The Virtual Tip Jar 201
kemokid writes: "At last, an example of what Courtney Love was talking about. Fairtunes is a site set up to allow users to tip musicians directly. You can read the Music Dish news story about it." $269 and change donated so far, I'm interested to see where this one goes.
Re:I like it (Score:2)
There's no proof that you are paying them for the albums that have been produced on their current label. You might only like their earlier stuff on a different label, or, in theory, you might be paying them for the enjoyment that you got out of seeing them live before they ever released anything. So I don't see how their current record label has any claim to the money. If you were tipping for a particular album, then things would probably be different.
Merchant Accounts (Score:2)
As it is, most music sites set up an alliance deal with amazon and have to sell the whole cd and don't sell all that much... it would be great to have like 45 seconds to a minute of each song on a relase with a checkbox next to it and a credit card form beneath and charge like 35 cents or whatever a song. Yeah, I know there are some sites that do this for multiple artists, I just would like to cut the entities down to artist, consumer, credit card company, and make it easy for the artist to set up....
Re:Slashdot Effect. (Score:1)
Bravo, /. for a job well done.
Re:The RIAA is right. (Score:1)
I think the basic argument in support of Iintellectual Property is beginning to fail. One cannot expect that a finite amount of effort like creating a digital recorded music source for a given song should be rewarded in perpetuity. Artists should be paid for performance not for recording, and recordings should be made only to promote and support the artists performace.
A final thought do you really believe that anyone undermining another companies business model deserves to be sued? Should Barnes and Noble sue Amazon.com?
Richard
Re:No one deserves "tips" just for DOING THEIR JOB (Score:1)
Re:The RIAA is right. (Score:1)
Re:MP3's Outlawed at Work (Score:1)
Re:A subscription model... (Score:2)
You can't have a company managing it.
A company is seeking profit that it'll even take from the artist' revenue.
If the goal is to deliver art that'd directly benefit its creators, then the system has to be managed by a non-profit organization.
--
Re:Nice idea, but... (Score:1)
Then why did so many smash their Milli Vanilli records?
Did the music suddenly sound different because it was two fat guys singing?
Re:Slashdot Effect. (Score:1)
Fortunately the World Wide Web Consortium [w3.org] has one cooking [w3.org].
Naive (Score:1)
What would the reason for being an AC be?
Re:[OT] Sig (Score:1)
=)
There is one... (Score:2)
It's still under development but all open source. They have a site on SourceForge.
Burris
Re:You Obviously Don't Live In New York. (Score:1)
With the anonymity the web provides, there is nobody to stigmatize those who don't pay. As you said, tipping is done far more often when there are social pressures. Without anybody to see you, the social influence is greatly diminished. That's not to say banner ads etc. won't eventually work, but they probably won't be as powerful as you suggest without public recognition of those who do/don't contribute.
Re:Courtney Love a creation of the recording indus (Score:1)
From what I'm told, digital @ 16bits can suck, but if its done correctly, it can be good as well.
However, digital at 24 bits is very good, beyond the range of human hearing.
For example, why hasnt anyone developed better than 24 bit color? Because its pointless...
Then again, with crappy 16 bit systems you can really screw up the music...
As for mp3s, they really do sound crappier. But then again, I built my own Vacuum Tube amp, built speaker cables from cat5 (is there anything it cant do?)...
Re:Here's my TIP (Score:2)
There are various other reasons why teen music will be so successful: artists will be forced to impress listeners with short, catchy snippets, and teen pop music is the only kind of music which is catchy. Moreover, in "online distribution" there is much more emphasis on hit singles (which is the realm of the top 40 teen singer), instead of actual albums. All of this tells me that top 40 teen music will be extremely successful after the record companies go out of business, and that almost nothing else will be produced.
Re:I know this is troll food, but Man! (Score:1)
Re:Steven King, with music (Score:2)
Actually, it might be possible to implement a tipping system based on email.. if you had one of those attach money to your emails things that people sometimes talk about.
MP3's Outlawed at Work (Score:1)
On a somewhat unrelated note, MP3s have been outlawed at my company. They're doing company-wide scans and are threatening some pretty ugly repurcussions if someone is caught with MP3s on their hard drive.
I had to blow away a gig of them yesterday... *sigh* Anyone else experiencing anything similar, as a result of the Napster debacle?
Re:Yes But, how do.... (Score:1)
Considering how many years labels have been selling CD's for far more than the cost of production and distribution
It's called a Profit. It's what companies are in business for. If you're looking for freebies, go to a soup kitchen or your local Salvation Army. Don't go looking for it in the Corporate world. If you do, you'll be disappointed.
Tell me the truth, if you were a record industry Exec(or any Exec for that matter), you wouldn't try to make as much money as you can? If you had millions of suckers paying $17.00 for a product that costs a percentage of that, you'd be happy as a pig in sh*t. Admit it, you'll feel better once you do.
Moderators, this isn't flamebait, it's my opinion.
Re:Yes But, how do.... (Score:2)
How do the Record Companies get Paid? This is still unfair to them.
