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Bye Bye, DRM - Hello Manageable Music!

Since the legitimate sales of digital music downloads began, record labels and recording artists have been looking for ways to protect their intellectual (ha, if you can call it that) property. Copyright law alone was not enough to enforce rights protection, so before many would let their music be sold online, they required a system to prevent copying and distribution.

That’s where Digital Rights Management (or DRM) came in to play. The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (or DMCA) was passed in the United States, making the circumvention of any digital or electronic system designed to prevent copy or distribution of works illegal and prosecutable with huge fines. These DRM systems qualified under the DMCA, and that made the RIAA and MPAA very, very happy.

Unfortunately, there was no standard on DRM, and so each online retailer of digital media invented their own proprietary system. This lead to issues with media not being accessible on all PC platforms, mobile devices, or other arguably Fair Use methods of enjoying your purchased content.

As a result, more people turned to illegally downloading content to get higher-quality, DRM-free media that could be played (or at least converted to play) virtually anywhere. Also, the delivery times from Peer2Peer networks was faster, and often lead to movies and music being leaked before their official release.

From a marketing perspective, what was the community at large saying about how it wanted its media? Free is obviously nice, but people know free either means advertising or lack of legality. Some labels and artists and film studios started to realize that customers want media fast, in high-quality, early releases, and they want to be able to enjoy that media on anything that will play it.

iTunes led the way towards the DRM-Free movement with higher-quality iTunes Plus music unencumbered by DRM or other restrictions. They have by no means released the entire iTunes Store in this format, but offer many artists already. Amazon followed up next by making their entire store DRM-Free mp3 format downloads. And just recently, Rhapsody joined the pack by offering DRM-Free downloads on a per-track basis.

Also, Verizon Wireless is jumping on the bandwagon by partnering with Rhapsody, and will soon allow VCast customers to download music from Rhapsody DRM-Free, by way of a $15 / month subscription for the music rental, or a per-track purchase just as you would from Rhapsody’s program on the PC.

Will DRM-Free music turn more “pirates” into legitimate customers? Will you purchase music, video, etc. that you’ve previously downloaded from Peer2Peer networks? What devices do you use to play your media besides your computer? Let me know in the comments.

-The Raging Tech

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Free Nine Inch Nails MP3 Download “Discipline”

So, maybe not all of you are Nine Inch Nails fans - but maybe you have an eclectic musical taste like me. If so, take a minute and visit the Nine Inch Nails download site to get your free mp3 of their new single “Discipline” - just put in your name and e-mail address and you should be able to download it straight away.

Post your thoughts in the comments. A Google search for “free NIN download” should get you some other fun results, as Trent Reznor has released an entire instrumental album free of download, with the expectation that people will pay for the higher quality editions and special collector’s editions.

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Get Plugged In to HD Music Videos

This morning I received an e-mail telling me that new HD music video / social networking site PluggedIn launched in beta today. PluggedIn is apparently a venture by actor / recording artist Will Smith in association with Sony, EMI, and other big name record labels.

What immediately one me over when I loaded up the site this morning was that in spite of it’s slick interface and decent selection of music videos, it runs from a Java-based client that works in Firefox on a Mac. Quickly it works, with next to no loading time to operate.

I just watched “Closer” by Nine Inch Nails (a live performance) and it was awesome. If you sign up for an account (also free), you can queue up a playlist of videos and get artist bios and shop for music in an online marketplace.

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Use Google to find MP3s and More

April 13th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Entertainment, Technology, Tidbits

Search powerhouse Google has captured millions if not billions of internet users’ attention and replaced the likes of Yahoo, MSN, WebCrawler, and Alta Vista as their search engine of choice. You probably have visited Google at least once today. If you’re like me, you may even use Google as your home page.

Do you cringe when you hear phrases like “search operators”? Well, this nerdy tip may sound intimidating, but you can use search operators with Google to help find web sites with mp3’s of your favorite songs.

Simply search like this:

inurl:(htm|html|php) intitle:”index of” +”last modified” +”parent directory” +description +size +(wma|mp3|aac|m4a|mp4|ogg) “Panic! At the Disco”

Now for an explanation:

  • inurl:(htm|html|php) tells the search to look for URLs that end in htm, html, or php. This eliminates a lot of lyrics sites and gets you to the goods.
  • intitle:”index of” tells the search to look at the title of the page and look for the phrase “index of” - because on most Apache or *nix-based servers, this is in the title of a directory or folder listing when someone forgets that their music files are accessible to their web server. Some file-sharing clients like Limewire also make this available.
  • +(wma|mp3|aac|m4a|mp4|ogg) tells the search to look for these types of files on the pages it searches through. So far, that should mean we are only getting directory or file folders that list music files. If you were looking for software, you might look for ZIP or DMG or ISO or EXE (be careful what you download though, and always do a virus scan!).
  • “Panic! At the Disco” - an excellent band, in my opinion. However, you could search for any band, or any song, or any album, for that matter.

There are a lot of ways to modify these search operators to get the results you want. YMMV (Your Mileage May Vary). And for legal reasons, I need to remind you not to download music you do not own that is copyrighted. Support your favorite artists and buy their albums legitimately. And as always, surf smart - don’t click on anything that looks suspicious and never download any programs or plugins from unknown sources. Run a virus check on all files that you download.

Thanks to Lifehacker, the source of this information.

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New P.O.D. Album - When Angels & Serpents Dance

April 10th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Entertainment, Music

April 8th, 2008 saw the release of Payable On Death (P.O.D.)’s new album, “When Angels & Serpents Dance” featuring the return of Marcos Curiel and a return to the band’s original guitar sound. Marcos left the band when they signed with Atlantic Records, stating he had been kicked out of the band over personal and “spiritual differences” - but the band claims they sorely missed him and had considered breaking up.

Now that Marcos is back, you can definitely feel the difference in the band. Don’t expect this to be the same P.O.D. you remember from his old days. The band’s new sound is harder, louder, smoother than ever. Expect to hear a band that’s evolving and determined not to be held back and buried with other artists that died out when a genre lost popularity.

Here’s a special treat: listen to the first single “Addicted” off the album here or on the band’s MySpace page.

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