lines When is>When is >Tigerbeat6 or Morr or Blah Blah going to form a >coalition such as the APG and search out those who >have downloaded their artists, to demand a payment due >to copyright infringement?
If these kinds of action are successful, I'm sure there would be any number of no win/no fee collectors and agencies. You are talking about a lot of labels and it would only takes one bloody-minded label, publisher or artist to complain. Are you that confident? I think you'd be surprised at how many small artists and labels who don't know how they should react when they see their stuff as mp3z. Realistically, I think the problem is more likely to be a case of self-censorship with ISP's pre-emptively blocking ip's/ports and filtering content to avoid potential lawsuits.
quoted 5 lines Essentially, we're talking about two different>Essentially, we're talking about two different >worlds--I'm talking about IDM-sized labels, if not IDM >style music; you're talking about WEA and the like. >This explains your doomsday-Orwellian tambor (and my >indie "fuck em all" doggedness.... :)
<>
quoted 9 lines No matter how cynical you are, how hopeless you>No matter how cynical you are, how hopeless you >believe the situation is, or how powerless you think >individuals are compared to the music industry, >alternatives will always exist. If we take it to its >logical end, and indeed your picture of the future is >correct, I believe more and more artists will eschew >the Big Brother reality you've illustrated, and revert >to a model that abandons copyright as we know it >altogether.
<>
quoted 2 lines Again, you're more concerned with majors>Again, you're more concerned with majors >whereas I'm not. Clearly our concerns are different,
<>
quoted 10 lines seems like the principle you're getting at is that>seems like the principle you're getting at is that >those in charge will remain there, and will recoup >their losses, no matter how underhanded the means. >Agreed. Jump ship as soon as possible, to the largest >extent possible. > >From: Mark <mef@ecst.csuchico.edu> >CC: idm@hyperreal.org >Subject: Re: [idm] Life after SoulSeek >Message-ID: <3E48ACE6.1090101@ecst.csuchico.edu>
<>
quoted 6 lines this future you describe was lobbied last year in a bill that was quckly>this future you describe was lobbied last year in a bill that was quckly >killed for those above reasons. why the bill? because the tech >industry is WAY more powerful (in terms of cold hard cash) than the >entertainment industry. i highly doubt the tech industry would ever >succumb entirely to these "pressures". unless, of course, it is >mandated by the government, and that didn't work.
The entertainment industry continues to lobby to get this stuff mandated by law in the US (to be followed by anyone who wants to do business with her). So far they got the DMCA and the battle between entertainment and tech industries is still ongoing (http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/28882.html). This is where companies like Microsoft and Sony come in. Sony is both a tech and entertainment company and they have openly stated that they intend to throttle copying at the hardware level while MS is openly working on Palladium, which will only run signed content (some beginnings here - http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/28938.html). In other words, these companies are going to implement this stuff in any case with or without government mandates. So wtf has any of this tech politicking got to do with you, me and tigerbeat? We can just do our thing while the men in suits do theirs... Only problem is that at least about 90% of us are using MS. What format are tigerbeat supposed to release on when the choice is between some digitally signed MS format or something that is free but that only a small number of people can use? The distribution margins are already cut to the bone for a microlabel and excluding a large section of the market while maintaining a distribution deal will not be an option. (You could also say a label's job is to get the music out there to the audience). Even worse, what if a license is required to encode music into this proprietary format - say something that costs $5k per year, cheap to a big label but unthinkable to a small one. So for tigerbeat to be able to avoid these formats, the vast majority of the audience must have some kind of oldschool or linux-y playing equipment. This could become difficult in terms of availability alone, I bought a hifi for someone recently and I was shocked by how hard it is now to actually get something which isn't a 5:1 dvd system; I just wanted some plain separates for a simple cd stereo system - even in a big city the choice was tiny. Seems like most companies stopped making this stuff already. And if it is difficult to get playback equipment it will be doubly hard to find manufacturing facilities for physical products. I think it is pretty safe to say that this will affect us all. -- ed http://www.noiseloop.com np: lazyfish demo --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org