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Wikipedia

Discogs

Discogs (short for discographies) is a database of information about audio recordings, including commercial releases, promotional releases, and bootleg or off-label releases. While the site was originally created with a goal of becoming the largest online database of electronic music,[2] the site now includes releases in all genres on all formats. After the database was opened to contributions from the public, rock music began to become the most prevalent genre listed.[3]

Discogs
Type of site
Music
Available inEnglish, German, Spanish, Portuguese (BR), French, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Russian
Headquarters
OwnerZink Media, Inc.
Created byKevin Lewandowski
IndustryInternet
ServicesDatabase, online shopping
RevenueAdvertisement (logging-in removes all ads), Marketplace Seller Fees
URLwww.discogs.com
CommercialPartially
RegistrationOptional
Users649,838 (November 2022)[1]
LaunchedNovember 2000; 22 years ago (2000-11)
Current statusOnline

As of 19 November 2022, Discogs contains over 15.7 million releases, by over 8.3 million artists, across over 1.9 million labels, contributed from over 644,000 contributor user accounts – with these figures constantly growing as users continually add previously unlisted releases to the site over time.[4][5] The Discogs servers, currently hosted under the domain name discogs.com, are owned by Zink Media, Inc. and located in Portland, Oregon, United States.[6]

History

The discogs.com domain name was registered in August 2000,[7] and Discogs itself was launched in November 2000 by programmer, DJ, and music fan Kevin Lewandowski originally intended to be a large database of electronic music.[8]

Lewandowski's original goal was to build the most comprehensive database of electronic music, organized around the artists, labels, and releases available in electronic genres. In 2003, the Discogs system was completely rewritten,[9] and in January 2004 it began to support other genres, starting with hip hop. Since then, it has expanded to include rock and jazz in January 2005 and funk/soul, Latin and reggae in October of the same year. In January 2006, blues and non-music (e.g. comedy records, field recordings, interviews) were added. Classical music started being supported in June 2007, and in September 2007[10] the "final genres were turned on" – adding support for the Stage & Screen, Brass & Military, Children's, and Folk, World, & Country music genres, allowing capture of virtually every single type of audio recording that has ever been released.

In June 2004, Discogs released a report claiming that it had 15,788 contributors and 260,789 releases.[11]

In late 2005, the Discogs marketplace was launched.[12]

In July 2007, a new system for sellers was introduced on the site called Market Price History. It made information available to users who paid for a subscription – though 60 days of information was free – access to the past price items were sold for up to 12 months ago by previous sellers who had sold exactly the same release. At the same time, the US$12 per year charge for advanced subscriptions was abolished, as it was felt that the extra features should be made available to all subscribers now that a different revenue stream had been found from sellers and purchasers. Later that year, all paid access features were discarded and full use of the site became free of charge, allowing all users to view the full 12-month Market Price History of each item.[2]

Milestones

Discogs publishes information indicating the number of releases, labels, and artists presently in its database,[4] along with its contributors:[5]

Date Master Releases Releases Artists Labels Contributors Note
30 June 2004 none * 260,789 unknown unknown 15,788 By mid 2004 releases crossed the quarter million mark.
2006 none * 500,000+ unknown unknown unknown In 2006 releases passed the half million mark.
25 July 2010 unknown 2,006,878 1,603,161 169,923 unknown By mid 2010 releases crossed the 2m mark.
4 March 2014 unknown 4,698,683 3,243,448 576,324 185,283 By mid 2014 labels had crossed the half million mark.
11 June 2014 unknown 4,956,221 3,375,268 612,264 194,432 In mid 2014 releases were passing the 5m mark.
26 December 2014 unknown 5,505,617 3,638,804 680,131 215,337 By late 2014 contributors surpassed the 200k mark.
30 May 2015 unknown 6,001,424 3,874,147 743,267 237,967 By mid 2015 releases surpassed the 6m mark.
31 March 2016 1,001,012 7,005,177 4,455,198 892,271 281,579 By early 2016 releases surpassed the 7m mark, and master releases passed a million.
19 January 2017 1,120,336 8,049,341 4,854,378 1,014,930 329,366 By early 2017 releases surpassed the 8m mark,[13] and labels passed a million.
25 October 2017 1,254,825 9,083,017 5,182,134 1,091,609 379,527 By late 2017 releases surpassed the 9m mark,[14] and artists surpassed the 5m mark.
28 June 2018 1,377,906 10,000,000 5,284,282 1,143,442 418,140 On this date in 2018 releases surpassed the 10m mark.[15]
28 March 2019 1,514,106 11,001,697 5,410,939 1,198,273 456,949 On this date in 2019 releases surpassed the 11m mark.[16]
7 October 2019 1,614,729 11,666,550 6,091,280 1,343,778 unknown By late 2019 artists surpassed the 6m mark.[17]
28 July 2021 1,964,238 14,246,546 7,663,244 1,734,786 593,087 By mid 2021 releases surpassed the 14m mark, and artists surpassed the 7.5m mark.

