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Damages of $1.9 million could backfire on music industry
Interesting read.
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Not exactly the employee/employer relationship that assigns the copyright to the employer. By default the copyright should be retained by the artist. If that arguement wins, the record companies will lose their catalog rights, and the artist will get them back. I hate to say it but i think this lawsuit would be the best thing that could happen for the artist. of course how many artist would publically say i support sueing my fans after seeing what kind of backlash happens when you do that (see metalica) |
i wonder if the CP i d/l all day is copyrighted... hrmmm
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By the way the smart artists get a writing credit so they do get copyright and larger royalties. I'm all for companies and artist having copyright protection, BUT copyright was never rmeant to last for 95 years or 70 years after someon dies. The old way of 56 years max was more than enough time to make money from something. Eventually there will be no such thing call "public domain" except for stuff made before 1923. If someone or some company made a song/movie/tv show in 1952 and still hasn't made any money, too bad. It should be public domain. Some has yet to epxlain to me why someon's great grandkids should be getting paid for what their ancestor did. They need to have REAL jobs. |
fuckers want her soul
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The tide is slowly turning. I like the message it sends.
I have a few horses in this race. I am selling music I recorded 20 years ago with my "big hair" 80's band. I will make more money from it this year, than I did back then. As an artist, I think I should have eternal copyright protection ... just sayin. |
The amount is kind of ridiculous. The songs are 99 cents on itunes.
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:thumbsup |
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in fact in canada and Europe there are actual trade organizations setup to specifically go against the policy. http://torrentfreak.com/moby-the-ria...banded-090620/ moby just declared that riaa should be disbanded radio heads agreed to testify against the riaa for a student accused of copyright infringement for their songs. the fact is when the record company is taking such a lion share of the royalties, forcing you to pay all of the production cost (including 20+ hour cost for $7/hour grunt work) authorizing file sharing for personal use is the best way to self promote your music. |
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a seeder on the torrent. She had 1700 songs on it and only got sued for 24 songs because contrary to the belief that the record company is trying to crucify her, she got off light. |
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You are just spouting dumb shit. |
I have a feeling eventually one of two things is going to happen with the music industry.
They will either eventually get strict enough laws on the books that allow the RIAA to shut things down at the ISP and hosting level and they will come down hard on anyone who uses torrent applications (IE if you if use a torrent you may have to prove to your ISP you are using it for a legal reason) and they will really put a clamp on this. OR They will kind of give up. Enough rulings will be made in favor of the pirates that the RIAA will give up and the music industry will drastically change its business model. I have no idea which way it will go, but I do know this much. If you thought artists got screwed by record labels now, just wait until the labels decide the new business model will be giving away the records and taking pieces of the artists other streams of revenue. The main reason you don't see a lot of artists coming out against illegal downloading is because it can still benefit them. They know they will make very little money in actual record royalties, but they can make a lot of money touring, selling merchandise, licensing their music to games, movies, TV and commercials and getting performance royalties from the radio. When the labels decide they can no longer sell albums like they want, they will start demanding a piece of those other things. Of course the bands/artists can choose not to sign with them and go it alone, but if you want to be a big, popular worldwide act you need the push that a major label can give you. I have seen people say they don't buy albums because the bands don't get enough of a royalty from the sale of the album. Don't be shocked when you see those same bands now having to turn over portions of their touring income and publishing and other revenue to the record companies. When they give away those records the artists will be making significantly less in the end. |
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BTW : if you shoplift a 99 cent item and get caught do you think the judge will fine you 99 cents? :1orglaugh |
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not be enough money in it for the artist to go into the studio and the result will be that your music choices will dwindle down to "Chocolate Rain". |
What would the backlash be at? The recording industry is already dead. What do they have to lose? When the top albums have trouble selling a couple hundred thousand copies...I'd say that they are already dead.
