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Gracenote founder Steve Scherf has come a long way from his younger days of meth-fueled llama sodomizing. While once it looked like he'd soon die in a gutter, that six months he spent in the federal pen for killing a bussload of nuns while drunk (which he coyly refers to as "Happy happy shower butt fun time") cleaned him up, allowing him to become the ruthless corporate asshat we know today.

'''Gracenote''' is a commercial enterprise which maintains and licenses a database containing information about the contents of audio CDs. The database is accessible online over the Internet. Computer software applications such as ] that are capable of playing CDs use Gracenote's ] or similar commercial services such as ]'s ] and ], or open-source projects such as ] and ]. These programs generally offer the option of contributing track listings, and most of the track listings in the Gracenote database are voluntary contributions by individual users of CD-player software.

Additionally, Gracenote operates a digital file identification service which allows digital music files to be identified. As well as a media management service for media management such as the generation of playlists, and recommendation of music.

Gracenote's database is mainly created via the contributions of its many users. If the music is not available in the Gracenote database, the service requests the user to input information such as the artist, album, and song names related to the music. Gracenote also receives some music information from third party database companies and record labels.

==Background==

Gracenote began in ] as an ] project involving a CD player program named xmcd. The xmcd player was developed by ] and had the ability to store and recognize CDs from a database. Xmcd users regularly sent additional CD information to Mr. Kan for inclusion in the database via email. By 1995, the database had become unwieldy and ], a friend of Mr. Kan, was recruited to build a server to store the CD information in a network database. Later, hosting facilities and an advertising business model were provided by an ex-pat Scot living in Texas, Graham Toal.

As CDs do not generally contain any digitally-encoded information about their contents (see ]), Kan developed software which identifies and looks up CDs based on TOC information stored at the beginning of each disc. A ], or Table of Contents, is a list of offsets corresponding to the start of each track on a CD. The matching is fuzzy and tolerates some variation in track offsets.

Some computer users who have copied ] from their turntables onto ]s have been surprised to find their computers correctly displaying the titles and track listings when these ]s are played on their computer. This happens when a commercial ] is a ] version of an ], containing the same tracks in the same order. If the track offsets of the homemade CD match the track timings of the commercial ] to within a second, the CDDB database can identify the ] successfully.

==Commercialization and controversy==
In ], the service was purchased by ], a consumer electronics manufacturer and operated as a business unit within the ] based company. CDDB was then spun out of Escient and then in July of 2000 renamed Gracenote (). The maneuver was and remains controversial, because the CDDB database was and remains to be built on the voluntary submission of CD track data by thousands of individual users. Initially, most of these were users of the xmcd CD player program. The xmcd program itself was an open-source, ] project, and many listing contributors assumed that the database was open-source as well due to the GPL notice on the cddb.com website's and . The website was modified in 1998 to state that the database is the .

], Gracenote claims that its database contains information on almost 4 million CDs. The reliability both of this statement and of the database itself have been challenged. Because the information going into the database has not been subjected to quality control, duplicate entries are very common. David Jennings, in an article entitled "How many CDs are there in the world?" gives an example of a six-CD set in which "two of the six CDs appear twice in the database, and one appears three times" (). An article on the Seattle Times website cites Ty Roberts, chief technology officer of Gracenote, as saying that there are approximately 500,000 individual CD titles commercially released and available for sale today in the United States.<ref>{{cite news
| title = Online music services need to meet demand
| publisher = The Seattle Times
| date = 2005
| url = http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2002276082_btview16.html
| accessdate = 2006-11-29}}
</ref>

==Lawsuits Against Licensees==
===Gracenote v. Roxio===
In ], Gracenote sued ] for "breach of contract, patent infringement, trademark infringement and other violations of Federal law" () when Roxio tried to switch to ].<ref>{{cite news
| title = Gracenote under pressure
| publisher = CNET News.com
| date = 2001
| url = http://news.com.com/2100-1023-257529.html
| accessdate = 2006-11-29}}
</ref> Roxio filed countersuit against Gracenote for fraudulently obtaining a patent, misuse of said patent, antitrust behaviour, and breach of contract (). The case was settled in ].

===Gracenote v. Musicmatch===

In ], Gracenote sued another former licensee, ], for breach of contract and patent violations. Musicmatch filed a counter-suit against Gracenote. The Northern District Court in California ruled on ], ] in favor of Musicmatch. The case was settled in ] after Musicmatch received summary judgement on all of Gracenote's patent claims.

A summary judgement found that Musicmatch's CDDB replacement service does not violate Gracenote's patents. The court also found significant evidence that Gracenote may have obtained its patents fraudulently. is available online. Later, the court issued a decision that Gracenote did not obtain its patents fraudulently, but the decision that Musicmatch does not violate any of Gracenote's patents was clear.

There has been speculation that Yahoo! had been holding off its decision to purchase Musicmatch for nearly seven months until the August 26th court order was issued. According to this speculation, the court decision for Yahoo!'s purchase of Musicmatch. The purchase of Musicmatch by Yahoo! was announced only two weeks after the August 26th court decision. Musicmatch and Gracenote settled shortly thereafter.

Until the Musicmatch case, Gracenote attempted to aggressively use its patents in an attempt to enforce a monopoly in commercial CD identification services. The inability of Gracenote to enforce its patent in the Musicmatch case opened the market for competition, and a growing global group of companies continue to enter media identification and metadata marketplace.

A summarized overview of the case is available at the website within Mr. Robert D. Becker's list of representative cases. Mr. Becker was one of Musicmatch's lawyers during the case.

==Competition==

After the commercialization of Gracenote a few other music databases started up such as ], ], ], and ].

]'s ] no longer uses the Gracenote database and has started its own database called CDi; but, also gets some of its data from ]. Microsoft also used the Gracenote database information at one point through one of Gracenote's licensees, Tunes.com.

==See also==
* ]

==References==
<references/>

== External links ==
*
* - links to PDF files of some of the court documents from the Roxio and Musicmatch cases.
* {{musicbrainz wiki|Gracenote}}
* Reliability of Gracenote database questioned
*
*
*

] ]
] ]

Revision as of 01:19, 3 December 2006

For grace notes in music, see grace note.

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Gracenote Inc.
File:Gracenote logo.png
Company typePrivate
Founded1998
HeadquartersEmeryville, California, USA
ProductsDigital music recognition technology
Number of employees95 (2006)
Websitewww.gracenote.com

Gracenote founder Steve Scherf has come a long way from his younger days of meth-fueled llama sodomizing. While once it looked like he'd soon die in a gutter, that six months he spent in the federal pen for killing a bussload of nuns while drunk (which he coyly refers to as "Happy happy shower butt fun time") cleaned him up, allowing him to become the ruthless corporate asshat we know today.

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