Taylor Swift: Apple's Disdain For Royalties Is 'Shocking, Disappointing' 368
Mark Wilson writes to note that Apple Music, yet unlaunched, already faces resistance on several fronts. From the BetaNews article:
It's not just smaller, independent labels that are complaining about Apple's refusal to pay artists any royalties during the initial three month free trial period. Taylor Swift has added her voice to the growing number of complainants, writing an open letter to Apple in which she says she will withhold her new album "1989" from the service. In the letter, entitled "To Apple, Love Taylor," the singer says that the company's decision not to make royalty payments is "shocking, disappointing, and completely unlike this historically progressive and generous company." Swift is an artist who could afford to shoulder the cost of three months of not being paid by Apple, but she has chosen to make a stand and stick up for those who are less fortunate.
that's funny... (Score:5, Funny)
"shocking, disappointing" are the most common words I've heard use to describe Taylor Swift's music.
Horray for Taylor Swift. (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't know about her music, but as of now, I say, horray for Taylor Swift.
Apple's business plan is "to get customers for OUR new business, we will give away YOUR music for free!"
Yeah. So, basically, Apple is saying that they, the world's most profitable company, require individual artists to DONATE THEIR WORK FOR FREE... to get Apple's business started.
And they're calculating that individual artists don't have any leverage, there's nothing they can do about it.
So, it's nice to see a singer whose work is selling millions of copies per month standing up to them.
Horray for her.
Re: Horray for Taylor Swift. (Score:5, Informative)
If you're interested in reading a bit more of her rationale, she posted her announcement on her tumblr page, here: http://taylorswift.tumblr.com/... [tumblr.com]
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Three months is a long time to go unpaid,
What silliness. The three months applies to individual users, not individual artists. She is greedily avoiding what her record label handlers negotiated with Apple by joining three months late after the big herd of new users.
It is unfair to ask anyone to work for nothing.
Possibly the deal is unfair because these big deals are negotiated by assholes based on monopsony power.
But, this again? No you do not have a "right to be paid for your work." You cannot go dig ditches, fill them in, and say, "somebody pay me." This type of argument takes advantage
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She doesn't have "record label handlers". She owns her own label.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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I'm pretty certain that makes no difference overall, apart from rearranging when the payments arrive (or rather don't).
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You miss the point.
If an artist who wasn't already very successful (and therefore very rich) made this stand the world's media, and Apple, would go "So what, who cares?" and we wouldn't be discussing it here.
In order for this to get attention it needs someone like Swift to make the stand. Whatever you may speculate her motivation is. Someone who has a genuine need and complaint about the money would get ignored.
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quite frankly i don't understand what it means for a public company to be "generous". give away investors' money? i dont think so.. thats your and my retirement money.
i'd much rather apple (or anyone else) be successful in creating a revenue-producing platform for artists than be "generous". if that takes a three months wait, well, so be it.
so far from the artist's perspective (who is not Taylor Swift) there is no platform like this.
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There are plenty of other revenue producing platforms than Apple's scheme. It's ridiculous to buy into the Apple Hype.
There is no reason at all that Apple shouldn't pay 'promotional costs' for using musical artists as their sales inducement. The same royalties should go to the artists before and after the promotion period.
With regard to 'investors'- fuck off. Your 'investment' doesn't entitle you to spoils from Apple's rip-off of content providers. Maybe you should be clamoring for some fucking dividends
Problem is (Score:5, Informative)
The problem is, the music isn't the artist's property. The labels claim all the rights. The artists theoretical royalties invariably end up being a shit sandwich, without much bread. The labels signed the deal with Apple, because they know that the artists have signed away all their rights already.
But Apple pays more later (Score:2, Interesting)
A hundred posts and not a single post yet pointing out that Apple's deal with the labels, while paying nothing for the trial period, pays MORE than the anyone else in the industry (spotify, pandora, etc.) after that point. There's a reason the labels agreed to the deal; it's not like they're stupid or weak, after all.
