Bobmi357
Knit one, Perl two...
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2003
- Posts
- 2,529
Mary Hall said:The RIAA sued a 12 year old girl, is that fair?
More than fair. Her parents are at fault for not monitoring her internet activities.
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Mary Hall said:The RIAA sued a 12 year old girl, is that fair?
sultresweetie said:I, personally, have no problems DLing shareware music. You can call me all the nasty names you want. The RIAA is not looking at the art of making music, it's solely into capitalizing off of it.
I'm sorry that people who are struggling musicians really believe that my DLing affects them. When our CEO talks about budget crisis and the bad economy making it impossible to compensate me for my work, I almost buy it-except that I know they are continuing to bank millions of dollars and couldn't care less that I'm short on rent.
If I buy a CD it's mine. If I feel like sharing it with others for free, that's my right.
If you wanna make money-tour.
I doubt that any of you spitting venom about this, would have any problems recording a program or movie from your cable TV, and probably have recorded VCR tapes in your collection that have been passed around to your family or friends.
The RIAA needs to spend it's time and energy catching up with technology instead of prosecuting artists' fans.
These "entertainers" like Britney Spears and the like, that are getting DLed for free spend their life getting shit for free.
I doubt Britney spends a dime for her entertainment or the designer shit she whores.
There has been quite a few artists that I have discovered from DLs. I have no problem going to their concerts and spending $80 to hear them perform, or sporting some of the fashion they are hocking.
midwestyankee said:Ljbonobo: a couple of questions for you, if you don't mind.
1. Would you consider it fair if one of your classmates "borrowed" a large project on which you had worked long and hard so that he could turn it in for a grade?
2. Let's say a classmate is found to have bought a term paper from an online service and gets a high grade for it. In the same class, you turn in your own work and receive the same grade. Do you believe your grade is somehow worth more than your classmate who plagiarized?
3. A historian reads several hundred books in preparing his own book on a major figure in history. A few years later someone discovers that an important passage in the historian's book, in fact the passage that was quoted during the ceremony in which the historian was given a prestigious award for the work, was copied verbatim from an obscure work published several decades ago. Does the historian deserve the prestigious award?
Intellectual property comes in many forms and people receive compensation for it in many different ways. Where do you draw the line on honesty for yourself? Is it at the barrier between convenient and inconvenient, or is it at the threshold between harming someone else and allowing someone else to earn her living?
Just asking.
. In my perspective you see all the artists complaining that I'm destroying their money making skills, I understand that but don't see the high executives of those companies taking any pay cuts..... The dixie chicks, after their incredibly sucessfull first album and tour (i'm thinking platinum in sales but i may be wrong), actually lost money on the deal if I recall correctly from the CMT Or GAC special I saw on them, how is the right? I'm sure their record label didn't lose money and that was before dl'ing music became so huge, so that couldn't have been the problem it is now. Also, dl'ing music off the internet is the same as recording a cable tv show, or recording off of the radio. The music was paid for at some point. The radio industry pays for the music they play (unless you are playing college radio generally in a noncom station), and the tv company pays for the rights to that tv show. When you download a song off the internet, the problem is that its almost a perfect copy as the the original, when you record off a radio, or the tv, its not as good as the original. That was the issue a lot of people saw with it in the beginning.alricflaim said:Where to start...where to start.... I know! At the Top of the list!
<SNIP>
Midwestyankee, your questions weren't posed at me, but I'll answer them anyways. Someone takes my work and claims it as their own? Fuckem' they need to discover the world of hurt. Downloaded my essay of the net without knowing it was mine? aside from the issue of how it got out there, they don't need to meet mister hammer.
But your questions don't have much to do with the issue at hand. I never claimed the songs I've downloaded are my own work. I'm not the inspiration behind the songs, or the writer, or singer, or musician of any sort that made them. It's a little different when someone takes something of yours and claims it was their own. Cite me for my work, that's fine, but the moment you take something I did and say you did it, then you're in the wrong.
Someone gets an equal grade as me when they turn in something they got off the net? sucks to be them. It doesn't hurt me any that I got the grade I deserve. I worked for my mark. They cheated. All they are doing is hurting themselves. Without doing the reasearch needed themselves, they aren't practicing their skills. They'll be found out when it comes exam time (and they are, I know) and I get better marks because I know my shit and they don't.
BTW congrats if you actually read my whole post instead of skimming it. It's long drawn out, and a little scattered, but then I wrote it, so it's bound to be all over the map.
Ljbonobo said:1)
If you look at the scientific world, one in which I am a member of, it happens all the time. Its called research and each and every scientific idea is built upon those before it. All you need to do is properly document where you got it from. I've done it, had it done from my work and experiments, not a big deal. If you look carefully at my example, there was no appropriate attribution of the work. In the scientific community, where duplication of research results is a desired part of the process, attribution is a form of compensation.
