New PC-software supports consumers of music downloads in disadvantages of music industry
German company RapidSolution Software has released the Windows software Tunebite. Music tracks purchased from the Internet are copy-protected and involve important restrictions for many users when they are played back. With the option to re-record them while they are played, Tunebite legally provides the user with new music files without restrictions. This ensures that music bought from Apple iTunes, Sony Connect, AOL or other music platforms in the Internet can be played back and listened to from everywhere.
(PRWEB) September 13, 2004 -- According to a press release from Apple in
April 2004, more than 70 million music tracks were sold in the US in the first
year of existence of the Apple iTunes Music Stores. Towards the middle of the
year, Apple has penetrated Europe with further iTunes Music Stores and announced
that the threshold of 100 million tracks has been exceeded. According to its own
information, Apple is the U.S. market leader in the electronic distribution of
music via the Internet. In August 2004, Apple announced that more than one
million pieces of music were available on the Internet for download from its
Apple iTunes Music Store.
Riding the wave of music euphoria, many
consumers have purchased their music as downloads that are protected by the
so-called Apple-Play-Fair or the Microsoft Digital-Rights-Management (DRM) data
formats and are thus limited in use. The different formats aim to prevent pirate
copies and abuse by limiting the possibilities of use. Tracks that are protected
by those formats have file extensions such as “AAC, M4P or WMA“.
The
music industry disadvantaging consumers
Protection against pirate copies
also, however, discriminates against honest consumers. Apple iTunes software,
for example, is restricted to the use of the mobile Apple iPod player. A track
in AAC file format can be easily transferred from Apple iTunes software to the
Apple iPod and played back.
At the moment, owners of conventional MP3
players who buy their music from the Apple iTunes Music Store neither have the
possibility to transfer tracks from Apple iTunes software to an MP3-player, nor
to play it back in Apple M4P format.
The only possibility that Apple
iTunes offers to these consumers is to burn an audio CD. Then the consumer, who
has to find his own solutions, must manually convert the individual tracks into
MP3 format by using additional software from third-party providers, in order to
be able to listen to music on his MP3 player. This requires lengthy processes,
specific knowledge and the use of additional software, which is often too
complicated for the average consumer. Information on the track concerned, such
as title, artist, album and cover are lost during this procedure.
Other
download platforms that serve as providers of music in DRM format have variously
either forbidden or restricted the possibility of burning a CD. And the
possibility of playing tracks in DRM format is – as with Apple - often tailored
to only one playback medium.
The online platforms for billable music
downloads, as well as the companies and institutions behind these formats, only
provide scant information. The honest end user, who does not seem to fit into
the patterns imposed by the music industry, falls by the
wayside.
Tunebite PC software legally helps
consumers
RapidSolution Software AG has recognized this problem for
consumers and now offers its software solution on its website http://www.tunebite.com . When
run in Windows, the Tunebite application automatically recognizes when a music
track is played back. At the same time, Tunebite re-records the piece of music.
At the end of recording, Tunebite saves the tracks to the hard disk. Apart from
automatic mode, the user can also use the Tunebite user interface to manually
record individual tracks or even a whole collection of tracks while they are
being played back, and save them to a file format of his choice.
Tunebite
facilitates the recording of tracks in different file formats. RapidSolution
Software AG offers Tunebite for sale and download, together with the so-called
ogg-file format. By downloading an additional plugin, Tunebite can also be
operated with the so-called enc_lame.dll-decoder and provide consumers with
tracks that can be played back without restrictions in MP3 format.
Analogous recording does not interfere with the quality of the tracks.
Most download platforms do not offer music in CD quality, but with a quality of
128 kbit/s. Depending on the PC’s soundcard, Tunebite can re-record it at up to
256 kbit/s, thus rendering any potential quality loss virtually inaudible for
the consumer.
Tunebite and the legal situation
Other music download
applications are also available on the Internet. These modify or fully delete
the copying protection by interfering with the original music files. Such tools
are illegal, and producers and users of these illegal tools are liable to civil
and criminal prosecution by Apple or the music industry.
Tunebite and its
use exploits a legal loophole which has been unsuccessfully hard-fought by the
music industry: the so-called “analog hole”. This worldwide legal loophole
provides the opportunity of legal private use by the analogous recording of
media while it is being played. This can be compared with music from the radio,
or movies from TV, which can be legally recorded onto cassette recorders or
VCRs. Tunebite uses this principle by the analogous re-recording of tracks that
are played back.
Illegal software modifies the original files. In the
event that producers of the original files change specific structures or
elements of the copy protection, such illegal software will become worthless. In
contrast to illegal solutions, Tunebite is format-independent, since the
software directly records the track being played from the audio source.
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2004/9/prweb156682.htm