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Court Action Does Not Reduce File-Sharing 233

gollum123 wrote to mention a BBC report that despite numerous court cases, litigation does not appear to be reducing the amount of file-sharing. From the article: "The level of file-sharing has remained the same for two years despite 20,000 legal cases in 17 countries. The International Federation of the Phonographic Industries (IFPI) said it was 'containing" the problem and more people were connecting to broadband."
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Court Action Does Not Reduce File-Sharing

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  • Obviously (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Rekolitus ( 899752 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:26PM (#14523763)
    The more people that take court action, the more bitter people will be, and the less likely people will buy from them.
    • Re:Obviously (Score:5, Insightful)

      by AoT ( 107216 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:32PM (#14523794) Homepage Journal
      Indeed.

      The tighter they clench their fist, the more files will slip from their grasp.

      But really, look at this logicaly. The record companies never thought they could stop this with law suits, they were forced to sue to keep the idea that downloading music is wrong in peoples heads. This is a rear-guard action while the big companies work on new business plan. Of course, whether those plans work or not is another story.
      • Re:Obviously (Score:2, Interesting)

        by LordRPI ( 583454 )
        Note that one of the first publicized waves of RIAA lawsuits coincided with a heavy marketing campaign by Apple and Pepsi for free downloads on iTunes. Coincidence? I think not. Heck, some of the kids being sued caught some good airtime in the commercials.
      • Re:Obviously (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 20, 2006 @10:31PM (#14524018)
        Copyright was never about the experience, it was always about the product. They want a copyright on the experience of something; afterall, the Eifel tower is an experience and it's copywritten, as is times square in new york. You can't take pictures of it; security guards will forcibly confiscate the film. Same goes for a number of other things in America.

        Copyright was always for the profitable production of various works; works being vynle records, tape casetts, music rolls, ect. It's come to the point where it's now on the experience of something, which it was never meant to be. But pioneering judges and profiteering politicians have sold their power for profit and in their attempt to gain an income, have sold off nearly all of their vested commodity.

        Frankly, if you're sharing music, you aren't a bad guy. If you're on the streets of Chicago selling burned CD's and harddrives full of various works then yeah, your but should be busted because you're selling a product, not sharing an experience.

        It may seem sad to some that we now have been spoiled by this technology. Frankly, technology has brought us closer together, and we have now nearly reached the ultimate goal copyright set out to achieve; a technology that lets everyone produce and spread experiences and media, for free. The new market, undoubtedly, will be for experience preservation. 89 cents to buy an MP3 is a bad business model; 89cents to gain access to someone's perminant music preservation service and $50 to order a hyper-long-lasting recording of it is going to be the new business model. Because of gnutella, I now have access to a breath and depth of information never before realized, and in the future, it will only exponentially increase. I can now hit a few websites and get enough books to last me for the rest of my life if I read them back to back, in mabye 2 or 3 days.

        The recording industry cannot compete with technology so they've tried to destroy technology, and have thus far failed and will fail. The cost of producing media and experience has gone down and down and as it does we get closer to living in a completly virtualised and created reality with created experiences and created ideas.

        Ownership and property will become obsolete. I look foward to the ultimate ego/identity dissolution experience it will be. Of course, there will be those who will refuse the change and will lead a path of destroying themselves and will try to drag everyone else under them. That's the basic idea behind revelations.

        If we've got a problem with filesharing, wait until someone figures out a way to make a home-fabrication machine the size of a car that can produce anything a machinist can. ;)
    • Re:Obviously (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Exactly, people should stop buying from such an industry and instead buy only from independent labels or directly from the artists.
    • Re:Obviously (Score:5, Insightful)

      by mboverload ( 657893 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:51PM (#14523884) Journal
      > The more people that take court action, the more bitter people will be, and the less likely people will buy from them.

      Yep.

      Unlike some people, I have NO problem with the music they produce. I'm one of those losers that like Green Day. I like mainstream music like Dashboard Confessional, Fall Out Boy, or even Justin Timberlake. Big fucking deal. Sue me.

      However, I can't buy msuic from them on principal. Just like I wouldn't buy blankets from the online Al-qaeda shop, I can't buy music from them. Yes, an extreme example but it lays out my point in black and white:

      I don't buy things/support people/companies I think are "true evil".

