crawler spider

Home Search Engine Back Volver
QTraxs free music downloads: Not yet - Machinist - Salon.com
Title
QTraxs free music downloads: Not yet - Machinist - Salon.com


Description
Salons Machinist, inside the tech innovations changing our lives. Read the latest technology news, blogs and articles from Salon tech writer Farhad Manjoo.


Keywords
Tech Blog, Tech News, Technology Articles, Salon, Machinist, Farhad Manjoo


Referer Text
QTraxs free music downloads: Not yet - Machinist - Salon.com


Google Page Rank
Google Page Rank

Page Content in text format
QTrax's free music downloads: Not yet - Machinist - Salon.com body { word-wrap: break-word; } .clearfix { height: 1%; } #col1 #calendar_nav li { margin: 0; padding: 0; } Machinist Site presented by Inside tech: Gizmos, people and big ideas Blog Archive 2008.01.28 • 16:15 EST QTrax's free music downloads: Not yet The Times of London headlined its announcement of a new legal music-download service quite dramatically: "From today, feel free to download another 25 million songs -- legally." Well, not really, buster. QTrax, the service being touted by the Times, put out word of its new plan at a music conference in Cannes this weekend. According to the company, the four major record labels had given the company their blessing to offer songs through a peer-to-peer download service that would be supported by advertising; you wouldn't pay a thing to download the songs. But no sooner did QTrax go public than the record labels balked. All four -- Warner Music, Universal Music, EMI and Sony BMG -- say they have not signed deals with QTrax to offer such a plan. QTrax, which is supposed to be live now, doesn't work yet. Allan Klepfisz, QTrax's CEO, tells CNet that there are only a few bureaucratic hurdles, and that the service will launch soon. "We plan to release music the way we said we were," he says. Well, that'd be nice. QTrax's service sounds a bit iffy -- the tracks will contain copy protection, meaning they can't be used on iPods, which may be a deal-killer to many -- but of course, it'd be a sign of progress in the music business. It'd be fun to try. When one might get to do that isn't clear. One more thing. The Times of London asked recording artist James Blunt what he made of such a service -- which promises to compensate artists when their music is downloaded -- and the dude went off the rails, suggesting that even legal downloading amounted to theft. "I'm amazed that we now accept that people steal music," he said. "I was taught not to steal sweets from a sweet shop. But I want to learn how this service works, given the condition the music industry is in." I'd take time to explain the philosophical and legal differences between physical property and intellectual property -- that, you know, when you steal sweets in a shop you're depriving some other bloke of the sweets, but not so with copying music -- and I might point out that the sooner we begin to recognize such differences the sooner we'd get to saner, more prosperous and less anachronistic IP business models. I would do all that, but haven't activists and legal experts and smart entrepreneurs been doing so for years now? Yup. And still there's no getting through. ― By Farhad Manjoo Posted in: Copyright, Music 2 comments Share Email Digg Facebook StumbleUpon Reddit P rint QTrax's free music downloads: Not yet About Machinist Cyrus Farivar is a freelance technology journalist who regularly reports for National Public Radio, PRI's The World, The Economist and others. His forthcoming book is "The Internet of Elsewhere." Tech News From The Wires Astronauts step out for longest, hardest spacewalk New space water recycling system has hiccups NASA's space water recycling system has hiccups Engineers sentenced to 1 year for espionage case NASA scales back flagship Mars mission Broadband makes tiny town an English-teaching hub Microsoft exec: No job cuts here Shuttle gives space station a mile-high boost Engineers face jail in economic espionage case Shuttle, astronauts prep for mid-mission reboost Astronauts end spacewalk to repair gummed-up joint Google empowers users to edit search results Most Popular Salon Stories Most Read Active Letters Most E-mailed Get over it, Clinton haters By Joe Conason Is it OK to be liberal again, instead of progressive? By Michael Lind Tuning out the braindead megaphone By David Sirota First lady got back By Erin Aubry Kaplan I stole my lover's pot while he was sleeping By Cary Tennis The list of the governments that have persecuted journalists (218) By Glenn Greenwald Get over it, Clinton haters (206) By Joe Conason Is it OK to be liberal again, instead of progressive? (170) By Michael Lind Happy Thanksgiving, from Sarah Palin (89) By Alex Koppelman Vhat vomen vant (71) By Kate Harding Get over it, Clinton haters By Joe Conason Happy Thanksgiving, from Sarah Palin By Alex Koppelman First lady got back By Erin Aubry Kaplan Is it OK to be liberal again, instead of progressive? By Michael Lind Obama daughters going to Sidwell Friends By Gabriel Winant Recent Blog Posts Fake text messages give false voting information CNN debuts hologram technology to beam people in 3-D Top 10 songs to rock your Obama victory party Subscribe Machinist RSS Feed Login to Salon Premium Currently in Salon Get over it, Clinton haters By Joe Conason Tuning out the brain-dead megaphone By David Sirota NFL Week 12: Big-game picks By King Kaufman Posts by topic Google Copyright XBox Music Facebook Privacy Yaho o PS3 iPhone Politics Gadgets Skype MySpace Voting GMai l NBC Games iPod Wii Microsoft Search Engines Voting Machines Web Applications iTunes Apple FCC Video Games YouTube Netflix Cell Phones Nintendo Sony Hackers Posts by date ← November 2008SuMoTuWeThFrSa1234567891011121314151617181920212223 24252627282930 Salon Daily Newsletter Get Salon in your mailbox! Table Talk What's on your iPhone? Your favorite computer games for the holidays. Salon About Salon Contact & Help Corrections Advertise in Salon Salon Personals Salon Jobs Salon Mobile Salon Newsletter RSS Feeds Salon Premium: Premium log in What is Salon Premium? A & E Books Comics Community: Table Talk & The WELL Life News & Politics Opinion Sports Tech & Business Letters Investor Relations Privacy Policy Terms of Service Copyright ©2008 Salon Media Group, Inc. Reproduction of material from any Salon pages without written permission is strictly prohibited. SALON® is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office as a trademark of Salon Media Group Inc.

Url
http://machinist.salon.com/blog/2008/01/28/qtrax/




enrique van oppen