Carlo Longino makes a strong case about how DRM, in the long run, will harm the record industry far more than file sharing and unprotected digital distribution ever will.
"A parallel problem is that DRM often isn't used to "protect" music, it's used as a form of lock-in by device manufacturers and service providers. For instance, if somebody's bought a bunch of music from iTunes, what kind of MP3 player will they buy -- an iPod, or one that can't play their music? The same thing will play out in mobile as service providers, labels and operators all jockey for top position on the food chain. This doesn't really benefit anybody, least of which the end user."
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Comments
Re: DRM is killing the record industry, not file sharing
I wasn't sure what DRM was, so I followed the link. (Must find industry-approved term...)
I'm sure it's not easy for most home consumers, but couldn't a lot of folk just record DRM protected material on editing programs? I used to find stuff on Napster that I knew came from bootleg cassettes and old-school reels... Is all underground file-sharing just gripping and ripping cd buyers now, or am I missing a bigger issue?
It seems that any CD that has the "unauthorized reproduction.. etc disclaimer meant that it was illegal whether it was me recording vinyl LPs to cassette in real time in 1986 (strangely, I never got caught) or by 1999 in 2 seconds by ripping mp3s from CD (then on a bootleg program...so I was told) It's just another hurdle, right? Why be angry that they caught up with the technology?
If they came out with records back in the day that couldn't be dubbed to cassette, I'm not sure I'd feel entitled to bitch.
Re: DRM is killing the record industry, not file sharing
taking protected music and un-protecting it is exactly what the guy in the article is saying. People are just working around the encryption and in the process getting bothered by the encryption in the first place. The record industry is shooting itself and its customers in the foot.
Records are actually one of the finest forms of encryption the industry has ever had. You couldn't copy them without loss, they were next to impossible for a consumer to make exact replicas of. I bet the RIAA is longing for the days of Vinyl.
Re: DRM is killing the record industry, not file sharing
I just find it very funny that in light of all this I saw a report yesterday morning on C-Span where the RIAA is back to crying about home-burned CD's again, and how it hurts their industry more than file-sharing.
Ridiculous tail chasing bullshit. Remember when they did the exact same thing with cassettes 20+ years ago? And they've certainly already done it with CD-R's at least once.
Anything to point fingers away from the fact that their output of the last 5-10 years or so has been utter crap (on the majority)
I'm out getting my abs airbrushed on...leave a message
Re: DRM is killing the record industry, not file sharing
I have to say I was pretty PO'd when I tried to put some songs I bought on Itunes on my wifes new ipod mini and it said NO!
I probably just have to authorize her or whatever, but come on, Itunes is supposed to be about convenience.
Re: DRM is killing the record industry, not file sharing
Quote:
actually Apple and iTunes is all about rights management. When you buy a song from the music store you have a limited use of that song. It's more a like a lease.
The iTunes Music Store uses FairPlay, Apple's digital rights management system that's designed to be fair to the artist, to the record companies and to you. In a nutshell, your FairPlay agreement entitles you to play your music on up to five computers (and enjoy unlimited synching with iPods), allows unlimited burning for individual songs and lets you burn playlists up to 7 times each.
www.apple.com
Re: DRM is killing the record industry, not file sharing
appropriately enough, today I wore one of my Downhill Battle shirts

http://downhillbattle.org/
Re: DRM is killing the record industry, not file sharing
What do you all think about FairPlay? Ya think it works? I figure its just a minor inconvenience.
http://SoulMovementMusic.com
http://myspace.com/soulmovement
http://LukeBass.com
Re: DRM is killing the record industry, not file sharing
I don't think people are very aware of what it is. They buy a song and believe they own it. They tried to share it etc. and they can't. I think that this page sums up the opposition to iTunes. This is just an excerpt, visit http://www.downhillbattle.org/itunes/ for the whole thing.

People are paying for songs on the iTunes Music Store because they think it's a good way to support musicians. But iTunes misses a huge opportunity. Instead of creating a system that gets virtually all of fans' money directly to artists-- finally possible with the internet-- iTunes takes a big step backwards. Apple calls iTunes "revolutionary" but record companies are using the service to force the same exploitive and unfair business model onto a new medium.
