HaqDiesel Wrote:
billy g Wrote:
I don't think most of the majors really want digital music sales to succeed so i don't think they are trying to find ways to make it work.
That's fine, that just means they'll lose control even more quickly.
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As far as Itunes and it "failing miserably", I doubt Itunes even at its most successful is anything but a rounding error in Apple's bottom line.
A lot of people have brought this up in response to this article, but it doesn't matter to me what the impact is for Apple, but what the impact is on the attempt to preserve per-album and per-track payment in the digital environment. It's a demonstration of what we knew all along: you can't do it. On the other hand, there is ample evidence that you can't easily keep your music from becoming digitized and shared. So from these two premises, I feel comfortable drawing the conclusion that forces are driving toward a fundamental (but of course not immediate) change in the pricing and delivery of music.
The problem with per track and per album pricing is that I tunes is priced too high. You have a whole generation of young people that is in denial that they are stealing when they download for free and resist the idea that they should pay anything for digital music and then others that are willing to pay something but want a significant discount if all they get is mp3's and not a physical product. There simply isn't any common ground in pricing between supply and demand for digital sales to really take off.
I think though that as long as the majors own the rights to the most popular music, you are going to see decreased physical sales result in a stronger push towards stiffer penalties and enforcement of the law rather than new pricing models. And as the economic harm done to them increases, their case for stronger penalties will be compelling.
The fact that you'd like a different pricing model doesn't mean its going to happen. If the artists themselves start viewing the majors as dinosaurs and stop signing with them, you might see change. Until then, I don't think you are going to see anything change in approach.