Posted on 02/03/2007 12:42:15 PM PST by Dallas59
Am I the only person who would have no trouble continuing to live well if I never bought another music CD?
Only CD I buy anymore is the tax program. If I want music, the old piano sits over there ready to go at any time even if the power grid is down again.
The RIAA and the member labels generally screw the artists out of as much money as they possibly can. However none of this excuses stealing music any more than the UAW making crappy cars excuses auto theft.
No doubt about it.
I am so sick and tired of hearing those in the music industry whine.
If they don't want anyone to listen to their songs 'for free' stop putting them on the airwaves. Or at least maybe those "artists" should PAY for the free airtime (advertizing) they get, all things being equal. Maybe then they will shut up.
"We sue Dead People -- and 9 year olds"
Even Wierd Al thinks the RIAA is a joke: Don't Download This Song.
Sure, price yourselves right out of the market. Thats the ticket to success, BABY !!!
So how is limewire diff from the old napster/bittorrent stealing s/w?
LP's went for 5 to 6 dollars in 1983. I have several major hit albums from that time that still have the price on them. LP's cost more to make than CD's. The RIAA is very good at lying.
When "Snoopy Dog Dog Bling Bling Kill A Cop and White People" and his ilk started to flood the airwaves....I stopped buying..
I am so sick and tired of hearing those in the music industry whine.If they don't want anyone to listen to their songs 'for free' stop putting them on the airwaves. Or at least maybe those "artists" should PAY for the free airtime (advertizing) they get, all things being equal. Maybe then they will shut up.
Your comment put me in mind of something that I read yesterday:
About 10-15 years ago, music companies told a bunch of NZ TV stations that they had to pay fees in order to screen music videos. The TV stations disagreed, saying that they were providing free advertising for the music companies, and if they didn't like that then they'd simply stop playing music videos. So they stopped playing all music videos.(from Peter Gutmann's essay, "A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection")After a few weeks, cracks stated to appear as the music companies realised just how badly they needed the TV channels. One of the music companies bought an entire prime-time advertising block (at phenomenal cost, this wasn't a single 30-second slot but every slot in an entire prime-time ad break) just to play one single new music video.
Shortly afterwards, music videos reappeared on TV. The details of the settlement were never made public, but I imagine it consisted of a bunch of music company execs on their knees begging the TV stations to start playing music videos again and let's please never bring this matter up again.
Nope. The RIAA can dry up and wither away. The Music industry is a joke these days. I'll admit that I have purchased CDs in the past year, but just to fill in some gaps in my music collection. But I can't recall the last NEW release I've purchased.
Lets hope Steve Jobs and Apple conitue standing up to the music industry. He told them to pound sand when they wanted a cut of every iPod sold. Yet Bill Gates/Microsoft gave that away. Also, Microsoft crippled the Zune' wifi system to bend over backwards to the RIAA.
The RIAA should face antitrust action.
You might be interested in reading the Peter Gutmann essay I just linked to in post #15...
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