IIRC YTM usually tries to find official uploads first, but in the absence of official channels they'll often pull audio from random channels' uploads. It's usually most noticeable by the bitrate drops.[at the risk of being off topic]
How do you get paid when people listen to music on YouTube Music?
I pay for YT Premium so the YT Music is my default app, and I've always wondered how the artists get paid since so much on YouTube seems randomly uploaded -- and I'd assume it's often not by the creators.
The servers including DNS are probably in some country that ignores IP laws, because (other people's) "information wants to be free"So can anyone tell me why Anna´s Archive even exist? You can download copies of the three books I have published, multiple formats, for free. Absolutely free. No barriers whatsoever. How the hell this is online or remotely legal?
The same way they did before recorded music, the same way most still do..liveSo… how, exactly, are artists going to be paid for their work? Is everything free now?
My Plex server is approaching filling up my total of 100tb and I’m starting to sweat what free space I have. I’ve upgraded the drives over the last few years and if I can find an economical way to get over the 20tb per drive cost I’m definitely going to. My limit right now is that I can only have 8 drives at a time in my synology rack and I’m not really that interested in buying their expansion rack for it. I’m also too lazy to try and figure a way to move it all to a larger rack with a different OS. Having that amount of space is not something I’d want I don’t think, but I’m at 100tb total space without a lot of work and not a terrible amount of money having waited for sales and finding drives to shuck to get really good deals.What kind of NAS setup do you have where you have 300TB of free space?
I mean, I just got a new NAS setup a few months ago... and I'm a tiny fraction of that space.
You could just subscribe to Apple Music or YouTube music? You do realize that the large majority of these songs will be on non-Spotify platforms?Anna's Archive's ethics are dodgy, but are they worse than funding the river of money that goes to Josh Rogan? Spotify subscribers might now have a choice between two bad options.
Is anything that could de-fund Rogan all bad?
Also, I looked in vain for what a certain group would perceive as the lede. Sorry Ashley, but are the torrents mp3 or lossless flac? For that group, this may not be an opportunity at all.
Spotify? The Archive?
Both?
Artists should be paid appropriately for their work.
That's the findability/too much information problem. How do you find music in genres and styles you like when there's probably petabytes worth of chaff to search through? I'm no fan of GenAI, but this happens to be a field where useful AI tooling would be helpful. I just don't think we'll ever get AI tools that do anything but reinforce and expand already existing divides. We see the same problem with "viral" and shallow, astroturfed influencer highlighted points of interests and eateries showing up and crowding out in navigation apps and search engines instead of equally deserving mom and pop places.I was a bit curious about the 37% of songs representing 99% of streams...
From this site: https://www.gearnews.com/spotify-streaming-report-2024-tech/
It seems like the cutoff is probably somewhere in the 50-100 total streams.
It's crazy to me how many songs have zero streams (25% or so?) and how much things are concentrated in a few 'billionaires' at the top.
Like with a lot of things, it seems like there should be a better distribution of wealth...
Apple Music has a ton of lossless stuff.Lossy. No point. The aural equivalent - when you have the audio equivalent of a 4K TV setup - of watching DVD instead of 4K on that system.
Pretty sure that's where YT's Content ID system comes in - if it flags a song as belonging to an artist, it gives the monetization to that artist, regardless of who uploaded it. Part of the deal they made with the RIAA to not copyright strike everything into oblivion...[at the risk of being off topic]
How do you get paid when people listen to music on YouTube Music?
I pay for YT Premium so the YT Music is my default app, and I've always wondered how the artists get paid since so much on YouTube seems randomly uploaded -- and I'd assume it's often not by the creators.
There used to be an elegant solution to this: regional markets.That's the findability/too much information problem. How do you find music in genres and styles you like when there's probably petabytes worth of chaff to search through?
Musicians cannot prevent the radio from playing their music. Which is honestly how it should be. The point of art is public enrichment. Sure, artists should receive compensation, but creating art to lock it away is fucking silly. If you've made it up share with the world, share it.Oh please, I know of zero people who think they're entitled to free music.