Considering how many years labels have been selling CD's for far more than the cost of production and distribution, a scheme like this ought to even things out in a decade or so.
SO, when does the revelution against the cereal companies start? They are selling their cereal for a lot more than the cost of production and distribution. Face it, the record companies aren't doing anything that any other industry is doing. They are maximizing profits. The are shelling out a lot of money to make and advertise records, and they want to get a lot of money back for that investment. When you spend a lot, you expect to make a lot.
Re:But will they actually get the money? (Score:2)
You're correct, but not because of the nature of administrators IMO. Even honest administration can't get around the fact that Visa makes very small transactions un-economic [e-gold.com], and makes person to non-merchant-person transactions impossible.
Fairtunes is interesting, and anything's better than the RIAA as a middleman, but if Courtney Love would ever-in-hell listen to me about e-gold [e-gold.com] some really interesting things could happen. Yes, if e-gold is the tip jar, there's a small spend fee & storage fee, and you have to get used to a market with lots of merchants who have different bid/ask spreads. If Fairtunes uses e-gold [e-gold.com] properly, it should be good for both artists and me (just a guy who likes art).
It's easy to do things like my Dutch friends did with "The Plant" by Steven King [arbitrix.com] even if artists have never even heard of e-gold [e-gold.com] (Thanks for covering only hype, instead of fundamentals, news media of the planet!).
JMR
(Ok, I'll try to stop posting on this subject.)
[OT] Sig (Score:2)
Don't you mean:
One MTA to rule them all, one MTA to find them
One MTA to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.
Re:Nice idea, but... (Score:2)
I really wish I could believe that. In many cases it may be true but it is obvious that the modern "record industry" is trying to sell the artist rather than the music. That's why we see all this crap like "Making the band", "The personality behind Britney Spears", "The legal battle between Eminem and his mom" etc. And people like that. If I meet one more gossip hog.... (well that's another story).
It's not about the music, it's about being famous and making rich people even richer (and obviously I don't mean the artists). And since so much is put into this people pay attention. How many die hard Beatles fans ONLY listened to their music and didn't try and get all the intimate details of every band member's life?
Well this is just my opinion. I could be wrong.
--
Garett Spencley
Yeah right (Score:1)
Sigh.
The site is
Re:Yes But, how do.... (Score:1)
Prehaps you are referring to the works of Marx? I believe he espoused that there is no natural right for profit from ownership. Correct me if I am wrong, but didn't Marx profess that work for profit is wrong? I can see where you would get Marx and Locke confused, what with their completely inconsistent ideologies and all.
Perhaps you do not think that information is the product of work and therefore can be owned? What about those that build houses. Is one capable of owning a house (the product of work and information and raw materials)? Is the house not worth more than the raw materials and work involved? If the house is not worth more than the raw materials and work, then why is there variable "property value?" This is an intangible that can be owned. The intangible revolves around aestheitcs and neighborhood, both of which are being purchased with a house. Otherwise, why would poorer people live in horrible sections of cities with less desireable homes? So it is possible to own an intangible and profit from it--whether it be safer neighborhoods or cash in the wallet.
All the internet saves you is media cost... (Score:1)
Re:Pain in the butt (Score:2)
What if there was an X.com (PayPal) tie-in, where all you need to remember is your email address? Even better, I think.
Re:But will they actually get the money? (Score:1)
If I were moderating at the moment it would be more likely to be
(Score -1, Blatant Spam)
but then I guess there's no accounting for taste.
Middlemen and the basis of economic reality (Score:1)
With the record industry, there are two problems that circumvent this theoretical model:
1. The product has the ability to vocalise thier grievances
2. The customer, nowadays, doesn't necessarily have to pay for the goods that they use.
The model has broken down. In order for the customer to understand that the only way that he/she may continue to enjoy the product offerings of the (artist/service/product) in question is to voluntarily, out of the goodness of their own hearts, pay people for what they produce.
This must set the recording industry on edge, as they have made gods out of their icons (to suit thier own nefarious purposes) for 100 years.
Are we to constantly swallow this? I don't think so. I honestly believe, simply because I espouse a vaguely libertarian philosophy, that it is my right to hear what I choose, and pay for it if it is valuable to me.
Maybe, the record industry has to climb off its high horse, recognise that both the artists and its customers don't need them anymore, and perhaps get a life.
Since the singers (Score:1)
Re:Yes But, how do.... (Score:1)
Here's a link [liberzine.com] to an article at liberzine (originally posted at ars-technica [arstechnica.com]). It's a good read. For those too lazy to follow the link here's the quote posted at ars:
The artist once again known as Prince was onto something when he sold his five-CD set "Crystal Ball" exclusively on the Web without the help of record companies, distributors, or record stores. On his website, he advertised the album and told his fans he would release not one song until he had 100,000 pre-orders for the entire record. He sold 250,000 copies and kept 95 percent of the revenue which industry experts estimate at $5 million.
