Instead, Aurous grabs its music from more than 120 sources across the Internet, according to a Billboard interview with Aurous co-founder Andrew Sampson.
Aurous is already being called the Popcorn Time of music, but that’s not quite right. Popcorn Time streams its content via pirated movies being shared online via the BitTorrent protocol. In effect, Popcorn Time is a BitTorrent client that shares the content you’ve downloaded with others while you’re watching the movie. Aurous, on the other hand, uses the application programming interfaces (APIs) of other music services to deliver content to users. Aurous does use BitTorrent, but only to deliver search results from those public sources—not the actual music.
While Aorous says its sources are legitimate, the major music labels dispute that. Atlantic Records, Capitol Records, Sony Music, UMG, and Warner Bros. are all suing Aorous for copyright infringement. “
Three days ago, Defendants launched a service that blatantly infringes the Plaintiffs’ copyrights by enabling Internet users to search for, stream, and download pirated copies of Plaintiffs’ sound recordings for immediate listening and later playback,” according to a copy of the complaint hosted by the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
The impact on you at home: Aorous is a nice looking app with handy features like a customizable UI, local file support, and music library management. But unless you really hate ads, there’s little reason to use Aorous. Getting free music from fully approved sources is easy with Spotify’s ad-supported tier, plus you get some limited features on mobile as well as PC. As for music library management there are tons of apps out there to help with that such as Plex.
Aorous may be a questionable program to use right now, but we’ll be keeping an eye on it as the developers plan to fight the recording industry’s legal challenge.