      I don't buy from Walmart, I don't buy music from the RIAA, and I don't buy ten year old girls from the local human trafficker.
      • Re:Obviously (Score:3, Insightful)

        by bladernr ( 683269 )
        I don't buy things/support people/companies I think are "true evil".

        If you were truly taking a principled stand, you would stop listening to the music altogether. It seems like you are trying to justify knowingly breaking the law with the reason "I like it." Interesting principled stand: "But I like it...."

        • Re:Obviously (Score:3, Insightful)

          by umofomia ( 639418 )

          If you were truly taking a principled stand, you would stop listening to the music altogether. It seems like you are trying to justify knowingly breaking the law with the reason "I like it." Interesting principled stand: "But I like it...."

          Isn't the statement of a principled stand even stronger if you actually do like the product? If you didn't like the product, you wouldn't have bought it anyway, so how is that a statement? If you do like the product but refuse to buy it because of the ethics of the

        • Re:Obviously (Score:3, Interesting)

          by mcubed ( 556032 )

          If you were truly taking a principled stand, you would stop listening to the music altogether.

          Can't speak for the poster of the grandparent, but why would you need to stop listening to the music altogether? I haven't bought a major-label CD new since 2001. The last ML CD I bought new was Depeche Mode's "Exciter" (which, as it turned out, wasn't very...). Since, I've bought some indie label CDs new, but mostly I buy all CDs used. Neither the labels nor the artists who support them get any cut from th

        • Re:Obviously (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward
          That's like saying if Rosa Parks were truly taking a principled stand she would have walked instead of stepping on the bus in the first place. When your principles are in conflict with the law, the only principled action is to knowingly break the law. How convenient that your interpretation of principles ensures that corporate profits aren't threatened.

          Down with the RIAA! Down with copyright!
      • by Anonymous Coward
        Which begs the question: Who do you buy ten year old girls from?
      • "Sue me."

        I don't think that's a phrase you should say around the RIAA, they might.

        I do like the last section, DRM is misunderstood and flexible. Of course it is, or not. I think "legal" sales of digital music would increase if it was sold in the form of unrestricted 320kbps mp3 for 99cents. That way the paying customers, or 'criminals' to the RIAA, can do whatever they want with it. I don't give away things I paid for. If for some reason I ever purchased a song in some digital format, even un DRMed, I would
      • "Big fucking deal. Sue me."

        Heh. Give them time, they'll find you :) They won't sue you for liking their stuff (hey, to each his own, eh?), after all -- millions upon millions of the teeming America pop culture crowd love the stuff. Once they read your post though and realize you must be downloading it (since you don't buy their stuff and you still love their stuff, surely you can't possibly resist the temptation to get it all for free?), you'll be hearing from one of their "settlement centers."

      • Sue me.

        Don't worry, just wait a while and they'll give you your turn.
      • "I don't buy from Walmart, I don't buy music from the RIAA, and I don't buy ten year old girls from the local human trafficker."

        Like your music, you get your ten year old girls for free online?
      • I was right with you up 'til the ten year olds. I mean, you gotta leave a guy some vices.

        Seriously though, relatively few people that I know (and many of those are engineers and professional people of one sort or another who you'd think would know better) have even heard of the RIAA. When I attempt to talk about the subject, I get a. a blank stare or b. "but they gotta protect the artists!" or c. "who cares." All they know is that there are a bunch of companies called "studios" and that, somehow, "studio
      • I don't buy from Walmart, I don't buy music from the RIAA, and I don't buy ten year old girls from the local human trafficker.

        So, what you are saying is that you're an informed customer and buy wholesale instead of retail. Good.

        /ducks
  • by balloot ( 943499 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:27PM (#14523770)
    The people who get nailed in court for file-sharing seem very remote. It just doesn't seem like a file-sharing conviction will ever affect "normal" people who just use Limewire every so often when they need something. These people make up 99% of the file-sharing population.
    • With the number of online filesharers versus people sued, your odds are pretty much right up there with winning the lotto.
      • With the number of online filesharers versus people sued, your odds are pretty much right up there with winning the lotto.

        Except the whiners that get caught claim they are unfairly targeted, why me, etc, etc, rather that just stepping up and saying "I gambled; I lost."

        • A better example would be office workers and terrorists. Workers take a risk every day that a place might come crashing down and kill them on the spot.