Because recording artists only get 10 to 12 percent of a CD's retail price, selling directly to the fans is a boon to them. "We got paid!" Prince said, "More than for the last five to six albums on Warner. It's straight-up money, and the check's on time, not quarterly."
Slashdot Effect. (Score:3)
Re:Costs are too high (Score:2)
Also with the shopping cart model you can send money to multiple artists on one invoice and the .23 cents is spread across all of those 'tips'.
Matt
co-founder
Fairtunes [fairtunes.com]
media cost, shipping, retail markup... (Score:2)
Promotion does not benefit the end user in any way. It just sticks stuff in your face whether you want it or not. It's a hostile act and if I can avoid paying for it, I will.
Promotion is often a much larger cost than production, too. When things are freely available on the internet, people find the good ones whether someone's spending lots of money pushing them or not. "Promotion" costs, like "distribution" costs, are really control costs. If you give up control, these things take care of themselves.
The internet is as much a more responsive and convenient a distribution system than retail CDs as email is a faster and convenient a way of sending messages than paper mail. With the support of the producers, it would be as convenient as radio with more choice than retail CDs.
So now we're down to production cost. No agents, no "label", no printer, no retailer, nothing. Production costs, hand it off to a fan site, and it's in everybody's home who wants it.
Add in the ability for anybody, anywhere to donate money in various automated, convenient ways, and there's your advantage.
If people are willing to make the donations, they'd only have to pay about 5-20% what they'd pay for CDs. That is the advantage of buskware. More money for producers, less money out of the users' pockets, no money for parasitic middlemen. Everybody who counts is happy, and the others can go do some honest work.
---
Despite rumors to the contrary, I am not a turnip.
Here's my TIP (Score:3)
I never eat a sig cuz my sig is a crock...
Street Musicans (Score:1)
...would have better luck methinks. There people give them money for several reasons. In the case of tipping our musicans though, most of the public (I fear, but hopefully I'm wrong) is still going to think that these musicans have made their money, blah, blah, blah. The exception of course is for the people who do understand the ongoing battle against RIAA and support it.
Re:Yes But, how do.... (Score:1)
I am not saying that every corporation should become a charity. But I feel corporations have (almost) as much responsibility as citizens to benefit their community. Otherwise you get situations like we have now, where they will grab as much power and money as they can, with no concern for how it affects consumers, or how good a value they really provide in their product. I guess thats what bugs me, I would like companies to be motivated by providing the better value (the best, or the cheapest or however they judge it), and not by forming cartels and spreading FUD.
Re:What's wrong with the middle men? (Score:1)
For an example of this, look at travel agents. They used to just book airline tickets for you, and hold them until you came and picked them up. But ETKT and airline websites made that business model obsolete. So now a good travel agent offers services over and above, like itinerary planning, locale-specific advice, emergency assistance services, etc, thereby adding value to the transaction.
The same thing happens in any commoditized marketplace, and despite what that fool Lars Ulrich says, music is a commodity (altho' it's not fungible).
But one thing that keeps getting forgotten is that the music industry is like the venture capital industry or the pharmaceutical industry: for every huge success, there are many, many expensive failures. Do you honestly believe that if word of mouth was all an artist had, your favourites would be heard above the hubbub? The music industry does need brokers.
Re:Yeah right (Score:1)
Don't forget that Napster is being sued because they allegedly infringe the rights of the RIAA -- are these laws still being infringed if both the sender and recipient of the
As always, there's only one country in the world, and I'm not living in it -- I'm over in Australia instead
Hmm... (Score:1)
--
Re:Street Performer Protocol - misnamed (Score:1)
I'd instead try "I'm going to keep doing this annoying street mime until there's $10 in the hat. The quicker you pay me, the quicker I move on."
:)
Re:I like it (Score:1)
Also the "paying...for the enjoyment that you get out of seeing them live" is the same the ticket price--which ALSO largely goes to the label.
I don't believe that's correct. Labels rarely get a piece of the revenue produced by ticket sales at live performances. That's one of the main arguments one could make against Courtney Love's claims that the artists are slaves to the label: The artists can make money from touring. (I still don't think it's fair for the label to keep the lion's share of the revenue from CD sales, but that's another issue.)
Re:Here's my TIP (Score:1)
one question... (Score:1)
But will they actually get the money? (Score:3)
Also, the fact that my Visa card bank has a minimum charge of £5 means that I will pay more to the bank than to the actual company or artists!
Withdrawel (Score:3)
Re:Yes But, how do.... (Score:1)
The farmer borrows lots of money to buy and produce the cereal
The farmer only get 5% of the sale price of the cereal
When, and only when the loan has been paid off is the farmer allowed to receive any of the profits
The cereal company still owns the farm and relevant equipment, and, should the farmer ever try and start a new cereal business the cereal company owns that too.
Then we backlash against the cereal companies
Re:Slashdot Effect. (Score:1)
great, a (perhaps) intelligent site in regards to mp3's and taking on RIAA and we're going to go in, get the site slashdotted, servers will be shut down, and the media can hype it up as a DDOS attack.....
...or maybe I got a little carried away at the end.
