At Date: Wed, 23 May 2007 02:34:29 Stewart wrote: >99 cents, or about 50 pence at the current exchange rate. > >And, no, no reason why they shouldn't cost the same that I know of. I think we had this discussion once before. The pricing imbalance is relative only if you're comparing territories or able to buy tracks from one territory to another -- but you can't. The exchange rate has no significance because you're dealing with a contained sale in a contained territory. UK residence are paying 79p. iTunes UK pays the labels and therefore the artists in British pounds as well. The money stays in Britain until royalties are dispersed to the various labels and acts oversees....and only then is it exchanged for the fluctuating US dollar or whatever. Not defending the price at all....just saying that you have to look at pricing as a self-contained entity based on the country of origin.....not on the world pricing (which will fluctuate daily from territory to territory). If you want to bitch at anyone for this imbalance, send a letter to your member of British Parliament and find out why their economy remains third world. Jaimie Vernon, President, Bullseye Records http://www.bullseyecanada.com SWAG: http://www.cafepress.com/bullseyecanada BULLSEYE LIVE 365 RADIO: http://www.live365.com/stations/bullseyerecords Author, Canadian Pop Music Encyclopedia http://jam.canoe.ca/Music/Pop_Encyclopedia/ http://www.myspace.com/jaimievernonsmovingtargetz _________________________________________________________________ Windows Live Hotmail gives you the control you need to help you keep your e-mail private, safe and secure. See for yourself! www.newhotmail.ca?icid=WLHMENCA147