          Now if a plane does come crashing down and they somehow survive but missing a few limbs, are they whiners for not saying "I gambled, I lost" or are the terrorists at fault for firing airplane-missiles at office buildings?

          The way I see it, file sharing is right to do (socially beneficial and without causing any legitimate harm or violating anyones legitimate r
          • what you really mean to say is that because the US has always had laws creating intellectual property that the entire country is based on flawed principles and founded by "bad guys" who crusaded against it.

            the laws establishing intellectual property have been around for hundreds of years. outside of those laws against committing personal harm and the such, these stand as some of the first laws ever written.

            I mean, personally, I don't see any reason why I can't go to a wal mart and take 6 or 7 bars of candy
  • Spin (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:31PM (#14523787)
    True, the level has stayed the same .. but perhaps without the lawsuits and FUD campaign the amount of file sharing would have grown?

    The number of users of iTunes and iPods music devices has increased, why hasnt the level of file sharing? Seems either lawsuits worked, or people prefer convenience of using the itunes store. I dont think it's healthy for the lawsuit factor should be blindly dismissed as ineffective.

    The point I actually want to make is we have to be objective and have to know where the threats are. After all, no point in ignoring something that might be true. Maybe counter FUD is needed, or better file sharing methods?
    • Plus, there is the fact that the settlements take money from people who legally should've paid and give it to the people who legally should've been paid. Isn't that the purpose of the civil legal system? To counteract the economic effects of illegal activity? They do accomplish that.
    • The number of users of iTunes and iPods music devices has increased

      Hmmm, maybe because people are using the iTunes service, and downloading their music their. You're making the assumption that everyone will download either to "stick it to the man," or perhaps because to take for free rather than purchase for moderate price is what most would do.

      I counter to say that people now have a more legitimate source of music, and they are using it. After all, the article is about filesharing... but music downloa
    • "True, the level has stayed the same .. but perhaps without the lawsuits and FUD campaign the amount of file sharing would have grown?"

      I'd say it's sound to stay away from conclusions with a lot of "maybe", "perhaps" and "what if" in them.
      Even the mighty RIAA doesn't have magic future vision to back any of this.
  • by Rob T Firefly ( 844560 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:31PM (#14523789) Homepage Journal
    I'm taking my w4r3z back to Usenet and IRC, where it's safe.
  • You mean... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Pantero Blanco ( 792776 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:33PM (#14523799)
    1. People don't think that it's a big risk if there's a 1 in 100,000 chance they'll be the next one sued (especially if they don't swap too much).

    2. Suing people tends to piss them off, making them less likely to buy from you.
  • Other conclusions? (Score:5, Informative)

    by RonnyJ ( 651856 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:33PM (#14523804)
    Court Action Does Not Reduce File-Sharing

    You can also interpret the data another way from this, if you so desire:

    35% of illegal file-sharers have cut back*
    14% of illegal file sharers have increased activity*

    *Jupiter survey of 3,000 people in UK, Germany and Spain
  • by Eightyford ( 893696 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:34PM (#14523811) Homepage
    Well I think it's obvious what the people want, and that's less strict copyright laws. I'm pretty sure democracy is not about who has the richest lobbyists, so the RIAA can kiss my ass.
    • by Pantero Blanco ( 792776 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:38PM (#14523829)
      Though I want less strict copyright laws myself, I would be VERY cautious about wanting democracy in its purest form - the "people" taking by force whatever they want. The "people" don't tend to think things through, and having a republic slows things down enough so that an actual thought process can happen.
  • by Foofoobar ( 318279 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:35PM (#14523817)
    And a resounding DUH rang round the world.
  • by mendaliv ( 898932 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:36PM (#14523821)
    I find the last paragraph of the article mildly amusing:
    [Mr. Kennedy] said DRM was a "sometimes misunderstood element of the digital music business".