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Free trial periods are fairly common and standard though; not just for internet services but in everything from telecoms to consumer products ("If you're not completely satisfied in 30-days return it for a full refund") to drug dealers. Some states even have a "cooling off period" where you are able to return a new car for a full refund within a certain period of time. So why is Taylor Swift, or anyone else, singling out Apple; besides the standard-issue irrational BS dating all the way back to "what kind
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Apple can wait, they have more money than God, it's the long con for them.
They'll get new Indy artists, some of those artists will eventually hit it big with Apple, and while they won't get paid during the 3 month trial period, they WILL get paid a significantly better cut than anyone dealing with one of the traditional labels where Hollywood accounting insures artists don't make dick.
And in a few years the greedy record labels will have screwed over enough people while others are making copious amounts of
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There are bands and musicians who have kept themselves relevant by maintaining their fan base, no matter how times change. Pink Floyd, Rush, Iron Maiden, Phish, ICP, and NIN come to mind.
However, it takes time to convert a fan base from "hey, that is a cool/trendy song" to "hey, $BAND is having a new album come out." Some musicians don't take the time to try to look at the long picture, and try to break from their genre into a unique area only they are present in. One can get heard via being the pop thin
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"But I say to Apple with all due respect, itâ€(TM)s not too late to change this policy and change the minds of those in the music industry who will be deeply and gravely affected by this. We donâ€(TM)t ask you for free iPhones. Please donâ€(TM)t ask us to provide you with our music for no compensation."
Re:that's funny... (Score:5, Insightful)
She is a pop-country singer that comes up on a regular basis with catchy tunes with clean lyrics, and she did not build a career on dressing like a prostitute or releasing sex tapes. Already that makes her quite unique in that industry.
Not everyone likes pop music of course, but in that genre she is definitely top shelf, and her fight against bad music streaming deals is in line with pretty much everything she does. This is not U2 phony or Metallica greedy, this is someone using leveraging her position to help fellow musicians.
Re: that's funny... (Score:2, Insightful)
Lady Gaga music is better. At least I remember her songs.
Re: that's funny... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:that's funny... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:that's funny... (Score:5, Funny)
Well, I guess they are never ever getting back together, then.
Re:that's funny... (Score:4, Informative)
She is a pop-country singer that comes up on a regular basis with catchy tunes with clean lyrics, and she did not build a career on dressing like a prostitute or releasing sex tapes
That's true, at least she keeps a clean image, but her songs pretty much carry on the stereotype that a woman's existence is defined by her boyfriend or lack thereof.
Re:that's funny... (Score:5, Interesting)
From an NPR interview with Ms Swift: [npr.org]
Interviewer: Like I said, I am the mother of a 12-year-old girl, and she loves your music. Her friends love your music. You have a huge platform among a very vulnerable, impressionable set of the population. And I wonder if you think about turning your lens outward, turning it away from the diary page, and sending a broader message to girls who would be really receptive to hearing about big ideas and the big world that's outside.
Swift: Like what kind of messages?
Interviewer: Well, other characters. I don't mean to minimize the effect of a love song or a pop song. But do you ever think about writing about other experiences, things that might turn girls away from themselves in a different way?
Swift: There's nothing that's gonna turn girls away from themselves at age 12...I think the best thing I can do for them is continue to write songs that do make them think about themselves and analyze how they feel about something and then simplify how they feel. Because, at that age — really at any age, but mostly that age — what can be so overwhelming is that you're feeling so many things at the same time that it's hard to actually understand what those emotions are, so it can turn to anxiety very quickly.
I'm not a fan of Ms Swift's music (I'm not a 12-year-old girl) but I do have a healthy amount of respect for the way she conducts herself in public.
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Re:that's funny... (Score:5, Funny)
Also, what do you suggest people sign about? Trees? Nature? Happiness? A day at the ranch?
There'll only ever be one John Denver, I guess.