The top album sales these days wouldn't have even cracked the top 40 in the 70's or 80's. So their isn't anything left to lose. Hell, their aren't even any record stores left, and I don't think this ruling is gonna stop very many people from buying the latest single on ITunes. |
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The average music listener has finite time. If they have enough music that they are entertained for a short period of time they listen in the car each day they are happy. There are also a small number of people who collect as much music as they can get their hands on. However, are these people going to then go out and support every act that they download when they come to town? Hardly. They may go see a few each month, but most they will download their album, listen to it a few times and then forget all about it or pull it out every few months and give it a listen, but they aren't going to be going out and buying concert tickets and seeing live shows 4-5 nights a week. I'm not for one second saying that record labels have the best taste or that they speak for everyone, but they get inundated with albums every day of hopeful artists. If we get to the point where they just give it all away they have nothing to lose and no reason to reject any of these people. They will just sign them to a ridiculous contract and put their album up for download. If somehow it catches on and the band starts selling tickets and playing before bigger crowds the label will then start to support them and cash in all these revenue streams. We the fans will suddenly find ourselves swarmed with hundred of albums each week to choose from. They will shift the burden of sifting through the sludge onto the fans. But the fans will have gotten what they wanted. They now get it for free. |
There is no backlash to be had. What are people going to do? The RIAA is a lobbying group, they don't give a shit what people think about them. The RIAA is the muscle, they are suppose to look bad so the artists can act like they are all about the fans and not dirty their hands with this sort of thing.
The media companies are in this for the long haul now and they want the laws to change in their favor. Honestly, it doesn't matter what people think or they feel toward towards the RIAA. If they can't download their favorite music for free, they will start buying it again. People buy into artists, not the lobbying group or the record labels behind them. The masses never win in the end. Look throughout history, the minority always ends up controlling the majority. The internet will be no different. Big companies will get back all they've lost and then some in the very near future. Not saying that's a good thing, but it's just the way the world works. |
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the only distribution that they could prove was to someone who was authorized to download the content they could not prove any other downloads because kazza didn't keep those kinds of records she was convicted for downloading period, the fined her based on the assumption that other people "must" have downloaded from her folder. |
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vcr diamond rio (mp3 ripping) cd burner cable tv the courts seem to ultimately rule in favor of the masses you have to understand that if the she gets the right to declare bankruptcy on the debt then all that is necessary for this to turn into a world class nightmare of publicity for the RIAA would be for one of her kids to "confess" that they downloaded the songs. The story would change from she deserved it to the big bad RIAA dragging a mother thru the courts, trying to take her house for something she never actually did. If you think the demands for making "file sharing for personal use" being a legally defined fair use are strong now imagine how bad it will get when that happens. How easy would it be to just fake that event, once the kids can legally declare bankruptcy on the debt. |
Stories like this makes me happy that the music industry is collapsing.
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You are spot on about the big acts. The top selling albums just aren't as big. Sometimes you have years where there just isn't any of those huge records that sell 6-10 million copies, but I remember days back in the early 90's when a hot band would release an album and sell 800K+ in the first week. You just don't hear of that anymore and I'm sure it is because they sell 300-400K, but also sell a bunch of copies of their hit single and they get a ton of illegal downloads. |
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What funny is you seem to see this as a justification to make more draconion copyright laws rather then i don't know produce a better quality album that has significantly higher percentage of good songs. leveraging the distribution channels (bit torrent etc) to test market the songs so that you have less dogs and more successes (for example). |
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Companies/Someone will come up with an easier distrubition method(ie itunes) that allows you to release your own records and own albums. I could see this 1 company with a few trailer companies leading the industry. You could do your own promotions. And you will see results because of quality/advertising/word of mouth/ect. |
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I do however think that the record labels should be allowed to defend themselves against illegal downloaders. If they feel suing everyone who ever illegally downloaded a song is the way to go about defending themselves then so be it. If it ends up biting them in the ass in the end then they will have nobody to blame but themselves. Call me crazy but I guess I just don't see it as too much to ask to pay for the music you own. |
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screw the music corporations
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Before the invention of the internet, I would have agreed with you. But now. It takes a LOT less to make it big. You can even write and Print a book and sell it yourself. |
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According to the evidence those songs appeared on cd she did buy, the version she had on her computer were ones that happened to be ripped by a pirate group but that does change the point she paid for those songs already. She could have just as easily ripped them from her bought cds. The point is i have been a system administrator for a large university so i am fully aware that there are two types of backup, the sms (system managment server) creates ghost images of the base pc (all the os and software installed) and a second server that stores the backups of the private data of the individual pc. Arguing that reaquiring a differently sourced version of the copyright material is automatically a copyright violation would make those servers illegal too. there is to much established doctrine under the law that contridicts that statement. Which is again the main reason i believe this has more to do with them knocking down bogus precedents rather than just go for the easier winning arguements (bankruptcy, backup/recovery, bad instruction that ignores fair use etc). if anything the outrage at this absurd judgements when these easier to win arguements are finally made will be used to fuel the extension of fair use to cover "filesharing for personal use" something which i personally think would go to far. But is getting ever more likely with each passing bad judgement |
This is great news... now, maybe these freeloading pricks (music or adult) will get the fucking hint and pay for content that people produce.