    I wonder if he knows who is misunderstanding it...
    • Nah. It's just that they weren't expecting people to catch on and get riled up, so the *AA has to try to convince people that they've "misunderstood" and that DRM is a "good thing". And for the most part, they were probably right...I meet few people outside of the Outer Geek Circle who know what it is. Still, look forward to seeing Billy the Jolly DRM Chipmunk on TV.
    • Yes, and Mr. bin Laden probably said that terrorist attacks are a "sometimes misunderstood element of the business of international politics".
  • by VampireByte ( 447578 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:41PM (#14523840) Homepage
    They are called The International Federation of the Phonographic Industries? Wow, that explains the ancient mindset of the music industry. Imagine the automotive industry still refering to themselves as horseless carriage manufactures!
    • Yeah, a friend of mine at the Electric Slide Rule and Graphical Telegraph Society pointed that out last week.
    • by monopole ( 44023 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:52PM (#14523887)
      Maybe if we disclose the existence of group to Bush he'll misinterpret the word and declare a war on phonography! We just have to convince him that DRM is related to WMDs
    • They are called The International Federation of the Phonographic Industries? Wow, that explains the ancient mindset of the music industry. Imagine the automotive industry still refering to themselves as horseless carriage manufactures!
      For some odd reason, I keep reading their name as International Federation of the Pornography Industries. God please tell me I am not alone in this.
    • Wow, that explains the ancient mindset of the music industry.

      It's not just an ancient mindset, it's an ancient industry. It's foundation is limitation of publication of physical media. From the broken presses of Gilbert and Sullivan sheet music presses to CD burnings, the industry has existed only through the intervention and support of government. In the US, the establishment clause of the constitution somehow has given us eternal copyright, three broadcasters and three big music publishers with much

      • Somehow I'm much more of a pessimist. I think that if the pigopolist media can drum up and continue a war on drugs and a war on terrorism then they'll definitely win all their wet copyright dreams. Big media carries a very big megaphone, and they have a personal stake in the matter.
      • In the US, the establishment clause of the constitution somehow has given us eternal copyright, three broadcasters and three big music publishers with much overlap.

        Given that the establishment clause is the clause that prohibits the government from establishing a religion, could you explain precisely how it's given us eternal copyright, etc.? I'm especially interested in how it compares with the copyright and patent clause.
        • Given that the establishment clause is the clause that prohibits the government from establishing a religion, could you explain precisely how it's given us eternal copyright, etc.? I'm especially interested in how it compares with the copyright and patent clause.

          Oh, picky, picky. I've heard Article One, section 8, of the United States Constitution described as the "Copyright Establishment Clause" which is very different from the Bill of Rights prohibition of a state religion. Perhaps I heard wrong and t

          • Oh, picky, picky.

            Eh, it's like people thoroughly mangling computer terms. There's one clause called the establishment clause, and that's in the First Amendment.

            Perhaps I heard wrong and that section should be called a patent and copyright clause, though neither of those terms is employed.

            And the elastic clause doesn't mention elasticity. So what? They're lawyer's jargon for various clauses in the Constitution, not parts of the actual document. The important thing is that people know what you mean when you u
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:43PM (#14523850)
    The level of file-sharing has remained the same for two years despite 20,000 legal cases in 17 countries.

    Maybe THAT is the reason why record companies are seeing their profits decline? Court costs are not trivial.
    • Carbon-copy court filing, are, however both rather inexpensive and easy to do. This is the tactic the RIAA seems to mainly use, as opposed to actually persuing things through court they bring forth an initial massive case and then an offer to settle things out for a less damaging sum.
  • what the ...? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by deep44 ( 891922 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:47PM (#14523863)
    Mr Kennedy, writing in the report, said DRM "helps get music to consumers in new and flexible ways".
    If by "new and flexible", he means, "irritating and tedious", then no- I don't think DRM is misunderstood at all!
  • by no_opinion ( 148098 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:47PM (#14523864)
    Wouldn't we expect the level of file sharing to go up, proportional to the growing internet population? If it has, in fact, stayed flat that would indicate something is creating downward pressure. Whether it's the lawsuits or not is another question entirely.
    • Wouldn't we expect the level of file sharing to go up, proportional to the growing internet population? If it has, in fact, stayed flat that would indicate something is creating downward pressure.
      I'd say it means people are being more cagey about letting their activity be seen, through ever more fiendishly untraceable P2P networks, blockers like PeerGuardian, and so on.
    • Wouldn't we expect the level of file sharing to go up, proportional to the growing internet population?

      Yes and it did. That is a brief history of the 90s.

      If it has, in fact, stayed flat that would indicate something is creating downward pressure.

      What you see is market destruction and saturation. The big publishers wiped out their competition, so their primary market is left with bad choices and continues to make them at the same rate as always.