Re:I like it (Score:1)
I guess you didn't visit the site. There a form to fill out where you can specify an album or title you especially like. In any case, some artists have no previous label. Also the "paying...for the enjoyment that you get out of seeing them live" is the same the ticket price--which ALSO largely goes to the label.
--
Re:MP3's Outlawed at Work (Score:2)
Of course, if their reasoning is based more on productivity or download bandwidth, it's slightly more understandable - but not much!
Where do you work? The RIAA
"Give the anarchist a cigarette"
Re:But will they actually get the money? (Score:1)
The record companies have them tied in to such horrible deals [mp3.com] that I would be highly surprised if they are even allowed to accept money gathered from this website. Though I'm sure Joe Blow, Record Exec would be happy to handle the check and make sure that it gets to the right place (ie. the record company's bank).
------
IanO
Re:Courtney Love. (Score:1)
Re:Steven King, with music (Score:2)
Doesn't Match Napster Structure - Too Bad, Though (Score:2)
Besides, if you could find the specific album, that would be admitting Napster is designed for publishing ripped off records rather than designed for unsigned bands and home DJs to publish their own Napster Public Radio shows.
Re:A subscription model... (Score:2)
Of course, subscription would only concern access to notorious artists' works, like Courtney Love or any other that escaped a vampiring contract.
I bet this system could also represent a viable opportunity for them.
--
Re:I like it (Score:2)
Kinda like if you met them in the street, "Hey! Wow! Cool! Wizard! [musician's name]!, I love your stuff, especially [album name]. Here's a tenner, and
Hitclip Player, McDonalds, Britney Spears N'Sync (Score:2)
===== From AP Wire Story =====
Tiger, which is owned by toy giant Hasbro Inc., has the Yahoo! HitClips Downloader ($20). Kids can plug the unit into the speaker jack of their computer, play any music or audio they want online and record up to 60 seconds of the sound on a computer chip in the downloader. The recorded selection then can be played on the transportable downloader or on any of Tiger's HitClip products, including an alarm clock ($15), a boom box ($11) and a personal audio player ($8) -- none of which are linked to the computer.
============================
Courtney Love a creation of the recording industry (Score:5)
What struck me about Coutrney Love's interview was that so much of her concept of an artist is derived from the manner in which hollywood and the recording industry treat artists.
When she uses terms like "creative person", or talks about how good recording execs are at masssaging the egos of their "talent", she's revealing how much she has bought into the whole system of maintaining stables of "talent". I mean really, who says artists have to be treated like gods, or treated by fans, distributors, managers in the manner the recording industry treats them? What Courtney Love is really saying, is that she likes the way the recording industry execs treats her, and wants internet content companies to massage her ego in the same way. Whether this is how all artists want to be treated is a different matter altogether.
The nonsense about the sound quality of MP3s preventing someone from enjoying the performance is another strawman. The problem generally is that someone used a bad encoder, or a damaged recording to make the MP3. If one does it appropriately, MP3s have very good sound quality. If you're listening to something interesting, even an LP makes for an interesting listen. If you're listening to bad music, using a better format won't change anything.
This attitude towards technology is not surprising at all. It feeds in perfectly with the strategy of the recording industries, where increasingly bad content (and yeah, I'll call it content if I want to Courtney, little of the mass entertainment produced by the music industry counts as art in my book) is released using increasingly sophisticated technology. Witness the quality of films produced by Hollywood, it has been steadily declining, as the quality of special effects and distribution media becomes better. Something most people have seen occur on the web, flashy sites, dumb content, high co-ordination with the point when LA become home to web-development companies.
In sum, I think Courtney makes some great points in the essay. The distribution system used by the music industry is broken, and serves only their own purposes. It would be great to see an independent distribution mechanism arise which is efficient, and capable of rewarding the people who are most important to a music recording (or a book for that matter). Some of them may well require managers, or editors, to guide them (clearly Courtney excepts to have someone like this), but this fucntion should not be foisted on the distribution company. Why should artists who are mature enough to handle themselves, have to see some of their earnings diverted towards paying psychologist-managers to look after enfant terribles? Why should consumers have to pay more either? If the artist requires therapy, they should foot their own bill.
The problem is, pop artists rely more on a cult of personality than their art. The recording industry loves it because they control the media that creates personalities (Hansen, Britney Spears, Jenifer Lopez, Leonardo DiCaprio). I'm more interested in the substance. So I'm not particularly interested in what Courtney Love does, but rather what she produces.
I don't (Score:2)
You know (Score:2)
Give Some (Score:2)
My
Quux26
Re:Yes But, how do.... (Score:2)
Re:But will they actually get the money? (Score:3)
Now if an artist went out and said "don't buy our CD, download it from Napster and send us a dollar", the company could have a case against them. I imagine something like that will end up happening; and it'll be interesting to see the way it goes.
