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How I Became A Music Pirate
Jarrett
March 20, 2007
http://consumerist.com/consumer/drm/how-i-became-a-music-pirate-245644.php
I thought I was the music industry's dream consumer.
As a 40 year old male with a long-standing passion for "all things music," I've spent
a bundle on my collection. In college most of my waking hours were spent wandering around
record stores, swap meets and record conventions, much to the dismay of the women I was
ostensibly dating. Then again, the fact that I also worked as a DJ at the radio station
and hung out with obsessive record collector types probably didn't help matters in the
romance department.
Then while in grad school in the 1990s, I became busy replacing many of my vinyl
releases with CD's. At the same time, entrepreneurial music industry types began to
exploit the market for out-of-print recordings by reissuing long out-of-print records
on CD formats, which of course I instantly snapped up.
So here I sit circa 2007 with a house filled with over 1000 vinyl records and around
800 CD's. If you figure about $12 per recording as an accurate average, that's somewhere
around $20,000. Not a bad chunk of change for the music business, I say.
Last week while I was busy importing my CD's into iTunes so I could listen to them
on my iPod (a most tedious task), I hopped on the internet. iTunes was busy importing a
Luna CD, one of my favorite bands, so I decided to see what they were up to since they
disbanded a few years back. After a few clicks in Google, I found a blog site describing
a posthumous, internet-only release of a collection of covers the band had recorded
throughout their career. While I already had many of the songs (they were often featured
on b-sides and imported singles, etc.), I couldn't resist tracking down this compilation.
As I read further on the blog site I encountered a link to a .zip file containing the
entire collection ripped as 128kbps mp3's.
While I must admit being tempted to simply click away and download the collection,
I though to myself, "Well, if I buy the music it's only $10, and this way I will get
high quality .WAV files. Besides, it's not like Luna were getting rich off of their
careers, they could use the money..."
So I headed to Rhino's online store, purchased the music, and downloaded the files.
A little later that evening, I tried to move the .WMA files into iTunes, when I
received an error message telling me that iTunes could not import them because they
were copy protected. I downloaded the files again (which took another 12 minutes)
and again, the same message.
So I called Rhino customer support and after an 8 minute wait spoke with a representative.
She informed me that the files were indeed copy protected so that I could only play them
on specific music players, most notably not iTunes.
"You don't understand," I said, "These files were not copied or pirated, I
actually purchased them."
"Well" she responded, "You didn't actually purchase the files, you really purchased
a license to listen to the music, and the license is very specific about how they can
be played or listened to."
Now I was baffled. "Records never came with any such restrictions," I said.
She replied, "Well they were supposed to, but we weren't able to enforce those
licenses back then, and now we can"
She later went on to explain that I could burn the songs to a CD and listen to
them in a regular CD player, but I would need an additional Windows based music player
to listen to them on my computer. But either way, she suggested there was no way the
files could be played on my iPod.
Frustrated, I hung up and began my search for a Windows application to allow
me to burn the music to a CD. After downloading Nero and firing it up, imagine my
frustration when I receive another error message telling me it cannot locate the
licenses for the music I purchased.
I call Rhino again, and this time speak to a young male CSR. He explains that
I need updated licenses in order to burn the music and often the problem is that
many firewalls will allow the music to pass through the firewall, but not the licenses
because of their encryption schemes. Lest you think I am exaggerating, I included
below the following text from their website (apparently this is a big enough
problem that it warrants mentioning in their FAQ):
1. Temporarily disable all firewall and pop-up blocker software you may be
running on your computer.
2. Attempt the download again
If the Licensing portion of the download is still hanging, please update the
Digital Rights Management (DRM) component on your computer via the following
URL: http://drmlicense.one.microsoft.com/Indivsite/indivit2.htm
The friendly CSR representative then suggests that I try once more to
download the files and licenses and if I still have no luck to try accessing the
internet from other providers such as a local coffee shop, library, or work
computer.
"Basically, just keep downloading the music until you find a gateway that let's
your licenses through without problems"
While I would like to say I responded with something witty, I must admit
to being completely flummoxed. There I sat, a loyal music fan who has shelled out
actual money to a business that is supposed to be having financial problems, and
the best they can do is tell me to wander the streets of Seattle looking for different
internet providers who might allow me to download the music that I have already paid
for, music that I have spent the better part of three house trying to listen to, and
which is still unusable?
How on earth have things come to this?!?!?!
Honestly, if this is the best you can do, you're business is in really,
really serious trouble.
I mean, could you imagine the consumer response if Coke could only be consumed from
specific Coke-approved equipment, and then only in the specific ways that the folks
at Coke wanted the product to be consumed. "drinking Coke with fast food is no problem,
but we must warn you that your license forbids the mixing of Coke with any alcoholic
beverages..."
In the end, I never was able to get the music to play on anything--my computer,
on a CD or on my iPod. I invested $10, several hours of my time, and my reward was,
well, nothing.
I'd like to say I was outraged, but in the end I must admit to feeling remarkably
sad and deflated over the whole process. See, the thing is, I was raised on music. I
was saved by music. I (used to) live for music. Lester Bangs wasn't my idol, he was
my soul mate (in a matter of speaking).
I've devoted a not-inconsequential chunk of my life to collecting music; to tracking
down obscure records, cassettes, 8-Tracks and CD's of all genres and styles. And now
apparently that is all but over. Music has somehow evolved from tangible things into
amorphous collections of 1's and 0's guarded over by interested parties as if they were
gold bullion. How so very sad.
I would like to think that someone at a place like Rhino would care enough to not
let these kinds of things happen. But alas, my suspicion is that anyone who would
have been cool enough to work at Rhino in their heyday some twenty years ago would
never be so callous, foolish or shallow to allow these kind of absurdities to occur.
Since I've resigned myself not to waste any more time with the music business, I
suppose I'll have to resort to purchasing used CD's & records, or having my
friends occasionally make me a copy of one of their newer CD's.
Call it piracy. Call it whatever you want. But at least I tried. I gave you
several chances and you failed miserably at every level.
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