      Don't confuse broadband adoption with internet access a

  • Just goes to show (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ztwilight ( 549428 ) <sysbin1120 AT yahoo DOT com> on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:48PM (#14523867) Homepage Journal
    You can't outlaw something that people don't think is illegal. Just how outlawing liquor in the 30's made it more popular than ever.
    • by Mr2001 ( 90979 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @10:18PM (#14523975) Homepage Journal
      ITYM "something that people don't think is wrong", or perhaps "something that people don't think should be illegal". Basically everyone knows it's illegal to trade copyrighted material on P2P services without permission from the copyright holder, just like everyone knows it's illegal to drive 65 in a 60 zone or cross the street when the sign says DONT WALK, and everyone knew back in the days of Prohibition that alcohol was illegal. They just don't care, because (1) they know they aren't hurting anyone and (2) the chances of getting caught are slim to none.
      • It's not the trading of music, it's the sharing/subsequent uploading of the copywritten music that constitutes copyright violations by most courts.
      • ITYM "something that people don't think is wrong", or perhaps "something that people don't think should be illegal". Basically everyone knows it's illegal to trade copyrighted material on P2P services without permission from the copyright holder, just like everyone knows it's illegal to drive 65 in a 60 zone or cross the street when the sign says DONT WALK, and everyone knew back in the days of Prohibition that alcohol was illegal. They just don't care, because (1) they know they aren't hurting anyone and (
    • You can't outlaw something that people don't think is illegal.

      Yes you can. Not wearing seatbelts was legal, a law was passed, now everyone thinks it's illegal. Many, many examples of things that were legal at one time (so everyone would rightly believe they were legal), becoming illegal.

      Just how outlawing liquor in the 30's made it more popular than ever.

      Very overused example, and there are many the other way. Outlawing seatbelts did not result in less people wearing seatbelts - it results in a grea

  • by ByteGuerrilla ( 918383 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:49PM (#14523874)
    .... RIAA lawyers kill a kitten.
  • by cshay ( 79326 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @09:50PM (#14523877)
    You would expect file sharing to grow naturally as more and more people use the internet. The fact that it has merely stagnated suggests that the litigation is succeeding somewhat. My own mother, who doesn't even use a computer, warned me not to file share the other day. She had "heard that people are getting sued".
    • You would expect file sharing to grow naturally as more and more people use the internet. The fact that it has merely stagnated suggests that the litigation is succeeding somewhat. My own mother, who doesn't even use a computer, warned me not to file share the other day. She had "heard that people are getting sued".

      From what I've read on the eMule forums, I'd suspect that the lack of growth in P2P use has more to do with packet shaping than with the threat of being hauled into court. I'd also question wh

    • You would expect file sharing to grow naturally as more and more people use the internet. The fact that it has merely stagnated suggests that the litigation is succeeding somewhat.

      But, you seem to forget that because people are aware of the lawsuits, they don't download the files themselves. There are plenty of small entrepreneurs around who will sell you a dvd or cd of whatever files you want, for much less than the retail cost. I know of one person who receives a stack of cds and dvds once a month by mai

  • by dada21 ( 163177 ) <adam.dada@gmail.com> on Friday January 20, 2006 @10:10PM (#14523949) Homepage Journal
    One spends money on things others can do more efficiently.

    The price we pay is based on our assessment of the time it took to make the exact item/service we're getting.

    Music live I can see paying $15-$50 or more -- supply is low, so demand sets the price.

    Digital music has a near infinite supply. The market pushes costs to zero.

    • utter rubbish. Go back to Economics 101, do not pass go..

      First, the cost is not "near zero." Rather, the MARGINAL cost of production of goods such as digital music is "near zero."

      There is a BIG difference between the two....

      however, what is more true is that the model of low marginal cost of production applies for virtually ALL industries from CPUs to newspapers to what-have-you and yet we far more rarely see the idiot economic justifications for piracy/theft in those areas that we see for music. i

      • Sorry, incorrect.

        I've owned a studio and I'm opening a new one in spring.

        A good recording session (8 songs average) costs the band US$12000. Producing 10,000 CDs 4color is US$8000. $2/CD cost. The physical CD has value.

        Now copying the CD to another copy has little cost. You're selling the official CD, so you're asking for more money with the end user understanding that the additional price is going to help the band make more music.

