Aussies Face Jail Over MP3s 345
An anonymous reader writes "Two Australian students have been charged over music piracy offences, according to this story on Australian IT. It's short on details, but presumably they weren't running a P2P network. The maximum penalties for breaching copyright under Australian law is 5 years jail."
Now I know this is hard to hear (Score:3, Insightful)
But people have to produce the songs that you're listening to for free.
Now I know that you might think that the companies involved are scummy or evil, but remember - if we didn't have the legal frameworks in place that we do, then the evil companies would do a lot more than overcharge you.
You'd be their slaves.
Re:Now I know this is hard to hear (Score:3, Interesting)
I find it amusing that people assume that there would be no more new music if people weren't getting millions of dollars for making it. I'm not sure if this is what you're assuming, but I'll use this time to rant anyways.
Music was around a long time before record labels. Moreover, when music is driven by the dollars that it brings in, it tends to suck. I would have absolutely no problem with the record industry coming crashing to ea
Re:Now I know this is hard to hear (Score:2, Insightful)
Music has historically been tied to money and sponsorship. Today it's the record labels, yesterday they were court musicians, royal composers, or were tied to the ch
Re:Now I know this is hard to hear (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Now I know this is hard to hear (Score:2)
You'd be their slaves.
I am wondering when they are going to arrest and jail the illegal, anti-competitive, price-fixing, anti-privacy, anti-any-rights, monopolistic, control-freak, entertainment industry cartel member corporations and give all of them 5 years jailtime; so that they can't d
Re:Now I know this is hard to hear (Score:3, Insightful)
(1) laws like these apply only to the powerless. This is why two college students were chosen, rather than some upper management PHB (many of whom are some of the worst offenders, from my anecdotal observations).
(2) In America whoever has the money makes the laws and decides how they're applied. Shitting all over the Constitution is perfectly acceptable if you're rich enough to push for such legislation.
In effect, we *are* their slaves. They
Where's the news value in this? (Score:3, Insightful)
Liquor Store Robbers Face Possible Jail Term
If these guys did actually break the law, and if the maximum penalty is jail, then this is no different to thousands of other cases before the courts -- except perhaps that the law involves the protection of intellectual property.
Move along people, there's nothing to see here.
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:4, Insightful)
Consider the following two items:
1) I am not a customer of the music industry. Even if I'd never heard of an mp3 I would not buy music. Period.
2) Stealing, by definition, means taking something from another without permission. The core idea is that by taking this item, you deprive the rightful owner of the item of its use and value.
Now, assuming point one is true -- that I'd never buy music -- then my downloading mp3s is taking nothing from anyone. In that case I'm not downloading music INSTEAD of buying it, I'm downloading it just because it's there. If it wasn't there and "free" I'd just do without.
So we get to point two. Let's say I come to your house and you have your dead mother's Harvard degree hanging on the wall. I take it. You'd be justifiably angry. But what if I just took a picture of it? Then we both have a copy. What if I stole your car? That'd suck. What if I somehow duplicated it without inconveniencing you in any way? I doubt you'd care unless you're just a big meanie.
It's not as if I download an mp3 and it's MINE MINE MINE and only mine
My roommate downloads songs all the time. Then he buys the CD if he likes the music and there's not too much crappy filler material
And what if he buys a CD and HATES it? Can't take it back after it's been opened, that's a no-no. So he downloads the stuff, listens, and decides based on that whether to get the CD (he was way over a hundred, compared to my zero -- I'm just not a music person).
I bet there are a lot more people like him (and like me) than there are people who "steal" just for the fun of it. The music industry MAKES money because he "steals" music. If the music industry would get with the times and stop waging war against its customers
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:3, Insightful)
That's BS. By *listening* to these records, no matter how you obtain them, you are a customer of the record industry. Regardless of whether or not you would have bought them, you have had the use out of the item *without* paying. If you want use of something, even if it's
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:4, Insightful)
That would be a very scary world. I walk into a café and they have the latest pop song on - I'm all of a sudden a "customer" of the record industry, owing them something. When I read that taxi drivers in Finland need to pay royalties for the music their clients hear in the car, it scares me.
How long do the tentacles of ownership stretch?
The very principle of intellectual property is insidious in and of itself, since it's dealing with a lot more abstract concepts. We don't generally allow people to claim ownership of air, right? And the air isn't even copyable.
Information and knowledge, especially in digital form, can be copied at next to no cost. Having an economic system that negates, practically forbids, that very real advantage should be looked upon with great caution.