Deeds speak louder than words (Score:3)
U2 phony
You mean the phony who shamed the world into forgiving Africa the crippling cold war debts that were foist upon it. The phony who personally persuaded Bill Clinton to dismantle the IRA's Boston based funding? The Irish phony who stood up in Boston and definitely screamed "fuck the revolution" at the IRA leaders and financiers in their home town? I don't know what TS has done to make the world a better place but criticizing Apple is just not in the same league as Bono's "good deeds".
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She is a pop-country singer that comes up on a regular basis with catchy tunes with clean lyrics, and she did not build a career on dressing like a prostitute or releasing sex tapes. Already that makes her quite unique in that industry.
Not everyone likes pop music of course, but in that genre she is definitely top shelf, and her fight against bad music streaming deals is in line with pretty much everything she does. This is not U2 phony or Metallica greedy, this is someone using leveraging her position to help fellow musicians.
Taylor Swift's vocal range [kinja-img.com] is among the narrowest of any pop artist in the last 20 years. Many of her songs sound almost monotone to me. Vocal range may not be the only indication of a talented singer, but someone with a very narrow range doesn't seem to me like a 'top shelf' performer.
Re: that's funny... (Score:3)
The argument isn't about being paid or not but rather, how much. Apple isn't refusing to pay at all. But simply treating royalty as "if we get money, you get money". I see nothing wrong with this model.
Re: that's funny... (Score:2)
It's not the artists who implemented the deal. Imagine if a retailer of CD'S gave away physical media for the first month they opened. They would have to pay for those disc's up front.
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I'm going to give your work away for nothing. You'll get nothing, but it's ok because I'm getting nothing too. I'm fine with this because I'm already insanely rich. Your financial position does not concern me.
What you complaining about? This is a valid model.
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But simply treating royalty as "if we get money, you get money". I see nothing wrong with this model.
Really? Apple has more money than any other company. They have a new streaming service. They want customers to use their service, because it's going to make money for Apple. The product that Apple is selling through this service is created by other people not affiliated with Apple. Apple, the most profitable company, has volunteered all of those creators for 3 months of not making any money in order for customers to sign up for Apple's service so that Apple can make even more money in the future. You
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This is no "moral hazard" because this is a voluntary transaction between two private parties. Taylor Swift is free to take the deal or leave it, depending on how she sees the risks and benefits.
You're saying that if I and a bunch of musician friends want to develop a new streaming service for s
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So if Apple offered a 1 year free trial, at no cost to them since they aren't paying royalties...what's stopping them from a 2 year trial? I guess the labels wouldn't have signed on for that. 3 months isn't much, but still not fair to musicians who aren't getting paid.
One, it doesn't cost Apple nothing. The cost of the implementation is carried 100% by Apple.
Two, what you say would make sense if Apple's intent was to rip off musicians. Apple's intent is to maximise profit from Apple Music. Apple believes that a three month trial period, followed by people hopefully paying $9.99 a month for the rest of their lives, maximises profit. Since Apple and musicians share the money, that would also optimise income for the musicians. Now Apple may have this wrong, and zero mont
Re: that's funny... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: that's funny... (Score:5, Insightful)
I own a store. If I want to make a promotional campaign or whatever, it goes out of MY POCKET. You know what will happen if I tell my suppliers "I gave this away because it was a promo, so I won't pay you for it?"
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And do the (mostly) indie artists, who ought to be tickled-pink that ANYONE is giving their music a listen
Oh, that argument again, huh? Hey assholes, you should be THANKING us for stealing your product and using it to enrich our lives at all!
You're an entitled prick. What about the band who went into debt in order to record their first album, and it's getting ready to be released, and the songs are good, and people will listen regardless of whatever Apple does, so they are expecting a quick surge in royalties when it gets released in order to pay off that debt and help launch their career. Now they get to st
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I don't like Apple
There. For the benefit of all Slashdot readers, I have edited the irrelevant words for your post.
Re: that's funny... (Score:5, Informative)
I used to like Metalica but i haven't listened to them since they started suing fans.
Re: that's funny... (Score:5, Insightful)
If you're acquiring their or anyone else's music without paying for it, you're not a fan - you're a freeloading, (and to turn the tables right back around on you, greedy) leech.
