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Trent Reznor Says "Steal My Music"

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Mon Sep 17, 2007 04:07 PM
from the unlikely-defense-against-the-mafiaa dept.
THX-1138 writes "A few months ago, Trent Reznor (frontman of the band Nine Inch Nails), was in Australia doing an interview when he commented on the outrageous prices of CDs there. Apparently now his label, Universal Media Group is angry at him for having said that. During a concert last night, he told fans, '...Has anyone seen the price come down? Okay, well, you know what that means — STEAL IT. Steal away. Steal and steal and steal some more and give it to all your friends and keep on stealin'. Because one way or another these mother****ers will get it through their head that they're ripping people off and that's not right.'"
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drcagn writes "Gene Simmons has blasted 'college' kids and claims that they have destroyed the music industry, with the labels also to blame for not properly suing them out of existence when they had the chance. When asked about Radiohead and Trent Reznor's recent support of a different direction in music distribution, he says "that's not a business model that works. I open a store and say 'Come on in and pay whatever you want.' Are you on f---ing crack?" When asked about music being free and making money off of merchandise, he says, "The most important part is the music. Without that, why would you care?" even though earlier in the interview he brags that he believes that KISS's merchandise is more profitable than Elvis's or the Beatles.'"
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  • by babbling (952366) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:11PM (#20643005)
    This was during a concert, not an interview. A YouTube clip of him talking about it. [youtube.com]
    • by LiquidCoooled (634315) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:16PM (#20643119) Homepage Journal
      Thats the exact quote referenced and includes the full reaction from the crowd.
      My only question is did the concert tickets also get cheaper since his last visit?
      Would he recommend people break into the stadium?
      • by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 17 2007, @04:20PM (#20643205)
        >Would he recommend people break into the stadium?

        You're conflating violent crimes with civil infractions again.
      • by xouumalperxe (815707) on Monday September 17 2007, @05:54PM (#20644489)

        You're comparing apples to oranges.

        On one side, you have a CD: It has a more or less fixed (for any given project) initial production cost, and costs a tiny amount per copy to make virtually limitless amounts of copies of it. On the other side, you have a concert, each night an individual piece of work, with hard-capped supplies for tickets. Of course the prices for one and the prices for the other shouldn't be held to the same standard. It's sort of like expecting oil paintings to be held to the same pricing standards as mass-produced posters.

  • Going indie (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Goose42 (88624) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:12PM (#20643027) Homepage
    IIRC, his contract is going to be up soon anyways, and if this is how he feels his company is treating him I doubt he'll sign a new one. With the innovative storytelling he's done with Year Zero, and essentially making open-source music by releasing the original recording data so that anyone can remix it, it'll be interesting to see how he goes about releasing new music without a large distribution network that the major label gives him.
    • by Otter (3800) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:19PM (#20643177) Journal
      My guess is that having his cake and eating it too is a lot more attractive than giving up major label money and moving into the apartment next door to Jonathan Coulton's. But we'll see...
    • Re:Going indie (Score:5, Informative)

      by Bacon Bits (926911) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:21PM (#20643221)
      If you've followed his career at all, you'd know his current record contract exists only because he had no other choice.

      He was using his own label -- Nothing Records -- to publish his music. He never liked working with the big labels. However, while he was going through some pretty destructive drug use after The Fragile, his partner essentially took the money from Nothing Records and ran. Trent woke up and found himself with no money and no way to make money.

      He signed a multi-album deal to get him enough money to be independent again, but he has become increasingly disgusted by the practices of the label (double dipping by charging Trent to do the color shifting ink label and then still charing the customer more, etc.). IIRC, he's got one album left and then he's free. I'd expect it to be released sometime in 2008 or early 2009, depending on how profitable his tour is. He wants out ASAP.
    • by tholomyes (610627) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:40PM (#20643509) Homepage
      If only there were some sort of large... electronic distribution network he could use... and if he could take those sounds and somehow send them over this network...
      • Re:Going indie (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Rimbo (139781) <rimbosity@@@sbcglobal...net> on Tuesday September 18 2007, @02:16AM (#20648509) Homepage Journal
        I just wanted to say something about CD Baby.

        I love, love, love CD Baby. I really, really do. They are what a label in the 21st century ought to be. The cut they take is perfectly fair, they give you all kinds of tips to help you sell your stuff, and really they just provide the store-front and a way to get your stuff into as many net-storefronts as possible, and they just keep doing more and more about this. I get 62.5 cents per iTunes purchase, several times more than any big-label band would get, regardless of how many I sell. I mean, working with them is SO SWEET. You can download your sales as a spreadsheet, something I do to make sure I'm paid up on my cover songs' licensing deals.

