I've been mulling the idea of Google acquiring Napster as reported a few days ago. The first thought I had was "why?" because this is a space where there are hundreds of competitors worldwide. Not to mention that the deals are setup such that the labels who own the copyrights retain the lionshare of income. As P2P has aptly shown, music may be much in demand but nobody's paying.
But it dawned on me today that it's a pretty simple concept. Google relies on advertisements for the bulk of their revenue. AdSense and AdWords have been hugely successful as evidenced by offerings like Gmail and Blogger. Bringing AdSense to a music offering seems exactly like something Google would want to do.
Streaming music over the Internet like Pandora or Last.fm seems like an integration waiting to happen. And if you're going to acquire a licensed music firm, why not nab the one with a big name? Napster certainly is ripe for the taking, with heavy competition with Real's subscriber-leading Rhapsody.
And since it's Google, I'd envision a basic streaming service that is free with downloads or portable device transfers to cost. That would make things very interesting for digital music if that happened...
Thursday, February 02, 2006
AT&T Jumps In On Extortion Games
To extort is "to obtain from a person by force, intimidation, or undue or illegal power" according to Merriam-Webster. While mainly used as a term for organized crime, communications providers have been ramping up their lobbying power to get the government's approval for charging content providers extra for the privilege of using their infrastructure. AT&T latest efforts are detailed in this Financial Times article: AT&T chief warns on internet costs.
Great, more fake rhetoric about ROI and who bears the costs. Let's be frank: telcos who think they shouldn't pay for their own infrastructure maintenance and upgrades should not be in business. This entire debate is ridiculous when you consider that these ISPs don't just charge end users for DSL or cable. Content providers also pay hefty rates for serving content in terms of T1, T3, and higher bandwidth. Google, Yahoo, and others don't just serve their webpages free over AT&T's pipes. Much of their business expenses include capital investments in server farms and connectivity.
If AT&T can't profitably maintain their network, they have every right to raise their rates for customers (whether they be the DSL or DS3 type) - any new fees are analogous to power companies getting a percentage of Dell's computer sales since you could argue that Dell is getting a free ride using all this electricity to make their hardware functional.
Plain and simple, ISPs are lobbying the US government for no other reason than to line their pockets. What's next, charge me for having this blog?
Great, more fake rhetoric about ROI and who bears the costs. Let's be frank: telcos who think they shouldn't pay for their own infrastructure maintenance and upgrades should not be in business. This entire debate is ridiculous when you consider that these ISPs don't just charge end users for DSL or cable. Content providers also pay hefty rates for serving content in terms of T1, T3, and higher bandwidth. Google, Yahoo, and others don't just serve their webpages free over AT&T's pipes. Much of their business expenses include capital investments in server farms and connectivity.
If AT&T can't profitably maintain their network, they have every right to raise their rates for customers (whether they be the DSL or DS3 type) - any new fees are analogous to power companies getting a percentage of Dell's computer sales since you could argue that Dell is getting a free ride using all this electricity to make their hardware functional.
Plain and simple, ISPs are lobbying the US government for no other reason than to line their pockets. What's next, charge me for having this blog?
Thursday, December 29, 2005
King George Must Go
I'm disgusted and saddened by the state of American politics. Instead of being the bastion of Liberty and Freedom, the once proud USA is in the clutches of a fascist president who was appointed by the Supreme Court. With control of both houses of Congress, the GOP has shamefully refused to hold their king accountable, despite the fact that there's been alarmingly many pieces of evidence.
During our last president's term, Bill Clinton was dogged by an independent prosecutor who essentially found no real illegal acts. Digging through dirty laundry, quite literally, Ken Starr finally was able to drum up charges of perjury through a semen-stained dress. Incredulously, the world watched as a partisan House of Representatives voted to impeach the President over consensual, albeit extramarital, sexual contact. Those same Republicans calling for impeachment were screaming about the Rule of Law violated by the Commander-in-Chief.
How quick we as a Nation have forgotten those clarion calls. Compare to King George, a man who admitted to wiretapping his own citizens, lead us disingenuously into a war that has killed or maimed tens of thousands of our young Americans, and whose administration illegally leaked the name of a covert CIA agent. Rather than citing the Rule of Law, Bush's apologists insist that we have more to fear from Terror than unchecked power.
Unacceptable. To the members of Congress: stand up for the Constitution and for our Republic. Have courage and punish this executive branch for their absolute corruption and cronyism. Impeach and indict the President and his minions for their Crimes against America. Such an act would restore America's credibility and give citizens faith that the Constitution, and not fear mongering, is our guide to governance.
During our last president's term, Bill Clinton was dogged by an independent prosecutor who essentially found no real illegal acts. Digging through dirty laundry, quite literally, Ken Starr finally was able to drum up charges of perjury through a semen-stained dress. Incredulously, the world watched as a partisan House of Representatives voted to impeach the President over consensual, albeit extramarital, sexual contact. Those same Republicans calling for impeachment were screaming about the Rule of Law violated by the Commander-in-Chief.
