Well this is interesting.

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Well this is interesting.
Hacker collective Anonymous came to prominence knocking music industry websites offline in protest at the anti-piracy efforts of the labels. Now it's launching its own music service, admittedly without a licensing deal in sight.
Anontune scrapes sites like YouTube and SoundCloud for music, then serves it up in searchable, playlistable nuggets.
"It has come to our attention that the state of online music has been sabotaged by the fat hands of corporate involvement,” explain the developers. “These changes have led to a world in which your enjoyment of music is controlled and billed by the minute."
Anontune isn't as usable as commercial services like Spotify and Deezer – although its closest comparison might be with open music service Tomahawk – but it'll be fascinating to see how it develops.
The hacktivist group Anonymous has begun work on a social music platform called Anontune. The service will allow users to create streamlined playlists that draw from YouTube, SoundCloud, and MySpace. The prototype for the service is online now.
Hola Salmones,
Les recomiendo que prueben Anontune: http://www.anontune.com/
Emyl nos podrá decir más sobre que tan inovador es el proyecto y si funcionará, pero puede ser útil. Ahora, no sé que tan bien funcione con canciones "raras". Me imagino que te dará algún video de youtube con nombre similar pero que se trata de otra cosa o algo por el estilo.
Pero bueno, no pierden nada probandolo: http://www.anontune.com/demo/
www.anontune.com
ハッカーグループが運営するソーシャル型音楽共有サービス「Anontune」。 使用の際には注意が必要!
"It has come to our attention that the state of online music has been sabotaged by the fat hands of corporate involvement. For years now, we have watched as perfectly good companies such as Limewire and Jam Glue have come and gone; Their key innovations lost. We have watched as the music industry has released countless copy protection schemes designed to steal your freedom and safe-guard their profits. ... Music is too important to be hindered and there is still much to do."
www.anontune.com