I've been getting a lot of this error lately. I'm using Zune Pass, and all of my music downloaded using it. I've deleted the song, and when I want to redownload, Zune Marketplace says you need to buy this song (cannot be downloaded as part of Zune Pass anymore).
Well, then what's the use of Zune Pass? I was just shocked to know this morning that all of my Oasis song falls under this "delete-and-purchase" scheme. Even though Zune Pass doesn't actually grants us ownership of the song, we still need to buy for certain songs. Sigh.
Now the tagline "instant music collection" doesn't sound quite true anymore, probably more like "instant crippled music collection".
Come on Microsoft, you can fix this!
Zuning from Singapore!
Microsoft/Zune doesn't control the availability... if the content owner decides to stop subscription availability, or decides to completely stop making content available at all ("not available"), it's their call. Thankfully, many distributors still participate in Pass... and more and more content appears, even as some disappear.
By the way, in the case of Oasis... basically their whole catalog has been removed and can't even be purchased from Marketplace. It's also been removed from Apple's iTunes Store. If you want to buy it, it's CD time.
danielgaytan wrote:I love Zune, but I don't agree with that dishonest scheme to get more of our money.
Corey Shuster 2009 Microsoft Zune MVP My responses come only from personal experience.
Anyway, the expired WMA downloads are as good as nothing, so Microsoft probably should provide a "Delete All Expired Music" or "Buy All Expired Music" button instead of throwing errors.
My current workflow for this kind of thing is:
And I have to do that one-by-one.