Amie Street Also Takes Away Features... But At Least Is Honest And Upfront About How They Hate Having To
from the take-a-lesson,-emusic dept
We've covered how eMusic (which had a fantastic reputation for a while) totally failed in communicating changes to its service, which involved increasing prices and taking away many valued features. The company tried to bury that news along with the fact that Sony Music would now be included, not recognizing that many of its users didn't care, and were pissed off at the way eMusic presented this as a good thing. At least some others may be learning. Ragaboo alerts us that online music site Amie Street is also removing some features (such as the ability to redownload tracks -- just like eMusic has done), but did so by admitting that it sucked and apologizing, but basically saying its hands were tied. They also gave advance warning of the changes. While Ragaboo isn't thrilled about he, notes that he appreciated the honesty from the company. Here's the email that he received:"In several weeks we're going to be making a change to how Amie Street handles downloads, and we want to be certain you are fully informed in advance about this change. In brief, starting on August 5th we'll only be able to offer a single download of your purchased music unless you've encountered a technical problem.Of course, the fact that both Amie Street and eMusic have removed the ability to redownload tracks over royalty issues makes you wonder what exactly is the issue here. Are record labels really demanding a royalty payment every time people redownload a song?
Although most people only download their music one time, we've noticed that you have done so more than once on occasion. We realize that the ability to re-download files has been important to you, so it's understandable that you might be disappointed to see this no longer available. Unfortunately a number of factors beyond our control, including legal and royalty concerns, have made this impossible going forward.
We're very happy to say, however, that you can continue to stream all of the music you've purchased on Amie Street. That means wherever you have access to the internet, you also have immediate and unrestricted access to stream the entirety of your Amie Street music collection from your Library.
To make sure that downloading music continues to be as easy as possible, we'll be keeping a close eye on the user experience and making updates to the site as needed. The primary voice that directs any such changes will be yours, so if you have suggestions based on your experiences using the site, we'd love to hear from you. Tell us exactly what you like and don't like, and we can make Amie Street even better!
Peace,
The Amie Street Team""
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Filed Under: benefits, features, users
Companies: amie street, emusic
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But ... but ..
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Re: Re: Re: Matt Tate
Jeez, sometimes reading these things makes me so irrationally angry inside. It makes me want to highlight my entire 5000+ mp3 library and just press Ctrl-C then Ctrl-V Ctrl-V Ctrl-V till my harddrive is full, just to spite the record companies. The sick thing is that I can almost imagine the record companies demanding a royalty for that. "HEY THAT KID MADE A HUNDRED ILLEGAL COPIES OF THAT SONG ON HIS HARDDRIVE, LETS CHARGE HIM TWO MILLION DOLLARS HAHAHA"
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royalties
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Re: royalties
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shouldn't that be
"While Ragaboo isn't thrilled about it, he notes that he appreciated the honesty from the company" ?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Matt Tate
I understand that common sense might be a difficult concept for you, but if they wanted to do that they could just download the same song ONCE and make FIFTY COPIES.
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Re: Re: royalties
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What they should have done .....
Not sure if this is on my list I am to lazy/wiped to check this my past posts AM ....
246 note/entry) Allow the songs owner to set the re-download fee from $0.0 (free) to $n.n (what ever fee they want to charge)
Again I love this place there are so many Gems here....
Mediocre Ole grin
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mTraks re-downloads
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Matt Tate
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Concerns about abusing re-download capability?
I personally think this concern is overblown. After all, people who want to abuse their subscriptions could just make copies of the tracks for their friends, or upload the tracks to a P2P network. Nonetheless I think this concern has at least some validity, and IIRC it was mentioned by eMusic and/or some eMusic subscribers when discussing the similar change at eMusic. One obvious way to address the issue is to limit the number of times a subscriber can re-download a track, which IIRC is what eMusic did. (I don't think they prohibit re-downloading entirely.)
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Re: Concerns about abusing re-download capability?
"After all, people who want to abuse their subscriptions could just make copies of the tracks for their friends, or upload the tracks to a P2P network."
This is so obvious (to us, not to the record companies) that it doesn't need to be explicitly stated.
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Re: royalties
Seems like YOU don't really understand what you are talking about. I think what you meant to say was "distributing data that is subject to intellectual property rights" or as I would prefer to say - and it makes more sense this way - "distributing data that is subject to Intellectual Monopoly Concessions"
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Matt Tate
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As contrasted to the situation of them downloading once and then copy/pasting it 500 times in a folder in their comp.
/facepalm.
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Re: /facepalm
"It should require a more expensive license because then someone could potentially download a song FIFTY TIMES, and then they'd have FIFTY SONGS and they only paid for one!! "
=
Sarcasm.
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Re: Re: Concerns about abusing re-download capability?
That's part of the reason why this stuff is getting criticised. The only remotely logical reasons for these changes are so that the labels either a) get paid for multiple copies or b) try to prevent file sharing.
However, this really does neither one. A person who downloaded an album, only to have it wiped from their hard drive or otherwise lost before they had chance to back it up is probably not going to buy another copy. They'll more likely either write it off as bad luck, or download a copy off P2P (after all, they already paid for it, and since it costs virtually nothing for the label to produce another copy, why should they pay full price again?).
The file sharing argument is also bunk, as you pointed out. It only takes one digital copy of the original file on P2P for infinite copies to be available. These restrictions yet again only affect paying customers and does more to promote "piracy" than prevent it.
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This would allow multiple people to download the songs instead to the only original purchaser. With nothing more than a user name and password. If the original user has to pay for 2nd, 3rd, 4th, etc., downloads, they're not apt to share that info.
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Re:
The media companies - networks, movie studios, record companies, online MP3 stores - are doing everything they possibly can to alienate their paying customers. From neutering Hulu to suing RedBox out of existence, the entertainment industry is hastening its own death.
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