Though everywhere I look, I can see the recording industry pimps' luck running out. Thanks to Courtney Love, Steve Albini, the Napster case and the Internet, lots of people know what bastards they are, how they rip off all sides. Now that 90% of the industry is five massive companies in the process of becoming four, there is no doubt that the recording industry is inhuman, artless corporate greed on a massive scale. And now that they've sued mp3.com and Napster, and the head of Universal came out calling for an end to Internet anonymity so that they could rake in the profits unhindered, it's clear to see who the villains are. Witness their reversal on the work-for-hire bill; chances are the changing tide of public opinion forced their hand.
It is only inertia that keeps the Big Five controlling the medium of recorded music. It no longer takes hundreds of thousands of dollars to record an album and promote it, thanks to advances in recording technologies and the Internet. The RIAA's role as gatekeepers depends on consumers and artists staying where they are. They can afford to lose Public Enemy and a few others, but they can't afford it turning into a mass exodus of artists to new distribution mechanisms. Eventually, they may get things like DVD Audio and SDMI put into place, where they control the means of encoding (as the MPAA does with DVD), and have a secure oligopoly. But that can only happen if their industry doesn't collapse like a house of cards first; hence, they're treading water.
If the RIAA try to sue these people, or take the money from artists with lawyers, there will be an outcry, and their situation will worsen.
Sliding Scale doesn't work (Score:3)
People imagine themselves to be generous, but few of us are as generous as we imagine.
BTW, $269 wouldn't even pay for the 2" tape used to record one album...
Re:Slashdot Effect. (Score:2)
I'd like to see a "tip" button on media players. It's the natural place for it. There could be provisions to auto-tip favorite performers/songs, as well as a tip budget manager built in.
No fuss finding artists this way- like tossing a coin in a hat.
For more on this, see Busking as a Form of Online Compensation [insound.com] at InSound.com
Re:Street Performer Protocol - misnamed (Score:3)
One possible way:
You think: I need $2000, and I have ~4000 listeners.
You say: "I need about one dollar from each of you."
Later, you think: I want to make five times as much, and I have ~40,000 listeners
You say: "Now, just 50 cents per person!"
In today's business model, it doesn't cost much more to listen to the most popular musicians (with the exception of live shows, and I'm not sure how much of that is venue-gouging). A CD is a CD, and the extra profit comes from volume.
- Michael Cohn
Pain in the butt (Score:2)
Yup, I think it is. So let's say you download 25 songs by 15 different artists on napster one night. And you actually like, say, 5 of them enough to tip. So you're going to jump over to fairtunes.com and individually search through the database 5 times to find your artists and go throught the rigamarole of tipping them?
Sure, if you're really committed. But it's a pain! What there needs to be is some kind of tie-in with, yes, napster or [insert p2p sharing system here] that collects info on what you've downloaded in a session, and provides an easy-to-click dialog saying "You've heard these 10 artists tonight. Check a box next to the ones you'd like to tip."
Then, if you were subscribed to the service (or had a cookie set or something, whatever) it could even fill in a default amount for each and your credit card number. Click! You just used 1-click (tm) tipping online. Okay, better make it 2 clicks to avoid patent infringement :)
Re:*mild sigh* (Score:2)
As dougman said, I read about this two weeks ago and the money hasn't exactly been rolling in.
Re:Nice idea, but... (Score:2)
They pretty much do, at least in this state. The minimum wage for tip-based jobs is rather lower than the normal minimum wage because, well, it's expected that you'll get tips to cover the difference. And if you're good, it'll probably get you a bit more.
--
Micropayment or Subscription (Score:3)
Some remarks before I click the Submit button
--
What's wrong with the middle men? (Score:3)
I've seen the statement "we don't want all the money going to the middle man" tossed around here quite a bit, and it got me thinking... I bet most of us here who have jobs end up working for some sort of "middle man". So if we try to cut out the middle man in these transactions, aren't we in fact taking money away from our fellow workers' pockets? (i.e. the middle men will see a decline in revenue, have to cut wages/jobs, etc.)
Okay, I'm done playing the advocate, I know that the above doesn't take into account all of the variables, but the fact is that for most products, middle men are necessary. There aren't a whole lot of CD manufacturing plants that have walk-up counters with cashiers, ready to take our orders. And our economic system seems to be built on the idea of having tons of distributors and resellers and retailers and whatnot, which in turn gives lots of people a job and food on their tables.
Just something I thought that people might want to think about.
Re:What's wrong with the middle men? (Score:5)
What's wrong with middlemen is that unless they add significant value to the transaction, they are parasites. If so, everyone else involved would be strictly better off if they were eliminated. If the middlemen eat 90% of the transaction costs (by no means unreasonable if you're talking about music), if the musician could deal directly with the consumer, you could quintuple the amount the musician gets, while halving the amount the consumer pays.
As to middlemen, let them find jobs where they are producing something of value, or performing a service, or even being middlemen in a transaction where they can add value (e.g. almost anything where the product can't be distributed instantly anywhere for practically nothing).
If you think our economic system is built upon shuffling money around endlessly without actually producing anything of worth, maybe you should study some economics. Think about where the money is coming from at the start of the transaction, and where it could go if it weren't being siphoned off every step of the way. People who think that adding frictional costs to transactions is a good thing ("it's food on someone's table!") are the same sort of people who think "I can't be overdrawn, I still have checks left!"
