Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
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Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
I don't know if anyone has else been watching this statistic, but I have been waiting for the Petrucci Music Library to represent 2500 composers, and it finally has.
Overnight the count finally shot above this incredible landmark number.
Congratulations! It really shows the breadth of the library not only representing well-composers sufficiently, but really representing all facets of eras and nationalities.
Some statistics:
6 Medieval composers
108 Renaissance composers
316 Baroque composers
300 Classical composers
1,197 Romantic composers
385 Early 20th-Century composers
and 200 Modern composers (1945 onwards)
There are even composers from, among others, Uruguay, Iceland, Cuba, Monaco, Lichtenstein, Peru, Colombia, and Hawaii.
Overnight the count finally shot above this incredible landmark number.
Congratulations! It really shows the breadth of the library not only representing well-composers sufficiently, but really representing all facets of eras and nationalities.
Some statistics:
6 Medieval composers
108 Renaissance composers
316 Baroque composers
300 Classical composers
1,197 Romantic composers
385 Early 20th-Century composers
and 200 Modern composers (1945 onwards)
There are even composers from, among others, Uruguay, Iceland, Cuba, Monaco, Lichtenstein, Peru, Colombia, and Hawaii.
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Re: Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
Fantastic! Quoted, without your permission, here.
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Re: Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
Since we are being excited about numbers in this part of the forum....
am I the only one who looks at the download statistics?
Here:
http://imslp.org/stats/numberofdownloads.txt
we've broken the 100000 downloads per day barrier recently! (I assume the numbers are the number of pdf files downloaded.) I didn't know there were that many musical poeple around!
am I the only one who looks at the download statistics?
Here:
http://imslp.org/stats/numberofdownloads.txt
we've broken the 100000 downloads per day barrier recently! (I assume the numbers are the number of pdf files downloaded.) I didn't know there were that many musical poeple around!
Re: Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
Strangely enough, it seems to also have been broken on June 27...I wonder why...
Re: Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
Interesting. Is there a detailed account available of the uploads for any given file, just to get an idea of what is the most in demand.
Re: Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
No, to my knowledge we don't have that, but on Special:statistics you can see the most visited pages, this will give you an idea.
That Jun27 thing, probably someone who still managed to circumvene site-rip prevention, or maybe due to some system change.
That Jun27 thing, probably someone who still managed to circumvene site-rip prevention, or maybe due to some system change.
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Re: Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
Almost twice more downloads per day than a year ago.. :X And you can see how we had some 1,600 downloads just the day IMSLP re-opened.. That's (a tiny bit more than) about one download a minute! (*was* - now it's about 10 downloads every 9 seconds)
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Re: Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
About those downloads per day - which recently topped 100,000 for the first time - I wonder how many are being generated by bots? SMA and some other sites appear to have set up some sort of bot whereby anything added to IMSLP is downloaded to their sites in the space of 24 hours or so. While this is obviously not of any concern with respect to public domain works, I do have some concerns about new compositions, editions, arrangements, etc. which the authors have kindly uploaded to this site. The main problem with some of the copycats appears to failure to properly attribute things to their creators, which is actually a violation of the CC license.
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Re: Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
Bots on fixed IPs can easily be blocked. Just a few lines in the .htaccess file, e.g.Carolus wrote:About those downloads per day - which recently topped 100,000 for the first time - I wonder how many are being generated by bots? SMA and some other sites appear to have set up some sort of bot whereby anything added to IMSLP is downloaded to their sites in the space of 24 hours or so. While this is obviously not of any concern with respect to public domain works, I do have some concerns about new compositions, editions, arrangements, etc. which the authors have kindly uploaded to this site. The main problem with some of the copycats appears to failure to properly attribute things to their creators, which is actually a violation of the CC license.
Code: Select all
order allow,deny
deny from 123.45.6.7
allow from all
[Where 123.45.6.7 is the IP address. You can also allow or deny by domain name, and there are other tricks for site rippers. The .htaccess file is a powerful tool.]
Re: Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
This is a problem I've thought about several years ago. My conclusion was that all of this essentially boils down to an arms race, which ultimately burdens the users and does not too much more besides that. This is why I've taken essentially no steps to prevent this kind of appropriation, so that we don't start the arms race in the first place.
The reason is that there is absolutely no way to distinguish between a legitmate user and someone who downloads the file to put it on another site. Most of the copycats are not mass-downloaders, but rather download files as they are submitted, which means that no bot-banning software will be able to catch them. The only possible thing to do is to put a captcha for every download, but that is a huge burden on the users (especially in the case of parts and other stuff split into a dozen files), whereas it is only a minimal burden on the copycats because they would only need to do it once for each file.
