I'd think no worse than already owned CDs, books, or movies. Unless it turns out tracks are more frequently gifted due to cost and popularity.
On Sunday, December 29, 2013, Carl Hoefs wrote: > Makes one wonder what percentage of gifted songs are already owned by the > gifter... > > > On Dec 29, 2013, at 2:47 AM, Cyril Niklaus > <[email protected]<javascript:;>> > wrote: > > > Indeed you are. When one gifts something on the iTunes Store, it is > associated to the giftee's AppleID, not yours. > > You have to buy it for yourself, just like you would a non-iTunes gift > too. > > Cheers > > Cyril > > > > > > On 28 déc. 2013, at 21:03, Carl Hoefs > > <[email protected]<javascript:;>> > wrote: > > > >> I just "gifted" someone a song on the iTunes store. Somehow I was under > the impression (since a song can be authorized for multiple computers) that > the "gifter" also is given access to the song. When I look at the song in > iTunes (logged in), it still wants me to buy it, and it does not show up in > my iTunes library. I guess I'm wrong on this? > >> > >> _______________________________________________ > >> MacOSX-talk mailing list > >> [email protected] <javascript:;> > >> http://www.omnigroup.com/mailman/listinfo/macosx-talk > > > > _______________________________________________ > MacOSX-talk mailing list > [email protected] <javascript:;> > http://www.omnigroup.com/mailman/listinfo/macosx-talk > -- arno s hautala /-| [email protected] pgp b2c9d448
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