Have they pirated? Swapped cassettes, recorded songs off their boombox onto cassettes? Sure.
Not because they're entitled, but because dumb, desparate artists gave away their stuff for free.
You're like the guy who ran up to me on the sidewalk, shoved his CD on my face, and then my hands, yelling about being the next Kanye, and then started demanding money for it. I just shoved the CD back into his hands.
And, if you don't like people listening to your music for free, don't broadcast it for free. It's that simple. It's a model that worked for decades, if not centuries.
The problem is entitled artists who want to be the next STAR, do everything they can to get their music "out there" and prostitute themselves to the labels and money men. And then once they shoved their music in everyone's faces, they want to start demanding money for it.
Just play your music, and make people pay to listen. Don't shill to Spotify and the ad gods/demons, who want to sell ads not music (you have that backwards, btw)Don't shill to the radio (same model). Don't put your stuff on the Internet for free.
Musicians are not entitled to make a living. They can ask people to pay for their product instead of giving it away, and that's fine. But copyright is a very new idea, and some of the best music ever made was made before it existed. So it's not some divine right. It's a nice by-product of the legal structures in most modern societies, and if you leverage successfully, bully for you. But it is not a basic human right, just a nice-to-have in privileged societies.
Which is what will probably adorn humanity's gravestone.Sounds like Anna's Archive's engineers were so preoccupied with whether or not they could that they didn't stop to think if they should.
Sure if you're commercial enough in your own town. If you have to travel to tour, it's more expensive and complicated than ever (as are the tickets). Let's say you're in a well known metal band with a few million fans scattered around the world, as opposed to a pop star in a small country with far less followers, guess which one can make a living easier by playing live? Guess which one of them quite possibly still has a "real" job?The same way they did before recorded music, the same way most still do..live
I've got 20 usable over 4 drives. Density has improved since so I could get 40 over 4 now.What kind of NAS setup do you have where you have 300TB of free space?
I mean, I just got a new NAS setup a few months ago... and I'm a tiny fraction of that space.
I buy books digitally when they are available DRM free - so, mostly through libro.fmSo can anyone tell me why Anna´s Archive even exist? You can download copies of the three books I have published, multiple formats, for free. Absolutely free. No barriers whatsoever. How the hell this is online or remotely legal?
In the old days, only the rich could afford art. Commoners might have given a few cents to street performers, otherwise went to church for music and paintings. Furthermore, without steady financial support over the decades, art was mostly an amateur hobby and could not really transcend.Copyright is an outdated concept, like trying to hold back the tide forever. The cost of distribution is literally zero, the only reason people pay more is that laws (sometimes) enforce it.
If artists want to be paid fairly then they need to be paid before they release their art, not after. Like in centuries past.
Edit: Made a mistake there, distribution doesn't cost nothing, it costs negative dollars, in the sense that enforcing restrictions on distribution is costing more money than just doing nothing.
Musicians cannot prevent the radio from playing their music. Which is honestly how it should be. The point of art is public enrichment. Sure, artists should receive compensation, but creating art to lock it away is fucking silly. If you've made it up share with the world, share it.
The problem is that art cannot sustain the livelihood of everyone who wishes to be an artist. At least not how we've gone about it for decades.
Hmmm, is that include the triple damages thing for when it was done on purpose?The legal precedent is $22,500 per song in a piracy case, so if the RIAA goes after them I would expect to see headlines about their $5.76 trillion dollar lawsuit.
I'd do it more too, if the music industry respected online user libraries.[..] if I like something enough to keep listening to it I go to Qobuz and buy the album in lossless FLAC format. [..]
I don't agree with the scraping (for tech-bros), but at least I wish they did it before 2022..One interesting thing from the AA blog:
![]()
Based on the accompanying text, it suggests that most music currently being added to Spotify is AI generated. I found their blog post to be a bit unclear on their statistics, but if it's true, the implications are interesting. Does it mean we're heading into a future where basically all music, art, and literature are just AI slop? Will it be impossible for future generations to find good art and music in a vast, eternal forest of neural network noise?