How quick we as a Nation have forgotten those clarion calls. Compare to King George, a man who admitted to wiretapping his own citizens, lead us disingenuously into a war that has killed or maimed tens of thousands of our young Americans, and whose administration illegally leaked the name of a covert CIA agent. Rather than citing the Rule of Law, Bush's apologists insist that we have more to fear from Terror than unchecked power.
Unacceptable. To the members of Congress: stand up for the Constitution and for our Republic. Have courage and punish this executive branch for their absolute corruption and cronyism. Impeach and indict the President and his minions for their Crimes against America. Such an act would restore America's credibility and give citizens faith that the Constitution, and not fear mongering, is our guide to governance.
Thursday, November 03, 2005
Sit Down, Girlcotters
I was just mentioning to someone today, "If you never cross the fucking line, how the hell do you know where it is in the first place?"
It reminded me again when I just read through this story about how some girls from Allegheny County, PA are "girlcotting" (nothing like a catchy phrase to get your boycott noticed) yet another controversial Abercrombie & Fitch clothing line. This time the hubbub is based on Abercrombie's so-called "attitude tees" that have such pithy phrases like "Blondes Are Adored Brunettes Are Ignored" or my favorite "Do I Make You Look Fat?"
Granted that these are indeed offensive, but boycotting the clothing is ridiculous! My dear girlcotters, your outrage is not universal and there are many women who find these tee's humorous and empowering. Even worse your group is elevating this into a civil rights issue! Says Emma Blackman-Mathis, co-chairman of the group:
Perhaps if Ms. Blackman-Mathis spent some time around a larger variety of women, she would find many who find this clothing line humorous and even empowering. Women who call themselves "bitch" wear it like a badge of honor instead of being shamed by the word. Gay men once were fearful of being called "queer" but now the word has lost its negative intimation.
Add also that these types of "offensive" tee shirts are rather commonplace in New York City among both men and women. If you cannot approach these with a sense of humor, you are obviously not A&F's intended market. Take your moral outrage, and your credit card, to the Gap instead.
This is much ado about nothing; if you are offended by the tee's, don't buy them. It does not give you the moral right to ban these goods for society at large. Instead of focusing your energy on personal choice, try contacting the National Organization for Women and perhaps try getting involved in their "Take Action" program.
It reminded me again when I just read through this story about how some girls from Allegheny County, PA are "girlcotting" (nothing like a catchy phrase to get your boycott noticed) yet another controversial Abercrombie & Fitch clothing line. This time the hubbub is based on Abercrombie's so-called "attitude tees" that have such pithy phrases like "Blondes Are Adored Brunettes Are Ignored" or my favorite "Do I Make You Look Fat?"
Granted that these are indeed offensive, but boycotting the clothing is ridiculous! My dear girlcotters, your outrage is not universal and there are many women who find these tee's humorous and empowering. Even worse your group is elevating this into a civil rights issue! Says Emma Blackman-Mathis, co-chairman of the group:
A lot of people don't see it as a civil rights infringement, they don't see it as an issue. But that's what we're trying to do -- bring it to the forefront of people's attention.Frankly the idea that this is anything close to civil rights is offensive and misguided. This young woman's heart may be in the right place, but A&F has done nothing to impinge on anyone's civil rights. And to elevate your cause to that of discrimination against minorities (including women) devalues the fight for true equality.
Perhaps if Ms. Blackman-Mathis spent some time around a larger variety of women, she would find many who find this clothing line humorous and even empowering. Women who call themselves "bitch" wear it like a badge of honor instead of being shamed by the word. Gay men once were fearful of being called "queer" but now the word has lost its negative intimation.
Add also that these types of "offensive" tee shirts are rather commonplace in New York City among both men and women. If you cannot approach these with a sense of humor, you are obviously not A&F's intended market. Take your moral outrage, and your credit card, to the Gap instead.
This is much ado about nothing; if you are offended by the tee's, don't buy them. It does not give you the moral right to ban these goods for society at large. Instead of focusing your energy on personal choice, try contacting the National Organization for Women and perhaps try getting involved in their "Take Action" program.
Tuesday, November 01, 2005
SonyMusic Hacks Computers! Call Your Local Paper!
Here's an interesting account from Sysinternals detailing how Mark Russovich discovered a rootkit after a seemingly innocuous install of a Sony Music copy-protected CD. To date the music industry has attempted various schemes to limit mp3 encoding by consumers but none have been so onerous as to hijack your computer. Rootkits, in general, are popular trojan horses which can provide themselves administrative control of your machine without your detection. While this particular rootkit is not as extreme as rootkits can become, these types of trojans can lead to immeasurable damage if used for nefarious purpose.