It's odd that people don't find these discussions more tiring. Every time a news story like this is posted, we don't get reactions to the story itself, rather people (of both positions in the question) start to discuss the validity of, or necessity for, a strong concept of intellectual property.
I think it's pretty scary that mere samizdat is yet again punished by deprivation of physical freedom - this time in a so-called "free country". The information - in this case music - does not appear to be something that's destructive or harmful, and reproduction of it has plenty of positive effects for most people, the only exception possibly being the record industry itself.
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:2)
In the US, you are indeed a "customer", and you have been for a long time. That cafe, in order to have the radio playing where customers can hear it, is supposed to pay an ASCAP fee. If they don't pay up, they ge
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:2)
Or maybe your perspective is correct.
I was aware of the practice so I usually shop at a café that only plays indie music.
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:3)
By reading this comment, no matter how you came across it, you just became a customer of my company, Original Thoughts Inc.
Pay up, asshole. It's as simple as that.
In fact, in this situation these laws should be more rigourously enforced. The Legal process is the only way these companies have to protect their intellectual property.
There is no Constitutional guarrantee asserting ownership over 'i
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:2)
You're still partially depriving them of the use and value of the copyright itself. In exchange for producing a creative work, the government awards the creator a time-limited (in theory), exclusive right to control the distribution of that work and derivative works. That govern
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Liquor Store Robbers Face Possible Jail Term
Yes you are missing something.
It is common place for robbers to be sent to jail. However, this is new. Australian teens facing jail for mp3s related crimes is ground breaking.
Your missing something else. You fail to take into account the spirit of the law. In most countries, when a law is applied, not only is the letter of the law considered but the spirit as well. Was it this law's intention to target and prosecute small infractions (such as teens trading mp3s or people recording radio shows and sharing them with friends)?
Additionally, there is the matter of public policy. In many cases public policy out weighs the techinical implications of the law. Generally it is against public policy to enforce a law that would deem a large percentage of the population criminals.
You must realise that the law is not a set of rules that can be executed like a computer program. The law is open to interpertation by reasonable minds. Simply applied to the letter, the law (in any country), would land most of us in jail.
sent to jail instead of being sued (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:2)
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:2)
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:2)
This is a 1968 copyright law. The law hasn't changed the environment has. In 1968 computers were strange things that large companies had. Hell it's 2 years before the dawn of time for the Unix world and 12 years before the dawn of time for DOS.
People find new ways to break the law all the time, that the Australians have found a way to apply an old law to current technology is probably about the mo
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:2)
I hear people talk about how radio stations pay to play music, that is total BS. They pay to play music but they get paid to play that music as well (its called Payola). Now its not so much under the table but hidden under advertising deals. How much did Columbia Records pay to advertise Roger Waters' last concert? Isn't i
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe yes, maybe no. If ten people listen to the song on the radio and don't buy the CD is that theft too?
If I drive a small car, instead of an SUV, am I stealing from the oil companies? After all I only buy 10 gallons of gas, instead of 30?
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:2, Interesting)
The media company has entered into an agreement with the station to air the song, it's a form of advertising. If 10 people hear the song and don't buy the cd, it's an unsuccessful attempt. If ten people download an illegal copy it's piracy. What's the difference? Control of property. Illegal copies potentially deprive companies of making a living
Different medium, different scale, same concept
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:2)
The media companies actually pay a lot of money to get their songs played on the radio (like $100K per song!). So, if they treated MP3 distribution as radio an
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:2)
I understand that they want control. They'd like to be a monopoly that charges you each time you listen to a song for 300 years. But the custome
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:3, Informative)
Salon has been writing about this for a while for example take a look here: Will Congress Tackle Pay for Play [salon.com]
Re:Where's the news value in this? (Score:2)
What's the news? (Score:2, Interesting)
What's the idea in this news item? That people can get jail time for breaking a law? As long as unauthorized distribution of copyrighted material over internet is illegal, this is a direct consequence. No news, really.
The important issues are when new laws are passed or when business wants to stretch the limits of existing laws. However I see nothing in the article that would suggest either.
Re:What's the news? (Score:2)
Re:What's the news? (Score:2)
Re:What's the news? (Score:2)
Re:What's the news? (Score:2)
As to where the world is going... I think I'd like to move to a part of it that isn't going along for the ride. As an Australian, I'd rather move somewhere like New Zealand, which is even more marginalised in world affairs than Australia is and has the sense not to take sides, and also has the compassion to welcome refugees. The last 7 years have re
it's not illegal, that's why it's news (Score:2)
As long as unauthorized distribution of copyrighted material over internet is illegal, this is a direct consequence. No news, really.