2)
My grade is worth one thing. It shows that I did the work required to get that grade. Therefore at some point down the line, I know how to repeat that sort of work again at that level. The classmate doesn't, and will be fucked. The grade is only a way of evaluating the quality, and I'd probably laugh at the classmate. I did not claim this was analogous to the songwriter's situation. This was only a question to suggest you think about how you feel when someone else claims your work as his own and receives a benefit from it. That's the theft of intellectual property - unless your work used little intellect (which I doubt).
3)
As long as the historian properly quoted the passage and then documented where he got the work there is no issue. That's completely allowed and considered correct. The art is in the combination of all the sources and data you collect into a meaningful and cohesive work. In fact having all those sources makes your work that much more appropriate b/c it shows you are not just coming out of left field. You have the sources to back up your standpoint and the data to show you are correct. I see nothing wrong with this. My example could have been more clearly stated. In the actual case this was based upon, the historian provided no such documentation. Again, as in the scientific community, documentation and attribution are the coin of the realm.
You are comparing apples to oranges. Intellectual property within the academic community is vastly different than musical property. Really? How so? Are not both created for the purpose of advancing the career of the individual thinker or creator? Are not both created for the purpose of generating income, advancement, or other similar benefits?
I download music, software, and movies for a few reasons. I download music b/c I don't like paying all that money for a CD that costs mere cents on the dollar for them to make. Yes I know that will get me flamed to high heaven, go ahead I have an asbestos casing on my monitor for flaming problems. In my perspective you see all the artists complaining that I'm destroying their money making skills, I understand that but don't see the high executives of those companies taking any pay cuts..... The dixie chicks, after their incredibly sucessfull first album and tour (i'm thinking platinum in sales but i may be wrong), actually lost money on the deal if I recall correctly from the CMT Or GAC special I saw on them, how is the right? I'm sure their record label didn't lose money and that was before dl'ing music became so huge, so that couldn't have been the problem it is now. Also, dl'ing music off the internet is the same as recording a cable tv show, or recording off of the radio. The music was paid for at some point. The radio industry pays for the music they play (unless you are playing college radio generally in a noncom station), and the tv company pays for the rights to that tv show. When you download a song off the internet, the problem is that its almost a perfect copy as the the original, when you record off a radio, or the tv, its not as good as the original. That was the issue a lot of people saw with it in the beginning.
Downloading software. I do it rarely, but primarily just to try something out before I buy it.
Downloading movies...I don't do it now, but did it primarily as an entertainment issue while at college. I also used it to compile libraries of my favorite tv shows that are no longer available....When was the last time you saw the muppets or alf on tv? You don't, however, I have most of their shows in entirety available to me. These arguments do not wash. In the first instance, you claim that you are doing no harm - or worse - even less harm than others, as in the industry executives whos decisions appear to be depriving artists of some income. Their behavior has nothing to do with the ethical quality of your behavior. In the second instance, trying something out before buying it, you are suggesting that what you are doing is comparable to trying on a shirt prior to purchase. That's fine so long as you leave the shirt at the store. Do you faithfully destroy all these files of software that you do not later purchase? Just curious. Your final example, copying old movies or tv shows for personal use is the only one that has much merit. Few people argue with the ubiquitous use of the VCR to record television programming. Perhaps that's because we assume that the various artists involved have already been adequately compensated. More importantly, they are not in the business of selling multiple copies of something in order to make a living.
Flame on people, I'm ready for it.
alricflaim said:The difference is that I'm not profiting from my downloads. I'm not selling them, or even claiming they are my own. I'm using them for my own enjoyment.
I'll admit, and even agree, that if I download something, I might be causing someone to lose a sale. I'll download a song, or maybe even a whole album, and decide if I like it or not. If I don't like it, and haven't bought the album, No one's lost a sale. I wouldn't have bought it anyways. But if I do like it, and I can buy it, I usually will, when I find it.
This is the crux of the problem. You are causing someone to lose a sale when you download and then do not purchase the music. And since you admit that you "usually" buy later, that means that sometimes you don't. That, as much as we might not like to think of it in these terms, is theft.
I buy more music now that I download, and I go to more concerts too. It doesn't just have to do with the fact that I have more money, that plays a part, but it's more because now I can hear things that I wouldn't otherwise hear. Or watch a movie that I'd otherwise have waited to come on PPV or DVD, rather then gone to see in the theatre, because I wasn't willing to pay for tickets to see something that didn't look really good. Question: if it were not possible to preview (your interpretation of what you do, as I see it) without making a recording for your own use, would you still do so? Or is the "previewing" aspect of your downloading a rationalization for getting music on the cheap?
I don't always buy stuff after I've found I liked it online, I'm more then willing to admit that. But there's always going to be, and as far as I know always has been this sort of thing ever since the ablitlity to record things has been given to us.Yes, illegal copies have been a problem for a long time. However, early copies were no match for digital copies, and the existence of the Internet has exacerbated the problem a million fold.