        CD Baby is fuckin' rad, man. They should be the only label any musician should even consider.

        It's hard enough to make money with music without some fucking label assraping you for every dime you "cost" them.
  • by Tibor the Hun (143056) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:14PM (#20643071)
    Nothing can stop him now.
  • Promoter vs Artist (Score:5, Insightful)

    by BoRegardless (721219) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:19PM (#20643195)
    Back to the same old B.S. that has caused turmoil in Hollywood since I can remember.

    Artist makes contract with "BigCo", and "BigCo" agrees to a % of the "sales" as they define them, and then "BigCo" sets the price of the movie, book, or music where they want to get their profits they want. That was the way of the 20th Century.

    In the 19th Century, artists of all types made money on direct sales, direct live acts and there was little other than a shop that might sell works for a % of the sale.

    Now I wonder if the 21st Century Artist is not moving back to the 19th Century methods, where the artist controls things more, since it is the Artist inspiring the viewers, listeners, readers of his work that counts for quality artistic expression. If Artists have something hot, that your subset of the human race likes, the Internet allows those mutual groups to find each other in lots of ways.

    I think the Internet is leveling the playing field, and artists are likely to see a resurgence of interest...provided they have quality work.
  • by Critical Facilities (850111) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:21PM (#20643209) Homepage
    I love Trent and think he's a very talented musician, but I'm wondering if someone's back on heroin again. I agree that the music industry is ripping off the artists and the listeners, but when you sign a contract, you agree to many things and it's doubtful that the company with which the agreement was made is going to look fondly on any attempt to decrease what they were promised (i.e. profits).

    Face it Trent, you've still gotta make a few records for them. Do what Prince did, paint 'slave' on your face and release a few "best of NIN" albums and then do whatever you want on your own label or just sell your stuff online, we'll buy it.
  • by the_olo (160789) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:26PM (#20643289) Homepage

    And is not afraid to go against the labels' will, e.g. see the history behind an eastern egg [eeggs.com] on the "Broken" album:

    They(tvt)wanted a more commercial album and insisted on producers doing his next album. When Trent refused, they told him his album would never get made nor released and denied studio time. The entire Broken album in turn was recorded and written almost entirely while on tour for Pretty Hate Machine. Trent even talks about how they would mix it in hotel rooms,on computers, and hide the names of the song and material with saved names like "pussyfuck".
  • But doesn't stealing something require taking it *WITHOUT* permission?
  • by unity100 (970058) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:49PM (#20643643) Homepage Journal
    instead YOU have stolen our hearts, as ./ers, liberals, geeks, open source people and such.

    what are you going to do about that ?
      • by justinlindh (1016121) on Monday September 17 2007, @05:13PM (#20643957)
        Posted too soon. Found info on the USB drive sharing thing on Wikipedia. Here's a snippet of what happened:

        On February 12, 2007, a USB drive was found in a bathroom stall during a NIN concert in Lisbon. It contained a high-quality MP3 of the track "My Violent Heart," which quickly circulated throughout the Internet. Another USB drive containing the same track was purportedly found in Madrid.

        On February 19, another USB drive was found in Barcelona, containing the track "Me, I'm Not" and an MP3 of static.

        On February 25, a third USB drive was found in Manchester, containing the track "In This Twilight" and an image of the Hollywood sign apparently demolished.

        Concerning the use of USB drives as a form of promotion, Reznor explains:

        " The USB drive was simply a mechanism of leaking the music and data we wanted out there. The medium of the CD is outdated and irrelevant. It's really painfully obvious what people want -- DRM-free music they can do what they want with. If the greedy record industry would embrace that concept I truly think people would pay for music and consume more of it.

        That's awesome, and makes my nerd heart warm.