You mean like before the members of Metallica "made it", and used to dub tapes instead of paying for them? Hypocrisy is the greatest luxury.
Re: that's funny... (Score:5, Insightful)
You mean like how it's the artists' call about when or whether they should be compensated for the provision of their goods and services?
The members of Metallica didn't respect this alleged right when they were young, why should anyone else?
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because two wrongs make a right?
First, show that it was wrong once.
Go on ahead and steal your cable or electric while you are at it I guess....
Theft requires that someone be deprived of something. If you get cable without paying, you are using some of the power output of the cable system, it costs them something to provide you that even when the programming is broadcast. Same for electrical power. But if I make a copy of a piece of music, nobody is deprived of anything, and therefore no theft has occurred. Once you realize that, you'll spew a lot less nonsense.
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Nonsense. Unique means that something is one of a kind. Suppose that you have a figurine, and there is exactly one other figurine in the world that is like it. If something happens to the other one, your figurine will become unique. Therefore, yours is almost unique, because you haven't found your hammer yet. After you do, it will be unique. :-D
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If she wants to protect the little people in the music industry, she should offer to allow Apple to use her music royalty-free for six months if they pay new artists during the three month free period.
A pathetically naive solution. Who gets to pick who is "little" and "new"? What if you're a just a bit bigger than "little" and just a bit older than "new"? Tough luck, you get to help multi-millionaire company Apple build a new business for themselves, at no recompense.
There is always a problem when people try to draw an artificial line, where the rules totally change, in the middle of a market. Because there is always someone who falls on just the wrong side of the line that gets hammered, while someo
Re:that's funny... (Score:4, Insightful)
Well you sure got proven wrong pretty damn quickly.
Apple wanted to give away someone else's product for 3 months in order to drive demand for its own product. It really doesn't take a genius to work out why the people Apple was trying to exploit didn't like the idea; to Apple's credit they caught on and changed policy pretty damn quickly.
Re:that's funny... (Score:5, Insightful)
If she wants to protect the little people in the music industry, she should offer to allow Apple to use her music royalty-free for six months if they pay new artists during the three month free period.
This. Exactly this.
What you describe is basically Taylor Swift (estimated net worth: 200 millions) bankrolling Apple (estimated net worth: 700 billions) because unlike them she cares about poor musicians.
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Apple Should Pay - It's Advertising (Score:5, Interesting)
Apple really needs to write off the cost as part of their marketing plan. This three months free is their advertising cost and should not be shouldered by the performers.
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It all comes down to money. Apple wants more money and thinks that they can get away with not paying the singers. The singers want to make more money and think that Apple should charge its customers on their behalf.
Bottom line - Apple is within its rights to ask singers to give away their music for Apple's benefit, and the singers are within their rights to decline that offer. There is nothing shocking going on here - its just business as usual (with everyone trying to make more money from someone else).
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I imagine Swift's reluctance has something to do with having a high-flying album still on the charts that will probably not be selling anywhere near as well 3 months from now. It's one thing to give out free introductory samples of, say, nachos expecting that to drum up more customers who will be hungry for them next week. But in this case the performers being asked to give away their product are giving away something that's time-limited for them. Sure, Apple will still have more music to sell 3 months f
Evidence that the copyright term is out of whack (Score:3)
I imagine Swift's reluctance has something to do with having a high-flying album still on the charts that will probably not be selling anywhere near as well 3 months from now.
If the shelf life of a musical recording is measured in months, then why does copyright in the recording subsist for two orders of magnitude longer (95 years)?
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Let's assume that 30% of all revenue is being cashed in the first 3 months. The rest of 70% is spread over the 94 years and 9 months of copyright remaining. The artist gets the thick of it in the first 3 months and then everything else it trickling down as crumbles.
Labels are greedy and can wait. An artist might not be able to wait that long, let alone still be alive 50 years from now.
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So Apple is like every major record label in the last sixty years.