* Master Release: from 30 April 2009 the function was made available.
† Contributors pages: in mid 2019 these pages were limited to show only the top 5000 users, with the total user count being made private, although the total user count figure was re-added sometime during early 2021 (also the About Us page mentions "More than 592,000..." have contributed the site.)[18]

Other projects

Discogs has so far created a further six online databases, for collating information on related topics, although only one, VinylHub, remains in use.

VinylHub

In mid-2014, a side project website called VinylHub[19] was started for users to add world-wide information about record stores including location, contact details, what type of items they stocked, etc. In August 2020 it was relocated as part of the main Discogs website, under subdomain vinylhub.discogs.com.[20]

Previous projects

Five other online databases were previously created, however they have since closed.

Filmogs

In late 2014, the company released a new beta website called Filmogs.[21] Users could add their physical film collections (on VHS, DVD, Blu-ray, LaserDisc, or any other type of physical film release) to the database, and buy and sell film releases in the global marketplace. The site was closed down on 31 August 2020.

Gearogs

Gearogs was launched as a beta in late 2014, at the same time as Filmogs.[22] The site let users add and track music equipment, including items such as synths, drum machines, sequencers, samplers, audio software, and any other electronic music making equipment. The site was closed down on 31 August 2020.

Bibliogs/Bookogs

At the start of 2015, the company began Bibliogs as another beta project.[23] Users could submit information about their books, physical or electronic, different versions and editions, and also connect different credits (writers, illustrators, translators, publishers, etc.) to these books. 21,000 books were submitted by the end of 2016. The project was in beta phase until 15 August 2017[24] when it reached more than 31,000 book titles, was renamed Bookogs following legal issues with the original name, and removed 'Beta state' notice from the main page. The next day the Marketplace Beta feature was presented.[25] On 8 June 2019, the project reached a total amount of 100,000 books.[26] The site was closed down on 31 August 2020, counting more than 154,000 books and 345,000 credits.[27]

Comicogs

Comicogs[28] launched around the same time as Bookogs, as a means for comic collectors and enthusiasts to catalog their collections and create an archive of comic releases. Similar to Bookogs, users could contribute comics, manga, graphic novels, and strips to the database, along with information on credits, publishers, writers, etc. 18,000 comics were submitted by the start of 2018. The Comicogs marketplace was launched on 23 August 2017,[29] allowing users to buy and sell comics from across the world. The site was closed down on 3 August 2020.

Posterogs

In September 2017, the company launched Posterogs.[30] Posterogs was the only Discogs site to launch a database and marketplace simultaneously.[31] The scope of Posterogs was left broad at the time of launch, with the company opting to let the community define what type of posters, flyers, or similar, should be included in the database. While non-music related items were fully acceptable for inclusion, much of the primary focus seemed to be on music posters, such as gig/tour posters, album promo posters, and promotional flyers (in keeping with Discogs' music theme), though there were also many film posters in the database. As with all other databases, users could save items to their 'Collection' and 'Wantlist', in addition to buying and selling in the marketplace. The site was closed down on 31 August 2020.

API

In mid-August 2007, Discogs data became publicly accessible via a RESTful, XML-based API and a license that allowed specially attributed use, but did not allow anyone to "alter, transform, or build upon" the data.[32][33][34] The license has since been changed to a public domain one. Prior to the advent of this license and API, Discogs data was only accessible via the Discogs web site's HTML interface and was intended to be viewed only using web browsers.[35] The HTML interface remains the only authorized way to modify Discogs data.[33]

On 7 June 2011, version 2 of the API was released.[36] Notable in this release was that a license key was no longer required, the default response was changed from XML to JSON, and the 5000 queries per day limit was removed (although a limit of 2000 image lookups per days was introduced).

On 1 November 2011, a major update to version 2 of the API was released.[37] This new release dropped support for XML, data is always returned in JSON format, however the monthly data dumps of new data are only provided in XML format.

