Discogz.blogspot -


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Discogz.blogspot -

It is impossible to discuss Discogz.Blogspot without addressing the elephant in the room: Copyright. The blog operates in a legal grey area. While many of the records shared are "orphan works" (copyright holders unknown or unreachable), many are still technically protected.

Between 2015 and 2018, the original Discogz.Blogspot (and its .blogspot.com subdomain) faced significant pressure from the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Blogspot, owned by Google, began towing the corporate line. Many links died. Some posts were "deleted by the blog owner." For a while, the community thought the site was dead.

However, the name "Discogz" has proven to be a hydra. When one blog gets pruned, three sprout up in different country domains or on alternative platforms (like Wordpress or even Telegram). The "Blogspot" aspect became a fortress of anonymity—easy to set up, easy to mirror. discogz.blogspot

The "Z" in the name hinted at the blog’s sensibility. It suggested a grittier, perhaps slightly rebellious approach to music curation. Unlike the clinical data-entry nature of the larger Discogs database, blogs like discogz offered context. A post wasn't just a tracklist; it was a history lesson. It often included notes on the pressing plant, the backstory of the obscure artist, and why that specific breakbeat was essential for sampling.

You might ask: With Discogs acquiring databases like VinylHub and improving its image upload system, why bother with an old Blogspot site? It is impossible to discuss Discogz

The answer lies in obscurity.

Modern music databases suffer from "Hit Single Bias"—common releases are perfectly documented, but rare white labels, test pressings, and small-run lathe cuts fall through the cracks. Discogz.blogspot operates on a different principle: "I own this record, so I will scan it." Between 2015 and 2018, the original Discogz

Furthermore, the Discogs marketplace has become flooded with flippers and bots. Consequently, collectors have started using archives like Discogz.blogspot to create private trading circles. You cannot buy a record from the blog, but you can verify the exact stamper number of a rare pressing before you spend $200 on eBay.