DRM for preset banks?
- KVRAF
- 5234 posts since 25 Feb, 2008
Reading about plugin copy protection in another thread got me thinking that it's a shame that there's no way of protecting commercial preset banks.
If u-he could come up with a solution it might help creators of good quality preset banks to see a worthwhile return on time invested, which would mean more good quality commercial banks for u-he synths.
I have a half baked idea about how it might be done, but it's a half baked idea.
If u-he could come up with a solution it might help creators of good quality preset banks to see a worthwhile return on time invested, which would mean more good quality commercial banks for u-he synths.
I have a half baked idea about how it might be done, but it's a half baked idea.
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- KVRist
- 178 posts since 25 Jul, 2012
I have always wanted to design preset banks for a living or just that extra dosh, but I don't see the point on spending hours creating something special, just for someone to pirate it.....I agree with you hakey, I wish there was some sort of protection for these peoples hard work.
I would like to know is it possible in this Digital "Robin Hood Attitude" Age to make a living from creating presets?
I would like to know is it possible in this Digital "Robin Hood Attitude" Age to make a living from creating presets?
- KVRAF
- 1772 posts since 1 Mar, 2010 from Paris
Same here. I protect none of my banks. I simply trust my customers.
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 5234 posts since 25 Feb, 2008
If you can churn them out, the going rate for factory banks is 15 Euros a preset.DefiantCatz70 wrote:I would like to know is it possible in this Digital "Robin Hood Attitude" Age to make a living from creating presets?
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 5234 posts since 25 Feb, 2008
Well I guess that's your intuition, but who knows?Kriminal wrote:Never bothered myself. Honest ppl will always buy, so you lose very little in the end.
My own intuition is that I wouldn't make enough money to compensate for the time and effort I'd have to invest, so I'm disinclined to give it a go.
- KVRAF
- 4287 posts since 6 Nov, 2009
There are very easy ways to track where an illegal preset fileshare started. Ive read about it on this site. At least you can catch the one who first made it availible for illegal download.
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 5234 posts since 25 Feb, 2008
Not worth the hassle. What would you do once you'd tracked them down?arkmabat wrote:At least you can catch the one who first made it availible for illegal download.
Bolting horses and stable doors... etc.
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 5234 posts since 25 Feb, 2008
And we'll never stop people nicking cars, but I still lock mine when I park it.Kriminal wrote:Some ppl buy, some ppl steal. Its never going to change and you cant stop it.
Some degree of copy protection for commercial soundbanks would be better than none.
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- KVRist
- 182 posts since 13 Nov, 2012 from Northern California
Presets are a convenient resource for musician, but making them hermetically sealed is just... silly.
People use presets as convenient "close enough" patches, then ADJUST as required! To make patches that cannot be edited are pointless... thousands of users redefine patches (releases, attacks, LFO speeds, etc) every day... there is no way to predict usage.
When I buy commercial patches, 50%-75% will often be useless until they are adjusted in some way, sure some are fine as is... but it is just arrogant and greedy to treat patches like some kind of "perfect" fine art that needs protection.
Pre-made patches are, quite frankly, the lazy users approach to synthesis... most commercial patch designers make money by quickly learning "new-synth-X" and pounding out as many sonic variations as possible. Sometimes it works, sometimes they spend more time crafting sounds... but it's just a convenience and manufacturers WISELY make few provisions to protect such work.
I'm not saying such patches are worthless, far from it... but I am saying that they are meant to be abused, torn apart, examined and otherwise handled by whoever buys them. If you can't handle this aspect... try a different line of work.
Seriously, if it is so hard for you to design a pile of sound patches that you INSIST on copy protection to be profitable...try a different line of work.
If unscrupulous people simply repackage the sounds and sell them as theirs, well... boo hoo.
No one is going to protect such work, if you cannot tolerate people wanting to adjust your sound, if you think your sound is worth SO much... you might as well sell it as a artistic recording (and good luck protecting that).
You had fun experimenting with a synth and selling the resulting sounds that people bought because they can't be bothered with learning how to program... well... easy come, easy go.
People use presets as convenient "close enough" patches, then ADJUST as required! To make patches that cannot be edited are pointless... thousands of users redefine patches (releases, attacks, LFO speeds, etc) every day... there is no way to predict usage.
When I buy commercial patches, 50%-75% will often be useless until they are adjusted in some way, sure some are fine as is... but it is just arrogant and greedy to treat patches like some kind of "perfect" fine art that needs protection.
Pre-made patches are, quite frankly, the lazy users approach to synthesis... most commercial patch designers make money by quickly learning "new-synth-X" and pounding out as many sonic variations as possible. Sometimes it works, sometimes they spend more time crafting sounds... but it's just a convenience and manufacturers WISELY make few provisions to protect such work.
I'm not saying such patches are worthless, far from it... but I am saying that they are meant to be abused, torn apart, examined and otherwise handled by whoever buys them. If you can't handle this aspect... try a different line of work.
Seriously, if it is so hard for you to design a pile of sound patches that you INSIST on copy protection to be profitable...try a different line of work.
If unscrupulous people simply repackage the sounds and sell them as theirs, well... boo hoo.
No one is going to protect such work, if you cannot tolerate people wanting to adjust your sound, if you think your sound is worth SO much... you might as well sell it as a artistic recording (and good luck protecting that).
You had fun experimenting with a synth and selling the resulting sounds that people bought because they can't be bothered with learning how to program... well... easy come, easy go.
Retired, Bored and ready to WRECK the JOINT... gonna drop some OLD-STEP, ya'll!!
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 5234 posts since 25 Feb, 2008
Copy protected patches could still be editable.TomTwohy wrote: To make patches that cannot be edited are pointless.
Thanks for the advice.Seriously, if it is so hard for you to design a pile of sound patches that you INSIST on copy protection to be profitable...try a different line of work.
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- Banned
- 18651 posts since 2 Oct, 2001 from England
What are you ranting about.....nobody said anything remotely like thatTomTwohy wrote:Presets are a convenient resource for musician, but making them hermetically sealed is just... silly.![]()
People use presets as convenient "close enough" patches, then ADJUST as required! To make patches that cannot be edited are pointless... thousands of users redefine patches (releases, attacks, LFO speeds, etc) every day... there is no way to predict usage.