On 1 February 2014, Discogs modified their API so that image requests will now require OAuth authorization, requiring each user of third-party applications to have a Discogs "application ID", with image requests now limited to 1,000 per day. Additionally the Premium API service was dropped.[38]

On 24 June 2014, Discogs deprecated their XML API in lieu of a JSON-formatted API.[39]

Discogs also allows full XML downloads of its Release, Artist, and Label data through the data.discogs.com subdomain.

The recommendations API is not publicly available.[40]

Contribution system

The data in Discogs comes from submissions contributed by users who have registered accounts on the site. The system has gone through four major revisions.

Version One (V1)

All incoming submissions were checked for formal and factual correctness by privileged users called "moderators", or "mods" for short, who had been selected by site management. Submissions and edits would not become visible or searchable until they received a single positive vote from a "mod". An even smaller pool of super-moderators called "editors" had the power to vote on proposed edits to artist and label data.

Version Two (V2)

This version introduced the concept of "submission limits" which prevented new users from submitting more than 2–3 releases for moderation. The number of possible submissions by a user increased on a logarithmic scale. The purpose of this was two-fold: 1) it helped keep the submission queue fairly small and manageable for moderators, and 2) it allowed the new user to acclimatise themselves slowly with the many formatting rules and guidelines of submitting to Discogs. Releases required a number of votes to be accepted into the database – initially the number of votes required was from four different moderators but in time the amount was decreased to three and then two.

Version Three (V3)

V3 launched in August 2007. Submission limits were eliminated, allowing each user to submit an unlimited number of updates and new entries. New releases added to the database were explicitly marked as "Unmoderated" with a top banner, and updates to existing items, such as releases, artists, or labels, were not shown (or available to search engines or casual visitors) until they were approved by the moderators.[41]

Version Four (V4)

This system launched on 10 March 2008. New submissions and edits currently take effect immediately. Any time a new release is added or old release edited, that entry becomes flagged as needing "votes" (initially, "review," but this term caused confusion). A flagged entry is marked as a full yellow bar across a release in the list views and, like version three, a banner on the submission itself – although, initially, this banner was omitted.

Any item can be voted on at any time, even if it is not flagged. Votes consist of a rating of the correctness and completeness of the full set of data for an item (not just the most recent changes), as assessed by users who have been automatically determined, by an undisclosed algorithm, to be experienced and reliable enough to be allowed to cast votes. An item's "average" vote is displayed with the item's data.[42]

The ranking system has also changed in v4. In v3, rank points were only awarded to submitters when a submission was "Accepted" by moderator votes. While in v4, rank points are now awarded immediately when a submission is made, regardless of the accuracy of the information and what votes it eventually receives, if any.[43]

Discogs-aware metadata software

Tag editors

  • ASMT MP3 Tagger – single release tagger
  • foobar2000freeware media player and music management software with a plugin
  • Helium Music Manager – music management software with a plugin
  • Jaikozshareware OS X/Windows/Linux spreadsheet-based tag editor
  • Kid3 – open-source project, tagger for all common music formats
  • Mp3tag – freeware tag editor, batch and spreadsheet interfaces
  • OrangeCD Catalog – music management software
  • puddletag – a free and open-source tag editor written for PyQt
  • taghycardia[44] – freeware, automated MP3 tagger
  • Tagog – Linux audio file tagger
  • TagScanner[45] – freeware tag editor with Discogs, FreeDB, TrackType.org support
  • The GodFather – freeware tag editor
  • The Tagger – MP3 and AAC formats tag editor for OS X
  • TigoTago – spreadsheet-based tag editor

Other

  • Album Art Downloader – Discogs cover art downloads
  • Discogs Bar – Discogs navigation and search control toolbar for Firefox
  • Discogs Enhancer – Discogs extension adding extra functionality to Google Chrome (inc. dark mode)[46]
  • Discographic for Discogs. Client for Apple devices for iOS[47]
  • MP3 Filenamer – online MP3 file name generator, based on Discogs release data
  • Stecotec Musikverwaltung Pro – Music database software by stecotec.de[48]
  • Music Collector – Music database software by collectorz.com
  • WWW::Discogs – Perl module for interfacing with the Discogs API
  • XLD (X Lossless Decoder) – a CD ripper and audio file converter for OS X