  • 100,000 CDs a year (Score:4, Informative)

    by athloi (1075845) on Monday September 17 2007, @05:27PM (#20644175) Homepage Journal
    Major label payout at 10%
    Wholesale price: $9 / 90 cents per CD = $90,000.00

    Selling as independent artist and Amazon(tm) Partner
    Staff member to mail packages: $30,000 per year
    Cost per CD, printing: $1
    Cost per CD, packaging and mailing: $4
    Cost per year: $530,000 on revenues of ($15 CD) $1.5m

    Net: $1m

    Going indie is not just more trendy, it's more profitable, once you've already got that mega-media marketing machine convincing 100,000 people they need to buy your (mediocre) music.
  • by gosand (234100) on Monday September 17 2007, @05:29PM (#20644215) Homepage
    Does this really matter? After all, it isn't his music anymore, he signed those rights away. He can't give permission to steal it. Wonder if he meant actually stealing the CDs from the stores, or downloading it. Those are 2 different things as we all know.

    Unfortunately, we are in the scenario where an artist that people will listen to (read: popular) got that way because of the RIAA and the industry they are in... they have likely signed a long-term contract. Once they are out of that contract, the general population won't really care about them (read: Pearl Jam, Prince) and they will kind of fade away. Personally, I like all of these acts I have named, but they aren't in the main spotlight anymore. This is a system that the RIAA has created, and unless someone can a) gain huge popularity without them and b) stay out of their clutches, it won't seem possible to break out of their system.

  • by MichaelCrawford (610140) on Monday September 17 2007, @05:40PM (#20644325) Homepage Journal
    You could really help me out if you shared my music [geometricvisions.com] on the Internet.

    If you play piano, there's sheet music available for two of my songs, with the rest coming sometime soon.

    It's all completely legal to share, as it has a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 license. You can create derivative works such as remixes, and even sell my work or perform it in front of a paying crowd, but you must share alike - that is, give your derivative works the same license.

    Why am I doing this? I am studying both piano and music theory with the aim of going back to school someday to major in musical composition. I want to compose symphonies.

    I'll be in my fifties by the time I graduate - I can't afford to spend years building up a fan base. So when your local symphony orchestra plays my work, I want there to already be a loyal fan base in your city.

    Thanks for your help!

    • by moderatorrater (1095745) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:10PM (#20643003)
      You're right, the 13 cents he makes per cd should totally be given back. Power to the people!
      • You're right, the 13 cents he makes per cd should totally be given back. Power to the people!

        Don't forget he has to pay for studio time, so make that 13 cents per CD (that's a very good deal, as these things go) minus $200,000 for each project.

        How's the math on that?
        -Nathan
        PS:I'm sure trent has built his own studio by now and has engineers lapping at his johnson to work on his stuff. But still. I bet the studio cost a couple million.
    • by dctoastman (995251) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:12PM (#20643035) Homepage
      Actually, if he stopped accepting royalties, then the record companies will make an even larger profit and they wouldn't care. That would make it an empty gesture.
      • by TubeSteak (669689) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:42PM (#20643539) Journal
        I think the point about royalties is that he built his career using their distribution and advertising networks and continues to enjoy the benefits (royalties) of their restrictive (high priced) distribution model.

        NiN is a Big Deal & could easily start their own label and do whatever they damn well please. So, by suggesting he renounce royalties, the GP is saying that Reznor shouldn't just say "Fuck the Man", he should actually stop taking money he's earned through the system he decries.
        • by KikassAssassin (318149) on Monday September 17 2007, @05:37PM (#20644293)
          Trent is in a contract with his label to put out a certain number of albums through them before he can break away and do his own thing.

          In the interview that was mentioned in the topic (http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,21741980-5006024,00.html [news.com.au]), he says:

          (Interviewer): Given all that, do you have any idea how to approach the release of your next album?

          I've have one record left that I owe a major label, then I will never be seen in a situation like this again. If I could do what I want right now, I would put out my next album, you could download it from my site at as high a bit-rate as you want, pay $4 through PayPal. Come see the show and buy a T-shirt if you like it. I would put out a nicely packaged merchandise piece, if you want to own a physical thing. And it would come out the day that it's done in the studio, not this "Let's wait three months" bulls---.
            • by CastrTroy (595695) on Monday September 17 2007, @08:20PM (#20646119) Homepage
              There's a whole bunch of artists on eMusic selling songs for $0.30 and albums for around $5.00 (assuming 15 songs on an album), who have yet to make their "pile". If they can do it, and Trent can do it, there's no reason that all the artists at in-between levels of famousness can't do it too, as well as those who sell many more records than Trent.
            • by raehl (609729) <raehl311.yahoo@com> on Monday September 17 2007, @09:39PM (#20646727) Homepage
              It's very easy to give stuff away - once you've already made your pile.

              It's very easy to give stuff away - when selling it puts money in someone else's pile.