Re: Apple Should Pay - It's Advertising (Score:2)
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I am not sure what she is whining about, the RIAA members give very little money to the artists, using the term artist very loosely as it rarely describes RIAA acts, especially bland, uninspired crap like Taylor Swift.
Many acts are in debt to a major label even after a moderately successful album.
She should be used to getting reamed without lube.
apple forcing suppliers to give away product. (Score:2)
This is just the sort of disruptive paradigm that all business should follow.
We're opening a new store, to get it established you're going to give away your stuff through us.
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So... basically the Compton Swap-Meet, syndicated all around the world.
Swift (Score:5, Funny)
After all that effort Apple made promoting Swift [wikipedia.org], this is how she treats them?
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Not yet. "Later this year" (source [apple.com]), Apple plans to release the Swift programming language under an open source license. It'll probably take some time after that for someone to port it to GNUstep.
"generous?" (Score:5, Insightful)
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Is it a whole biscuit? That is what the hordes of Indian sub-contractors beating down that particular door want to know. Personally I would want to know if they had negotiated hobnobs in their contract, or were stuck with rich tea.
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I've been an Apple user for 30+ years, have done work for them, know people within the company, etc. "Generous" is not a word associated with Apple in my experience....
It's just capitalism inaction, the maximization of profit. Isn't that the American way? Offer artists something totally unacceptable and make them laboriously negotiate you up to something a little bit above the least they will settle for. If you have ever tried to sell something you'll recognize the tactic, you ask 20 grand buyer offers 8 grand and eventually you settle on 14. The only reason this is news is because it's Apple that's doing it and everybody around here hates Apple. Poor oppressed artists vs
As always (Score:3, Insightful)
" Swift is an artist who could afford to shoulder the cost of three months of not being paid by Apple, but she has chosen to make a stand and stick up for those who are less fortunate."
As always when people tell us, it's not about the money, it's about the principle, it's about the money.
Re:As always (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple has BILLIONS in cash in the bank. LIke, ~$200 billion. And yet people think it's fair that the artists man up and shoulder the cost of a few months of streaming.
Taylor Swift: Apple's Disdain For Royalties.... (Score:2)
something something something something.... I don't know what it said. The headline has been redacted by a big black, kinda square-ish looking thing with a number in inside of it. Should I file an FOIA request to get the rest?
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Maybe start a Kickstarter program to get all of you folks on 12 inch 80 x 25 monitors on to something more current?
Yes, I think putting the ambiguous icon on the right hand side of the screen is dumb, but I can read the entire headline (and the summary and, if the editor provides a link, TFA but that's only for special occasions).
So, where's she getting money? (Score:5, Informative)
Assuming she's for real in this respect, I appreciate her concern for her comrades in the industry. However, She's pulled her music from Spotify, and now she's pulling it from iTunes. So...she's living off Pandora royalties and CD sales? I mean, the album has been out for quite some time, so she's made most of her millions off it at this point anyway and this is more grandstanding than anything else...but if it were a new release, would she really be this adamant about giving up iTunes revenue, even if it spent a bit too much time in the 'Accounts Receivable' column?
Re:So, where's she getting money? (Score:5, Informative)
Assuming she's for real in this respect, I appreciate her concern for her comrades in the industry. However, She's pulled her music from Spotify, and now she's pulling it from iTunes. So...she's living off Pandora royalties and CD sales? I mean, the album has been out for quite some time, so she's made most of her millions off it at this point anyway and this is more grandstanding than anything else...but if it were a new release, would she really be this adamant about giving up iTunes revenue, even if it spent a bit too much time in the 'Accounts Receivable' column?
Unless she has a super-special deal (which, who knows, with her market power she might), she makes way more off touring and related merchandising than she does the pitiful royalties from album (both physical & virtual) sales.
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Of course, that also means that iTunes is more like a shared marketing agreement, and by making it more difficult for less successful artists to make an attractive deal with Apple for their own marketing, she actually is proposing to hurt them.