BTW, anyone know of the porn industry complaining about downloading? They're (If I remember correctly) a bigger business then hollywood or the Recording industry. And we all know that the number one downloaded thing on the net is still porn, but I've yet to hear word one from the porn industry about this. I'm curious to know what they think. If you're referring to the downloading of still images, then I don't know if this is a good analog for downloaded music files as the still images, when posted by their originator, are knowingly made available or access to them is being sold by subscription. As for the sharing of video clips through file-sharing venues, I have read of complaints. Further, the stealing of images between websites is a problem that does get some attention within the industry. They just don't take their problems to the New York Times.

hersixstring said:In response to this, I'm sure sheath will post her own links. In the meantime I'm expecting those of you who download music illegally to at least be educated on what you are doing to the songwriters and artists.
Ljbonobo said:I have but one last comment for today.
Yes I do download some illegal MP3s but I actually prefer to use Morpheus and Kazaa like programs to get the up and coming artists that don't have major record deals, along the lines of what mp3.com used to be like. When you give me other sources to musicians like shelby cole and such whose only source of music is either her concerts or off one or two websites that she's on, that's not much. I like the unique artists that I can't find anywhere.
I, too, like the unique artists that are next to impossible to find anywhere. But I also tend to listen to college radio stations when we're stationed in areas that have decent ones. Sources are available to no-name musicians. They are hard to find but generally worth the effort. Having said that, there are also plenty of places that offer the free MP3s legally by these artists. I'll have to find one and link it later.
I have downloaded illegal MP3s in the past. I still download some software and tv shows. However, the passion and the well thought out arguments for the non illegal side have won some serious thought in my head. I would prerfer to discuss this further in a rational way rather than the slapdish way its being debated on here. I guess until you talk to people who are actually being screwed by what you are doing you don't realize it. Thank you.
Lit is great in part because we can have all sorts here without really having to acknowledge our own status in society. However, sometimes that can create rifts as well because of things as simple as this thread. There are two main schools of thought regarding this issue and sometimes people forget that some of us here actually do have our careers affected by the opposite school of thought. I hope that the next time someone thinks about what you've just said, they'll think again about some of us real people being screwed.
I still hold my thoughts that the music industry is messed up where artists get pennies while the CEO's get rich, but I guess its just the same as every other part of american society in that respect.
Yes it is. Some people get fucked out of a good income because of the higher ups. Others don't get fucked as bad. But the majority of american business is built around making money off of the people under you. A monarchy of sorts.
I used to work in college radio. I got used to having all the nonames and the artists before they got big, that's what has me hooked on MP3s. There really isn't anywhere else to get that, that I am aware of.
I too used to work in college radio. It's what got me started in songwriting in the first place, and really hit home on many levels how much some artists do struggle before they make it big time. However, in my case, we were also very well informed about music piracy even before the internet p2p programs were available. So I guess I got an early start. Then again, I was working in college radio at 15.
I apologize for getting pissed off and fighting an argument that I really had no solid arguments for. Thanks for pointing that out so bluntly. Sometimes that's what it takes.
K is a very blunt person. And hard to argue with.
Having said that, sometimes the full effect stuff like this has on us is downplayed even by the affected because we tend to like the anonymity of being here. We don't like getting screwed, but we don't want to tell you how bad we're being screwed because you might put together who we are. Thank you for actually taking some of our words to heart.
Ljbonobo said:I have downloaded illegal MP3s in the past. I still download some software and tv shows. However, the passion and the well thought out arguments for the non illegal side have won some serious thought in my head. I would prerfer to discuss this further in a rational way rather than the slapdish way its being debated on here. I guess until you talk to people who are actually being screwed by what you are doing you don't realize it. Thank you.



sultresweetie said:If it makes you feel better, you hateful nasties don't have to worry about your precious Country diddies ever making it into my collection, because I think country music sucks shit.
Here's a lil diddy of mine, FREE from me to all of you hysterical RIAA lackeys.....
KKKKIIIIIIIISSSSS MYYYYY FREEEEE MUUUUUSIC LOOOOVING ASSSSS!
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sheath said:Your maturity level just hit an amazing low.
Thank God for the ignore function.
S.
sultresweetie said:You know what? I don't fucking apologize for DLing music and I don't see any reason to be persuading by a group of disrespectful and rude people on the internet who want to name-call, and suggest that I'm a horrible person and deserve to be killed, because I download songs that I enjoy. Music brings a lot of joy into my life and I appreciate the art. Only in America would businessman be so fucking uptight about capitilizing off of sound that it would punish those who listen.
Pop artists make money off of being living billboards-not from CD sells. I doubt you would ever find a "struggling artist" in my collection of MP3s.
If it makes you feel better, you hateful nasties don't have to worry about your precious Country diddies ever making it into my collection, because I think country music sucks shit.
Here's a lil diddy of mine, FREE from me to all of you hysterical RIAA lackeys.....
KKKKIIIIIIIISSSSS MYYYYY FREEEEE MUUUUUSIC LOOOOVING ASSSSS!
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VSE said:late night ramble mode engaged
I dont object to paying for music, I just object to being forced to buy the music in a format that isnt relevant to me and having to pay through the nose to do it.