              Artists for major record labels don't make any money selling CDs. You give your mechanical rights to the record company, they promote you, and you make your money on performances. That's the deal.

              In the old world, this was a 'good' deal, as without the muscle of the record companies promoting you, your act was going to continue to play bars and night clubs instead of stadiums.

              In the new world, there's the internet, and you can do quite well for yourself keeping your mechanical rights and performing less.
        • by Zonk (troll) (1026140) on Monday September 17 2007, @05:40PM (#20644335)

          NiN is a Big Deal & could easily start their own label and do whatever they damn well please. So, by suggesting he renounce royalties, the GP is saying that Reznor shouldn't just say "Fuck the Man", he should actually stop taking money he's earned through the system he decries.
          Perhaps he should. A cool name for it would be Nothing Records [wikipedia.org]...
    • by king-manic (409855) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:16PM (#20643111)

      I just wonder one thing: has he stopped accepting royalties from the CD sales, or canceled his distribution contracts? Without that step, this is a fairly empty gesture from a very rich man.
      He makes available high quality raw audio track for people to sample with. He vocally questioned the high prices in Australia. He encouraged his fans to steal his music. I don't think he needs to impoverish himself to have an opinion.
        • by king-manic (409855) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:41PM (#20643517)

          Rather, he seems to be encouraging his fans to not buy his music, which deprives him of royalties, but also deprives the label of money.
          Exactly, already it's like 98:2 label:talent money split for new bands. For NIN I'd imagine it's 85:15. His label loses more if his music is stolen then he does. If you look for some of his older records they are premium priced. $24-$45 CAD for pretty hate machine or the downward spiral. Ludicrous for something that is individually less then $0.10 to produce.
            • by Volante3192 (953645) on Monday September 17 2007, @05:21PM (#20644083)
              Pretty Hate Machine came out in 1989. Somewhere in the past 18 years I'd imagine it recouped it's production costs. Could you imagine software made in 1989 being sold at original retail today?
    • by krog (25663) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:18PM (#20643157) Homepage
      Jeopardizing one's employment by publicly disagreeing with the immoral practices of one's employer doesn't sound very empty to me.

      Sure, he might not have said these things back when Pretty Hate Machine was about to be released, but that doesn't negate what he's saying.
    • by pilgrim23 (716938) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:26PM (#20643287)
      Royalties? you are enjoying that smoke I hope...
      Having been in the biz I know why he said that at a concert; he gets NOT ONE DIDDLY PENNY for those CDs. nada, nothing nyet! that is the way it works. All your uber stars get nothing more then a screw job for the recordings which is why they go on tour. Life on the road sucks but at least you DO get a percentage of the concert take. Remember that band from the 60s you loved? They are playing the county fair in Backwoods Iowa today and may get 20% of the gate or if they are lucky car fair, and a straight grand or so for a week's performances. Music biz is a reality check; The record companys get the other sort of chequeues.
      • by Joce640k (829181) on Monday September 17 2007, @06:56PM (#20645297) Homepage
        I personally know musicians who've got albums in the "100 best sellers of all time" list and didn't make a penny from record sales. Not one.

        This isn't anything new either, it's been going on since at leat the 70's. The web is full of stories about major artists who disbanded because they ended up owing money to the record companies.

        I remember the day I first showed them Napster and they laughed out loud because they knew it would be the end of the record companies.

        What should artists do? First set up a web site. Next, go and talk to somebody like CDBABY - they garantee you at least $6 per CD sale (minimum!). Link to them from your web site.

        What should the public do? First watch the movie "Before The Music Dies". Next, steal from the RIAA like Trent says but buy direct from the artist or through people like CDBABY.

        The record companies aren't just ripping off artists they're also stifling innovation and killing decent music. The sooner we get rid of them the better.

        • by pilgrim23 (716938) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:50PM (#20643657)
          I have the $20 royalty check for my plus 130,000 sold albums. McCartney is not a normal musician and I do nto abide by slashdot wisdom bunkie. been there, but I could not AFFORD the teeshirt. -nuff said.
        • by julesh (229690) on Monday September 17 2007, @06:34PM (#20645013)
          Paul McCartney is worth $1.5 billion.

          You can't compare the popularity of NIN or Reznor with the Beatles or McCartney. They're on different scales.