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I didn't read her post on tumbler but from the article I read she wasn't pulling her music from iTunes. She's just keeping it out of Apple Music which is their new streaming service. She's still selling music through plenty of other storefronts, brick and mortar as well as digital. Not that she would likely miss 3 months of income very much.
No business acumen (Score:2)
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This is a really interesting idea. I don't expect any single artist to do this as they investment of time and effort requires serious dedication. If artists wanted to be business people then they would not have become artist.
However if you could get maybe half of the top 20 artist to agree that it was in the best interest of the themselves and artists in general, they could pull there music form all the other services and form a new non-profit service (non-profit for the service no the artist). The top arti
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as they investment of time and effort requires serious dedication.
A couple hours spent interviewing someone to hire to set it all up? Yeah, lots of time and dedication. I'm not saying she'd do it herself. She'd hire people to do it for her. You think Paris Hilton personally manages her cosmetics line?
GhostTunes (Score:2)
When Garth Brooks did that, it was called GhostTunes. But his complaint was more about selling singles separate from the "context" of the album.
Free trials are great (Score:2)
If you are running a startup, you would love a service that offers 3 month free trials with decent conversion rate. It would be easy enough to get a bank loan and cover expenses while subscriptions ramp up, so long as you can document your likely monthly profits afterwards.
Now it could well be that most musicians would rather be paid a salary than depending on fluctuating royalties. But the likes of Taylor Swift would actually be strongly against that. When you are on a salary and become a megahit, you woul
Great PR team (Score:4, Insightful)
Swift has a hell of a PR team. She is in the news practically every other day for something. This is not done out of goodwill, this is a business decision.
Tim Cook will step in (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, good for her to take this role.
Apple can do no wrong... (Score:2)
Apple can do no wrong. Just get used to it---unless you have more lawyers than they do.
waaaaahhhhh (Score:2)
The *real* reality is that no artists makes any real money off physical album sales, downloads or streaming except the rare mega-acts like Metallica, U2, and presumably TS which the RIAA treat as loss-leaders, so Apple payi
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Meh (take 2) (Score:2, Interesting)
Well, looks like /. ate and posted an incomplete post of mine. I guess I won't try writing any posts from my phone in the future, if their UI is going to be this crappy. Let's try again, with a few revisions:
I think she's calling for a bit too much out of Apple.
Apple is a hardware company; any products or services they offer other than hardware are only relevant to them because they think it'll help them sell hardware. Apple also has a justified complex regarding self-sufficiency. More on that presently.
W
Yet another reason... (Score:2)
I will never buy from Apple and will never develop for Apple platforms.
sue for misuse of trademark (Score:5, Funny)
Hey, Taylor Swift, you aren't going to get much money out of Apple by complaining about how they license and sell music.
But have you considered suing them over the "Swift" language? Obviously, they are using your trademarked good name in order to sell their new language, and you can probably get a well-deserved buck out of them so that you don't have to starve.
Hey, it worked for Bob Dylan [macspeedzone.com].
Apple & Taylor Swift aside... (Score:2)
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I'm sure they are free to cancel their contract with Apple any time. Of course, Taylor Swift wouldn't even exist without iTunes, so she is reluctant to do that. And the fact that Apple is in this bargaining position is really the result of choices that artists made earlier, namely signing up with Apple rather than signing up with a larger variety of companies.
The correct thing to do would be for people like Taylor Swift to cancel their contracts with Apple and sign up with other music services. That would e
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Re:Not sure I fault Apple on this one (Score:5, Interesting)
The music business model has been predatory against artists since the player piano roll.
Correction: The music business model has been predatory against performers since the player piano roll.
The music business has been predatory against COMPOSERS (also "artists," i'd think) since Petrucci [wikipedia.org] first popularized music printing around the year 1500. You can read about the details here [cam.ac.uk] for example, but early music publishers and patrons generally took advantage of composers -- preferring to publish collections of "greatest hits" and getting copyright protection granting exclusive privileges to PUBLISHERS, not the artists who actually created the music. On the few occasions where composers were granted privileges in the 1500s, publishers frequently ignored them and published whatever they wanted anyway, without necessarily giving any money to composers whatsoever.