See also

References

  1. ^ "Discogs contributors". Discogs.com. November 19, 2022. Retrieved November 19, 2022.
  2. ^ a b "Discogs: what is it, where it came from, and how to use it". Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  3. ^ "Discogs Reaches 10 Million Releases 🎉". Discogs Blog. June 28, 2018. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  4. ^ a b "Explore on Discogs". Discogs. May 2, 2022. Retrieved May 2, 2022.
  5. ^ a b "Discogs Contributors". Discogs.com. May 2, 2022. Retrieved May 2, 2022.
  6. ^ "Whois discogs.com". www.whois.com. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  7. ^ "DisCogs.com WHOIS, DNS, & Domain Info - DomainTools". WHOIS. 2016. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  8. ^ Carnes, Richard (March 26, 2010). "Discogs: Vinyl revolution". Resident Advisor. Retrieved October 15, 2010.
  9. ^ . Discogs. Archived from the original on 22 June 2004. Retrieved 2 October 2008.
  10. ^ . Discogs. Archived from the original on November 1, 2019.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 June 2004. Retrieved 27 March 2013.
  12. ^ Garber, David (February 26, 2015). "How Discogs Dragged Record Collecting Into the 21st Century". Vice.com. Retrieved March 13, 2022.
  13. ^ SoLil (January 7, 2017). "8 Million Releases In The Discogs Database!". blog.discogs.com. Discogs.com. Retrieved January 19, 2017.
  14. ^ SoLil (October 4, 2017). "Discogs Music Database Reaches 9 Million Releases". blog.discogs.com. Discogs.com. Retrieved October 25, 2017.
  15. ^ Moon_Ray (June 29, 2018). "Discogs Reaches 10 Million Releases In The Database". blog.discogs.com. Discogs.com. Retrieved July 10, 2018.
  16. ^ "Another Milestone In Just Nine Months: 11 Million Releases On Discogs!". Discogs Blog. March 28, 2019. Retrieved March 29, 2019.
  17. ^ "Discogs Releases 2019 Mid-Year Marketplace Report". finance.yahoo.com. Retrieved October 7, 2019.
  18. ^ "Disogs.com - About Us". Discogs.com. Retrieved July 28, 2021. More than 592,000 people have contributed some piece of knowledge...
  19. ^ "VinylHub". vinylhub.com. Discogs.com.
  20. ^ "VinylHub". vinylhub.discogs.com. Discogs.com. Retrieved October 3, 2020.
  21. ^ "Filmogs". filmo.gs. Discogs.com.
  22. ^ "Gearogs". gearogs.com. Discogs.com.
  23. ^ . bookogs.com. Discogs.com. Archived from the original on March 20, 2015. Retrieved July 22, 2022.
  24. ^ . bookogs.com. Discogs.com. August 15, 2017. Archived from the original on August 17, 2017. Retrieved July 22, 2022.
  25. ^ "The Bookogs Marketplace is here! Start Selling Books Online". blog.discogs.com. Discogs.com. August 16, 2017. Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  26. ^ "100,000 Books | Forum | Bookogs Database & Marketplace". www.bookogs.com. Retrieved November 16, 2019.
  27. ^ . August 20, 2020. Archived from the original on August 20, 2020.
  28. ^ "Comicogs". comicogs.com. Discogs.com.
  29. ^ "Start Selling Comics on Comicogs! New Marketplace Launched". comicogs.com. Discogs.com. August 23, 2017. Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  30. ^ "Posterogs". posterogs.com. Discogs.com. September 6, 2017. Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  31. ^ "Track Your Poster Collection; Buy and Sell on Posterogs!". posterogs.com. Discogs.com. September 6, 2017. Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  32. ^ Lewandowski, Kevin (August 2007). "Open Data + API". Discogs (Discogs News forum post). Retrieved August 27, 2007.
  33. ^ a b Lewandowski, Kevin (August 2007). "Discogs Data License". Discogs. Retrieved August 27, 2007.
  34. ^ Lewandowski, Kevin (August 2007). "Discogs API Documentation". Discogs. Retrieved August 27, 2007.
  35. ^ "Terms of service changes". Discogs (forum thread). June 15, 2005. Retrieved August 27, 2007.
  36. ^ "API v2.0". Discogs. June 7, 2011. Retrieved March 15, 2012.
  37. ^ "API v2.0 Improvements". Discogs. November 1, 2011. Retrieved March 15, 2012.
  38. ^ "API Changes". Discogs. January 1, 2014. Retrieved April 16, 2014.
  39. ^ "API Changelog". Discogs. June 24, 2014. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
  40. ^ "Discogs API Documentation". Discogs. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  41. ^ "Discogs News - Discogs Version 3 - Part 1". Discogs. Retrieved February 16, 2011.
  42. ^ Lewandowski, Kevin (February 2008). "Restructuring of Moderation/Voting System". Discogs. Retrieved March 17, 2008.
  43. ^ Various (October 2008). "Fastest grown user". Discogs. Retrieved August 29, 2008.
  44. ^ "taghycardia - mp3 folders and tags normalizer". Tag Hycardia. taghycardia.info.
  45. ^ Sergey Serkov. "TagScanner - Многофункциональный редактор тэгов" [Multi-tag editor]. XD Lab (in Russian).
  46. ^ "Discogs Enhancer - Chrome Web Store". Chrome. July 26, 2021. Retrieved July 28, 2021.
  47. ^ Barcelona, Fluido Digital Web & Mobile Applications Studio in. "Discographic. App for iPhone and iPod Touch". Discographic. App for iPhone and iPod Touch.
  48. ^ "Stecotec Musikverwaltung Pro - Die Software für Ihre Musiksammlung".