Re:you call $2.50 an hour a salary? (Score:2)
Re:Nice idea, but... (Score:2)
The way the system works, the recording company gives you an advance for recording the album, say, $250,000. They you record it, they manufacture it, market it, pay promotions people to bribe radio to play it, and so on, which costs the best part of a million.
The CDs go on sale. In a typical major-label contract, the artist gets 50c-$1 for each one sold. That is, after they've paid off their advance, marketing expenses, producers' fees, returns, breakages, &c. Which means that you don't see any money from CD sales until you've sold several million units, and then see only a trickle. Meanwhile, the recording company sees money from the first CD sold. They're not the ones who have to pay for the whole thing, after all. In his book Confessions of a Record Producer, Moses Avalon estimated that this is equivalent to a loan at 66% interest.
If you're a big-name artist, say, Metallica or someone, you can negotiate a cushier deal; say, $2 per CD, with the company footing parts of the bill, and you owning the copyright. After all, it's in their interest to sign you. However, if you're just a young band, star-struck that Warner or someone would be interested in them, no dice. If you don't sign on their terms, one of the young bands in the line behind you will.
I go to work for the fun of it... (Score:2)
Re:Yes But, how do.... (Score:3)
An AC wrote: How do the Record Companies get Paid? This is still unfair to them.
CmdrNacho wrote: If you're looking for freebies, go to a soup kitchen or your local Salvation Army.
Well, that's exactly what we keep trying to tell them, but they don't listen! Buncha lazy good-for-nothing bums! They think they can get stuff for free -- that just because they've always got things for free in the past they have a right to continue this practice indefinitely!
It's time for the record companies to wake up. Their free ride is over. Their welfare state -- created and empowered by a government-granted monopoly on an infinite resource -- is being destroyed.
The world -- or at least a small part of it -- is finally beginning to realize that "intellectual property" is a crock of shit. Just because someone has a funny little C-with-a-circle-around it and their name on something, that doesn't mean that they have a natural right to make money from it. In fact, there is no natural right to make money at all. That's what a free market means -- you may make money, or you may not. You spin the wheel, you take your chance.
Now all we have to do is survive the mercenaries they're likely to send to kill us. (Hint: they're the ones with the red-white-and-blue flags on their uniforms. Bought and paid for by the RIAA using the money that you spent on CDs. You didn't think all that money went to the artist, didya?) At least the second amendment isn't completely dead yet. We still have some hope of living through this with both lives and freedom intact.
(Sorry, I'm in a bad mood this morning.)
I like it (Score:5)
I have to wonder though: What do the artist's contracts look like? Do they have to split these tips with their labels because they are revenues generated from jointly produced work? I can see how they'd get around this if I were tipping a band member (just a person-to-person transaction). But I'm tipping by band name--not really the same thing.
--
Re:Slashdot Effect. (Score:2)
I have repeatedly tried to get Courtney Love (or any musician) to notice that we've been able to do micropayments or macropayments efficiently, cutting out the middleman and saving people money even if they keep using plastic [e-gold.com]. Wanna buy an animated gif (hey! it's PUSSY! WooHoo!) for ten cents worth [e-gold.com] of e-gold? It has been possible for over a year... Try it.
Step back and think about gold logically, even though it's the most emotional element on the periodic table. The stuff makes damn good money, and this e-gold bunch (me included) are NOT going away. We'll keep doing, keeping promises made about the internet and its possibilities instead of hyping the theoretical. Journalists interested in fundamentals (if that's not an oxymoron anymore...) should contact me. Thanks.
JMR
Nice idea, but... (Score:3)
$269 is a good gesture, but its only that -- a gesture. That doesn't pay bills, keep food on the table, or make it worth the hassle for the artist to keep on creating. (He could do better working at McDonald's) An argument might run that an true artist doesn't really need to be rich if he really loves his job, but we have to face reality, artists need money -- real money.
I think this is a good first step, but we need to improve on this idea. You can't really count on the generosity of others to make a living. What if waitresses didn't get a salary but instead relied entirely on tips?
Actually, that analogy is flawed, because in the case of the artist and MP3s, you don't really see the artist's face being polite to you trying to win your favor like a waitress does. People pay much less attention to the artist than the actual music. How do convince people that they are ethically obligated to donate money into this tip jar? Maybe they'll get about 20,000 Slashdot folk to do it, but there are hundreds of millions in the US alone that need convincing.
Re:But will they actually get the money? (Score:2)
Ah, but there is! (Score:2)
the cost of music IS real world cost. Tape costs money, studio time costs money, rehearsal space costs money, FOOD costs money.
These are fixed investments producing unlimited copies of music. It is a fundamentally different situation than an investment producing transient performed music which can only be heard by a limited audience. It demands a fundamentally different income model.
---
Despite rumors to the contrary, I am not a turnip.
