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Say Bye-Bye to Illegal Music Downloads?
by Syd Johnson
Both Napster and Microsoft Music Service are working on new way
to get customers to download music file to their iPod and
otherportable mp3 players for less than $1 per song. Actually,
significantly less. Both of these music service are working on a
way allow customers to downloads as much music as they want as
long as it goes directly to an iPod or similar portable music
player.
This is great news for customers who still think $1 per song is
too steep. Although the price model words for one song, 10 songs
or even 100 songs, it starts getting outrageous when you go by
factors of ten. If an iPod holds 10,000 songs and you want to
fill it up, you would have to spend $10,000. Most people can
fill up the iPod in less than a year.
Unfortunately, they probably won’t spend $10,000 on music, in
any single year. So, what you could have is a legal product, the
iPod, being used to hold thousands of illegal songs because the
space is there. (assuming the iPod would be open later on to all
mp3 formats.)
Napster has a workaround
Napster is the first to announce that it is working on a
subscription model that would allow it’s user to pay a cheap
subscription fee with no restrictions on how many songs they can
download. By their estimates, a user can probably download
10,000 songs for about $180. Unfortunately, the Napster system
does not work with the iPod so customers can only take advantage
of this offer if they purchase either of two Napster approved
portable mp3 players.
The Microsoft model would also allow customers to download a
significant number of files for less than the average cost of $1
per song. Microsoft is another company that is also locked out
of the iPod. They will distribute the songs via Microsoft
approved portable mp3 players.
This new pricing model is radical change for the digital music
industry. This came about because the success of iTunes has
highlighted all that is good and bad about the ways music is
sold online.
It shows that customers will buy online and they will browse
through digital catalogs for individual songs rather than entire
albums. But, it also shows that a lot of work needs to be done
to make the mp3 security codes and portable players more
compatible. If Apple continues to dominate the portable mp3
player market with the iPod, then customers will only have three
choices:
1. Subscribe through iTunes because they want the iPod
2. Hack the iPod which Real Network is doing already
3. Or, ignore the most reliable portable mp3 player out there
and deal with having a few files on their computers or on
another less prominent player.
This is all great news for digital music fans, but we’ll have to
wait and see how the recording industry responds to this
cheap-for-all music model.
Is it sufficient to bring back the revenue streams that
songwriters and singers have been losing to totally free
services such as Kazaa and Grokster? No one knows.
Also see:
About the author:
By Syd Johnson, Editor For http://www.rapidlingo.com.
Must See!:
MP3 Instant Music
MP3 Music Downloads
MP3 Downloads
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