Personally, I've made the following pledges and hope they inspire someone:
- I will not distribute MP3
I deal with a lot of original content, and after mix-down there's a choice--how to encode it to let someone hear it over the Internet? I will always choose FLAC or Ogg Vorbis, and refuse to send an MP3. - I will maintain my personal collection in Ogg Vorbis
When I buy a new CD, the first thing I do (usually) is run it through GNOME Sound Juicer (which supports OGG and FLAC by default) and create Ogg Vorbis files so I can load it onto music player (software) or portable media player (hardware), and to protect the data from being damaged by wear on the CD. This is the cheif method that OGG could become ubiquitous. Transcoding MP3 to OGG is lossy (it's much better to start from the original sampling), and any audiophile would tell you it's not worth it. Therefor, the most important source of OGG files is at the source (audio CD, FLAC, etc.), and we can become less dependent on MP3 by replacing MP3 files with newly-encoded OGG files. - I will not buy a portable media player that does not support free codecs like Ogg Vorbis
Okay, I still want to be able to listen to MP3, but in order to support pledge #2, I need my portable media device to support OGG out of the box. I personally have a COWON (iAudio) T2, but there are many other options from abroad. - I prefer Ogg Vorbis Internet radio over other formats
Hey, if OGG has the same fidelity at a lower bandwidth (you'll note the rates on Internet streams have a lower average), then we're saving the host bandwidth by preferring an Ogg Vorbis stream. Also, since Internet radio is struggling with royalties, why don't they save themselves money by dropping their MP3 streams and providing only Ogg Vorbis streams? I feel that most Internet radio listeners would not mind having to download an additional codec (if they even need to) to make the switch.
Note that DRM is not even in my vocabulary--it seems like the only "solution" to DRM is to avoid it at all costs. This business of limiting where, when and who can listen to a file (that someone has paid for, mind you) is nonsense. This is exactly the reason we dropped vinyl albums and magnetic tapes for compact discs--so we could hear the same thing again whenever and wherever we want.