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News Universal to sell songs without DRM

Discussion in 'Article Discussion' started by Tim S, 10 Aug 2007.

  1. Tim S

    Tim S OG

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  2. DougEdey

    DougEdey I pwn all your storage

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    So RealNetworks will be the most bloated piece of software on your machine, with loads of really annoying pop-ups when you load up. AKA: Adware.

    Walmart will be US only.

    And the rest will also be US only. Way to share the love UMG!
     
  3. bilbothebaggins

    bilbothebaggins What's a Dremel?

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    Do I get this correctly?
    They want to create competition so that prices are allowed to RISE???

    :wallbash:
     
  4. bloodcar

    bloodcar Minimodder

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    Basically, yes. One of the big battles a year or so back was various record companies wanting iTunes to raise the prices per song but Steve Jobs told them that he wouldn't do it.

    They're reporting losses in physical disc sales so they're wanting to make that up somewhere else. There's a higher profit margin in digital distribution then in disc sales so naturally that's going to be their big tarket for the time coming.
     
  5. iwog

    iwog Linux cursed

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    But consumers dont want to pay more, they want to pay less than what iTunes is charging.

    And this strategy will never work, you can steal away market share by charging a higher price for the same service. The only way they would gain market share from iTunes is by charging a lower price which is the opposite of what they want. Then supposedly once they are the monopoly they can start charging higher prices again and watch music piracy sky rocket again.
     
  6. bloodcar

    bloodcar Minimodder

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    These new DRM-free songs will be available at the current price that you can buy music from iTunes for but if they manage to grab a large portion of market share away from iTunes, don't be shocked if prices start increasing. Who knows, maybe Universal will eventually put their DRM-free catalog over on iTunes.
     
  7. iwog

    iwog Linux cursed

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    But its economically unsound. Consumers aren't happy atm with the high prices so what makes Universal think it can make more money by charging more? For most people music is an elastic good which means that when you increase the price you loose money as you loose more customers than is offset by the increased revenue.

    The only reason music piracy is so prevalent is because the market is failing to give us what we want so we operate outside the market. If the range of legal DRM free music was as great as the illegal, in qualities and artists, and the price was low enough so that hunting around on torrent sites wasn't economically viable (the time spent hunting costs more than the price paid legally). Then and only then would you see a major reduction in music piracy. Until the music companies offer a better product at a more sensible price it will have no significant impact upon the level of piracy.

    They could also have take preventative measures during the fledling days of the internet, just like the film industry should have done a few years ago, but thats for another rant.
     
  8. Paradigm Shifter

    Paradigm Shifter de nihilo nihil fit

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    When they start selling digital music in non-DRM Lossless formats (FLAC), then I might start buying music online. Until then? I'll stick to CDs, thanks. :D I like having the physical media... and besides, half the stuff I listen to is next to impossible to find on CD - finding it online is impossible.
     
  9. mikeuk2004

    mikeuk2004 What you Looking at Fool!

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    If I buy music I want to have something physical to show I own it. Also, how does one sell downloads onto somebody else. I mean if you get board of a CD it ends up on ebay or in your local cash generator. What do you do with a download???? delete it and get nothing back??

    I dont like the idea paying for downloads becase what happens when your hard drive crashes and you loose it?? Can you re-download them with no charge???
     
  10. steveo_mcg

    steveo_mcg What's a Dremel?

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    Music really needs a steam like service, where all your purchased songs are stored and allow you download them again even if you delete them.
     
  11. Phil Rhodes

    Phil Rhodes Hypernobber

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    Oh, fer chrissake. It's a zero-sum game, guys. You can't keep your disc sales exactly the same and make more money out of selling online. If this is obvious to me, why isn't it obvious to Universal? You'd have thought they'd be happy just with the online sales reducing their fixed costs.

    Phil
     
  12. iwog

    iwog Linux cursed

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    Its not a zero sum game because they are targeting two different sectors of the market. They have cross elasticities but unless they are exactly equal to 1 its not zero sum. Zero sum implies that what ever one looses the other gains, but there could be a large increase in online sales without the same decrease in CD sales. Ok?
     
  13. Da Dego

    Da Dego Brett Thomas

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    Stop looking for reason in the mind of madmen. It doesn't work :p When common, proven and sensible economic theory doesn't favour big businesses, they don't go looking to fit their business models to the theory - they write a new theory to fit their business model.
     
  14. iwog

    iwog Linux cursed

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    yeah but as an economic student its my nature. And it pains me when business make decisions that fly in the face of economic reasoning. Yes the theories aren't perfect but they give give a good enough representation of what will happen.
     
  15. completemadness

    completemadness What's a Dremel?

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    q f t

    I dont know about you but i still think the ITunes price is too high, it still practically costs the same as the CD, yet you dont get any of the stuff that should cost money (disc, case, artwork, etc)
     
  16. Phil Rhodes

    Phil Rhodes Hypernobber

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    Er, yes, thanks, I'm fully aware of what a zero-sum game is, and I maintain my contention that the music business is (approximately) one, but:

    > but there could be a large increase in online sales without the same decrease in CD sales. Ok?

    No, not OK. What makes you say that; what information is it based on?

    Phil
     
  17. bloodcar

    bloodcar Minimodder

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    There are actually some crazy people out there who will purchase downloadable copies of music they already own on disc. Don't ask me why they do it, but I know a couple of people who do.

    Personally, I've not bought into paying for downloadable music. $0.99 per song is too much in my mind when I can go out and buy the cd for roughly the same price. A good chunk of my music is music I have bought the disc of...the rest, well, we all know where that came from. :eek:
     
  18. liratheal

    liratheal Sharing is Caring

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    I rarely hope things of this nature, but I hope Universal go out of business.

    They want to drive consumers away from iTunes, to create competition (I understand this bit)

    But they will probably end up charging more?

    Won't that drive more consumers into piracy and/or iTunes?

    Bunch of idiots :|
     
  19. Kipman725

    Kipman725 When did I get a custom title!?!

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    what I don't get is why they don't sell the music at above CD quality as we almost all have broadband equal to or above 2Mb/s downloading multi GB albums would be appealing. What I would rearly like is a track pakaged as a collection of files in a zip. Each file would be what each mic in the studio recorded and the background sounds songs sometimes have (phone calls, screams etc.) and then I could make my own track which would sound awsome.
     
  20. Rebourne

    Rebourne What's a Dremel?

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    I agree with Kipman someone should create an audio disk based on blueray tech or something so we could get a lot higher quality music.

    The only problem is that no one seems to care, they want it fast and don't really care about the quality of the audio.... Damn MP3 files...
     
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