by Tom T. » Sun May 20, 2012 2:30 am
It seems some sites are able to prohibit saving the stream. When you upload
your own mp3 to Soundclick, it asks you whether you want to:
Sell it
Allow free downloads
Allow free streaming only
I choose the latter, not because there's any money to be made, but because one enjoys seeing the hit counts (all four charted as high as #2 or #3 in their genre at some point) and the comments, if any.
Also, it's still an acknowledgment of copyright, which I own. Redistributors probably won't do that, and a British rugby club had posted one of my creations without author name, link to original, or notice of copyright. They gladly corrected that when asked, and the song got a large number of hits for several more months.
I just tried to "Save" my own produced mp3, as a user, not logged in as myself, and there is nothing in the Temp file that can be converted to a local mp3. (I tried). This is with normal means, not FlashGot or any other downloader other than the browser. Please try it yourself:
http://www.soundclick.com/player/single_player.cfm?songid=11471033A lot of people upload commercially-published records to, say, YouTube.
YouTube invites copyright owners to complain if they object, and indeed some videos are removed. Repeated violators have their accounts deleted.
If the copyright owner doesn't complain, then fine. I wouldn't have bought the record anyway, and I don't re-sell it.
But I don't call someone nasty names because they spent a lot of time and effort and talent producing something for the commercial market, then see it being pirated -- and yes, that is the word. Some users may have bought it if they couldn't get it from YT, so that's loss of revenue.
GµårÐïåñ, would you like it if the sw you developed were pirated, with free copies all over the Net?
After all,
The best they can pull is a shrinkwrap defense and that has historically failed 99.9% of the time in any court in the land, so it means nothing to me frankly.
You feel that way when it's your paid project too, correct? -- that copyright or intellectual property rights are meaningless?
It seems some sites are able to prohibit saving the stream. When you upload [b]your own[/b] mp3 to Soundclick, it asks you whether you want to:
Sell it
Allow free downloads
Allow free streaming only
I choose the latter, not because there's any money to be made, but because one enjoys seeing the hit counts (all four charted as high as #2 or #3 in their genre at some point) and the comments, if any.
Also, it's still an acknowledgment of copyright, which I own. Redistributors probably won't do that, and a British rugby club had posted one of my creations without author name, link to original, or notice of copyright. They gladly corrected that when asked, and the song got a large number of hits for several more months.
I just tried to "Save" my own produced mp3, as a user, not logged in as myself, and there is nothing in the Temp file that can be converted to a local mp3. (I tried). This is with normal means, not FlashGot or any other downloader other than the browser. Please try it yourself:
[url]http://www.soundclick.com/player/single_player.cfm?songid=11471033[/url]
A lot of people upload commercially-published records to, say, YouTube.
YouTube invites copyright owners to complain if they object, and indeed some videos are removed. Repeated violators have their accounts deleted.
If the copyright owner doesn't complain, then fine. I wouldn't have bought the record anyway, and I don't re-sell it.
But I don't call someone nasty names because they spent a lot of time and effort and talent producing something for the commercial market, then see it being pirated -- and yes, that is the word. Some users may have bought it if they couldn't get it from YT, so that's loss of revenue.
[color=#00AA00][b]GµårÐïåñ[/b][/color], would you like it if the sw you developed were pirated, with free copies all over the Net?
After all, [quote]The best they can pull is a shrinkwrap defense and that has historically failed 99.9% of the time in any court in the land, so it means nothing to me frankly.[/quote]
You feel that way when it's your paid project too, correct? -- that copyright or intellectual property rights are meaningless?