Tommy Lee's Naked Eloquence On File Sharing
from the so-convincing dept
Part of the promotional campaign for the Buy.com's new BuyMusic service is to have well known musician Tommy Lee posing naked on a huge billboard in Times Square to "make the case" that downloading music on file sharing services is bad. I'm not exactly sure how a naked Tommy Lee proves that file sharing networks are bad, but I guess I just needed to hear his convincing argument. Tommy Lee was on hand to unveil his nakedness and told everyone, "when people steal music, it sucks." Aha. Case closed. Is he trying to tell us that if we went out and bought his music he'd keep his damn clothes on? Meanwhile, as more details come out about BuyMusic.com it sounds like a weak copy of the other, dreadful music services that are already out there. They're being incredibly misleading in their advertising, and are offering digital music in restrictive formats. The advertisements say songs are $0.79, but they actually range from $0.79 to $1.29 - and most of the popular songs are on the higher end. Also, there isn't much you can do with the song once you download it. You're limited in ways to get it off your computer. You can only burn it to CD a limited number of times, it can only be played on a single computer, and they won't work on most digital music players. This really doesn't sound all that different than the old, dreadful, PressPlay - just without the subscription fees. So, no Tommy, the fact is, when the music industry puts up awful attempts at offering music where they do everything possible to restrict the consumer from actually listening to the music - that sucks.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Tommy missed the perfect example...
Can't see that on the billboards though.
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No Subject Given
These people are so far away from reality that they don't even have a passing acquaintance with it.
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Shrug.
It still sounds like this is progress: it is per-song, you can burn CDs, and they are at least acknowledging the existence of digital players.
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Re: Shrug.
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Re: Shrug.
Hopeful the music companies will come around.
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Re: Shrug.
There are really only three main areas where a proprietary network could beat the open network: reliability, size of catalog, and guaranteed file quality. If any of those things is lacking, their value proposition decreases proportionally. A restrictive file format also lessens the value proposition because it makes the for-pay file less desirable than its free counterpart.
The market will set the price eventually, but I'm betting $1.29 is too much. In fact, I suspect $0.79 is too much for a service with this many flaws.
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Why iTunes and BuyMusic don't work for me...
Second: Why in bloody hell would I pay $1 a song, when I can rent and rip for almost the exact same price.
Third: The cat is already out of the bag. The RIAA will fail with their scare tactics and there will still be file traiding 1 year from now, 5 years from now and 10 years from now....
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Re: Why iTunes and BuyMusic don't work for me...
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Re: Why iTunes and BuyMusic don't work for me...
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Re: Why iTunes and BuyMusic don't work for me...
Why even consider the cash to credit system ? those who choose to pay $$ to download ? Just get some good free ones, from a choice, popular sharing tool. theres many available. Download, Burn , Delete, and call it , a great mix !
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