April 05, 2004

TuneCircle: Glaring Omissions in its Privacy Policy?

Heard about TuneCircle over at Fred Wilson's VC blog. I've been trying it out and have two concerns.

First, in a nutshell, what TuneCircle is, or wants to be, based on what I can figure out so far: a social network built each members' MP3 collection. To do anything in TuneCircle after you've joined, you pretty much have to download and run their embedded Java app, which searches your hard drive, identifies your MP3 files, reads the ID3 tags, and reports it all back to TuneCircle.

Still with me? Haven't run for the hills yet?

  • Invalid Java Certificates? The first time I did the "Scan Your Library" activity, a rather intimidating dialog box appeared, warning me that the certificate was bad, unsafe, and all kinds of other gloomy adjectives. Of course, there was a message saying someone's name at TuneCircle assures users that this Java code is safe. There's a button to continue. Since I was using Safari in MacOS X, and know that Safari is very flaky with certificates which are interpreted as fine everywhere else, I decided to continue. Thousands of MP3 files later, TuneCircle was listing my songs on their site, with pre-set star ratings for each artist...

  • Who is TuneCircle and What Is Their Relationship to RIAA? Nuff said.

  • Privacy Policy issues galore: TuneCircle's privacy policy incredibly makes no mention of the fact that the company INSTALLS JAVA ON YOUR COMPUTER, SCANS DIRECTORIES, FINDS MP3 FILES, READS THEIR ID3 TAGS, AND THEN 'PHONES HOME', REPORTING IT ALL BACK TO A CENTRALIZED DATABASE. No explicit mention in the privacy policy that I could find, that explains how the company uses your MP3 library information, what third parties have access to it, etc. The policy states this:
    Protection of TuneCircle and Others: We may release Personal Information when we believe in good faith that release is necessary to comply with that law; enforce or apply our conditions of use and other agreements; or protect the rights, property, or safety of TuneCircle, our employees, our users, or others. This includes exchanging information with other companies and organizations for fraud protection and credit risk reduction.

    Also, the privacy policy's language on "we own everything you do or say" is about as bad as Orkut's.

  • Errors in the data The whole experience reminds me of MP3.com's My.MP3.com service and the Beam-IT software. Only now, it's not "tell us everything that's in your CD collection", it's "tell us everything that's in your MP3 collection". And their Java code does a poor job generally of identifying stuff and resolving numerous duplicates. Also, since my music library is within iTunes on a Mac, it seems to have trouble with that (and other TuneCircle users have reported similar problems).

  • Three-star ratings I think the three-star ratings is the wrong number of stars. Especially since TuneCircle explains that 3 stars = "I LOVE this artist", two means "I LIKE this artist", one means "I HATE this artist", and none means "Not rated yet". I wish the ratings were done pretty much like Netflilx (five stars plus an extra button for "Not Interested".)

TuneCircle needs to do a lot more to be interesting. For instance, forget the artist, focus on the song and the album. Forget lists and lists and lists, and focus on CD album covers. These social network experiences all work best on a visual basis, and TuneCircle could be a far more visual experience and far less of an experience of lists of this and that.

But first and foremost, TuneCircle has some explaining to do with regard to their Java app and privacy of the MP3 libraries. Who knows what else the Java app looks for on your hard disk?

Posted by brian at 09:45 PM | Comments (2)

The Music of the News: The Spoken Song

Fascinating archive of broadcast news music jingles from stations across the country.

Of course, what they miss out on is the real music of the news: the musical way news anchors report the news, in happy sing-songy voices. Ever noticed it before? Listen to the BBC sometime. Then listen to the local happy-go-lucky newsteams in your city. Then listen to Dan Rather, Jim Lehrer, and the rest. They all have their own tune. There is a whole world out there of the true language of news reporters: it's not the spoken word, it's the spoken song. I wonder if anyone has ever done a study on the real music of the news...?

Posted by brian at 10:24 AM
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