Re:Street Performer Protocol (Score:2)
Your prize is a "imagine a beowulf cluster of street performer protocols!" shirt.
sig:
Re:Courtney Love. (Score:3)
As for your joke about Kurt Cobain's death.........grow up.
This idea should work for more than just music. (Score:4)
In short, the reason you donate is that it sends a message to the world that there is money to be had in making something you like. You aren't donating primarily to support one specific producer, but to reward, and thus encourage, the behavior of making such products and releasing them for free distribution.
The key to making it work is for each buskware producer to give full public disclosure of how much money they receive, with as much information about which product it was for as is available. This is the payoff for the donor, as other people can look at this and think "Hey! He's making money at it, I should try, too!" (conversely, they are discouraged from following the example of people who don't make an adequate profit).
Music is something of a special case, as most music isn't tailored to a particular audience, and people generally don't seem to prefer that it is, but at the very least you are encouraging musicians to believe that they can distribute their music freely, without signing on with a big label.
---
Despite rumors to the contrary, I am not a turnip.
Street Performer Protocol (Score:3)
--
welcome to the digital age... (Score:2)
--
Cool (Score:4)
Even better, this money goes *right* to the artist (sounds like it at least) circumventing every middle-man down the line slicing his share off. I think this could turn the tables so that now *artists* are in control, and instead pay for the services of the recording industry.
Costs are too high (Score:2)
A real micropayment system would require a lower base fee. For example, maybe you could set up an account at the site and buy a few dollars worth of tips at a time (thus losing only 4 or 5% to Visa), which you would then distribute as you see fit over time. The other advantage of this system is it minimizes the number of times you need to enter your credit card data (which seems like it would improve security, though I know little on the subject).
Re:Here's my TIP (Score:2)
A quick search on Platinum Certifications [riaa.com] notes that Britney Spears has sold over fifteen million records in two years. If over fifteen million people are willing to pay over $10 for a CD, why wouldn't they tip considerably less if given the choice?
Slashdotters who continually bitch about how killing the RIAA will destroy Britney Spears types amaze me. There will always be a market for each generations equivalent of teenage bubblegum pop, killing the RIAA won't suddenly mean that the average teenage girl would suddenly see the Who or whatever as quality music and leave Britney Spears, N'Sync and the Backstreet Boys. In fact they will be reinforced since they cater to the lowest common musical denominator (kinda like how McDonald's is a major player even though their food is nowhere near the best) and will thus benefit more from artist centered music distribution schemes than fringe groups. If you doubt this...consider how many of their concerts are sold out.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Uhh (Score:2)
Look mom! We're rebelling!
*mild sigh* (Score:2)
This was covered [theswindle.com] on The Swindle, uhmm...2 weeks ago. At that time, a whopping 60 dollars had been donated.
I wish Fairtunes the best of luck, tho. I put my money where my mouth is.
Need micropayment system (Score:2)
There needs to be a method of micropayment available which is secure, resistant to fraud, and easily limited. Ideally I could just go to the store and buy a card worth $20 to $50, like a phone card, and use it until it's gone. Then even if the card is compromised, I'm not out a whole lot.
Rent ain't free. (Score:3)
There's your problem. You're talking about a very limited distribution medium (how far does sound carry?) with a real-world cost.
In that situation, you need a certain minimum average donation, and that's what kills the profit model.
There is no motive for the people to donate more. They gain no advantage by encouraging voluntary admission shows if they pay more at each one. If they were willing to pay $30 for the show, they'd rather it be required and not have to fight for elbow-space with the riffraff that crowds in for free. It is against their interests to subsidize the admission of people who pay less.
There is also the problem that there is only one opportunity to donate. If you have a copy of a song, listen to it often, and the option to pay is always there, you are a lot more likely to decide it's worth paying for at a time when you are able to donate.
Paying voluntary admission is "social donation", people pay because they are in a public place and feel obligated to demonstrate that they're not freeloaders. Naturally, they look at it as a problem in how little they can get away with spending (hmm... what's the recommended minimum?).
It's different when you're paying for freely distributed (whether legally or not) music in private and at your own convenience. Then you stop thinking "how little can I get away with spending" and start thinking "how much do I want to spend on keeping this band around"?
Whether this will work out remains to be seen...
---
Despite rumors to the contrary, I am not a turnip.
You Obviously Don't Live In New York. (Score:5)
$269 is a good gesture, but its only that -- a gesture. That doesn't pay bills, keep food on the table, or make it worth the hassle for the artist to keep on creating...reality, artists need money -- real money.
Most of my friends in NYC have worked as waiters at one time or the other and currently do so now while in school. One of them is a bright kid who is currently working on Nanotech research at the Rochester Institute of Technology yet he frequently waits tables while in school instead of looking for a better job.
Why is this?
In New York city, everybody tips. There is a social stigma associated with people who do not tip. When Hilary Clinton ate a meal at a restuaraunt and didn't tip, it made front page news in some tabloids. Because of this it is normal for waiters to make anything from $100 to $200 a night depending on how busy the restaurant is. Working five days a week that is comparable to what most people make after a gruelling 4 year degree in college.
