MP3 Patent Royalties Expired "royalty free now?"
#1 Posted 27 April 2017 - 08:01 AM
EDIT: Just did a quick search and found that the relevant patent expired April 16th and there are still a couple more that expire in August and December and then that's it everything's public domain. Apparently it would cost $2500 to license MP3 in a video game, for instance. That money machine seems to be coming to an end, which to me is exciting.
This post has been edited by MusicallyInspired: 27 April 2017 - 08:05 AM
#2 Posted 27 April 2017 - 10:16 AM
This post has been edited by Mark.: 27 April 2017 - 10:20 AM
#3 Posted 27 April 2017 - 12:30 PM
While I and some people CAN, not being able to hear the difference between MP3 and CD isn't the point, the point is you're not getting the full quality. It's a devolution of audio medium that everyone has just accepted and this annoys me. It's better now, but when iTunes and things like that first started it was absolutely atrocious yet people still did it. The change was different from the vinyl vs CD debates because those are two entirely different types of audio (whereas MP3 and CD are both digital and one is clearly inferior in every way) and the argument was less about quality and more about "how it sounds" as there's an inherent different in the nature of recorded sound on tape and cut to vinyl than on HDD and burned to disc. Personally, I think having the best quality for an album equates to getting the album on a medium that it was at the time mainly produced for. Of course, you can argue that modern pop music today doesn't have much depth and is produced and condensed and engineered in the studio in a way to exist just fine as an MP3, which is fair, but I don't really consider that type of music a true artform anyway. Or essentially, I still believe there's still a difference in quality between the CD (or the lossless) and the MP3 but it's not a big loss; it doesn't matter to me because the music sucks anyway. I'm also not against downloading MP3s. I'm also not against listening to the radio. I am against paying to listen to the radio, however, which by its very nature is low quality and a condensed compressed version of its originally engineered self. There's also huge problems with the way music is mastered BEFORE it's put to medium which is a whole other issue...
Also, not everyone lives in 'murica. Certainly not the German-based Fraunhofer Society which MP3 and MPEG were developed and licensed by.
As for the comparisons between OGG and MP3 at comparable bitrates regarding file size, it's not even a comparison. MP3 has gotten better over the years at well it should have (just not good enough for me), but higher frequencies have always sounded much better on OGG files than MP3 at the same bitrates. And the file size comparison isn't even a competition. OGG files are incredibly small and put MP3 to shame. Sometimes a standard 3 minute song can be under a megabyte. When MP3 gets to that level (if it hasn't already) then using them as a portable music player format would be a complete non-issue for me (I don't really care about it as it is, but if people are citing file size as a reason for not wanting the obviously larger lossless formats, then there's already a better alternative than even MP3s around).
#4 Posted 27 April 2017 - 01:15 PM
I agree that audio quality on FM radio sucks big time. Massive compression to boost modulation levels.
This post has been edited by Mark.: 27 April 2017 - 01:23 PM
#5 Posted 27 April 2017 - 01:25 PM
However, I hope that experiment was just for this purpose and you don't make a habit of listening to 96kbps files. That's just blasphemy.
#6 Posted 27 April 2017 - 01:38 PM
load the lossy audio into audacity
invert the lossy audio
load the lossless audio as a second track
make sure both tracks are aligned correctly
merge the tracks
The result of merging the two tracks is essentially the difference between the two audio files. If the compression was any good, you get silence.
#7 Posted 27 April 2017 - 01:40 PM
This post has been edited by Mark.: 27 April 2017 - 01:42 PM
#8 Posted 28 April 2017 - 04:29 AM
I wish there were more providers of digital music who offered freedom of choice for format downloads like Bandcamp do. I realise that cost for servers that store multiple copies of the same content plays into it, but companies like Amazon and iTunes probably make multiple times the average yearly profit that sites like Bandcamp do and yet they limit the quality options.
This post has been edited by Engel220: 28 April 2017 - 04:32 AM
#10 Posted 28 April 2017 - 05:09 AM
This post has been edited by MusicallyInspired: 28 April 2017 - 05:12 AM
#11 Posted 28 April 2017 - 06:33 AM
MusicallyInspired, on 28 April 2017 - 05:09 AM, said:
Bandcamp is slowly becoming more popular with big labels, I'm seeing more and more big names coming to it, but currently it is held up more by indie artists working to their own price points. As for the Grammy thing, I generally dislike how the Granmys are handled but Bandcamp is as legit a platform as any so it should be added in my opinion.
This post has been edited by Engel220: 28 April 2017 - 06:34 AM
#12 Posted 28 April 2017 - 06:37 AM
#13 Posted 28 April 2017 - 06:51 AM
This post has been edited by MusicallyInspired: 28 April 2017 - 11:12 AM
#14 Posted 28 April 2017 - 10:04 AM
This post has been edited by Mark.: 28 April 2017 - 10:06 AM

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