Here we can learn from Wikipedia: the value of Wikipedia is not really the content, because that can be duplicated. Rather, the value of WIkipedia is the community. Similarly, no matter how much other sites tries to duplicate IMSLP, IMSLP will always be better by default because IMSLP can grow, whereas the copycat is a dead thing. Their duplication of IMSLP may temporarily ward off the day of judgment, but the day will come sooner or later, as users realize that they could just get everything for free at IMSLP (and with a better format and more information to boot).
I believe in the inherently superior nature of a well-organized collaborative project, especially with regards to scalability. IMSLP is improving day by day, both in the number of scores and the quality of the site, and there is nothing other sites can do about this.
I would strongly suggest that the question of whether other sites copy IMSLP or not should be ignored. As long as we keep IMSLP the best-run music library project on the internet, we do not need to worry about anything else. This is why I have not checked other sites for IMSLP scans in several years, and probably will never do so again. The important thing here is to focus on what we can do, knowing that if we do it well, we have no worries.
Regarding Carolus' concern about copyright infringement on the other sites: I would leave pursuing the legal remedy for infringement to the composers themselves. This sort of infringement is not something we can stop for good, and there is really not a whole lot we can do about it anyhow.
The reason is that there is absolutely no way to distinguish between a legitmate user and someone who downloads the file to put it on another site. Most of the copycats are not mass-downloaders, but rather download files as they are submitted, which means that no bot-banning software will be able to catch them. The only possible thing to do is to put a captcha for every download, but that is a huge burden on the users (especially in the case of parts and other stuff split into a dozen files), whereas it is only a minimal burden on the copycats because they would only need to do it once for each file.
Here we can learn from Wikipedia: the value of Wikipedia is not really the content, because that can be duplicated. Rather, the value of WIkipedia is the community. Similarly, no matter how much other sites tries to duplicate IMSLP, IMSLP will always be better by default because IMSLP can grow, whereas the copycat is a dead thing. Their duplication of IMSLP may temporarily ward off the day of judgment, but the day will come sooner or later, as users realize that they could just get everything for free at IMSLP (and with a better format and more information to boot).
I believe in the inherently superior nature of a well-organized collaborative project, especially with regards to scalability. IMSLP is improving day by day, both in the number of scores and the quality of the site, and there is nothing other sites can do about this.
I would strongly suggest that the question of whether other sites copy IMSLP or not should be ignored. As long as we keep IMSLP the best-run music library project on the internet, we do not need to worry about anything else. This is why I have not checked other sites for IMSLP scans in several years, and probably will never do so again. The important thing here is to focus on what we can do, knowing that if we do it well, we have no worries.
Regarding Carolus' concern about copyright infringement on the other sites: I would leave pursuing the legal remedy for infringement to the composers themselves. This sort of infringement is not something we can stop for good, and there is really not a whole lot we can do about it anyhow.
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Re: Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
That's a good way of putting it. You've convinced me. Life's too damn short to sniff around after bots like a Nazgûl.imslp wrote:This is a problem I've thought about several years ago. My conclusion was that all of this essentially boils down to an arms race, which ultimately burdens the users and does not too much more besides that. This is why I've taken essentially no steps to prevent this kind of appropriation, so that we don't start the arms race in the first place.
The reason is that there is absolutely no way to distinguish between a legitmate user and someone who downloads the file to put it on another site. Most of the copycats are not mass-downloaders, but rather download files as they are submitted, which means that no bot-banning software will be able to catch them. The only possible thing to do is to put a captcha for every download, but that is a huge burden on the users (especially in the case of parts and other stuff split into a dozen files), whereas it is only a minimal burden on the copycats because they would only need to do it once for each file.
Here we can learn from Wikipedia: the value of Wikipedia is not really the content, because that can be duplicated. Rather, the value of WIkipedia is the community. Similarly, no matter how much other sites tries to duplicate IMSLP, IMSLP will always be better by default because IMSLP can grow, whereas the copycat is a dead thing. Their duplication of IMSLP may temporarily ward off the day of judgment, but the day will come sooner or later, as users realize that they could just get everything for free at IMSLP (and with a better format and more information to boot).
I believe in the inherently superior nature of a well-organized collaborative project, especially with regards to scalability. IMSLP is improving day by day, both in the number of scores and the quality of the site, and there is nothing other sites can do about this.
I would strongly suggest that the question of whether other sites copy IMSLP or not should be ignored. As long as we keep IMSLP the best-run music library project on the internet, we do not need to worry about anything else. This is why I have not checked other sites for IMSLP scans in several years, and probably will never do so again. The important thing here is to focus on what we can do, knowing that if we do it well, we have no worries.
Regarding Carolus' concern about copyright infringement on the other sites: I would leave pursuing the legal remedy for infringement to the composers themselves. This sort of infringement is not something we can stop for good, and there is really not a whole lot we can do about it anyhow.
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Re: Over 2500 Composers Represented on PML
2600 Composers now!