Posts Tagged ‘Music’

Greedy: Judge Tells ASCAP No Royalties For Ringtones

October 16th, 2009

Greedy: Judge Tells ASCAP No Royalties For Ringtones.

One of the weirder strategies by the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) recently has been to claim that every time a ringtone played, a royalty should be paid. ASCAP sued AT&T earlier this year over the claim, but a federal judge has ruled that your phone ringing does not constitute a public performance.

The ruling may also affect another ASCAP lawsuit that’s even more ridiculous, reports Barb Dybwad at Mashable:

That means carriers won’t have to pay royalties on ringtone plays. It also has implications for another recent suit we reported on recently, in which the music industry is seeking royalties on 30-second song previews and performance fees for TV show downloads. Part of the language in the judge’s ruling also considered a ringtone download as not being a public performance either, which could set a precedent for the other suit in which ASCAP/BMI are seeking royalties on downloads.

Paying good money for a ringtone is stupid anyway. Symbian (i.e. Nokia) and Android phones should let you assign pretty much any common audio format as a ringtone. Here’s an info page for Android, and here’s how to make your own for an iPhone.

“Judge: No Royalties for Music Industry Each Time a Ringtone Plays” [Mashable via IntoMobile]

Popularity: 8% [?]

How To: Rip Your Music Like a Pro – How To – Gizmodo

September 19th, 2009

How To: Rip Your Music Like a Pro – How To – Gizmodo.

For most people, dropping a CD into their disc drive and clicking “Import” in iTunes is good enough. For music freaks, though, it’s not—and with good reason. Here’s how to digitize your tunes, the right way.

First off, some reasons to take this road: iTunes is a decent audio encoder, and it’ll get your music from point A—the CD—to points B, C and D—your computer, your MP3 player and your backup drive—without much trouble. But it’ll do it with a less-than-great encoder, with occasionally inconsistent tagging, with album art that’ll only work on Apple devices, and without support for the best lossless audio formats and MP3 encoding options, which you probably want, whether you know it or now.

Popularity: 9% [?]

iLogic Sound Hat | Geeky Gadgets

September 2nd, 2009

iLogic Sound Hat | Geeky Gadgets.

The iLogic Sound Hat comes with a 98cm wire, that can be extended from the internal lining to the exact length you want, it seems like a great idea.

If you want one the iLogic Sound Hat comes in a choice of three colors, black, white and pink, it is available for £14.99 about $25 from Iwantoneofthose.

Popularity: 25% [?]