Well that's the point. Here in Australia it is not illegal, but as we have no idea what laws these three are being charged under we can't make an informed protest.
Hmm, looks like it's 5 years total (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, it's not clear what side of the fence the accused stand on.
Re:Hmm, looks like it's 5 years total (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Hmm, looks like it's 5 years total (Score:4, Insightful)
Those readers from countries other than the US (or other third world dictatorships) may be familiar with the concept.
Re:Hmm, looks like it's 5 years total (Score:2)
Maximum penalties (Score:3, Insightful)
The interesting question is whether they did anything to attract attention, or whether someone's just trying to find someone to make an example out of.
Re:Maximum penalties (Score:2)
You'd hope they'd be harsh. I'd hand out five years for someone who shared Jimmy Barnes and AC/DC. (:
Don't do the crime (Score:3, Insightful)
By downloading music you don't own you break the law. Just because people think they have the right to listen to music for free it doesn't mean it has to be that way. I don't understand what the fuck this has to do with "your rights online". Privacy, I understand. Spam, I understand. Spyware, I understand. But what right are we talking about? Kazaa leeching? Give me a fucking break.
Go on, mod me a troll. I don't give a shit, I've had it with listening to the constant whining of a handfull of people who cannot understand the basics of "stealing music".
Re:Don't do the crime (Score:2)
Wrong. You can legally download music from www.mp3.com for example. But you don't own the copyright of what you download.
Actually, almost everything you download (or look at with your browser) is created by someone and is protected by the copyright laws (unless the writer explicitly gives up his copyrights and place his work in the public domain).
However, it is illegal to distribute or upload work that you don't own the copyright on. Big difference.
Th
Re:Don't do the crime (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Don't do the crime - price fix monopoly abuse (Score:5, Insightful)
I'll sketch a quick picture for you:
1. Massive global corporations refuse
repeated requests by their own customers
for convenient ways to download and pay.
2. Instead, these corps collude to fix prices,
impede unsigned artists from radio airplay,
bury studies showing that MP3 helps artists,
and sue alternative distributors into oblivion.
3. These corps lobby for draconian DMCA laws,
push for spyware and denial-of-service attacks,
force police and DAs to criminalize MP3 trades,
use subpoenas and search warrant techniques,
and seek terrible shock-and-awe punishments.
4. Many governments call this monopoly abuse,
for a wide range of probable legal reasons.
5. P2P overcomes this monopoly abuse,
even as it enables copyright violations.
So I think the answers are less obvious
than "don't do the crime" like you said.
There are legal twists and turns to this.
Cheers, Joel
Re:Don't do the crime - price fix monopoly abuse (Score:3, Insightful)
Please don't give me stupid arguments about civil disobedience to stupid laws. This is not civil disobedience. It is plain and simple copyright violation. You do have an alternative - RAISE YOUR VOICE. Write letters to the companies you consider to be perpetuating the situation saying "oh well, you know, IF you had a service that allowed me to download unrestricted music for a reasonable price, I'd go there". But no! You go on with the same stupid argument that "ther
Re:Don't do the crime - price fix monopoly abuse (Score:2)
Oh, we need to tell the music distribution industry we want their products delivered in another way and at a lower price. Why didn't anybody think of that? I am going to inform the conglomerates of this right away; I am sure they will be delighted to listen to my input. I am sure their current mode of operation is only due to the fact that nobody told them their business model is outdated, so how could they know?
Re:Don't do the crime - price fix monopoly abuse (Score:2)
Re:Don't do the crime - price fix monopoly abuse (Score:2)
Is this the service where your music files will disappear from your computer when you stop paying? Or the one where you have to pay extra to burn songs to CD?
Thanks, but no thanks. I use Emusic.com - I get all MP3 I want for $10 bucks a month - no strings attached.
Re:Don't do the crime - price fix monopoly abuse (Score:2)
Re:Don't do the crime BAN VCR'S and tapedecks (Score:2)
Psh. Yo' mama such a pirate she wears an eyepatch and has *every single episode* of the Jerry Springer show on tape.
more detailed articles (Score:5, Informative)
http://news.com.com/2100-1027-998132.html [com.com]
Re:more detailed articles (Score:2, Informative)
The local TV news made it sound like they had copies of the songs available for download. But if all it was is a site containing links to other locations where the song can be downloaded, then I am not completely comfortable with this.
