In the past year Soundcloud has had their fair share of issues surrounding copyright infringement, thanks to big-name labels pressuring the online company to enforce stricter policies and guidelines. As a result, countless respected artists in the scene have had their accounts permanently deleted via Soundcloud’s “three strike” policy. The other day LA producer Ookay became the latest victim, as his bootleg of the White Stripes’ “Seven Nation Army” earned him his third and final strike on the site.
Is Soundcloud going too far? As music progresses in our digital age it seems to become increasingly difficult to find an equilibrium that fully satisfies artists, streaming services, labels, and of course music fans as well. Read Ookay’s frustrated tweets and let us know what you think in the comments section below.
THIS IS FUCKING BULLSHIT pic.twitter.com/zFSiw2rcge
— OOKAY (@Ookayx) June 2, 2016
I’ll keep my head up.
— OOKAY (@Ookayx) June 2, 2016
I’m worried about all the upcoming producers trying to make a name for themselves. I got mine. I’m still getting mine like you all are.
— OOKAY (@Ookayx) June 2, 2016
also glad to know Soundcloud support’s twitter has only been about getting their payments to go through rather than helping the artist out.
— OOKAY (@Ookayx) June 2, 2016
Also this is really showing how supportive my fans and friends really are. I love all of you.
— OOKAY (@Ookayx) June 3, 2016
I made remixes to gain some popularity every once in a while and I hustled my ass off because thats the only way I knew how. now it bites me
— OOKAY (@Ookayx) June 3, 2016
My best revenge is making the best damn song i’ve ever fucking made.
— OOKAY (@Ookayx) June 3, 2016
In a busy office that deals with lots of folders and binders, index tabs can be a life-saver when identifying groups of printed data. Find my word documents. Although you can write on the tabs using a pen, it is much easier to print them off, especially when you use them more often than not.
I’m sad about the fact that I lost all my “likes”. True gems in there. So many great artists I’ve found through the poison that killed me
Don’t bother for finding no way to recover lost Google Play Music files on your computer anymore. Professional solutions for Google Play Music file recovery are available now. Find more details about Google Play file recovery, Google Play Music recovery or how to recover deleted Google Play musics.
Google Play Deleted Music, How to Restore
Happen to delete some songs from Google Play Music due to maloperation? Or accidentally remove the downloaded Google Play Music files from your PC? Or having lost songs from Google Play due to app failure or system error? If you are unlucky to encounter any of these problems, don't worry, you can use the following useful methods to restore music from Google Play Music web player or recover deleted downloads music from your PC.
How to Restore Music from Google Play Music Web Player
You can delete songs and music albums from your Google Play Music library through Google Play Music web player or the Google Play Music app. But you can restore music only from the web player. See the how-to steps below.
Tip: You have 28 days to restore music to your library after you delete songs from Google Player Music. After 28 days, anything in Trash will be permanently deleted.
1. Go to the Google Play Music web player;
2. Select 'Menu' > go to 'Trash' and choose 'Menu' > click 'Undelete'.
If you have permanently deleted music files from Google Play Music, you'll need to contact the support team for help.
How to Recover Deleted Google Play Music with Data Recovery Software
This method is suited for those who have downloaded Google Play Music files into their local PC. When you happen to delete songs from Google Play, but fail to restore with the method above, you can try EaseUS hard drive recovery software to restore permanently deleted or removed Google Play Music files from PC within only three steps. You can restore downloaded Google Play Music files on different Windows systems without any obstacles.
Other great features of EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard are listed below in brief.
Recover lost or deleted files, documents, photos, audio, music, emails effectively
Recover files from formatted hard drive, emptied recycle bin, memory card, flash drive, digital camera, and camcorders.
Supports data recovery for sudden deletion, formatting, hard drive corruption, virus attack, system crash under different situations.
Keep Noted: If you lost music files on an SD card, USB or external hard drive, connect it to your PC in advance. Also, keep in your mind that you should stop using the device immediately when you lost files on it.
Step 1: Run EaseUS file recovery software.
Select the location on which you lost music files in EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard. Click Scan to let this program scan your device to find lost files.
Step 2: Scan and find lost music files.
Wait for the program to scan the selected device to find lost music files. Check Deleted Files, Drive (with your device name), Lost Partition Files and even Extra Files to find all lost files. Preview found music files by double-clicking them.
Choose a safe location on your PC or an external storage device.
After restoring the Google Play Music files, you can import the recovered music files into Google Play Music and enjoy again.
Have you ever accidentally deleted an iTunes playlist or two and figured it was gone forever? Here’s how you might be able to get those missing playlists back.
MacLife details a simple process for iTunes playlist recovery. If you’re missing a playlist, you can still recover it if you haven’t added any new content to your iTunes library. If you haven’t, here are the steps to follow:
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Quit out of iTunes.
Go into your home folder, then into the Music folder, and finally into the iTunes folder.
Find a file called iTunes Music Library.xml and drag it out of that folder (to the desktop, or somewhere else that’s convenient for you).
Delete the file called iTunes Library.itl.
Re-open iTunes and go to the File menu. Select Library > Import Playlists.. and choose the iTunes Music Library.xml that you saved.
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This process should magically restore that state of your iTunes library before you accidentally removed that playlist you just couldn’t live without. It’ll also, potentially, restore any playlists you may have intentionally deleted, so be prepared to delete those again after the restore.