External links

  • Official website  

discogs, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, secondary, tertiary, sources, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, february, 2022, learn, when, remove, this, template, messag. This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Discogs news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Discogs short for discographies is a database of information about audio recordings including commercial releases promotional releases and bootleg or off label releases While the site was originally created with a goal of becoming the largest online database of electronic music 2 the site now includes releases in all genres on all formats After the database was opened to contributions from the public rock music began to become the most prevalent genre listed 3 DiscogsType of siteMusicAvailable inEnglish German Spanish Portuguese BR French Italian Japanese Korean RussianHeadquartersPortland Oregon U S OwnerZink Media Inc Created byKevin LewandowskiIndustryInternetServicesDatabase online shoppingRevenueAdvertisement logging in removes all ads Marketplace Seller FeesURLwww wbr discogs wbr comCommercialPartiallyRegistrationOptionalUsers649 838 November 2022 update 1 LaunchedNovember 2000 22 years ago 2000 11 Current statusOnlineAs of 19 November 2022 update Discogs contains over 15 7 million releases by over 8 3 million artists across over 1 9 million labels contributed from over 644 000 contributor user accounts with these figures constantly growing as users continually add previously unlisted releases to the site over time 4 5 The Discogs servers currently hosted under the domain name discogs com are owned by Zink Media Inc and located in Portland Oregon United States 6 Contents 1 History 2 Milestones 3 Other projects 3 1 VinylHub 4 Previous projects 4 1 Filmogs 4 2 Gearogs 4 3 Bibliogs Bookogs 4 4 Comicogs 4 5 Posterogs 5 API 6 Contribution system 6 1 Version One V1 6 2 Version Two V2 6 3 Version Three V3 6 4 Version Four V4 7 Discogs aware metadata software 7 1 Tag editors 7 2 Other 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditThe discogs com domain name was registered in August 2000 7 and Discogs itself was launched in November 2000 by programmer DJ and music fan Kevin Lewandowski originally intended to be a large database of electronic music 8 Lewandowski s original goal was to build the most comprehensive database of electronic music organized around the artists labels and releases available in electronic genres In 2003 the Discogs system was completely rewritten 9 and in January 2004 it began to support other genres starting with hip hop Since then it has expanded to include rock and jazz in January 2005 and funk soul Latin and reggae in October of the same year In January 2006 blues and non music e g comedy records field recordings interviews were added Classical music started being supported in June 2007 and in September 2007 10 the final genres were turned on adding support for the Stage amp Screen Brass amp Military Children s and Folk World amp Country music genres allowing capture of virtually every single type of audio recording that has ever been released In June 2004 Discogs released a report claiming that it had 15 788 contributors and 260 789 releases 11 In late 2005 the Discogs marketplace was launched 12 In July 2007 a new system for sellers was introduced on the site called Market Price History It made information available to users who paid for a subscription though 60 days of information was free access to the past price items were sold for up to 12 months ago by previous sellers who had sold exactly the same release At the same time the US 12 per year charge for advanced subscriptions was abolished as it was felt that the extra features should be made available to all subscribers now that a different revenue stream had been found from sellers and purchasers Later that year all paid access features were discarded and full use of the site became free of charge allowing all users to view the full 12 month Market Price History of each item 2 Milestones EditDiscogs publishes information indicating the number of releases labels and artists presently in its database 4 along with its contributors 5 Date Master Releases Releases Artists Labels Contributors Note30 June 2004 none 260 789 unknown unknown 15 788 By mid 2004 releases crossed the quarter million mark 2006 none 500 000 unknown unknown unknown In 2006 releases passed the half million mark 25 July 2010 unknown 2 006 878 1 603 161 169 923 unknown By mid 2010 releases crossed the 2m mark 4 March 2014 unknown 4 698 683 3 243 448 576 324 185 283 By mid 2014 labels had crossed the half million mark 11 June 2014 unknown 4 956 221 3 375 268 612 264 194 432 In mid 2014 releases were passing the 5m mark 26 December 2014 unknown 5 505 617 3 638 804 680 131 215 337 By late 2014 contributors surpassed the 200k mark 30 May 2015 unknown 6 001 424 3 874 147 743 267 237 967 By mid 2015 releases