I don't see how they breached copyri
1968?? (Score:2)
If this copyright law dates back to 1968 than there are bound to be some loop-holes that should get these guys off. They just need a decent lawyer.
Re:1968?? (Score:3, Informative)
No,it makes it a lot harder, since all the other cases since 1968 have been testing the law as it stands. The police (in general) will not prosecute if they determine that there's a previously known escape / loophole in this law that fits these circumstances. They make pretty sure that the law applies before going into court.
Updated 2000, 2002: with Karma whoring links... (Score:3, Informative)
For the curious, you can download (.pdf, .rtf):
the original act plus revisions [law.gov.au]
the copyright act amendment, known as the Digital Agenda [law.gov.au]
The reader will note that for the purpose of copyright infringement, actions that are not specifically allowed are considered to be infringing. Making .mp3's out of legally purchased CDs is technically an infringement, as it is not listed in the permissives, and not explicitly endorsed by (most)
Copying CD's (Score:2)
Short answer is that if you download music or just copy a CD is stealing. Its just how you feel afterwards that makes the difference
Rus
Here's a better link, without the crappy Flash (Score:3, Informative)
DNA based encryption with software developed [xnewswire.com]
Make up your minds!! (Score:3, Informative)
"Three students have been charged with copyright offences over an alleged $60 million music piracy operation. "
While another reports....[news.com.com]
"Australian police said on Thursday they had closed down an Internet music piracy site and arrested three students in an alleged copyright scam that cost the music industry at least $37 million."
Re:Make up your minds!! (Score:4, Informative)
The significance of this is... (Score:4, Interesting)
BTW - another article about this can be found here [australian...iew.com.au].
Free money for government allies (Score:3, Interesting)
and these MP3 problems get worse every week.
If anyone in public office reads this
and can advocate for better solutions,
send me email and I'll donate to you.
If you feel strongly like I do,
try donating to EFF [eff.org]
Cheers, Joel
Damages (Score:4, Interesting)
The piece of information I want the most at this point is the source of these numbers. Everytime I read these articles and come across figures such as these, I smell bullshit. Are they pulling these numbers out of their arses? Is it fuzzy math? (i.e. one download equals one lost album sale) If it's the latter, I say they need to start producing *real* numbers, and not these mystical figures. IMO, claiming one lost album sale for every download is like charging a retail burglar for the MSRP value of every single item in the store, regardless of whether or not it was actually stolen.
Re:Damages (Score:2)
Just speculation, but my guess is...
Loss = Mean income from each son x Number of MP3 downloaders worldwide
Criminal and civil law (Score:2)
On the hand, we do have the same civil laws as other coun
An easier way (Score:3, Insightful)
The laws (over here at least) are so messed up.
Amerika (Score:5, Interesting)
In the past year and a bit, we've seen a DMCA-like law passed, seen the senator for communications introduce stupid CDA-wannabe laws to appeal to the religious right, and many other atrocities.
What I find upsetting about this whole 'peer-to-peer users are terrorists' thing is the fact that the music industry couldn't give two shits if people were pirating Britney or 2pac or the artist formerly known as Puff Daddy. They're using legislative pressure to defend their business model.
While this was confined to the United States of Amerika, there was some hope that the new system would spring up around underground artists from other countries. Now that every man and his dog is a member of the 'coalition of the religious right against piracy and non-OPEC member countries', the world will slowly but surely be subjugated under big corporations, with Amerika as the figurehead 'state.'
I have often dreamt that those Free States such as Australia (was), New Zealand, the EU, etc would decide 'enough is enough, W!' and (in would would amount to a voluntary violation of the Berne Convention) decide that the DMCA and other laws were a load of junk and refuse to prosecute any of their citizens for alleged violations involving Amerikan IP.
This is looking less likely to happen now, and it's sad. My three year old sister is growing up as a slave to the MPAA because my father is too old to do anything else. Millions of other children are being rased similarly. In ten years we'll have a 'western' society where underground and independent (vs merely 'unsigned') artists have no place because nobody knows what they are or why. We won't have a public domain because it will have been bought, a-la Mexico.
I've called for moderation in the past, as people who deliberately break the law wind up appearing to stand on a very shaky political platform, but I'm fed up with it. The time is now. Spread pervasive peer to peer everywhere. Index EVERYTHING! And make sure that you're not violating classical copyright law in the process. Distribute works which WANT distribution.
Only in this way will we avoid becoming a slave to the media cartels.