I think this is a good first step, but we need to improve on this idea. You can't really count on the generosity of others to make a living. What if waitresses didn't get a salary but instead relied entirely on tips?
They do, most waiters/waitresses make half of minimum wage. Obviously no one is making a living on $80 a week (after taxes) for 40 hours of work.
How do convince people that they are ethically obligated to donate money into this tip jar?
Easy, bombard people with information about tip sites until they feel socially obligated to do so. If all 20 million Napster users suddenly started getting hit with banner ads advocating tipping the artists whose music they were downloading, how many do you think wouldn't? Especially if the payment process was easy. Heck, if I could click a link from Napster everytime I downloaded a good song to throw a dollar or two at the artist I would. Multiply that by a few million and you have a new distribution model that pays artists a lot more than the current butt-fucking that the RIAA gives artists.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Making Voluntary Payments Easy (Score:2)
We're working on embedding meta-data into digital content files which will allow for easy voluntary payments and will encourage free distribution. We're using crypto in an attempt to assure consumers that the person they're paying is actually the originator of the content, not an imposter with their hand in the artist's tip jar. The discussion is just getting rolling and we could use some input:
http://tipster.weblogs.com [weblogs.com]
The Future of E-Music (Score:2)
I praise Courtney Love for the opinion she wrote. It indicates that she has a good grasp of where things should be going and why what's happening now is wrong. I can't wait for the day when all it takes is the artist, a credit card commerce outfit, and a web pimp for bands to exist. At that point, costs will be ultra-low for everybody. I'd love to slap $1-5 for an mp3'd album (or whatever compression system is big in 2020 when this actually happens =P ).
Street Performer Protocol - misnamed (Score:3)
The Street Performer Protocol has little relation to the operating procedure of street performers (a.k.a. buskers): a price is set and must be matched. Have you ever seen a busker with a sign, "I'm only playing the first half of this song, if there isn't $10 in my hat by the end of the first half, I won't play the second half."? It doesn't fit the analogy at all.
I think it is a badly flawed variant of mass market busking [boswa.com] (not to suggest that the idea was derived from it, just that MMB is the more general term).
The flaws?
Well, how do you set the price? You know donations are going to drop right off once one the price is reached; when you explain it in terms of influencing this one single producer, people will think of it in those terms and look for the minimum donation they can get away with (and who knows what price you'll set for the next piece? better to hold some back against future increase). So when you set a target, you also set a limit.
What if you're a runaway success? You can't raise your price and not expect your customers to feel betrayed.
What if your sequel isn't as well-received as the first book, even though it pays well enough that you'd like to keep going? You can't lower the price when you see it's not going to be met, or people won't take you seriously at all.
IMHO, it's far better to just let people pay what they will. If you want to make noises about giving up on the project because you're making too little money, fine, but don't try to set a price target/limit before release. Only someone like Stephen King, who has such a loyal following that he can predict demand, can get away with this kind of thing.
---
Despite rumors to the contrary, I am not a turnip.
Cyber Tip Squatting? (Score:2)
I think this idea has considerable merit. I like it. I do have, however, some concerns about their ability and plans for dealing with "imitations", for lack of a better word.
Just like cyber squatting on domain names, and their similar-looking/sounding names, it seems it's only a matter of time before someone starts registering:
Then there's making web sites that are variations on www.fairtunes.com [fairtunes.com] such as:
Steven King, with music (Score:5)
The thing about these sorts of scheme is that they believe that fundamentally most people are honest, as was demonstrated by King. The record industry (and movie) work on the principal that if people can steal it they will.
I believe that the latter arguement has got human nature fundamentally wrong. I don't mind paying for a CD/Video but what I do mind is the fact that these things cost so much and most of the money goes to the middle men. This is especially true with CDs when the artists get relatively little.
This sort of thing works because most people don't mind paying Steven King 1USD a chapter (as long as there arn't too many chapters
The same could work for music. When we are all downloading music direct from the artists we cercumvent the distibution companies, removing them froom the loop. Most people would be willing to pay a reasonable amount direct to the band on an honour basis, and with costs so low you wouldn't have to ask for much.
I live in York (england) and at the Minster (big church) they don't charge you to look around (partly because they can't), but they do request that everyone make a voluntary donation of a suggested amount, and most people do. Admitidly it being religious probably helps, but I have seen a similar scheme used for other historic buildings. This works because people are generally willing to pay for what they get.
The same is true for musicians, artists, writers, movie makers and software writers. If people like what you have done they will more than likely pay for it because they want more.
What people object to is paying through the nose for a CD only to find out that it is rubbish when they get home.
With the advent of digital distribution for music, books and films (digi projectors and broardband?) we could (eventually) see the sidelining of the distributers, and money going direct to artists on an honour system. At which point piracy becomes moot and everyone is happy (except the RIAA and MPAA of course).
A little utopian (and rather long winded), but we can hope. King has already shown that it can work for the well known artists, it just remains to be seen how it scales down to the up and comming ones who have no publicity machine or well known name. Mabey.