Posted on 04/03/2002 6:59:49 AM PST by Darkshadow
I take one of my studio/professionally recorded CDs, put it into a computer, and burn a copy.
Which of those three steps constitutes stealing?
The problem with the situation outlined in the article is that the copying is a service provided by a business for the profit of that business.
It is my understanding that "fair use" includes the copying material for personal use, and not for monetary gain. For example, you can record an NFL game off the TV so you can watch it later (say when you get home from work), but you can't take that recording of the game and use it to somehow profit monetarily (i.e., you can't rebroadcast the game, or part of it, and you can't compile highlights from different games and sell said compilation).
Reimbursed them for what? The source is my property, the blank is my property, and the computer is my property.
The idea that I did not pay for the "first one" is your fabrication.
Are we in agreement then; that nothing in this article constitutes stealing?
No we're not.
The Copy Cat CD Duplication machines charge just $5, plus the purchase of a $2 blank disk, to make digitally identical copies of CDs in under 10 minutes.
No, because the Copy Cat CD Duplication service described in the article (and the excerpted above) is based upon a business model that depends upon copyrighted material on which they have no claim. If the service were completely free it may have a chance of passing the "smell test."
BTW, I am largely arguing here from a moral position. I am not a lawyer, and I don't even play one on TV. So regardless of the particular legalities of this Copy Cat business, I think it is morally wrong to make money from the work of others while failing to compensate them for their original efforts. Like I said before though, borrowing your buddy's CD to copy does not carry the same moral dilemma as does a transaction involving money. In the former, the artists loses on the opportunity cost of your purchase of the CD you borrowed. Justifiably you could say the artist really loses nothing because you would not purchase the music anyway. However, when money is involved, the artist loses the not only an opportunity cost, but loses the money you are willing to give the seller of the copied music who does not have the legal right to sell the product.
Bottom line: it's ok to trade and borrow music from friends, but it is wrong to purchase material from pirates. The Copy Cat business is essentially a more flexible form of pirating. Instead of the pirates copying thousands of CDs at a time to sell on the street, the Copy Cat business is scaled back to afford piracy on demand for individual consumers.
Don't services like this already exist in US record stores, whereby consumers can mix and match tracks from different CDs? The difference is that in the US business model, the record stores have to pay a cut to the artist/record label. Should Copy Cat develop their business along these lines, then no moral dilemma exists because the artist is justly compensated for their work.
FYI, your ol stompin grounds?
I can use a gun to rob a bank. It is me robbing the bank, not the gun.
The use of the machine described in this article, to copy legally purchased music/data for ones' own use, does not constitute stealing.
OK, you have a point here. But these machines are an awful lot like leaving a gun outside your bank for use in a robbery should someone choose. The company that put the machines in place know full well how people will use them.
...coin-operated CD duplication machines fitted with software to circumvent anti-copying measures built into some CDs.
They include the software because they know the material copied does not belong to them, and they profit directly from each copy of protected material. That's not piracy?
A virtual quote from the anti-gun manufacturer group.
"They include the software because they know the material copied does not belong to them.."
True. They know that it belongs to me..the legal and rightful owner of the protected material.
My local auto garage has computers they hook up to my car which speak GM. When repairing my car, no duty is owed to GM as it is my car being repaired.
"..and they profit directly from each copy of protected material. That's not piracy?"
Only if they manage to get a copy without my permission. They are not providing a product, the provide a service.
This is a pretty weak attempt at linking me with the anti-gun crowd and you have no basis to make such an assumption. There is a world of difference between guns and the Copy Cat machine. Guns have a dual purpose, both offensive and defensive. The gun manufacturer would have no way of knowing exactly how consumers will use the guns they purchase. Also, the gun manufacturer does not make money on each round fired from the guns it sells, but Copy Cat does make money for each CD copied in its machines. Does the software that circumvents the anti-copying technology embedded in (some) CDs have any such dual, or multiple purpose? The answer is no, this software is used for one thing only.
They know that it belongs to me..the legal and rightful owner of the protected material.
If you buy a CD that has the anti-copy technology embedded within, your purchase is a tacit agreement not to copy the CD. So you own the CD itself, but not the rights to copy the music. The record producers are kind enough to give you the added obstacle of anti-copy protection to help you live up to your end of the deal. Of course, if you don't like the terms of the sale, then don't buy the product. (I actually recommend the "don't buy it" strategy because I think the record companies are being penny-wise and pound-foolish. Anti-copy technologies ultimately pit record companies against their customers - not a good business strategy in my estimate. Many music consumers will find alternatives.)
...they hook up to my car which speak GM. When repairing my car, no duty is owed to GM as it is my car being repaired.
It's your car alright, but it sounds like GM is the ONLY place you can take the car for service. It's not a "duty" per se, but the technology used by GM binds you to their service. Don't you think that GM has included a "duty" in the pricing of their services to which you are beholden?
They are not providing a product, the provide a service.
This raises an interesting point because the distinction between goods and services is blurred. Products that fullfill needs or wants essentially provide services to the consumer. For example, when you buy a car you are purchasing transportation. Likewise when you purchase CDs, you are buying entertainment. The ethereal nature of music itself (not the media) makes it hard to identify simply as a "product." Virtually everything consumers purchase provide them with some sort of service. Most successful companies recognize that their products are more than just widgets. Consumers associate all kinds of properties and characteristics with products that help marketers and advertisers differentiate products in the market place and develop a service orientation to the customer.
Anyway, no real disagreement that Copy Cat is a service oriented business, but so what? The services Copy Cat provides are based upon the reproduction of protected material that does not belong to them, and they gain profit everytime someone infringes on the copyright of another.
I see no problem reselling or giving away your paperback. Reselling a paperback (or a CD) means effectively transferring the rights to use the copyrighted material to another. What would be wrong is if you were to reproduce the book and then sell the reproduction.
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