PS- i'm sure that assloads of Americans are going to mod this into oblivion. I don't give a crap. I'm angry.
Re:Amerika (Score:3, Informative)
Laws that protect "copy protection mechanisms" which stop me listening to the music I buy on the devices I want to listen to them on (Not even copy or distribute them) go too far
And I understand that distributing MP3's is not illegal in itself. It is only illegal if the copywright owner has a problem with it. Fortunately not all owners don't have that view. I've DL'ed some great free to di
Re:Amerika (Score:3, Informative)
My problem is the content cartels using bullshit laws bought and paid for in Amerika and applied here by weak politicians to stifle new distribution models which may be interesting to people who AREN'T BREAKING THE LAW AND CONSIDER MAINSTREAM MUSIC CRAP AND NOT WORTH COPYING.
Bone up on your comprehension skills, Mr. Coward.
Re:Amerika (Score:2)
jail is too much (Score:2, Insightful)
We're talking about JAIL here, damn it! something that will fsck up your life for ever, mess up your future, end your chances of getting a good job, make you look bad to others. They didn't kill, didn't rape, didn't drink & drive. Give them fines (big fines), community service
Just my 2 cents.
Ok....bail time or jail time (Score:2)
What's it worth to put your money where your music library is?
I think it should be Don Henley.... [usatoday.com] seriously.
this *is* news (Score:2, Insightful)
It would set a very bad precedent if these kids were jailed.
What next? (Score:3, Interesting)
Makes me sick when there are people who are actually comitting crimes that harm people and society aren't even getting jail terms.
My opinion (Score:2, Informative)
Clearly the artists must own the rights to their creations - but that does not guarantee they make money from it. When I buy a record I have bought the right to play it as often as I like, and for who I like. How could it be any other way?
Re:My opinion (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not that people don't want to pay - it's that people do not want to be ripped off. I use Emusic.com, which cost $10/month for unlimited MP3, no strings attached, downl
Re:My opinion (Score:2)
Re:My opinion (Score:2)
So are you saying that I can distribute MP3s of Charlie Parker's recodings legally? I don't think so..
Is this a good thing? Maybe. (Score:2)
Even the 'entertainers' download the music (Score:2, Interesting)
Not that it means anything I suppose, but it's amusing how blatantly obvious it is that it's not the entertainers (singers, etc) but rather the **AA who are out for blood.
I wonder what would happen if one of their own were found to have a colle
Probably criminals (Score:2)
Typical slashdot (Score:2)
If it is short on details, who is Slashdot to make these presumptions? This is a little bit like unabashed Slashdot-style Microsoft-bashing, when not enough is known and the editors take their potshots at Microsoft anyway, driven by personal biases.
Creative Commons, towards 'free media' repository (Score:2)
What we need is an new music format with several parts to it; the first part specifies the license for the file (in particular the creative commons license number), the second part is a digtal signature of some authorata
Re:no fun (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:no fun (Score:2)
Damn right you would.
Re:no fun (Score:4, Interesting)
Not really, how many people belive it will not happen to them? Look at smoking, the packects say on them "these things will kill you and give you cancer" but people still keep on doing it.
Up the percentage killed and over a (shorter) period of time people that are inclined to jaywalk will be removed from the gene pool thus a form of darwinian(sp?) natural selection will prevail reducing the number of jaywalker/stupin people.
This would scale well to other situations...
Re:no fun (Score:2)
Re:no fun (Score:2)
The UK drink driving rate has been decreasing due to a maturing cultural attitude as you mentioned and the economics of being banned. When I say the economics you get dicked by the insurance companies if you get a large number of points
Re:no fun. Germans (Score:4, Interesting)
And that's the answer to the likes of the RIAA. Laws are supposed to reflect the beliefs of society in general, not special interest groups. If society believes that the present copyright laws are a mistake, people must not behave like sheep.
Re:no fun (Score:2)
Max
If that worked... (Score:2)
Lesson? Kill off the criminals and you just get fewer, more powerful criminals.
Re:no fun (Score:3, Insightful)
This thinking is wrong.. yes if there is only a small chance then people would still do it,
thinking it'd be someone else who'll get caught.
What you get when you put too harsh punishments is that people who break the law, will act more violent and try not to get caught. If the punishment for something feels too high compared to more severe act for which you get punished less, people may commit the oth
Copyright is a NECESSITY (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Copyright is a NECESSITY (Score:2, Interesting)
And how is this different today? Small inventors will invariably violate patents. Dragging the major hardware company to court doesn't get them anywhere. The legal costs are astronomical and the best you could hope for is a settlement which doesn't leave you with less than before. Even big businesses admit that they can't ensure that their products don't use others' patents without license. So much for patents.
