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Music Piracy Technology

A Music-Sharing Network For the Unconnected 66

An anonymous reader writes: Operating as personal offline versions of iTunes and Spotify, the téléchargeurs, or downloaders, of Mali are filling the online music void for many in the country. For less than a dime a song, a téléchargeur will transfer playlists to memory cards or directly onto cellphones. Even though there are 120,000 landlines for 15 million people in Mali, there are enough cellphones in service for every person in the country. The spread of cell phones and the music-sharing network that has followed is the subject of this New York Times piece. From the article: "They know what their regulars might like, from the latest Jay Z album to the obscurest songs of Malian music pioneers like Ali Farka Touré. Savvy musicians take their new material to Fankélé Diarra Street and press the téléchargeurs to give it a listen and recommend it to their customers....This was the scene Christopher Kirkley found in 2009. A musicologist, he traveled to Mali hoping to record the haunting desert blues he loved. But every time he asked people to perform a favorite folk song or ballad, they pulled out their cellphones to play it for him; every time he set up his gear to capture a live performance, he says, 'five other kids will be holding their cellphones recording the same thing — as an archivist, it kind of takes you down a couple of notches.'”
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A Music-Sharing Network For the Unconnected

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  • by Charcharodon ( 611187 ) on Sunday June 07, 2015 @10:20PM (#49864467)
    Sneaker net for the win. Got a 256GB flash drive, let me borrow it for an hour or two and I'll give it back to you full.

    Frankly I've given up on the whole giant music collection thing. I've lost interest in it. It's not that music sucks, it's just that I barely have time to spend on it. Once your personal collection busts a couple hundred gigs you hardly know what you have anyway.

    • by Locando ( 131600 )

      Once your personal collection busts a couple hundred gigs you hardly know what you have anyway.

      I understand your sentiment here, but if you lose track of what you have after only a couple hundred gigs I can't help thinking you might be doing it wrong.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Back in the way we had things called Swap Parties. People would meet up somewhere with their computers and a stack of floppy disks, and spend all day copying and chatting. It was one of the primary ways that things were distributed in the "scene", e.g. demos, disk magazines and of course cracked games.

      • Yeah, and more interesting people were having more interesting swap parties. I understand, though. You couldn't find girls to come to have one of those. Me neither.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Actually there was a "wives and grilfriends" group that would organize stuff to do on the day, or sometimes even participate. I seem to recall one couple who ran a PD library, but most were pretty young. There were games to play and stuff like that.

  • You would think something filling "the online music void" would be, you know, filling it online?

    Otherwise, there's still an "online music void", and what these guys are doing is "Download MP3's to your device for you to play locally, just like any other MP3 player". So they may be filling the "get MP3's onto my phone void", but they are certainly not filling the online void, because it's still a void.

    Also... I assume they aren't paying the original copyright holders for this, they're just pirating the musi

    • . I assume they aren't paying the original copyright holders for this, they're just pirating the music, right? There's no way you are legally getting music for $0.10, unless it's being locally produced and distributed.

      No, they are just making large volumes of pirated music, and selling it by the song. Somehow it is glorified by this author as some type of wonderful musical sociocultural phenomena, but the only difference between here and anywhere else is that in most places large volumes of music are given away freely.

  • Why, I wondered, would anyone need a cellphone without a network connection? It was a question as dumb as my simple Nokia phone. A cellphone is a digital Swiss Army knife: flashlight, calculator, camera and, yes, audio player.

    It now is a giant android turd screen whose only use is to make money .. for others.

  • You are NOT sharing music if you are paying for it. The summary clearly states that songs cost a dime or less.

    • I like their rates, waiting for that on Itunes. Oh right, region based prices. Of course once we make a darknet that actually stays dark, we'll all be able to pick and choose where we buy things.
      • There was a study a couple of years ago from Harvard (and covered on Slashdot) that put the optimum price for maximising profit at 5/track. At that price, people don't think about buying music - they'll happily buy an album because they heard a bit of a song and liked it or a friend recommended the artist. The increase in sales, the study claimed, would more than offset the reduction in per-sale profit.
  • by murr ( 214674 ) on Sunday June 07, 2015 @11:40PM (#49864703)

    The article seems to have neglected to mention what kind of music Kirkley actually found. He released a few volumes of "Music from Saharan Cellphones", which can be purchased here: https://sahelsounds.bandcamp.c... [bandcamp.com]

    I quite like some of it, and the hipster cachet it conveys is pretty considerable as well.

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