surpassed the 6m mark 31 March 2016 1 001 012 7 005 177 4 455 198 892 271 281 579 By early 2016 releases surpassed the 7m mark and master releases passed a million 19 January 2017 1 120 336 8 049 341 4 854 378 1 014 930 329 366 By early 2017 releases surpassed the 8m mark 13 and labels passed a million 25 October 2017 1 254 825 9 083 017 5 182 134 1 091 609 379 527 By late 2017 releases surpassed the 9m mark 14 and artists surpassed the 5m mark 28 June 2018 1 377 906 10 000 000 5 284 282 1 143 442 418 140 On this date in 2018 releases surpassed the 10m mark 15 28 March 2019 1 514 106 11 001 697 5 410 939 1 198 273 456 949 On this date in 2019 releases surpassed the 11m mark 16 7 October 2019 1 614 729 11 666 550 6 091 280 1 343 778 unknown By late 2019 artists surpassed the 6m mark 17 28 July 2021 1 964 238 14 246 546 7 663 244 1 734 786 593 087 By mid 2021 releases surpassed the 14m mark and artists surpassed the 7 5m mark Master Release from 30 April 2009 the function was made available Contributors pages in mid 2019 these pages were limited to show only the top 5000 users with the total user count being made private although the total user count figure was re added sometime during early 2021 also the About Us page mentions More than 592 000 have contributed the site 18 Other projects EditDiscogs has so far created a further six online databases for collating information on related topics although only one VinylHub remains in use VinylHub Edit In mid 2014 a side project website called VinylHub 19 was started for users to add world wide information about record stores including location contact details what type of items they stocked etc In August 2020 it was relocated as part of the main Discogs website under subdomain vinylhub discogs com 20 Previous projects EditFive other online databases were previously created however they have since closed Filmogs Edit In late 2014 the company released a new beta website called Filmogs 21 Users could add their physical film collections on VHS DVD Blu ray LaserDisc or any other type of physical film release to the database and buy and sell film releases in the global marketplace The site was closed down on 31 August 2020 Gearogs Edit Gearogs was launched as a beta in late 2014 at the same time as Filmogs 22 The site let users add and track music equipment including items such as synths drum machines sequencers samplers audio software and any other electronic music making equipment The site was closed down on 31 August 2020 Bibliogs Bookogs Edit At the start of 2015 the company began Bibliogs as another beta project 23 Users could submit information about their books physical or electronic different versions and editions and also connect different credits writers illustrators translators publishers etc to these books 21 000 books were submitted by the end of 2016 The project was in beta phase until 15 August 2017 24 when it reached more than 31 000 book titles was renamed Bookogs following legal issues with the original name and removed Beta state notice from the main page The next day the Marketplace Beta feature was presented 25 On 8 June 2019 the project reached a total amount of 100 000 books 26 The site was closed down on 31 August 2020 counting more than 154 000 books and 345 000 credits 27 Comicogs Edit Comicogs 28 launched around the same time as Bookogs as a means for comic collectors and enthusiasts to catalog their collections and create an archive of comic releases Similar to Bookogs users could contribute comics manga graphic novels and strips to the database along with information on credits publishers writers etc 18 000 comics were submitted by the start of 2018 The Comicogs marketplace was launched on 23 August 2017 29 allowing users to buy and sell comics from across the world The site was closed down on 3 August 2020 Posterogs Edit In September 2017 the company launched Posterogs 30 Posterogs was the only Discogs site to launch a database and marketplace simultaneously 31 The scope of Posterogs was left broad at the time of launch with the company opting to let the community define what type of posters flyers or similar should be included in the database While non music related items were fully acceptable for inclusion much of the primary focus seemed to be on music posters such as gig tour posters album promo posters and promotional flyers in keeping with Discogs music theme though there were also many film posters in the database As with all other databases users could save items to their Collection and Wantlist in addition to buying and selling in the marketplace The site was closed down on 31 August 2020 API EditIn mid August 2007 Discogs data became publicly accessible via a RESTful XML based API and a license that allowed specially attributed use but did not allow anyone to alter transform or build upon the data 32 33 34 The license has since been changed to a public domain one Prior to the advent of this license and API Discogs data was only accessible via