Corante

Authors
CORANTE Jonathan Peterson
( Archive | Home )

Marc Canter
( Archive | Home )

Recent Trackbacks
Monthly Archives
Site Search
About this blog
The rise of mass media in the last half of the 20th Century turned us all into "consumers" and took away much of the natural human inclination to be creators, performers, singers, musicians and storytellers.

Today, the rapid proliferation of cheap professional-quality media-making tools, paired with the drastic decrease in the cost of content distribution is leading to a quiet, but quite real revolution in the quantity and quality of "amateur" content. It's the democratization of media, the "Big Flip" as Clay Shirky calls it, and we think it's going to play an increasingly important role in how we make, share and consume media. For more, read my introduction to Amateur Hour.

In the Pipeline: Don't miss Derek Lowe's excellent commentary on drug discovery and the pharma industry in general at In the Pipeline

Amateur Hour

« When IP costs more than hardware | Main | Ogg Vorbis direct to audio CD »

February 28, 2004

Telltale Weekly - DRM-free low-cost audiobooks

Email This Entry

Posted by Jonathan Peterson

Telltale Weekly is releasing professionally recorded audiobooks in MP3 and ogg vorbis formats using bitpass micropayments system. They're doing everything right - paying artists, reusing the public domain, low-cost and not anti-customer digital right management systems. If they can't make a go of this, it's proof that the democratization of media, importance of fair use and customer trust and all the rest are just pipe dreams. I'm gonna make an audio cd of some stuff to listen to in traffic. How sweet would it be if they could get their hands on some of the old radio series from the 30s and 40s. I'd LOVE to listen to The Shadow in the car as audiobooks. Surely the rights to that stuff could be had at a reasonable price?

Telltale Weekly seeks to record, produce, and sell performances of at least 50 public domain texts a year, with the intention of releasing them under the Creative Commons Attribution License five years or a hundred thousand sales after their first appearance here, whichever comes first. Your purchases help us to build and/or contribute to a free audio equivalent of Project Gutenberg. Read More

Quality Recordings by Compensated Artists
To do each text justice, Telltale Weekly is committed to using professional-grade equipment and experienced actors, and pays for both (in addition to bandwidth and royalty fees) by charging as little as 25 cents per story, much of which goes to the artists. Read More

BitPass and Micropayments
The BitPass payment solution is based on the founding belief that the most important criterion is ease of use. Using Bitpass, Telltale Weekly can offer audiobooks for as little as twenty-five cents each in a system that makes purchasing as easy as surfing the web, with no software downloads or installations required. Read More

DRM-Free MP3 and Ogg Vorbis Audio
In additon to the popular MP3 format, all texts at Telltale Weekly are available in the Ogg Vorbis open, free audio compression standard (.ogg). Telltale Weekly will also voluntarily donate a portion of every Ogg Vorbis purchase to the Xiph.org Foundation (creators of the standard). And after paying for a recording, you can listen to it however and wherever you want for personal use, so every MP3 and Ogg Vorbis download is DRM free. Burn away. Read More

Comments (0) | Category:



EMAIL THIS ENTRY TO A FRIEND

Email this entry to:

Your email address:

Message (optional):




RELATED ENTRIES
test
Google buys (then gives away) Picassa
Free Comic Book Day
Bloggers to get Democratic National Convention Press Credentials
AudioMulch - shareware audio ferrari
The coming explosion of Amateur TV
Star Wars Kid remixed
Remix Fight