massive
Bluelighter
tinrib said:lol, do you have any idea how the music industry works??!!!!
Yeah I have some ideas about how the music indusrty USED to work.ffs
tinrib said:lol, do you have any idea how the music industry works??!!!!
massive said:Yeah I have some ideas about how the music indusrty USED to work.ffs
Yeah you can have a copy because your really cool, but we dont like you so you have to pay us.
Maybe the label was losing the music sending out promos to their uber-select-elite friends.
Its become so standard to do this that peopel do it without thinking, we need to change the current 'norms' and look at ways of keeping the industry alive
Just because they throw loads of money on a project doesnt make them intelligent- and doesnt garantee a quality product.they then sell the record they've spent so much time and money working on.
the difference is that i am willing to give my music to people who are nice, and no-one here steals new cars... doesn't that tell you something?
alasdairm said:^ your inability to decouple
Just because they throw loads of money on a project doesnt make them intelligent- and doesnt garantee a quality product.
It tells me that thats a weak analogy; they are totally different products. Consumers view the music as a disposable product - which has a lot to do with labels flooding the market sub-par products, not for the love of music, but just to make a quick buck.
dr seuss said:if you really had experience of how fucked up the music 'industry' can be, then ffs why are you ripping on a small dedicated independent label which consists of two guys and an email address? lame man.
dr seuss said:it's easy to criticise but hard to emulate. would you care to show us all how it's done?
TheDEA.org said:Why I Steal Music (and don't give a fuck what you or RIAA thinks):
1. Because sometimes you hear an obscure song on the radio and just want to hear it again. File sharing allows me to listen to music that I enjoy...but don't enjoy enough/won't listen to enough to remotely justify buying the CD.
2. Because I got sick of buying hype. Now, let's have a show of hands: How many of you have NEVER shelled out (far too much) good money for a CD that seemed to have promise based on the heavy rotation single, but when you got it home it was mostly filler and crap? The music industry has made a living on this bait-and-switch game for decades, and I'm fucking tired of it. I deserve a damn good album for $15-20.
3. Because I'm tired of price fixing. Walk down the DVD aisle. What do you see? Price points all over the spectrum. I picked up a copy of Conan the Barbarian because, at $8, it provided value. I picked up a copy of the extended version of the Return of the King because, even at $27, it provided value. The movie industry prices their goods competitively. The music industry pretty much charges the same damn price for every CD, no matter how good or rotten, no matter how new or old. RIAA has grown accustomed to collusion, keeping prices as high as the market will bear instead of competing with each other for music lover's dollars. As a result, the industry has gotten (stayed?) slow, stupid, and wasteful. We don't need the recording industry in it's current form to exist at all. Let aspiring artists round up a few grand and rent some studio time, cut their own album, and sell it online.
4. Because it's a great way to find new artists/albums. What, your dozen local ClearChannel stations don't play obscure artists? Of course not. Thanks to file sharing, I have often simply plucked an album from thin air, based on nothing more than a weird band or album name...and liked it! And bought it! I swiped Moby's "Play" when it came out. It was interesting, so when "18" came out, I bought it, sight-unseen. The bloated brainless ticks that sit on the executive boards of the Big Five don't understand that there's more to album/artist promotion than just high dollar videos and bribing DJs. In fact, researchers who have analyzed P2P traffic found that there was reliably a sudden spike in file SHARING of a certain album BEFORE sales of the CD picked up. File sharing spreads the word.
5. Because the dog I had fed for so many years decided to bite the hand that fed it. RIAA runs around calling people like me criminals, saying we're destroying the music industry (when people like me were their best customers). They sue teenagers for tens of thousands of dollars over sharing the music on their computers. I refuse to buy new CDs from the big publishers these days. It's a personal boycott, but it's still going to damn well cost them thousands of dollars (perhaps tens of thousands in the long run.) If they want to treat their customers like criminals to be beaten into submission rather than catered to, I'll damn well spend my money elsewhere.
6. Because I would like to buy music online, I really would. But RIAA won't let me. Or rather, they'll let me buy 128 kbit tracks that are DRM'd to slave them only to Authorized players. Fuck that! Apple and the iTunes store can suck my hairy balls. I start buying music online when I can get loss-less with NO DRM...and not one minute before. The P2P networks are already littered with non-DRM music; it's just an insult to suggest that DRM is preventing anybody from downloading music.
The notion that making an unauthorized copy is simply 'stealing' is childish and simplistic.
Don't talk to me about intellectual property rights, either. The point of copyright and patent law was NEVER to provide absolute control over your creative works. Rather, copyright and patent exist ONLY to provide motivation to create by protecting you from unfair competition. You have a right not to have some asshole selling a copy of your work in competition with you. That's all.
The 'ethics' of downloading are: be ethical about your downloading.