          Also, McCartney was recording for an independent label (Apple Records) at the height of his career. That makes a big difference. He also owned the copyright to some of the most popular songs in the world, which he sold for a substantial sum. There aren't many songs that a collector would pay to own the copyright to. It's not a great business proposition.
    • by RingDev (879105) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:28PM (#20643317) Homepage Journal
      Actually, until 2005 Trent was running Nothing, his own Label and Studio. And given his attitude to the industry (the record industry, not the musicians), and his past affinity for the internet and viral marketing, it would not be surprising to see him go to a fully independent internet only distribution system and start a new label once his contractual obligations to Interscope are done.

      -Rick
    • by purpledinoz (573045) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:28PM (#20643323)
      He's right though, CD prices are still too high. An extreme example is in Malaysia, a I looked at some CDs, and they costed 45 ringit, which is about $15. Normal price for an American. But if you consider that an average Malaysians make 3 times less than an American, then a 45 ringit CD to a Malaysian is like $45 to an American. Now, who the hell is going to pay $45 for a CD????
      • by Ash Vince (602485) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:26PM (#20643293) Journal

        He said recently in an interview that he's trapped in a contract and has to produce some number of albums for his label,....
        This also means his label are probably stuck with him for the same number of albums proving the previous one sells a certain minimum number.

        It sounds similar to Matt Groening and FOX. They pissed him off by not letting him concentrate on Futurama and making him churn out more Simpsons so he used the Simpsons as a vehicle to insult FOX executives whenever he could. They had to put up with it as he was sticking by his contract and making them money.
        • by SloWave (52801) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:28PM (#20643321) Journal
          >> Until the studio pulls out the contract with his signature that states that the studio owns the IP.

          Anytime you see the term 'IP' used in this context, think 'Illusionary Property' because that's exactly what it is. The whole fiction of IP being somehow property that can be owned, sold, stolen, or otherwise equated with real hard goods is a fiction created by lawyers and corporations to extract more money and control for themselves.
          • by DragonWriter (970822) on Monday September 17 2007, @06:40PM (#20645081)

            Anytime you see the term 'IP' used in this context, think 'Illusionary Property' because that's exactly what it is. The whole fiction of IP being somehow property that can be owned, sold, stolen, or otherwise equated with real hard goods is a fiction created by lawyers and corporations to extract more money and control for themselves.


            No more so than the idea of anything, including "real, hard goods" being property that can be owned, sold, or stolen is a fiction created to extract more money and provide narrow control to a favored subset of the population.

            Property is a social construct, not something with any kind of natural essence. This as true of tangible personal propert and real property as it is of intangible personal property like stocks, bonds, copyrights, and trademarks.

            Legitimate arguments can be made over whether any proprietary rights should exist in some things and what kind of proprietary rights should exist in each class of things to which those rights are ascribed, but the idea that proprietary rights in anything or something other than a social construct designed to facilitate the extraction of value and wall off things from the general use is a wildly inaccurate starting point for any such argument.
              • by mr_matticus (928346) on Monday September 17 2007, @06:02PM (#20644603)
                "Exclusive right" pretty much covers that. The right to control something is a property interest.

                In a society where rights are evaluated on economic issues, particularly given that the issues that concern IP are business-based, they all function as property rights.

                Property is not "things you can own." Property in the law is ALL artificial. Property is the right to exclude, in the simplest of terms. There is no legal relevance to or association with any tangible object in ANY kind of property law. To say otherwise is an extralegal fiction perpetuated by an anti-IP crowd.

                Intellectual Property doesn't refer to a "fiction that it's something to be owned." The fiction is the unstated premise that "property" actually refers to a "thing" at all. It doesn't and never has. Real property isn't a thing. You can't own land. You can only own rights to that land guaranteed by the government. There is no difference. The only reason the name "Intellectual Property" exists is for convenience--it flags people as to what specific fields are involved. Real property law is a special pursuit, separate from plain-old vanilla property law, separate from personalty.

                People in general don't know what property means, and they don't know what "real" means either, and instead they decide that somehow "Intellectual Property" causes people to think in false terms, as though it has any consequence whatsoever on the legal community. This is why Slashdot's arguments about legal terms of art are spurious at best. Property isn't a thing, and Intellectual Property doesn't imply a thing to own. The thing is the right itself. It's not even a little misleading, contrary to what RMS spoon feeds you.
      • by fishbowl (7759) <nethack.cox@net> on Monday September 17 2007, @04:28PM (#20643327)
        Can you please cite the judicial order or legislative ruling that establishes copyright infringement as equivalent to theft?