It's too expensive
Let's start simple: the iTunes Music Store is not a good value for customers. Apple says many users are buying whole "albums" for $8-$12 each. That's less than the $16 store price, but used CDs at Amazon or ebay cost $5, and those come with liner notes. If you don't care about liner notes, you can burn the CD from a friend for 25 cents and send the musician a buck. In both cases, you end up with a real CD, and you can always use iTunes to rip it onto your computer or mp3 player. And you don't have to deal with restrictions on how you use it.
Lossy means loss
iTunes AAC files don't sound as good as CDs. AAC is a "lossy" compression format: it shrinks the sound file by throwing away subtle nuance and texture that a computer program thinks you won't be able to hear. The thing is, you can hear it. You might not notice listening to your iPod on the subway, but if you get home, lie back on the couch, and listen to your new iTunes album on a real stereo, it won't have the same nuance, punch, and presence that a CD has. A burned copy of a real CD will always sound better than a burned iTunes album.
"But I don't really care about compression"
Then you're in good company: lots of people just want to hear the songs they like and don't mind listening to compressed music. The majority of those people (the sensible ones) choose peer to peer filesharing programs like Kazaa or Acquisition to get their mp3s. Downloads are fast, there's a bigger selection, and peer to peer sharing doesn't prop up the music industry. Plus it's free.
If you build a shiny new house on a landfill it still stinks
Apple says iTunes is "better than free" because it's "fair to the artists and record labels." That's simply not true. First of all, Apple gets 3 times as much money as musicians from each sale. Apple takes a 35% cut from every song and every album sold, a huge amount considering how little they have to do. Record labels receive the other 65% of each sale. Of this, major label artists will end up with only 8 to 14 cents per song, depending on their contract. Many of them will never Artists Get Ripped Off. even see this paltry share because they have to pay for producers and recording costs, both of which can be enormous. Until the musician "recoups" these costs, when you buy an iTunes song, the label gives them nothing. (Sources: major label musician's cut Apple's cut For a thorough explanation of how recouping screws musicians, see Confessions of a Record Producer by Moses Avalon)
Nothing changed
So why does iTunes give artists such a raw deal?
Because it's the exact same deal that artists have always gotten from the big five record companies. Despite huge new efficiencies created by internet distribution --no CDs to make, no distributors to store and ship them, no CD stores to build and run-- artists receive the same pathetic cut. That is the disaster of iTunes. Instead of using this new medium to empower musicians and their fans, it helps the record industry cartel perpetuate the exploitation. Apple might say it's not their fault: after all, they didn't write the unfair record contracts. But when Apple supports and profits from an obviously unfair system, while telling customers that it's "fair to the artists", they are just as guilty. For years, Apple Computer has built a reputation for straightforward business. So
If Apple honestly believes that the iTunes system is fair for artists, we challenge them to display the artist's cut next to each song and let their customers decide:
[If you are a programmer and are interested in working to develop a patch, application, or script that would display this info in iTunes, please contact us.]
If the artist's cut were clearly visible, more people would want to buy music from independent labels, which give musicians a bigger share of each sale. Apple should make the Music Store open and transparent, so that customer choice can push major labels to do better. The major label mess was built on secrecy; when people can finally see how it works, it will have to change.
Keeping progress at bay
iTunes is just a shiny new facade for the ugly, exploitative system that has managed music for the past 50 years. Thanks to peer to peer filesharing, we finally have a chance to break the major record label system-- but every iTunes user who pays 90 cents on the dollar to middlemen props up the old regime and delays the day when corporations finally lose their stranglehold on music. Now that's something to feel guilty about.
Pods looks stupid.
Love not guilt
If you want to support the musicians you love, the best way to begin is by downloading the song for free on a filesharing network. Then send them what you want to give, no middleman. 14 cents. 99 cents. 10 dollars. A site like musiclink.com, though still rudimentary, makes this a little easier and is a step in the right direction. Weed (weedshare.com) is an ingenious new system where songs can be distributed on p2p networks but must be paid for after 3 plays. Instead of pursuing dead-ends like iTunes, we can develop p2p and direct contribution systems into a full-fledged music economy that sustains many more musicians than the current one. If downloading and contributing is made just as easy as iTunes, it could work and it would work. After all, iTunes is already voluntary.
