• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

When is amazon's MP3 store going international?

Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
Originally posted by: eos
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
Originally posted by: eos
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
yea amazon even uses lame encoder

Don't spread rumors. Amazon.com doesn't rip anything.

??
i'm pretty sure their mp3s have lame headers.

Again, Amazon.com doesn't rip anything. You're not seeing my point.

yea...whatever

Wow. I'm really not sure how to process your comment.

Are you calling me a liar?
Are you upset with my response and how I said you were wrong a second time?
Option 3?
 
Originally posted by: eos
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
Originally posted by: eos
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
Originally posted by: eos
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
yea amazon even uses lame encoder

Don't spread rumors. Amazon.com doesn't rip anything.

??
i'm pretty sure their mp3s have lame headers.

Again, Amazon.com doesn't rip anything. You're not seeing my point.

yea...whatever

Wow. I'm really not sure how to process your comment.

Are you calling me a liar?
Are you upset with my response and how I said you were wrong a second time?
Option 3?

or you could just further explain your answer in that Amazon itself doesn't physically encode the files, they get them from the labels. His original comment didn't deserve to be jumped on. Amazon itself may not encode the mp3s, but Amazon does sell mp3s encoded with lame.
 
Originally posted by: eos
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
Originally posted by: eos
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
Originally posted by: eos
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
yea amazon even uses lame encoder

Don't spread rumors. Amazon.com doesn't rip anything.

??
i'm pretty sure their mp3s have lame headers.

Again, Amazon.com doesn't rip anything. You're not seeing my point.

yea...whatever

Wow. I'm really not sure how to process your comment.

Are you calling me a liar?
Are you upset with my response and how I said you were wrong a second time?
Option 3?

you're a tool that isn't giving a straight answer. process that one.
 
Originally posted by: rockyct
Originally posted by: eos
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
Originally posted by: eos
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
Originally posted by: eos
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
yea amazon even uses lame encoder

Don't spread rumors. Amazon.com doesn't rip anything.

??
i'm pretty sure their mp3s have lame headers.

Again, Amazon.com doesn't rip anything. You're not seeing my point.

yea...whatever

Wow. I'm really not sure how to process your comment.

Are you calling me a liar?
Are you upset with my response and how I said you were wrong a second time?
Option 3?

or you could just further explain your answer in that Amazon itself doesn't physically encode the files, they get them from the labels. His original comment didn't deserve to be jumped on. Amazon itself may not encode the mp3s, but Amazon does sell mp3s encoded with lame.

Don't spread rumors. Amazon.com doesn't rip anything. is abundantly clear for a forum like this. And if that is the new definition of "being jumped on" I guess things have changed.
 
I am wondering the same OP, I would love to purchase some MP3s from Amazon, but they don't even sell to Canada. 🙁

KT
 
Originally posted by: Inspector Jihad
he never said amazon rips anything, he just said they use lame. now please don't ever post in one of my threads again.

hahahahaha You said please, but it's a really stupid request.

Rip and use are one in the same. You can't (well, shouldn't) 'use' lame encoder unless you rip.

Use and sell are completely different. You can sure as fuck sell something you did not rip.
 
dude eos you are seriously a toolshed. And you're logic is flawed, an MP3 has to get encoded somewhere, last time I checked the labels don't actually make their original recording straight to MP3. Which means somewhere along the line, be it at the label or at Amazon, it gets encoded to MP3 - perhaps even using Lame! What's your problem?
 
Back
Top