Web Services Face Reliability Challenge
from the locked-out dept
While Apple's iTunes continues to dominate the online music space, a small segment of the music listening population has opted to go with subscription music services like Rhapsody and Napster. For the most part, however, the uptake of these services has been minimal. It seems people still want to own their music, although arguably the concept of ownership is meaningless when DRM prevents listeners from doing what they want with their legally purchased music. One of the problems with subscription music services is that if your internet connection goes out, then your music library becomes unavailable to you, which is an experience that many Rhapsody users are now going through. According to the company, a number of people have been locked out of their accounts, and it can't figure out why. For some customers, this has been going on for a few weeks, with no solution in sight. Meanwhile, in a related situation, Google is apparently experiencing some growing pains associated with its newly-released paid productivity apps. A number of customers are have complained that reliability has been poor, or at least worse than the 99.9% uptime they were promised. Again, this is one of the hazards associated with any internet-based service. None of this is to suggest that the concept of web services is flawed; there's no doubt that more and more software and services will be delivered this way. But at this early stage of the game, there are still some risks for those who buy into this model.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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That's not it's only problem...
Needless to say, don't have them anymore, ill stick with independant music now that you've taken away the last decent way i had to listen to everything else, thanks for saving me some money Real !
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It's a shame they really didn't think any of this copyright 'protection' stuff through. They'd have realised how stupid it is to force someone to buy something repeadiatley. Stupid if only because most people say 'screw you' and just not buy it.
This isn't Civilisation where just havng 'fundamentalism' means your populations are happy. This is reality, and people with sticks tend to not put up with crap.
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DRM isn't bad in comparison
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Re: DRM isn't bad in comparison
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Mischaracterization...
Rhapsody, as noted above, has many other problems than this. I will agree, though, that people who aren't me seem to prefer to illusion of ownership the iTunes a la carte model provides.
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RE: Web Services Face Reliability Challenge
I have to take exception with the idea that Rhapsody had "no solution in sight" for the service issue first reported at news.com and again referenced here. The problem which affected a fraction of one percent of our users was identified and fixed before this story contribution was even posted.
That aside, Rhapsody allows music playback both on and off line depending on user preference. Users can choose to keep their library stored locally on their hard drive, enabling off line music listening but requiring more disk space. Users with limited HD space can opt for streaming their music instead, if that's what works best for them.
I appreciate the comment space for clarifications. Thanks!
Ronda Scott
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