        And, on topic, what about the big fuzzy gray area where the creator of a work still has free expression to say things like "steal this book" or "my agent is a dick nose and I want out of my contract?"
        • by omeomi (675045) on Monday September 17 2007, @04:44PM (#20643581) Homepage
          Can you please cite the judicial order or legislative ruling that establishes copyright infringement as equivalent to theft?

          Pfft...who needs judicial orders or legislative rulings when you can have wild speculation? ;-)
              • by Goldberg's Pants (139800) on Monday September 17 2007, @10:38PM (#20647183) Journal
                Working on the logic of some assholes on here, you just said something positive about something, ergo you must be a shill for Tool.

                Anyway, Tool aren't bad. I've been a NIN fan for about 14 years now, and in 2000, I started boycotting RIAA CD releases. Trent's new album this year, "Year Zero", is the first CD I've bought in seven years. Why did I buy it? Had it been a traditional release, I would never have bought it most likely, despite being a huge fan of Trent's work. However, Trent's marketing, in particular leaking several tracks on USB drives and dumping them at various concert venues was enough to hook me (not to mention the multiple websites and the extremely elaborate back story for the whole album). Because of all that, I wound up buying the CD the week it was released.

                Trent has already said that once his contract with Interscope is up (one more album) he's going to an online distribution model and not bothering with a label.

                As for Trent's comments... I already knew his attitude toward the labels. On that video I'm more interested in the fact there seems to be not one for TWO security guys right in front of the person with the camera not doing anything about the dude with the camera.:)
        • Re:And then (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Artifakt (700173) on Monday September 17 2007, @06:28PM (#20644949)
          You're presenting a serious argument, not just shouting that copyright violation equals theft. You deserve a good explanation, and not abuse. But there are several reasons why copyright violation isn't theft, and they have nothing to do with who gets compensated for what (in the US at least).

          1. Copyright law, at least originally, was all under title 17 of the US legal code. Criminal actions are kept organized in a completely different section, Title 18. So the congress drafted our most basic federal laws to say copyright violation was not only not theft, but not criminal at all. Some parts of CV have become criminal of late, but they are still not all properly incorporated into that part of the code.

          2. Copyrights expire. There is no such thing as an object becoming old enough that it is no longer theft to steal it. So long as the constitution says "for a limited time" copyright violation is being treated as automatically not theft by the U S Constitution.

          3. There is still a non-criminal class of copyright violations, including 'violations' that are not even torts because of fair use. 'Non-criminal theft' is an absurdity. If copyright violation = theft, then there can be no fair use, as stealing even part of something is still theft just as much as stealing the whole thing. CV=T means no quotation of even a small portion without permission, and makes negative reviews illegal.

          4. All copyright law in the US is federal, and the courts have ruled it cannot be delegated to the states. If copyright violation is theft, then the Federal government has no legal grounds for prohibiting the individual states from passing laws to prohibit theft taking place within their borders.

                  Now, you could argue that the U S Congress, the Justice Dept., and the Supreme Court are all wrong on various points, and the Constitution itself needs amended. Maybe. But I have yet to see any of the persons who are yelling "CV=T!" on Slashdot accuse their congressman of pandering to thieves, or demand a recall of the Supreme Court because they are misapplying the constitution so egregiously, or even lobby their state to pass its own copyright laws that make CV=T locally, and fight the court decisions prohibiting them. The CV=T! crowd seems to love calling typical slashdot posters thieves, but until one of them stands up in the capital rotunda and applies their very same logic to the congress, I'm assuming they either don't really believe it, or are too cowardly to speak truth to power. (That's very much not directed at you, OK?)

                On the same note, I've been repeatedly called a thief, just for making these very same points before. Since I have never either uploaded or downloaded music (except downloading by fully legal methods where I have paid properly for every track), I think I can safely say I am not a thief, even by the strictest CV=T definition. So, if the CV=T! shouters are right, and "the law is the law, its all so simple, there are no other factors and only a crook would think otherwise", I know 15 or so Slashdot posters who have committed Libel. I don't see anyone posting to these endless copyright threads with "What you've just said = Libel" when this comes up. None of the CV=T! people seem to give a damn about whether a crime is being committed against me, just against the RIAA. They come off like they live by the George Orwell phrase "Everybody's equal, but some are more equal than others.", and I suspect that's why a lot of people are fed up with them. Personally, I'd rather let them insult me than complain - their lack of rational behavior will eventually make it clear what they really want is very far from justice for all.