You have to wait about 75-80 years after music printing first became popular before any composer was really granted a sort of international copyright privilege for his own works that seemed to "stick" (which was granted by the French king and the Holy Roman Emperor to Orlande de Lassus [wikipedia.org]). Composers before that who tried to print their own works were sometimes sued or fined for illegal "printing without a license." (You think I'm joking... I'm not. And you think publishing cartels trying to control artists is new? It's not -- there's a VERY long tradition.)
Anyhow, the point is that any new technology will always try to exploit artists during the period of transition. Moving music around on the internet in electronic form is barely 20 years old. It could be years or even decades before all of the "dust settles" and artists finally establish secure rights in this new medium... if ever.
Re: maybe the musicians will realize (Score:2)
Do you listen to music at all?
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Do you program at all?
I think you missed the funny. Of course, your post might be subtly sarcastic in which case I missed the funny.
Life is so complicated in ASCII....
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I'd be more interested to find out if he had a soul.
I'm sitting here humming Beethoven's Fifth and pondering the notion that there is a human being out there somewhere who thinks it's mere patterns of sound waves.
Re: New Accounts every 3 months (Score:2)
Until they run out of credit cards to sign up with.
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Well, you can still resubscribe for a long time if the constraint is to use different credit cards. Pretty much every single store you visit nowadays wants to give you a credit card. I already have about a dozen credit card number I could use. And remember that credit card expires and send you a brand new card periodically. I seriously hope for them that a credit card is not how they plan on identifying returning users...
Identifying users based on name, adresses and verifying the name based on credit card i
Re:I'm sorry, what? (Score:5, Insightful)
Ah, the classic blunder of confusing physical goods with intellectual property.
You can wave a magic wand to get a house cleaned. Someone is running a service where a significant portion of users sign up to pay you some change for each cleaning after a 3 month free trial. Is it really a bad deal, even if it did take you a lot of time to make your magic wand?
Recognition won't pay the bills (Score:3)
Your model is basically saying that since the artists already did the work, "they're not losing any money or time" if somebody else gives away their music for free.
Yes, you can say that. After all, why should you ever pay any artist? They already did the work, so they aren't losing any money, right? People are merely using their work for free without paying.
Here's the problem: "recognition" doesn't pay bills. It's nice, it's flattering, it's great for the ego, and the net result is you starve. Apple's bu
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Some of them dislike streaming services period, because of the very low pay and perceived reduction in music purchase by their users; even if they are willing to work with streaming services, they'll have a much better negotiating posit
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I appreciate your reply, though please note that the post you're replying to was incomplete; Slashdot's lousy UI went ahead and posted it while I was in the middle of writing it. For the whole thing (revised slightly) see here: http://entertainment.slashdot.... [slashdot.org]
Anyway, I don't have any qualms with rightsholders complaining about, or refusing to assign or license rights to, businesses that they disagree with. That's their choice. But the music industry is in a bad way right now. Siding with Apple might be a
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With all the sound and fury about people "stealing" copyrighted materials, how is Apple getting away with this?
Best as I can tell, EACH Instance should be punishable with thousands of dollars of fines and jail terms for those at Apple who authorize this.
It's not illegal. Apple either has permission from the rightsholders for the music they offer, or a statutory right to offer it, and doesn't offer the music for which they don't have permission or a right.
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If you are streaming it, you are using the exact same model that radio uses
True of Pandora, not of Spotify. Spotify users make their own playlists.
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Ms. Swift has a ticket for Ship B.
Taylor Swift has somewhat of a prodigious talent for song writing and a knack for business. Not through money, but her personal talent. Just because you have a problem with her rare ability to pen a catchy pop song which made her rich, or don't personally like her music, you somehow think she doesn't deserve her success and should give all that money back? According to your logic people can only be rich if you work hard for decades? How many decades? Is 2 enough, or does it have to be 4? Or 6? What is the