        The processor market is cheap, too. I can run SOCs for a few bucks a pop
        • Glad to know music is so worthles^Wcheap.

          How about this: 30 minutes of animation can cost between $30k and $300k, or more, depending on the quality you desire.

          Multiply that by 13 for one season and you've got a lot if it's a well animated show. Multiply it by two or four (some shows run a full year) and you're chalking up hefty costs.

          I guess since recorded media has no value, they'll have to find some way of doing animation live? Apparently since it can be digitized and copied at zero cost, the work must ha
          • Apparently since it can be digitized and copied at zero cost, the work must have zero value, and apparently zero production value. Do the slashbots have some solution for things that have high fixed costs?

            This is a very accurate viewpoint of the current problems with digital content and the force of copyright. I was in the 3D animation business years ago (when a Pentium-200 with 64MB of RAM was considered huge) and I left it due to lack of profitable clients. If only I had waited 2 years!

            Nonetheless, I ag
  • International Federation of the Pornographic Industries?


    Now that would be an interesting institution to do research on filesharing!
  • by scdeimos ( 632778 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @10:37PM (#14524053)
    Entities like the RIAA and IFPI hire spin doctors (and the media) trying to make the public equate file-sharing with illegal activities. But this isn't necessarily the case.

    P2P file-sharing technologies are inreasingly being used for legitimate distribution of many large content objects, simply because it makes more-efficient use of Internet infrastructure: the free-for-download fan series "Star Trek: New Voyages" and World of Warcraft patches are just two examples that come to mind.

    I expect there's plenty of Gene Research data and other such things using P2P by now as well.
  • by burni ( 930725 ) on Friday January 20, 2006 @10:52PM (#14524130)
    consumers and artists

    1.) artists need money to live and be productive
    2.) artists need consumers who appreciate their art work, and pay for them
    3.) consumers need artists too, because artists are the basic glue which upholds
    and inspires our culture, every decade is mostly described by their artists,
    and the artwork,

    what you think of when I say 80s, perhaps there is a famous tune floating
    through your ears, or you see a picture of the androgynous "Boy George",
    or see a black pontiac transam cruising, it&#180;s part of our culture,
    or even parts of our identity.

    <b>artwork belongs to both society and creator </b>

    so as I wrote in the subject it&#180;s a two way relationship where no side
    can exist without the other, so from my point of view if you are an artist and create artwork, on the one hand you should have the right to sell your artwork,
    and you should have the right to prosecute those people who sell
    your creations, because this is a really damage in your oportunity to
    sell your artwork, but persecuting private fileshares, which could not
    pay for all artwork they have on their HDs aren&#180;t really a loss,

    because most of them still buy the artwork they appreciate most,
    they are consumers who are willing to pay for artwork.

    But accepting that you created artwork and release it to the public you also
    must accept that since release you don&#180;t own your creation entirely anymore,
    it becomes part of the cultural heritage of a group, a society or even the worlds cultural heritage.

    So concluding this, and citing what was said in a thread above, the more people you take to court the more bitter people there will be, the more consumers
    you will lose.

    <b>The copyright has gone mad since the "Mickey Mouse" - act induced by Bono.</b>

    In germany we call the copyright "Urheberrecht"

    Which means the right of the creator on his creation, but why should
    the copyright last longer than the creator lives, because he is dead,
    so he and his work were and are part of our culture, he participated
    on the wealth of the consumers of his artwork, so why after his death
    his artwork shouldn&#180;t be public domain ?

    Artwork isn&#180;t pure commercial, because it&#180;s part of our culture.

    a.) I&#180;m against commercial copyright violators

    b.) I provide an allowance of private and fair use,
    perhaps using a culture flat fee, where you pay non directional
    so creators of swapped artwork get a compensation

    c.) many artists owe their public success to the napsters and eDonkeys
    of the world, for example "Gorillaz"

    d.) music industry is stuck into a total commercial way of thinking,
    they forgot that those private file swappers they sue, are also mostly
    consumers, and that private fileswapping can boost record sales

    e.) we even have recuded file swapping rates, but the record sales
    are still decreasing.

    <b> Copy doesn&#180;t kill music,
    Copy is a sign of life,
    Hearing & Copying is a sign of appreciation,
    </b>
    and leads to prospering business.
  • The fact the level has remained the same is a massive victory for the RIAA.

