As far as Anna's Archive and other shadow libraries go, legality (in terms of copyright law / etc) is not really a prime concern of theirs anyway, and I personally respect them for that in certain...
As far as Anna's Archive and other shadow libraries go, legality (in terms of copyright law / etc) is not really a prime concern of theirs anyway, and I personally respect them for that in certain ways.
However, I do think that given the music industry's aggressive history in the legal realm, this could be putting a much bigger spotlight on themselves than desired which could damage their other efforts, so I'm not sure it's a good decision for their organization regardless
I'm not sure of their state of resiliency compared to other shadow libraries like SciHub etc,, but maybe they've already carefully considered this and have taken whatever efforts are necessary to conceal themselves or reside in a location to make getting at them more difficult
Some of you may have seem this around, but I wanted to post this here to get your thoughts: There are several data visualizations on the blog page. The project seems audacious and questionably...
Some of you may have seem this around, but I wanted to post this here to get your thoughts:
We backed up Spotify (metadata and music files). It’s distributed in bulk torrents (~300TB), grouped by popularity.
This release includes the largest publicly available music metadata database with 256 million tracks and 186 million unique ISRCs.
It’s the world’s first “preservation archive” for music which is fully open (meaning it can easily be mirrored by anyone with enough disk space), with 86 million music files, representing around 99.6% of listens.
There are several data visualizations on the blog page. The project seems audacious and questionably legal. What do you think?
Everything Anna's Archive does isn't just "questionably legal," it's considered wildly illegal and governments treat them similarly to organized crime. Which is exactly why Anna's Archive is...
Everything Anna's Archive does isn't just "questionably legal," it's considered wildly illegal and governments treat them similarly to organized crime.
Which is exactly why Anna's Archive is necessary. Many have said that the digital era will be a bigger black hole of lost media than any other time since recording technology was developed, because things are disappeared when they no longer make enough money.
It's kinda weird how people are not nearly as angry about this sort of thing as they are about, say, AI companies. Spotify doesn't pay much in royalties, but Anna's Archive pays nothing. Isn't...
It's kinda weird how people are not nearly as angry about this sort of thing as they are about, say, AI companies. Spotify doesn't pay much in royalties, but Anna's Archive pays nothing. Isn't that worse?
It’s because the end result is so different. Projects like Anna’s library are for prevention and are still giving credit to the creators, just not monetarily. Where as AI is hoovering up real...
It’s because the end result is so different. Projects like Anna’s library are for prevention and are still giving credit to the creators, just not monetarily. Where as AI is hoovering up real creative projects to churn out slop, while the creators that were used to train it get no credit.
What profit is Anna's Archive extracting from their efforts? That they aren't taking from the public weal for their own profit makes a big and very obvious difference.
What profit is Anna's Archive extracting from their efforts? That they aren't taking from the public weal for their own profit makes a big and very obvious difference.
No they're taking from the artists well. Stealing 300g of music is not some noble thing. Artists dont need more people trying to figure out how to avoid paying them.
No they're taking from the artists well. Stealing 300g of music is not some noble thing. Artists dont need more people trying to figure out how to avoid paying them.
The sort of people who are most involved with music piracy are the kind of people who are likely giving the most money to musicians. Generally they're huge fans. The barrier to entry is high...
The sort of people who are most involved with music piracy are the kind of people who are likely giving the most money to musicians. Generally they're huge fans. The barrier to entry is high enough to get into music piracy these days that normie music consumers will likely just pay for Spotify or Prime or iTunes or whatever the kids use these days to not own music. The guy deeply involved in private trackers, with a hundred terabytes of storage filled with flacs, also has hundreds of records, t-shirts, and goes to shows monthly.
There are probably some people like that, but how many? If we rephrase this as a neutral question, perhaps something about the spending habits of people who torrent music, how could we even begin...
There are probably some people like that, but how many? If we rephrase this as a neutral question, perhaps something about the spending habits of people who torrent music, how could we even begin to answer it?
Well, with the discontinuation of the penny here in the US, I have to round to the nearest nickle, and that means that artists have to get zero. It's just simple practical business sense. In all...
Well, with the discontinuation of the penny here in the US, I have to round to the nearest nickle, and that means that artists have to get zero. It's just simple practical business sense.
In all seriousness, though, If artists are barely getting paid for my streams, why should I care if that doesn't get to them at all? If there's an artist I really care about, I'd actually buy their music so that they get a more reasonable cut, or if possible (it often isn't), I'd go to a concert and buy merch.
Beyond that, why does it make a difference if Anna's Archive has this when chances are that all of this music is available elsewhere already - possibly in higher quality, even? If anything, it's a good thing that this music is archived.