GOOD FUCKING NEWS :thumbsup |
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I have heard that she downloaded these songs and I have also heard that she bought them on CD seperatly. I don't know which is true. Here is my personal opinion on how it should work. 1. If you download a song you have not paid for in some way that is wrong and illegal. 2. If you take a song you own (either through paid download or purchased CD) and you share it via p2p or torrent that is wrong and should be illegal. I don't buy the argument that people are only sharing a tiny bit of the file so it isn't illegal because they aren't sharing the full file. I also don't buy that uploading it to a torrent is "backing up via the cloud." To me it is encouraging pirating because there are going to be many people out there who are now downloading your stuff when they haven't paid for it. There are tons of ways to back stuff up without uploading it a torrent or p2p program. 3. The most obvious is if you download something you haven't paid for then you share it. To me this should be the most harshly penalized because you are taking something you don't own and distributing it to others. For me that is it. I don't think asking people to purchase the music they want to own and then not share it with tens of thousands (if not millions) of other people via p2p and torrents is too much to ask. |
Now that gideon is posting in this thread, I predict it will go on for many pages.
I'm not really posting this, I'm just timeshifting my sig onto the first page. I will be back later when this thread is available for rental. |
Its all been said...
people who don't produce content that can be digitized - will always be in favor of unrestricted free access people who do produce content that can be digitized - will want some ability to make some money from their work people who work get screwed, people who steal win so i'm not going to post here oh, wait.... |
Trying to control the masses through scare tactics..interesting twist to the story
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Basically she got convicted because she choose to simple click a link and start a download rather then hunt thru her cd collection (very close to a 1000) to find the song and then rip it using the software. That btw is what i find most offensive about this ruling, she actually did buy the songs, no one lost a penny of royalties from her so called infringement. Quote:
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Until you do arguing their are other back up alternatives is a sherman anti trust violating abuse of the copyright monopoly, because you are simply trying to use your copyright monopoly to force dominance in another market (backup). Quote:
but that being said with statutory damages as high as they currently are, it more than enough anyway. Quote:
again downloading without paying absolute go after that person hard sharing (especially in a way that in and of it self is not a copyright violation) simple takes away people rights. golden rule of the law should always be your rights end where mine begin. taking your content without paying for it violates that golden rule because it prevents you from making money on your content. taking away my right to use torrents as the most cost effective back solution after i have bought your content, takes way my fair use right to choose the most effective backup solution. |
Gideon...could you please explain to all of us what a "piracy tax" is?
Are you trying to tell me that the Canadian govt. is now taking money on stolen stuff too? And by the way...since you love to back stuff up on the internet instead of at your own home. Why don't you quit being a cheapskate and just get a server. You can get a virtual server for 9 bucks a month and back up all of your precious t.v. shows without causing piracy and content theft. But I know you won't. You'll have some other excuse. That's what makes your threads so funny to me. :) |
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Wow. I need to get with my hosting company and explain to them that they are doing backups all wrong. All they need to do is just get an account at a torrent site and start uploading. Thanks Gideon! :thumbsup :1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh :1orglaugh:1orglaugh |
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Step 2. type in search term "free online storage" Step 3. Choose your provider Micosoft will give you a free 25 gig and all you need is a free MSN Live account. Quote:
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kane you just don't understand how things work like gideon does. He is sooooo smart.
You see, people weren't even able to make "backups" of anything until torrent sites came along. We all have to allow people to steal our stuff in order to keep gideon fat, happy, and dumb. It's the only way. |
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