the Discogs web site s HTML interface and was intended to be viewed only using web browsers 35 The HTML interface remains the only authorized way to modify Discogs data 33 On 7 June 2011 version 2 of the API was released 36 Notable in this release was that a license key was no longer required the default response was changed from XML to JSON and the 5000 queries per day limit was removed although a limit of 2000 image lookups per days was introduced On 1 November 2011 a major update to version 2 of the API was released 37 This new release dropped support for XML data is always returned in JSON format however the monthly data dumps of new data are only provided in XML format On 1 February 2014 Discogs modified their API so that image requests will now require OAuth authorization requiring each user of third party applications to have a Discogs application ID with image requests now limited to 1 000 per day Additionally the Premium API service was dropped 38 On 24 June 2014 Discogs deprecated their XML API in lieu of a JSON formatted API 39 Discogs also allows full XML downloads of its Release Artist and Label data through the data discogs com subdomain The recommendations API is not publicly available 40 Contribution system EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The data in Discogs comes from submissions contributed by users who have registered accounts on the site The system has gone through four major revisions Version One V1 Edit All incoming submissions were checked for formal and factual correctness by privileged users called moderators or mods for short who had been selected by site management Submissions and edits would not become visible or searchable until they received a single positive vote from a mod An even smaller pool of super moderators called editors had the power to vote on proposed edits to artist and label data Version Two V2 Edit This version introduced the concept of submission limits which prevented new users from submitting more than 2 3 releases for moderation The number of possible submissions by a user increased on a logarithmic scale The purpose of this was two fold 1 it helped keep the submission queue fairly small and manageable for moderators and 2 it allowed the new user to acclimatise themselves slowly with the many formatting rules and guidelines of submitting to Discogs Releases required a number of votes to be accepted into the database initially the number of votes required was from four different moderators but in time the amount was decreased to three and then two Version Three V3 Edit V3 launched in August 2007 Submission limits were eliminated allowing each user to submit an unlimited number of updates and new entries New releases added to the database were explicitly marked as Unmoderated with a top banner and updates to existing items such as releases artists or labels were not shown or available to search engines or casual visitors until they were approved by the moderators 41 Version Four V4 Edit This system launched on 10 March 2008 New submissions and edits currently take effect immediately Any time a new release is added or old release edited that entry becomes flagged as needing votes initially review but this term caused confusion A flagged entry is marked as a full yellow bar across a release in the list views and like version three a banner on the submission itself although initially this banner was omitted Any item can be voted on at any time even if it is not flagged Votes consist of a rating of the correctness and completeness of the full set of data for an item not just the most recent changes as assessed by users who have been automatically determined by an undisclosed algorithm to be experienced and reliable enough to be allowed to cast votes An item s average vote is displayed with the item s data 42 The ranking system has also changed in v4 In v3 rank points were only awarded to submitters when a submission was Accepted by moderator votes While in v4 rank points are now awarded immediately when a submission is made regardless of the accuracy of the information and what votes it eventually receives if any 43 Discogs aware metadata software EditTag editors Edit Main article Tag editor ASMT MP3 Tagger single release tagger foobar2000 freeware media player and music management software with a plugin Helium Music Manager music management software with a plugin Jaikoz shareware OS X Windows Linux spreadsheet based tag editor Kid3 open source project tagger for all common music formats Mp3tag freeware tag editor batch and spreadsheet interfaces OrangeCD Catalog music management software puddletag a free and open source tag editor written for PyQt taghycardia 44 freeware automated MP3 tagger Tagog Linux audio file tagger TagScanner 45 freeware tag editor with Discogs FreeDB TrackType org support The GodFather freeware tag editor The Tagger MP3 and AAC formats tag editor for OS X TigoTago spreadsheet based tag editorOther Edit Album Art Downloader Discogs cover