Tag Archive for 'Sony-BMG'

Sony-BMG Uses Pirated Software

Spotted on: Ars Technica

The major labels are very outspoken about the evils of piracy, and aggressively pursue those who chose to download music and not pay for it. That being the case, there is great ironyin the fact that up to 47% of Sony-BMG’s software is pirated.

Recently, a tech support call for a program called Ideal Migration (a Windows server management tool) was made by a Sony BMG employee, and the product code given was pirated.

The ensuing drama included a seizure of some of Sony-BMG’s assets.? Paul Henry, The CEO of the maker of the software, was quoted as saying “I think piracy is linked to the policy of a company. If the employee has the necessary funding to buy the software? he needs,? he will. If this is not the case, he will find alternative ways, as the work must be done in one way or another.”

Bottom Line: A company that is using pirated software should not be surprised when their products are pirated.

A DRM free World

Spotted on: Gizmodo

The way the major labels are adapting to the transforming music industry is strange. Somehow, the four largest music labels in the world seem to be the last ones to understand what people want. From the perspective of an onlooker, it seems like they wait till the last second to adapt to everything.

DRM is officially becoming a thing of the past. According to Business Week, it appears that Amazon’s DRM free service and billion MP3 Giveaway has brought the Big Four around to a DRM free world (at least for some albums). Sony BMG, the last of the big four labels to cling to DRM like a liferaft, has announced they will stop using it sometime early this year.

This is the magic moment when the major labels have all given up on the wildly unpopular copyright protection. Sony is using a gift card service, where listeners can buy cards at retail outlets (such as Best Buy and Target) and then redeem them for MP3 albums online.

Considering the 15% drop in CD sales last year, it’s refreshing to see that the major labels are adapting to the desires of their audiences, even if it is forced by pressure from iTunes and Amazon. DRM was instrumental in iTunes gaining dominance in the music download market, and now even they are beginning to offer DRM free tracks, and at the same 99 cent price tag.

Bottom Line: DRM will finally be relegated to where it belongs, on subscription services.

This Is Why People Don’t Buy Music

Spotted on: Ars Technica

The RIAA finally got their first case in court over people who serve MP3s on file sharing platforms. So all bland arguments aside, here’s the bottom line.:

The new argument is that if we rip or download songs we already own, we’re stealing.
Let’s cut through all the fancy arguments and cogent dissections and get right to the nitty gritty of it all.

Major media companies complain people aren’t buying music (as if over 500 million album slaes is some kind of small number), so they try to force us to buy music by restricting our access to it. The general public (that’s us) then gets indignant that we are being limited in our ability to enjoy music, and we download everything we can. The major labels then raise the prices of CDs, and add malware to their products (with some benign name so we don’t make the connection that a rootkit is a kind of virus).

We are told that when we buy music online, it will include some form of control, so that we can only enjoy it on proprietary software or hardware (think about how cellphone companies have 400 different adaptors to their chargers). Now they want us to believe we have no right to backup our data.

Now they are finally in court with us for downloading and sharing content, and they accuse us of stealing from them if we rip music we already own. There are now record players that will turn your albums into MP3s as you play them. I own lots of vinyl, and some of it is hard or impossible to find, even as an MP3. Am I criminal if I want to preserve my record collection? Most of these albums can only be obtained second hand at this point, anyways.

Where does it stop? At what point will they sue for the right to audit every harddrive on the planet, or require us to carry some sort of permit to listen to the music we have? Are we all to be fined for singing Happy Birthday?

Let’s look at it another way. People still pay for HBO. People still buy CDs, and digital downloads are a robust market (just not robust enough to support the behemoth of major record labels). It’s possible that if people weren’t forced to buy music, and told that everything we did with our music was a crime, we would be more inclined to buy more. What would happen if everyone stopped using DRM, and file sharing was accepted as part of society? What if intellectual property wasn’t treated like another flavor of soda?

If major labels want to revive their fiscal bottom lines, perhaps they could invest in developing talent, instead of suing us into buying music. Perhaps the answer to selling music lies inside of the music itself (this might explain why artists like Jimi Hendrix and Pink Floyd never stop connecting with younger generations).