The Age of Music Piracy Is Officially Over

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Mark down the date: The age of stealing music via the Internet is officially over. It’s time for everybody to go legit. The reason: We won. And all you audiophiles and copyfighters, you know who fixed our problems? The record labels and online stores we loved to hate.

Granted, when Apple launched the iTunes Music Store in 2003 there was a lot to complain about. Tracks you bought on computer A often refused to play on gadget B, thanks to that old netizen bogeyman, digital rights management. (It’s crippleware!) My local Apple store was actually picketed by nerds in hazmat suits attempting to educate passersby on the evils of DRM.

Well played, protesters: In January 2009, Apple announced that it would remove the copyright protection wrapper from every song in its store. Today, Amazon and Walmart both sell music encoded as MP3s, which don’t even have hooks for copyright-protection locks. The battle is over, comrades.

A few years ago, audiophiles dismissed iTunes’ 128-Kbps resolution as anemic, even though it supposedly passed rigid blind testing against full-bandwidth CD tracks of the same song. The sound is compressed, connoisseurs said. The high end is mangled. Good work, audiophiles: Online stores have cranked up the audio quality to a fat 256 Kbps. To most ears, it’s indistinguishable from a CD. (Actually, most ears are listening through crummy earbuds anyway, but whatever.) It’s certainly better than most of the stuff out on BitTorrent. If you still hate the sound of digital music, you probably need to go back to vinyl. You can get a pretty good turntable for around $500. Which, I’ll just point out, is not free. And when you steal vinyl records, it’s called shoplifting.

Music is so cheap, there’s no reason not to buy. Besides, many downloads send 20 cents straight to the band.

Haters might get a bit more traction with the gripe that official stores still don’t carry every track ever recorded. You won’t find, say, AC/DC or the Beatles* in iTunes. For other artists, contract restrictions mean some songs can’t be downloaded in every country, which indeed seems dumb for a store on the border-free Internet. Americans, for example, can’t buy Daniel Zueras’ 2007 Spanish hit “No Quiero Enamorarme
 
Mark down the date: The age of stealing music via the Internet is officially over. It’s time for everybody to go legit. The reason: We won. And all you audiophiles and copyfighters, you know who fixed our problems? The record labels and online stores we loved to hate.

Granted, when Apple launched the iTunes Music Store in 2003 there was a lot to complain about. Tracks you bought on computer A often refused to play on gadget B, thanks to that old netizen bogeyman, digital rights management. (It’s crippleware!) My local Apple store was actually picketed by nerds in hazmat suits attempting to educate passersby on the evils of DRM.

Well played, protesters: In January 2009, Apple announced that it would remove the copyright protection wrapper from every song in its store. Today, Amazon and Walmart both sell music encoded as MP3s, which don’t even have hooks for copyright-protection locks. The battle is over, comrades.

A few years ago, audiophiles dismissed iTunes’ 128-Kbps resolution as anemic, even though it supposedly passed rigid blind testing against full-bandwidth CD tracks of the same song. The sound is compressed, connoisseurs said. The high end is mangled. Good work, audiophiles: Online stores have cranked up the audio quality to a fat 256 Kbps. To most ears, it’s indistinguishable from a CD. (Actually, most ears are listening through crummy earbuds anyway, but whatever.) It’s certainly better than most of the stuff out on BitTorrent. If you still hate the sound of digital music, you probably need to go back to vinyl. You can get a pretty good turntable for around $500. Which, I’ll just point out, is not free. And when you steal vinyl records, it’s called shoplifting.

Music is so cheap, there’s no reason not to buy. Besides, many downloads send 20 cents straight to the band.

Haters might get a bit more traction with the gripe that official stores still don’t carry every track ever recorded. You won’t find, say, AC/DC or the Beatles* in iTunes. For other artists, contract restrictions mean some songs can’t be downloaded in every country, which indeed seems dumb for a store on the border-free Internet. Americans, for example, can’t buy Daniel Zueras’ 2007 Spanish hit “No Quiero Enamorarme
 
I hate these kind of articles. So intent on being the first to determine something before everyone else.
 
I hate these kind of articles. So intent on being the first to determine something before everyone else.
 
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I remember the first MP3 i downloaded in like 1998 or 1999 it was "My Name is" by Eminem and THAT was free...i shall never pay for digital music...
I'd buy CDs but Never paying for itunes trash
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I remember the first MP3 i downloaded in like 1998 or 1999 it was "My Name is" by Eminem and THAT was free...i shall never pay for digital music...
I'd buy CDs but Never paying for itunes trash
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Aint itunes songs like 0.99$? And i have about 10000 songs on my HD. Bying them all from itunes would be pretty costly. And i like to listen full albums not separate songs. That aint so cheap.
 
Aint itunes songs like 0.99$? And i have about 10000 songs on my HD. Bying them all from itunes would be pretty costly. And i like to listen full albums not separate songs. That aint so cheap.
 
itunes offering Beatles albums for $13.99. Why not buy the physical version for less (even $8 for Pepper) on Amazon?

Apple/Itunes is the devil.
 
itunes offering Beatles albums for $13.99. Why not buy the physical version for less (even $8 for Pepper) on Amazon?

Apple/Itunes is the devil.
 
The guy who wrote this is 49 years old... Why the $%## is a guy who also writes for the New York Times writing like a 15 year old kid.
 
The guy who wrote this is 49 years old... Why the $%## is a guy who also writes for the New York Times writing like a 15 year old kid.
 
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