Kazaa, Verizon Propose Compulsory Music Licensing 455
akb writes "USA Today is reporting on an interesting new alliance between Kazaa, the dominant file sharing network, and Verizon, a company with revenues of $67 billion. The two companies are floating a proposal to ISPs and the computer and manufacturing industries to lobby to force the music industry to license their music. Royalties would be payed to artists directly, thus circumventing the stranglehold the RIAA has on the music industry."
Sounds Good (Score:2)
As long as the RIAA doesn't get to do the fucked up stuff it does now, I'm all for it. As long as it's an open market, so we're not just stuck with one distributor.
Re:Sounds Good (Score:4, Insightful)
Artists will encourage people to download their music and give away promo cd's for free to entice people into becoming fans to get them to pay $45-$80 to see the band live. It will be a revolution in the music industry- everything will have turned upside down, but there is no other way. Artists need to make money somehow- except those who do it just for the love of the music, but I'm sure those artists would enjoy a bit of money and fame too.
Just my prediction- who knows what will really happen.
Re:Sounds Good (Score:3, Interesting)
However, I do agree that the real test of artists will be in their performances. That's where they will need to make their money.
Re:Sounds Good (Score:2, Insightful)
I only buy CDs from DIY artists. I refuse to allow my money to go to the giant record companies knowing that only about ten cents goes to the artist, versus seven out of ten dollars for a DIY cd, subtracting $3 for production costs.
Its not about selling cds (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Sounds Good (Score:4, Insightful)
Prince? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Sounds Good (Score:3, Funny)
Well, yeah... But it's a rather grand assumption to suggest that I like to work, but I haven't found anyone who'll pay me to do nothing.
Concerts are not charities for bands, they're social events that go way beyond the band...
What? You're saying that these are social events that go way beyond the band. I.e., people go to concerts because they are social events, not because of the band. This is good news for people like Britney that, despite having no talent, will still be able to earn plenty of money by providing a social event to the public.
No more naive then expecting people to continue to pay $20 for something they can download for free.
Sounds good to an outsider, but run this up on someone who it's going to affect and they're likely to have some different opinions.
Yeah, they're used to rolling in money and for the most part doing very little. Now they'll probably earn less and might actually have to work. Bummer. Sounds almost like MY life.
Re:Sounds Good (Score:2)
And the RIAA Reaction is: (Score:3, Insightful)
Strange, I thought that the proposal was one of the most rational proposals I have heard yet.
Speaks volumes about character of Hilary Rosen.
Re:Sounds Good (Score:5, Insightful)
Sounds like a take-over bid to me.
Re:Sounds Good (Score:2)
Re:Sounds Good (Score:2)
No, compulsory license means anyone can get access to it at the same rate.
RIGHT ON! (Score:2, Informative)
about time.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Who does the RIAA benefit? themselves?
oh, when the RIAA was first enacted, it's purpose was to protect intellectual property rights worldwide and the First Amendment rights of artists.
however, now it seems that the RIAA doesn't even acknowledge the artists anymore.
it's time for RIAA reform, or do away with them completely.
Verizon's plans are a step in the right direction...to help artists make money making music. isn't that what it should all be about?
Aha! (Score:4, Funny)
Who does the RIAA benefit? themselves?
-and-
however, now it seems that the RIAA doesn't even acknowledge the artists anymore.
only go to show what you don't really know:
That is that the RIAA is a secret Iraqui agency working for Saddam Hussein. What seems to be the RIAA's plan to take over the world is really Saddam trying to take over the world. All that money that supposedly goes to the "artists" is really funneled into an Iraqui weapons program. I mean, what really happens to the artists anyway? Just look at people like Vanilla Ice, Weird Al Yankovic and Marky Mark from Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch. THEY were really killed to hide the truth after their money was secretly sent to Saddam. The next thing you know, he'll be commanding all the world's computers using something called "Brilliant Digital Projector..."
Or, it could just be a scheme run by The Brain from Pinky and the Brain.
This is great... (Score:5, Insightful)
Recording Industry Association of America president Hilary Rosen calls the proposal "the most disingenuous thing I've ever heard. It's ridiculous."
The logical statement:
"It would be like me opening a video store, charging 10 times what others were charging and only offering videos in the Beta format," Guerinot says. "In any business, when you have billions of downloads occurring, you don't say we're going to ignore that market and try to create something else. You serve your customers."
Why the hell is Hillary Rosen in charge anyway? Attempting to change an industry that already exists and is going strong into what you want it to be is stupid. This is a great turnabout though, I'm glad to see some heavy hitters start going against the RIAA. I'd gladly pay $1/mo to download music legit. Assuming the majority of that $1 went to the musicians. I'm paying for the network from my own bandwidth and hard drive space, and I'm glad that Guerinot seems to understand that.
Re:This is great... (Score:2)
One problem: Which musicians? The fair way would be to track what people are downloading, and dole out the money proportionally based on that, but trying to track everybody's downloads opens up several cans of worms...