However, this is a copyright issue. I have a very hard time accepting that I'm supposed to pay tw
Copyright is only one possibility (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Copyright is a NECESSITY (Score:3)
Hardly. Most programmers working today work on customized in house software that would be useless outside their own companies.
You are also mixing up patents and copyrights, they are quite different. At least patents last for only about 20 years. Copyright at the moment last for about 150 years.
The copyright laws have gotten way out of balance. I wouldn't mind such laws if copyright expired after 14 year
Re:better start deleting.. (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree to some extent that it's not very ethical to be sharing mp3's on your fave p2p network. I'm the last one to scream "but it can be used for good, too!" We all know what the primary purpose is. Fact remains, times are changing.
P2p file sharing isn't going away. And I perceive that as a good thing.
Information availability has been upped a few notches and now I can quickly access music and movies that before I could only dream of. I'm talking non-commercially available stuff. Will I have to wait before someone decides to release a DVD box set (that is very much over-priced)? No, but will I buy it if I deem it a valuable addition to my collection? Yes! No one ever bought a movie to watch it once and let it collect dust afterwards.
This whole situation is called evolution. It happens and no one can do anything about it, no matter how hard they try. Some victims will fall, but in the end, the majority will benefit the most. No, I don't see mp3 file sharing as a severe crime punishable by jail time. That's just a shock-and-awe tactic that will get the music industry nowhere. They think "set an example!" and don't think in terms of human beings. What do they care? As long as they get out the message that they want. A person's life does not matter, nor does it matter that possibly this offender will fall victim to more severe crimes because of his social decline. If anything is criminal, this is it.
The people will continue buying. Maybe a little less than before, but that may be for the better. Too much of anything is simply too much. Step off your high horse and see things in perspective. This is just an over-reaction and it's painfully obvious.
Re:better start deleting.. (Score:5, Interesting)
This is a misnomer. The DVD medium lends itself to kneejerk buying : it's a movie your friends may have raved about, it has special features. You buy it because it's about 10-15 bucks, and then you watch it once, don't enjoy it, and indeed it does gather dust. Or, you're a business traveller and you want something to watch on the plane, you impulse buy a DVD that looks OK at the airport in 5 minutes as you rush to get to the gate, to watch on your laptop. You never watch it again.
I have done all of this. Half my DVD collection is unlikely to be watched again. Indeed, I would never have bought VHS tapes the same way, because I never had a portable VCR... but I have a laptop with DVD, a PC with DVD, and a home DVD player. Add to that quality, nicer form factor, special features that may make the DVD as a whole more valuable than just as a movie. And of course let us not forget that we can watch a particular scene and freeze it really well, just to see if there was indeed a hint of beaver in that sex scene ;-)
Add in special features and extra content, and you have DVDs that you might buy (especially if you have a reasonable income) on a whim.
Now, the scary thing with mp3 / DivX (why have I seen no articles about DivX and mpeg traders?) is that there are students being taken to court, fined and jailed. Students don't have much of a disposable income, and are bound to be ahead on the technology curve. I don't understand why they're being persecuted, because they are the ULTIMATE consumers of the future. Sure, I've downloaded the odd movie, but I'm in an income bracket now where a couple of DVDs per month is going to be par for the course for a long time. A lot of my friends, graduated say over 5 years ago, also have big DVD collections.
Banks, restaurants, brandnames for clothes, dead tree publishers... these have all been known to give students breaks in order to keep them when their income starts coming in. This is the mistake the record industry is making, because they are missing the whole point. Students have always bootlegged, borrowed and stolen music. I can't quite understand it. The regular consumers are NOT doing this. It really screws with my mind to see this kind of intellectual property fascism. Consumerism is not the be all and end all of the whole world economy, let's hope that sooner or later a bit of clemency starts to happen especially, I have to say, in the US (by virtue of its being the biggest, most hardcore consumer economy in the whole world).
Re:better start deleting.. (Score:2)
Easy. The industry has always been short-sighted about this. All they know is that they've picked a target with little resources to fight back.
Re:better start deleting.. (Score:2)
No material is gone missing and I do not think I would buy less products if I didn't have file sharing. I'm not going t
Re:Death by hanging! (Score:2)
Re:...album covers... (Score:2)