I’m not convinced that one can attribute much actual harm to Anna’s Archive. I doubt many people will use this for their music instead of a service like Spotify. Pirates could sail the high seas...
I’m not convinced that one can attribute much actual harm to Anna’s Archive. I doubt many people will use this for their music instead of a service like Spotify. Pirates could sail the high seas with other sources before, and non-pirates (like me) likely won’t switch off existing platforms in response. Perhaps my unsubstantiated prior is wrong; we’ll see if Spotify has a massive drop in subscribing users.
If Spotify loses no users, why spend money trying to stop this?
First, they have a reputation to uphold in the public eye. Second, they don’t want anyone getting the idea of making it easier to access pirated content. Third, I believe Spotify still has to attempt some retaliatory action to provide a legal basis for potential future damages awarded in court. If they don’t try to fight this now, lawyers may argue in the future that the lack of action shows Spotify was not being materially harmed by the piracy.
I think the only material change of this event is that it is easier to archive a bunch of songs that previously were not archived because nobody cared that much. I don’t think that’s too bad.
As far as Anna's Archive and other shadow libraries go, legality (in terms of copyright law / etc) is not really a prime concern of theirs anyway, and I personally respect them for that in certain ways.
However, I do think that given the music industry's aggressive history in the legal realm, this could be putting a much bigger spotlight on themselves than desired which could damage their other efforts, so I'm not sure it's a good decision for their organization regardless
I'm not sure of their state of resiliency compared to other shadow libraries like SciHub etc,, but maybe they've already carefully considered this and have taken whatever efforts are necessary to conceal themselves or reside in a location to make getting at them more difficult
Some of you may have seem this around, but I wanted to post this here to get your thoughts:
There are several data visualizations on the blog page. The project seems audacious and questionably legal. What do you think?
Everything Anna's Archive does isn't just "questionably legal," it's considered wildly illegal and governments treat them similarly to organized crime.
Which is exactly why Anna's Archive is necessary. Many have said that the digital era will be a bigger black hole of lost media than any other time since recording technology was developed, because things are disappeared when they no longer make enough money.
It's kinda weird how people are not nearly as angry about this sort of thing as they are about, say, AI companies. Spotify doesn't pay much in royalties, but Anna's Archive pays nothing. Isn't that worse?
It’s because the end result is so different. Projects like Anna’s library are for prevention and are still giving credit to the creators, just not monetarily. Where as AI is hoovering up real creative projects to churn out slop, while the creators that were used to train it get no credit.
What profit is Anna's Archive extracting from their efforts? That they aren't taking from the public weal for their own profit makes a big and very obvious difference.
No they're taking from the artists well. Stealing 300g of music is not some noble thing. Artists dont need more people trying to figure out how to avoid paying them.
The sort of people who are most involved with music piracy are the kind of people who are likely giving the most money to musicians. Generally they're huge fans. The barrier to entry is high enough to get into music piracy these days that normie music consumers will likely just pay for Spotify or Prime or iTunes or whatever the kids use these days to not own music. The guy deeply involved in private trackers, with a hundred terabytes of storage filled with flacs, also has hundreds of records, t-shirts, and goes to shows monthly.
There are probably some people like that, but how many? If we rephrase this as a neutral question, perhaps something about the spending habits of people who torrent music, how could we even begin to answer it?
Maybe there are studies out there.
Well, with the discontinuation of the penny here in the US, I have to round to the nearest nickle, and that means that artists have to get zero. It's just simple practical business sense.
In all seriousness, though, If artists are barely getting paid for my streams, why should I care if that doesn't get to them at all? If there's an artist I really care about, I'd actually buy their music so that they get a more reasonable cut, or if possible (it often isn't), I'd go to a concert and buy merch.
Beyond that, why does it make a difference if Anna's Archive has this when chances are that all of this music is available elsewhere already - possibly in higher quality, even? If anything, it's a good thing that this music is archived.
I’m not convinced that one can attribute much actual harm to Anna’s Archive. I doubt many people will use this for their music instead of a service like Spotify. Pirates could sail the high seas with other sources before, and non-pirates (like me) likely won’t switch off existing platforms in response. Perhaps my unsubstantiated prior is wrong; we’ll see if Spotify has a massive drop in subscribing users.
If Spotify loses no users, why spend money trying to stop this?
First, they have a reputation to uphold in the public eye. Second, they don’t want anyone getting the idea of making it easier to access pirated content. Third, I believe Spotify still has to attempt some retaliatory action to provide a legal basis for potential future damages awarded in court. If they don’t try to fight this now, lawyers may argue in the future that the lack of action shows Spotify was not being materially harmed by the piracy.I think the only material change of this event is that it is easier to archive a bunch of songs that previously were not archived because nobody cared that much. I don’t think that’s too bad.