On one hand there is honest protection of your valuable assets. But this clearly crosses that line. What common sense principle would lead your business to illegal activity? Computers are important personal property, and it's your honest customers that will be affected by this. Those who trade the non-authorized files will continue unabated. Sony Music is acknowledging that this rootkit has been used on CDs in 2005 and obviously feels no shame in hacking their customers computers with their "sterile burning" system.
Sony Music has crossed the line with this latest tactic and consumers need more exposure to these issues. While the tech community is up in arms, will the mainstream press publish these reports? If shown the potential damage Sony Music's aggressive tactics may cause, consumers may be startled and gravely upset by Sony's breach of trust. I'm sending letters to various local editors with the hope to raise awareness since I believe old fashioned paper gets better results than an Internet blog. Hopefully some folks will see this post and try to do the same in their own locales...
On one hand there is honest protection of your valuable assets. But this clearly crosses that line. What common sense principle would lead your business to illegal activity? Computers are important personal property, and it's your honest customers that will be affected by this. Those who trade the non-authorized files will continue unabated. Sony Music is acknowledging that this rootkit has been used on CDs in 2005 and obviously feels no shame in hacking their customers computers with their "sterile burning" system.
Sony Music has crossed the line with this latest tactic and consumers need more exposure to these issues. While the tech community is up in arms, will the mainstream press publish these reports? If shown the potential damage Sony Music's aggressive tactics may cause, consumers may be startled and gravely upset by Sony's breach of trust. I'm sending letters to various local editors with the hope to raise awareness since I believe old fashioned paper gets better results than an Internet blog. Hopefully some folks will see this post and try to do the same in their own locales...
Tuesday, October 11, 2005
Microsoft reaches deal with Real, end run for iTMS?
An interesting development in Microsoft's digital music sales ambitions: they have settled a long-standing dispute with streaming media company, Real Networks. This after last week's news that Microsoft broke talks with the music industry over royalties rates for launching their own subscription service.
This is interesting since Real already has a license for their own subscription service, Rhapsody. While many companies are making a play at digital music services, only Apple's iTunes Music Store has seen widespread success. iTMS has cornered the downloads market so companies like Real have bet that they can find success by using a different sales model: subscriptions. If these subscription services gain traction, it could prove a viable competitor to Apple and Microsoft obviously has been making moves in that space.
Now it looks like perhaps Microsoft is looking to jump into subscriptions by proxy, using Real as a partner. Could we be seeing the beginnings of an end run to take down iTMS? It will be interesting to see how this plays out considering the acrimonious talks Apple and the music industry have also been having...
This is interesting since Real already has a license for their own subscription service, Rhapsody. While many companies are making a play at digital music services, only Apple's iTunes Music Store has seen widespread success. iTMS has cornered the downloads market so companies like Real have bet that they can find success by using a different sales model: subscriptions. If these subscription services gain traction, it could prove a viable competitor to Apple and Microsoft obviously has been making moves in that space.
Now it looks like perhaps Microsoft is looking to jump into subscriptions by proxy, using Real as a partner. Could we be seeing the beginnings of an end run to take down iTMS? It will be interesting to see how this plays out considering the acrimonious talks Apple and the music industry have also been having...
Tuesday, October 04, 2005
Scream If You Hate Web 2.0
I'm tired of reading all about Web 2.0... Nomenclature is an important facet of human existence, but this is just a crass marketing term. Spitshine ideas that have been floating around for years and suddenly they're a hip, new thing? Nonsense.
I don't give a damn about Wiki's page calling "the new web" a platform for serving applications. Give me a break. To call the web anything other than a platform is to ignore its development. We are seeing exciting new stuff on the web because it was designed that way. Sure static HTML is simple and boring; but it's a metaphor for the programming concepts involved with presenting things over the Internet.
It doesn't matter that those concepts got better with time or got other technology bolted on top. The obsession with tacking a revision number adds little value other than the buzzword du jour. Stop trying to classify things as "oh that's so Web 1.0" or bless the latest startup company "a stellar example of Web 2.0".
Keep version numbers for products. Leave the damn mediums alone with their traditional names...
I don't give a damn about Wiki's page calling "the new web" a platform for serving applications. Give me a break. To call the web anything other than a platform is to ignore its development. We are seeing exciting new stuff on the web because it was designed that way. Sure static HTML is simple and boring; but it's a metaphor for the programming concepts involved with presenting things over the Internet.
It doesn't matter that those concepts got better with time or got other technology bolted on top. The obsession with tacking a revision number adds little value other than the buzzword du jour. Stop trying to classify things as "oh that's so Web 1.0" or bless the latest startup company "a stellar example of Web 2.0".
Keep version numbers for products. Leave the damn mediums alone with their traditional names...
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