Positive Changes
Since we first created this page about iTunes in August 2003, there have been some positive developments. Apple, which had previously indicated that they would only allow artists signed to record labels to offer music on iTunes, has begun including music from CD Baby. CD Baby allows any artist to join their service and takes a very small cut from each song (about 9 cents). This leaves the artist with about 55 cents from each sale, which is pretty decent-- though it could be a lot better. Additionally, as noted in the "victory" section above, Apple has stopped saying that iTunes is fair for artists, which was our primary concern. The key factor for deciding whether a music purchase is good for artists is the record label-- some purchases on iTunes leave artists with fair compensation, but buying major label music not only leaves the artists with pennies, it also supports a system that marginalizes every independent musician.
To sum up
iTunes can be a good deal for independent labels and musicians (see side bar) and there's no reason for them to boycott-- labels get a somewhat bigger cut than they would from a CD sale and artists on indy labels get much bigger cut than those on major labels. But most people don't find out about music on the internet, they hear it on the radio (that's why the majors sell 85% of all music). If the major labels can eventually use iTunes and similar internet services to survive, independent labels will stay locked off of mainstream radio. Which is why this is not an anti-Apple page-- we own Macs, we run Panther, and we know how much better Apple's computers are. It's precisely because Apple did such effective design on the iTunes Music Store software that it becomes dangerous. An unusable, unsuccessful music service won't keep major labels in control, but iTunes and copycats might. In practice, iTunes is already a voluntary contribution system -- all of their music is available on filesharing networks. It proves that people will contribute to artists if it's easy. Even more will contribute if the artist gets more than 10%.
Downhill Battle
As you've probably gathered by now, this project is about more than just iTunes. Downhill Battle is about why major label domination of music needs to end. Filesharing and CD burning have given us some tools, but we need to defend our right to use them and at the same time develop new ways to support artists. Downhill Battle has articles, interviews, news, and free music propaganda. No matter what kind of music you're into, it will be way more fun after the major labels are gone. Take a look at some projects, if you like what we do, we'd love to have you get involved: downhillbattle.org. If you're interested in reading more of our thoughts about iTunes, check out this page of responses to emails that we've received.
More:
Save the iPod We think iTunes is misguided, but we think the iPod is very important. Congressional legislation could make iPods and similar devices illegal if we don't act now.
iTunes iSbogus: Napster Sucks Edition, it's as different from this page as Napster is from iTunes.
Read more about the music industry
Stop RIAA Lawsuits Coalition - A coalition of 179 websites calling for a boycott of major label music.
The Problem with Music - Steve Albini explains major label record contracts.
Price fixing and more and more.
Pay for play - more - Why independent music can't get on the radio.
Confessions of a Record Producer - A great book and annoying web page.
Anti-trust suit against the major labels - recently filed by the Webcaster Alliance.
Zeropaid - Filesharing software and news site.
Independent label sales are rising while major label sales are falling. It's because they build a real connection between musicians and fans. They'll do even better when the majors fall and they can get on the radio. Also see this CD Baby sales graph. It looks a little different from the major labels' sales graphs, doesn't it?
Weed The best music distribution "business model" so far. Share an artist's files freely, listen 3 times for free, then pay $1 to unlock. Artists get half and filesharers even get a cut. Uses DRM, but clever enough to deserve a chance.
Re: DRM is killing the record industry, not file sharing
I have music on iTunes. They pay as you said $.65 per song. CD baby takes 9% not $.09 (about $.06).
$.65 per song is pretty close to standard. Check this Link to compare.
That means I get about 59% ($.59) for each song that is sold in the same place as the majors. It only costs ms a CD Baby membership (I think it was $30). Thats not bad if you ask me.
I realize I'm never going to be on the main page and they will never do a write up on me on the iTunes website but then again I'm not selling thousands of downloads either.
In conclusion:
Fuck the Major Labels! I don't need them!
More importantly Fuck Commercial Radio!!!
There the ones enabaling labels to sell CRAP!
Please don't listen to commercial radio.
Praise to iTunes for leveling the playing field (a little)
And praise to Downhill battle if they helped to open iTunes up to independents. But not for telling people to steal music and pay the artist directly. Thats not gonna work.
By the way Weed pays as little as $.50 per song and up to $.85 depending on how many people recomended it.
Re: DRM is killing the record industry, not file sharing
I am very familiar with Weed. I wrote about them on this site a little while ago >>link
There isn't a doubt that iTunes and the concept of buying music digitally and eliminating the need for major distribution is a good thing. The question is, is digital rights managment a good thing for the consumer or not?