art downloads Discogs Bar Discogs navigation and search control toolbar for Firefox Discogs Enhancer Discogs extension adding extra functionality to Google Chrome inc dark mode 46 Discographic for Discogs Client for Apple devices for iOS 47 MP3 Filenamer online MP3 file name generator based on Discogs release data Stecotec Musikverwaltung Pro Music database software by stecotec de 48 Music Collector Music database software by collectorz com WWW Discogs Perl module for interfacing with the Discogs API XLD X Lossless Decoder a CD ripper and audio file converter for OS XSee also EditList of online music databases Global Electronic Music MarketplaceReferences Edit Discogs contributors Discogs com November 19 2022 Retrieved November 19 2022 a b Discogs what is it where it came from and how to use it Retrieved October 8 2019 Discogs Reaches 10 Million Releases Discogs Blog June 28 2018 Retrieved October 8 2019 a b Explore on Discogs Discogs May 2 2022 Retrieved May 2 2022 a b Discogs Contributors Discogs com May 2 2022 Retrieved May 2 2022 Whois discogs com www whois com Retrieved February 18 2019 DisCogs com WHOIS DNS amp Domain Info DomainTools WHOIS 2016 Retrieved February 9 2016 Carnes Richard March 26 2010 Discogs Vinyl revolution Resident Advisor Retrieved October 15 2010 What Why v2 0 Discogs Archived from the original on 22 June 2004 Retrieved 2 October 2008 Final genres turned on Discogs Archived from the original on November 1 2019 Discogs Archived from the original on 29 June 2004 Retrieved 27 March 2013 Garber David February 26 2015 How Discogs Dragged Record Collecting Into the 21st Century Vice com Retrieved March 13 2022 SoLil January 7 2017 8 Million Releases In The Discogs Database blog discogs com Discogs com Retrieved January 19 2017 SoLil October 4 2017 Discogs Music Database Reaches 9 Million Releases blog discogs com Discogs com Retrieved October 25 2017 Moon Ray June 29 2018 Discogs Reaches 10 Million Releases In The Database blog discogs com Discogs com Retrieved July 10 2018 Another Milestone In Just Nine Months 11 Million Releases On Discogs Discogs Blog March 28 2019 Retrieved March 29 2019 Discogs Releases 2019 Mid Year Marketplace Report finance yahoo com Retrieved October 7 2019 Disogs com About Us Discogs com Retrieved July 28 2021 More than 592 000 people have contributed some piece of knowledge VinylHub vinylhub com Discogs com VinylHub vinylhub discogs com Discogs com Retrieved October 3 2020 Filmogs filmo gs Discogs com Gearogs gearogs com Discogs com Bibliogs bookogs com Discogs com Archived from the original on March 20 2015 Retrieved July 22 2022 Bibliogs is Now Bookogs bookogs com Discogs com August 15 2017 Archived from the original on August 17 2017 Retrieved July 22 2022 The Bookogs Marketplace is here Start Selling Books Online blog discogs com Discogs com August 16 2017 Retrieved April 15 2018 100 000 Books Forum Bookogs Database amp Marketplace www bookogs com Retrieved November 16 2019 Goal for the end of 2016 Forum Bookogs Database August 20 2020 Archived from the original on August 20 2020 Comicogs comicogs com Discogs com Start Selling Comics on Comicogs New Marketplace Launched comicogs com Discogs com August 23 2017 Retrieved April 15 2018 Posterogs posterogs com Discogs com September 6 2017 Retrieved April 15 2018 Track Your Poster Collection Buy and Sell on Posterogs posterogs com Discogs com September 6 2017 Retrieved April 15 2018 Lewandowski Kevin August 2007 Open Data API Discogs Discogs News forum post Retrieved August 27 2007 a b Lewandowski Kevin August 2007 Discogs Data License Discogs Retrieved August 27 2007 Lewandowski Kevin August 2007 Discogs API Documentation Discogs Retrieved August 27 2007 Terms of service changes Discogs forum thread June 15 2005 Retrieved August 27 2007 API v2 0 Discogs June 7 2011 Retrieved March 15 2012 API v2 0 Improvements Discogs November 1 2011 Retrieved March 15 2012 API Changes Discogs January 1 2014 Retrieved April 16 2014 API Changelog Discogs June 24 2014 Retrieved November 17 2015 Discogs API Documentation Discogs Retrieved March 14 2017 Discogs News Discogs Version 3 Part 1 Discogs Retrieved February 16 2011 Lewandowski Kevin February 2008 Restructuring of Moderation Voting System Discogs Retrieved March 17 2008 Various October 2008 Fastest grown user Discogs Retrieved August 29 2008 taghycardia mp3 folders and tags normalizer Tag Hycardia taghycardia info Sergey Serkov TagScanner Mnogofunkcionalnyj redaktor tegov Multi tag editor XD Lab in Russian Discogs Enhancer Chrome Web Store Chrome July 26 2021 Retrieved July 28 2021 Barcelona Fluido Digital Web amp Mobile Applications Studio in Discographic App for iPhone and iPod Touch Discographic App for iPhone and iPod Touch Stecotec Musikverwaltung Pro Die Software fur Ihre Musiksammlung External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Discogs amp oldid 1131632723, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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