When People Die or Become Inactive

• Jan 4, 2017 - 14:20

I'll start with a statement: some of us are not all that young and over time nature will dispose of us, but will mankind dispose of our creations?
My question is this: when an account (pro) becomes inactive and the annual fee is not paid what will happen? Will the account and the scores which may well be original works be deleted?
And if they are deleted isn't that terribly unfair because we all know there are many people who who avoid contributing money to musescore by having multiple free accounts. Presumably free accounts will remain as long as musescore exists.
Philip McHugh


Comments

In reply to by [DELETED] 5

Hello, my point which nobody has addressed is that there are numerous people with more than one account. So these people who don't play the game would in the event of their death have all their work available to the public via musescore accounts. Someone who was honest and went pro and paid money to musescore would be in a worse position because only 5 of their scores would show to the world. This in my humble opinion is not natural justice.

In reply to by [DELETED] 5

If you state the problem it seems to me the answer is to ensure musescore users 'play the game'.
How many people have more than one 'free'account? Is it fair to turn a blind eye to this at the expense of people who make a monetary contribution to musescore?
A system which knowingly allows an injustice will not be respected.
The result of accepting the status quo is this: the honest user who dies keeps 5 scores on line; the 'dishonest' user who dies keeps all their scores online. It just can't be right.

In reply to by philip_mchugh

That's no prove. I occasionally had to resort to this myself, because my favourite name was already taken by someone else.
Also a pro acount can have thousands of scores online, for 1000 scores you'd need 200 free accounts, I don't think anyone really does this (and goes unnoticed)

The World will see only 5. Make the 1st and last score a compilation of all your other scores and one of them ought to be included in that 5.

In reply to by Isaac Weiss

You can always hide empty staves. You might also be able to get a bit creative with the file format - since mscz is just a Zip of mscx, you could embed all your scores in a Zip file and change the extension but leave instructions on how to decompress it into several different scores. Now, when you add another score just append it to the Zip, change its extension and update your uploads.

In reply to by Isaac Weiss

So 'who cares'. Ultimately if nobody cares the whole system is brought into disrepute. So what if people who used to contribute annually to musecore suddenly 'don't care'. Lets all abuse the system and use multiple free accounts. You get the picture.
I care and feel a bit aggrieved that some people are not 'playing the game'. I have said my bit and will say no more.

Hi Philip, it's a very good question to ask, and unfortunately we don't have a good answer for it yet. I will analyse the policy of the other services are such as Flickr, SoundCloud and Vimeo on this matter. TBC.

As for the people who are gaming the system. Instead of playing police, we will give users who perhaps won't have the money, the ability to earn a Pro membership by doing something which shall benefit all. While the announcement for this idea is scheduled for later, you may get what it is by reading https://fosdem.org/2017/schedule/event/openscore

I was wondering what would be a suitable punishment for those who game the system. I came up with the following, but I'm not sure I should post it. What kind of twisted mind could think of this?

Lock them in a room and force them to listen to an endless loop of bad transcriptions of Zelda themes, until they went legit. To intensify the pain, we could follow Zelda best practices and leave each one unfinished, with a large random number of empty measures at the end. The system-gamer would be highly stressed, waiting for the next one to start. Perhaps that would be too harsh.

To address the OP's concerns, the best thing to do is write down your passwords for all your online accounts somewhere safe and leave instructions in your will.

From a technical standpoint, MuseScore.com could introduce a feature to have your account "managed" by another user in the event you become inactive, or for other users to chip-in towards a PRO subscription to keep a user's scores available after they die.

Hi

The thing you can do is create a youtube account and then send your score in video... So if your account turn to a free one... all your score will stay on the internet... Don't forget to talk about this channel youtube when you post a new score on musescore.

:)

To be fair, a lot of people who use this website/service aren't cheating Musescore because they simply don't want to play the game, and not pay. There are users who do this because they simply don't have the money. If you look through Musescore's groups section, you'll see quite a bit of them dedicated to composers that are under legal-working age. Of course, as a teenager, you want to share with the world your creations! Though they might think the Pro membership is worth it, their parent/guardian might have different thoughts on the matter.

As for when someone passes away, it'd only make sense that their scores faded away like their legacy. When someone dies, the least of their worries isn't going to be whether someone will be able to view their score. There are 7+ billion people on the planet, most people's existence is insignificant. Yes, there are those who make a name for themselves, but the majority just fade away to be forgotten. I'd say that the limiting to 5 scores is fair.

Not really a solution to your original question, but my thoughts on the matter of skipping out on Pro accounts.

Also, there are video sharing sites like YouTube, Dailymotion, VidMe, etc... that normally allow unlimited uploads for users. No cost.

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