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Official: iTunes is illegal in the UK http://consequenceofsound.net/2015/08/itunes-is-now-illegal-in-the-uk/
[Edited 8/6/15 12:04pm] | |
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At least the UK still has relevant record stores to shop in! This would never fly in North America. | |
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Where? there's barely any left, just a few HMV's dotted in the big city's She Believed in Fairytales and Princes, He Believed the voices coming from his stereo
If I Said You Had A Beautiful Body Would You Hold It Against Me? | |
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I thought it was illegal to rip a cd to itunes/ipod in the states too. I remember reading a post like this on another forum back in 2005. | |
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Then "music groups" have the nerve to wonder why no one's buying music anymore. Complete common sense fail.
In reply to the poster above, I live close to a fantastic traditional record store here in the UK, and am nowhere near London. Not sure how the situation is across the country, though. | |
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You can burn, copy and/or ripp CD's you've bought legitimately. You can transfer digital files of the copied and/or ripped CD's you've bought legitimately. You can burn one CD you legitimately bought for personal use. It's illegal to burn, copy, download and/or rip music you haven't purchased in the United States. Damn near everyone has broken the law at one time or another... upteem times I'm guessing.
This is dumb law and totally unenforceable law, good grief. As ChickenMcNuggets pointed out, all this does is alienate the music consumer even further. Music buying is a nonessential habit... folks can live without it.
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This would make my entire iTunes illegal, save for maybe 100 M4A's I purchased on iTunes. | |
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I can the see jokes coming...
Man, what are you in jail for? "I ripped several thousand of my CD's to iTunes." | |
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*mean inmate approaches* | |
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In theory...
======================== [Edited 8/11/15 9:26am] | |
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That's exactly right. You know I paid for my triple threats three times, once for each format, and a digital file is another format one has to pay for. | |
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mine too, hehe actually my library is 100% CD rips, I haven't bought one damn thing on iTunes Vanglorious... this is protected by the red, the black, and the green. With a key... sissy! | |
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Folks like you, should get an excemption are something.
Crazy | |
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It is quite insulting to the remaining music consumers that still buy CDs (and rip them). That's not even the source of real piracy! | |
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I am the same age as the inventor of Napster, and remember very well using that right out of high school. Metallica seemed out of touch to persecute file sharing, but if there was ever a window to act on it legally, especially North America, I admit that would have been perfect timing. Lots of technology still had not caught up to it, but all kind of code has been written since then, and a whole generation grew up not buying ANYTHING. | |
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l I strongly believe the music industry lost a generation of music fans, when they fail to realize they were in a winner takes all competition with computers, computer gaming, smartphones, software, social sites, and all the accessories that go with that stuff. It took the industry nearly 2 decades to realize maybe the should have ONE release date for new music. Artist and the industry should have compromised on music blogs such as soulwalk.co.uk and web radio station Grooveshark. In my hearts of heart, "streaming" will never be cash cow and the industry and its artist are hoping. I think they are setting up another generation to be just as indifferent as the past one. (IMHO)
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[Edited 8/13/15 19:08pm] | |
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If you think about it though, every new format that came out had some sort of adopting and learning curve. There is a chance that a generation could pick up on streaming as the norm, especially since they don't have to learn how to get around a bunch of firewalls and stuff. Streamning could be the new MiniDisc though. | |
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OK, here in India, I've never used iTunes, and have only the haziest idea what it is, but can someone please explain to me - if you can listen to and buy music on an artist's own site, then why is itunes necessary?
and why must you use itunes to rip anything? just get a CD ripping software and rip away to your hearts content...? | |
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The point is more that iTunes is mainstream and accepted as the digital music store and personal program to rip with, and it still does not fit within the boundaries of this UK law. CD ripping is not allowed by definition of this law, so that goes for any program similar to iTunes as well. | |
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