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View Full Version : Transferring songs from my iPhone to someone else's


alra111
October 9th, 2009, 06:04 PM
My friend recently purchased an iPhone 3G S, the same model I have. He wants to have a copy of my music on his phone, as he likes all my songs. My songs were ripped from CDs, NOT purchased through iTunes, so none of the songs should have DRM qualities attached.

When I start up iTunes (with my phone attached to hsi computer), click on the name of my phone, then click on the music tab, it asks me, "Are you sure you want to sync music? All music on this device will be replaced with your iTunes collection." Since he just started out on iTunes, his collection is basically empty. I want to copy the songs from MY iPhone to his iTunes library so that he can then synchronize his phone and get a copy of my songs. Is there any way to achieve this?

The way iTunes says that MY phone's songs will be replaced with his library is NOT what I consider syncing. Syncing is merging the data from two sources and creating an aggregate of all data, NOT taking that data from one source and moving it to the other source, overwriting that other source's data. Big thumbs down to Apple for this.

Rafael

ElDiabloConCaca
October 9th, 2009, 06:58 PM
iPhones and iPods have always been "one-way" sync. Computer to iPod, and that's it, and that's the way it's always been.

The reason for this is to prevent people from pirating music, exactly the way you describe. You purchased the CD, so you get to listen to the music on a bunch of different devices. By "giving" the music to your friend, you are committing piracy. If your friend wants to listen to the music from that CD, his/her only option is to purchase the music, same as you did.

You cannot "give" music to another person. That is the very definition of piracy.

If people could just take their iPods to their friends' houses and "give" them all their music, that would be rampant piracy. One person purchased and ripped a CD, then 20 of his/her friends get to all get a copy of the music? Rampant piracy. All 20 friends need to each purchase their own copy of the album.

You can have as many iPods as you like synced to a single computer. You cannot sync an iPod with more than one computer, except in "manual sync" mode -- but the limitation still stands: computer-to-iPod, and not the reverse.

Don't shoot the messenger -- this is not my point of view; rather a statement of fact. Blame the RIAA, blame Obama, blame corporate hell, blame whomever you want -- the law stands as it does, though. If your friend wants to listen to and manipulate the songs that you have, he/she has one and only one option: purchase the music.

There are programs out there that will allow you to copy music from an iPod to a computer outside of iTunes, such as Senuti and others found with super-simple Google searches. I do not know if they work with iPhones as well, but I would suspect so. These are very handy when you have a complete and total crash of the computer and lose everything, but still have your iPod around -- so you can get back on your computer what was once there at some point in time... kind of like a "backup."

It would be illegal to entertain suggestions of "selling/gifting" him a copy of the CD or simply copying the songs from your iTunes to his/her hard drive, so I won't delve into those realms (hint, hint).

Scoops98
October 9th, 2009, 07:35 PM
iPhones and iPods have always been "one-way" sync. Computer to iPod, and that's it, and that's the way it's always been.

The reason for this is to prevent people from pirating music, exactly the way you describe. You purchased the CD, so you get to listen to the music on a bunch of different devices. By "giving" the music to your friend, you are committing piracy. If your friend wants to listen to the music from that CD, his/her only option is to purchase the music, same as you did.

You cannot "give" music to another person. That is the very definition of piracy.

If people could just take their iPods to their friends' houses and "give" them all their music, that would be rampant piracy. One person purchased and ripped a CD, then 20 of his/her friends get to all get a copy of the music? Rampant piracy. All 20 friends need to each purchase their own copy of the album.

You can have as many iPods as you like synced to a single computer. You cannot sync an iPod with more than one computer, except in "manual sync" mode -- but the limitation still stands: computer-to-iPod, and not the reverse.

Don't shoot the messenger -- this is not my point of view; rather a statement of fact. Blame the RIAA, blame Obama, blame corporate hell, blame whomever you want -- the law stands as it does, though. If your friend wants to listen to and manipulate the songs that you have, he/she has one and only one option: purchase the music.

There are programs out there that will allow you to copy music from an iPod to a computer outside of iTunes, such as Senuti and others found with super-simple Google searches. I do not know if they work with iPhones as well, but I would suspect so. These are very handy when you have a complete and total crash of the computer and lose everything, but still have your iPod around -- so you can get back on your computer what was once there at some point in time... kind of like a "backup."

It would be illegal to entertain suggestions of "selling/gifting" him a copy of the CD or simply copying the songs from your iTunes to his/her hard drive, so I won't delve into those realms (hint, hint).

Feel a little strongly about this, do you?

ElDiabloConCaca
October 9th, 2009, 07:57 PM
Feel a little strongly about this, do you?
I don't think you read my post in its entirety; rather, maybe my point(s) were lost on you:
Don't shoot the messenger -- this is not my point of view; rather a statement of fact.
There are programs out there that will allow you to copy music from an iPod to a computer outside of iTunes, such as Senuti and others found with super-simple Google searches.
...and the last paragraph of my post.

I offered more than a few suggestions, workarounds and alternate paths on how he can accomplish what he wants to accomplish.

Just because it was verbose and lengthy does not indicate any kind of passion for the subject. Perhaps I'm just a verbose and lengthy kind of person.