Posted on 12/14/2002 6:45:48 AM PST by new cruelty
Record labels together with technology companies are meeting consumers' desire to access music online. Looking back over the past year, the legitimate marketplace has grown by leaps and bounds. Four different services now offer content from every major music company, and several others provide a rich array of music and listening options. Music fans can enjoy hundreds of thousands of tracks in many different ways.
But what these services do not yet have is enough customers. No business can be expected to compete against an illegal service that is offering the same product for free.
If the legitimate services are to have a chance to succeed in the marketplace, we must take action against those who trample the copyrights of songwriters, artists and record labels.
The notion that pursuing peer-to-peer network piracy violates personal privacy is just plain wrong.
First, no one enjoys the right to commit a federal crime anonymously, and downloading or uploading copyrighted works such as software, movies or music without permission is clearly illegal.
Second, users open up their computers to the peer-to-peer networks, not copyright owners. It's like walking down the street holding up a sign and then being mad that someone has read it.
And third, colleges and others can address this problem in non-invasive ways, such as using filtering systems and bandwidth-management controls.
Ironically, it's the peer-to-peer networks that actually put users' privacy at greatest risk. A recent study by Hewlett-Packard showed that typical users of a network such as Kazaa inadvertently expose personal files, including credit card information and e-mail, for millions to rummage through.
Given the scope of the problem, we are taking measured steps to combat online piracy. These efforts are a necessary means to an important end, which is an expanding and dynamic legitimate online marketplace -- a reality achieved after a year of progress and multiple new licensing agreements from the major record companies.
(Excerpt) Read more at story.news.yahoo.com ...
I don't use these peer-to-peer services, but IMHO it's just desserts for an industry in dire need of being destroyed.
flame away
Isn't that a matter for the artists and the labels to sort out between themselves? Nobody holds a gun to the artist's heads to make them sign with record labels. Seems to me that most of the screwing going on between artists and labels is consensual in nature.
There are certainly valid arguments to be made for whichever side of this controversy you find yourself. Record labels have indeed screwed artists, and RIAA comes off as a bunch of church lady blowhards who are trying to line their pockets at the expense of the truly talented. However, I just can't help thinking that music pirates who justify their theft of other people's property by citing the misdeeds of others don't have much of a moral high ground to stand on.
(And no, I'm not insinuating in any way that you are a music pirate. Its the ones who admit they do it but don't have any moral problem with stealing other people's work who bug me).
Has anyone heard of these Services? I haven't heard even so much as a rumor of them.
But once that happens, and it will, the arguments surrounding piracy will be stripped entirely of all "social justice" fig leaves. I'll wait to see if "ripping off record companies that only screw artists" becomes "ripping off stupid rock stars who shouldn't be that rich anyway."
Knowing what moral contortions folks assume to get free stuff (how many Liberals are there in the world?), I've got my suspicions.
I think the issue in the music industry all comes down to market forces. In a another scenario, like cigarettes, the price was raised (for whatever reason) in such a way that it far exceeded perceived value. In response, a black market grew which met the demand of the consumer.
In the music industry, the demand for a $20 CD does not exist at the level that the industry hopes for and the perceived value and content of today's standard musical offering is not enough to compel the consumer to buy it. I would argue that most individuals are interested in persuing legal means of acquiring their music, but with the current pricing structure, the market convulsed and peer-to-peer sharing became the preferred means of the consumer to acquire their music.
I'm not condoning or condeming it, just making a statement of what I see are the facts of the situation. The music industry can either profit or perish by those hard facts.
If I had a choice of watching first-run movies in my comfortable Barcalounger and using my very good home theater, or in a dark cold barn with screaming babies, 500 other people all coughing and shedding virus, sticky floors, and popcorn that you need a second mortgage to afford, guess which one I'd select?
How could we stop it now? The sites don't even have to be in this country or operate by our laws.
I don't think we can - hence the dilemma. RIAA (aka "Buggy Whips 'R Us") can't sue everybody who ever used the Internet to download a song or a movie. They can't identify the "criminals" to begin with and spit on the concept of personal freedom by even trying. And your point about offshore sites is very apt - does RIAA intend to sue every single person in the entire world with a modem and a dialup connection? Pass me the (hopefully) cheap popcorn - I want to watch them try.
Excellent point. All excellent points, as a matter of fact. Who wants to pay that much for a CD that might have one or two decent songs but is padded with crap?
I guess auto workers who steal SUV's off the assembley line are justified, since the product is prohibitively expensive and it "screws" all the suppliers who don't get a big slice of the profits.
The RIAA and labels have had a virtual monopoly on popular entertainment in this country for 80 years.
Napster is the cultural equivalent of the Boston Tea Party.
I hail the effort.
They should put a page in the liner notes showing Hilary Rosen having sex with farm animals - that might be worth a sawbuck ...
Maybe so, but I have a different view.
Intellectual property law in this country is so badly written and rife with special interests (can anyone say "Disney Copyright Giveaway of 1998"?) that the farce had to come to this sooner or later.
For Hilary Rosen to hide behind "the law" is spurious, when she and her ilk bought the law they're hiding behind.
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