probably because you can't overcharge poor souls on Discogs and rip them off again with the postage.
While we're on the subject: selling my vinyl on Discogs
Is Piracy Really Killing The Music Industry? No!.........?
PsyTox.
Coincidence Records.
www.coincidencerecords.be
www.myspace.com/coincidencerecords
www.myspace.com/djpsytox
Coincidence Records.
www.coincidencerecords.be
www.myspace.com/coincidencerecords
www.myspace.com/djpsytox
want tracks, just beatport has, make account, select wav tracks, enter paypal, error : incorrect billing information, enter credit card, error : incorrect billing information, call bank, everything ok there, send email to support, wait 3 days, answer :
Unfortunately we are unable to process orders from your region at the current time.
greetings from romania
and thanks beatport, I think I'll buy the vinyls.
Unfortunately we are unable to process orders from your region at the current time.
greetings from romania
and thanks beatport, I think I'll buy the vinyls.
- infernal.techno
- mnml maxi
- Posts: 845
- Joined: Sat Nov 15, 2008 4:29 pm
- Location: Atlanta
- Contact:
Uhm... in fact... if you have not a single dime left after paying for rent and some form of fodder to fill your stomach with, BUT have the will to DIY your way through bullshit, access to computer trash and free wi-fi from the restaurant next door, you're in.::BLM:: wrote:Yep. That argument is a load of rubbish! If you have a computer and an internet connection you can afford a £1 tune.Barfunkel wrote:Funny how someone doesn't have the money to buy a song online (for 0,99) but can afford a computer and a broadband connection. And has the free time to surf on pirate sites. One would imagine that if you can't afford to buy music you either can't afford a computer or work 16 hours a day to feed your children and have no time to waste on online entertainment.
That's how I produced my first twelve tracks.
And fck the police. Always.
I'm not so sure always you can give a black and white answer to all of the questions raised about piracy, selling MP3s etc , but I do know it's a constantly evolving situation.
One thing I'd really like to know is what people get out of ripping stuff in the first place.
I've seen my own material ripped off vinyl in really cruddy ways, and I'm thinking - man, why bother sharing that - surely it benifits you to keep that one to yourself as a secret battle weapon track - why would you give it away to DJs for free, who are gonna take it and play it out - possibly in competition to yourself. I remember when I first learned to DJ with my friends - we always fiercly guarded our selections and often wouldn't tell our friends what records we were playing, cos guaranteed - they'd go and buy it the next week and play it out, we always thought that sorta sh!t was bad form so we always kept our best tunes a secret (from other DJs).
Weirdly also , I thought fans of more discerning music might show a little more respect, I mean - If I bought a maurizio record, the last thing I'd do is rip it and allow others to download it - out of respect, so I'm wondering who these people are who do, and what motivates them, not in a judgemental way - as in - I'd be interested to know what makes them tick.
It's a really weird situation to me, is it some form of sub-culture rebellion,is it sticking it to the man ? What is it that inspires people to rip and share in the first place ?
One thing I'd really like to know is what people get out of ripping stuff in the first place.
I've seen my own material ripped off vinyl in really cruddy ways, and I'm thinking - man, why bother sharing that - surely it benifits you to keep that one to yourself as a secret battle weapon track - why would you give it away to DJs for free, who are gonna take it and play it out - possibly in competition to yourself. I remember when I first learned to DJ with my friends - we always fiercly guarded our selections and often wouldn't tell our friends what records we were playing, cos guaranteed - they'd go and buy it the next week and play it out, we always thought that sorta sh!t was bad form so we always kept our best tunes a secret (from other DJs).
Weirdly also , I thought fans of more discerning music might show a little more respect, I mean - If I bought a maurizio record, the last thing I'd do is rip it and allow others to download it - out of respect, so I'm wondering who these people are who do, and what motivates them, not in a judgemental way - as in - I'd be interested to know what makes them tick.
It's a really weird situation to me, is it some form of sub-culture rebellion,is it sticking it to the man ? What is it that inspires people to rip and share in the first place ?
You produced your first twelve tracks because you had an internet connection!? I don't get it?thom wrote:Uhm... in fact... if you have not a single dime left after paying for rent and some form of fodder to fill your stomach with, BUT have the will to DIY your way through bullshit, access to computer trash and free wi-fi from the restaurant next door, you're in.::BLM:: wrote:Yep. That argument is a load of rubbish! If you have a computer and an internet connection you can afford a £1 tune.Barfunkel wrote:Funny how someone doesn't have the money to buy a song online (for 0,99) but can afford a computer and a broadband connection. And has the free time to surf on pirate sites. One would imagine that if you can't afford to buy music you either can't afford a computer or work 16 hours a day to feed your children and have no time to waste on online entertainment.
That's how I produced my first twelve tracks.
And fck the police. Always.