    The way file sharing was growing with Napster and Even with Kazaa it's a wonder they didn't go out of business.

    Well here's hoping someone compiles ALL free music and formats it well somewhere and they take down the RIAA.
  • Just one idea that seems, at the moment, to make sense. You're a music company, now. You sell CDs. You advertise them on the radio by passing out major bucks to corrupt DJs and so on. This works? For teenyboppers. Thus the boy bands, the Britneys, all of that. Hey, it's smokin' when you're 14. But it doesn't work with core music buyers. So what to do? Simple. Sponsor sharing networks. Pay people if they recommend things that get downloaded a lot. Give them download credits for uploading. Get into commercial
  • i'm sorry, but i will never buy digital media in my life ever again. i haven't bought a single CD since i fired up Napster in 1999. my formula for not being caught is two-fold:

    1. load your shared folder up with porn

    2. if you must download linkin park or flipsyde, the kind of stuff the riaa is sniffing?:
    a. stop all of your downloads except that song you want with the most sources and the best connections
    b. suck it down in under a minute
    c. immediately get it out of your shared folder
    d. if you do it fast enough, all the porn suckers you have cultivated will flood out and anyone trying to get that drop of water pop song in your sea of masking porn
    e. and the riaa only goes after those who make pop songs available, not those who download it, don't forget that

    additionally you are a filesharer of good ethical standing: you ARE sharing files people want, you are just segregating what you share/ don't share according legal risk

    and speaking of pop songs? i have the BEST solution for beating the riaa on that subject matter: i embrace world music, i let my mind wander. currently, i'm into japanese pop music and european techno: love that armin van buuren and ayumi hamasaki (i live in new york city)

    the thing to do is is to expand your musical interests to things beyond the usual pop crap of your native country (and embrace pop crap of other countries, heh), and you are also therefore using the new file sharing technology to its greatest benefit: connecting with resources that otherwise would be beyond your grasp in the pre-internet universe. file sharing is exactly what the digital utopians dreamed about in the heyday of the internet: the free exchange of world culture, bringing people together in large and small ways. file sharing is the promise of the internet. the only people who lose, are media conglomerates. every one else wins, INCLUDING THE ARTISTS. because a real artist does it for the art, not the money

    so embrace world music, and you win two ways:

    1. you won't be on the riaa's radar
    2. you'll grow new brain cells as you develop an awareness of a world beyond your nation's borders, of music beyond your stupid local music industry

    there really is a lot of good stuff out there. free your mind and give the bastards who want to keep you in a marketing straightjacket the finger in the process.

    and for those of you with a holier-than-thou attitude about me ripping off musicians from other countries? get around this chicken and egg situation: if it weren't for the filesharing networks, I WOULD NEVER BE EXPOSED TO THE ARTIST I AM LISTENING TO IN THE FIRST PLACE. solve that quandry and get back to me with your holier than thou attitude
  • Looking at it form a statistical stand point they are correct. If more people are using broadband internet connections but the number of people using peer to peer file sharing services is the same, then they can consider this a success because the PERCENTAGE OF PEOPLE IS DOWN because of all the people who could possibly file sharing at high speeds, a lower percentage are than before they began these law suits. Also a major flaw of this study is that it does not mention if people are still using peer to peer
  • by eneville ( 745111 ) on Saturday January 21, 2006 @08:43AM (#14525758) Homepage
    I don't see the point in all the who-har around music piracy. Up until 1920s people in Spain would have played music via instruments in town squares joyfully, people shared music and shared the enjoyment of it. There was no complaint of reproduction of music. Later came the tape cassette, so shortly there after the bootlegger. Now we have CDs, at incredible prices and people just boot leg via mp3. There is some reduction in quality and there is also the colour injet to make the inlays.

    Whats the point though, why all this fus, it's just people trying to share enjoyment. It's not like money makes people happy, if the artists are good then they sell tickets, that's where the real money is.

    I'd rather move to Spain and try to catch some of the towns people reproduce music their way, that has to be more original.

    But on this note, why should the consumer pay to listen to some remake of an old classic for a rediculous price, it's not original work and therefore as much IP theft as someone who boot leggs music.

    And no, I do not copy music, kazza doesn't run on Linux, I listen only to shoutcast streams, and freeview channel 18.

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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