Well, duh! (Score:2)
Of course the cost will be passed along to subscribers. How can that not be clear? Only a moron would willing give up $1/user/month and get nothing out of it. The ISPs don't gain anything from this venture. If anything, they lose because it will encourage more Internet activity and increase the bandwith costs. So if anything, the subscribers will pay more than $1/month.
Frankly, I don't understand why I can't just buy the music directly from the artists, at $1/song.
Re:Well, duh! (Score:2)
I'm willing to pay a few extra bucks a month if it means I no longer have to switch filesharing programs every week.
Re:Well, duh! (Score:2)
This sounds fairly communist (though good, since music has always been "for the people"), and I'd wager that kazaa and especially Verizon have more at stake than good will. Hell, the pair almost make TW/AOL look good. What next? SBC and MTV will pair up?
Re:Well, duh! (Score:2)
Re:Well, duh! (Score:2, Insightful)
How would we know how to pay each artist?
I would have no problem with this fee as long as it reasonable. But how is the money distributed is the big issue. Who gets to decide who gets how much and why. Who sits on that pool of money dooling it out. Have you seen a family fighting over an estate?
If this proposal were to go through we would likely have a quasi-governmental agency in charge of talent, giving out money from this pool, while the masses of computer users (perhaps pirates) pay a talent tax so that they can download all they want. How would we measure the traffic? Would this agency try to encode some information into the file to measure how many times something was transferred within Kazaa's network. Would there be a floor amount of money that would be paid to artist because they are part of this consortium? It seems simpler to "Pay the artist" but there will inevitably be a middle man to deal with.
We've got this already....Re:Well, duh! (Score:2)
We have this already. It's called "the RIAA".
Re:Well, duh! (Score:2, Interesting)
The real problem is that the smart artists would then all setup beowulf clusters on OC-3's to pipe their own songs in massive parallel to
.
Re:Well, duh! (Score:2)
Far too sane, look who is talking... (Score:5, Interesting)
My first thought: this is far to sane to actually take place. Then I read:
Sooo, let me get this straight: it is riciculous to directly pay the artist who produce the music.
Well, this is very telling. I sincerly hope compulsory license comes to be... it seems about the only way to tame the RIAA beast. Maybe it will even save internet radio.
Re:Far too sane, look who is talking... (Score:2)
Musicians make music, record companies produce it. Not that I agree with the cut they take or pressure they can put on the musicians and market.
Re:Far too sane, look who is talking... (Score:2)
Re:Far too sane, look who is talking... (Score:2, Insightful)
But how can you pay the artists directly if they have signed away all their rights to their label?
Taming the beast as it shakes in its boots in drea (Score:3, Interesting)
What should terrify the RIAA is the possibility that the USSC will pull a Roe v Wade re copyright law; that suddenly out of no where it will take a fish hook to copyright law and essentially disembowl it. That is what Roe v Wade did to abortion laws. There is far more constitutional ground to oppose the DMCA than old anti-abortion laws.....
That ruling on virtual child pornography should have been a wake up call for the RIAA and MPAA because it shows that there is a hardline utilitarian streak to the current USSC. That ruling showed the public that utility matters to most of the justices, especially ones like Scalia that typically rule against big government (which is what the DMCA really is, an excuse to increase police powers).
A good legal argument to use before the USSC against the DMCA is that it violates the first amendment. The bill of rights was ratified AFTER the body of the Constitution. Therefore federal copyright law must be restricted by the first amendment since it came AFTER the clause in Article I, Section 8 establishing IP enforcement powers. Since the provision that "Congress shall pass no law abridging freedom of speech" came after said section, it naturally follows that said section cannot restrict freedom of speech.
(Now what would really be nasty is if the USSC ruled that because local governments and corporations are both chartered by state governments, the states can legally hold not for profits like the RIAA to the provisions of the bill of rights)
Performers need a union (like the writer's ASCAP) (Score:2)
The song writers get paid per play by radio stations with moneys distributed by this group which is headed by elected representatives.
Musicians really could use something similar...There the ones getting walked all over by record companies.
Re:Far too sane, look who is talking... (Score:2)
force me to listen? Oh wait... (Score:2, Interesting)
"Kazaa, Verizon Propose Compulsory Music Listening"
I got an image of being *forced* to listen to whatever music I download...
I'm pessimistic (Score:2, Insightful)
All eveidence is to the contrary - start back in 1985 or whenever it was that CDs started replacing wax - the wax was more expensive to produce yet CDs cost more that the equivalent 12" LPs. I never heard about artistes getting paid more then.
I also remember the promise of DAT - was supposed to replace casettes . That didn't happen because the "Music Industry" was paranoid about people being able to make perfect copies of LPs.
Then there are all the artistes that get dropped like a bad habit when their records don't sell in sufficient volume to suit the record company ("Music Industry"). Of course, when the artiste wants to break the same contract, they find they can't.
For "Music Industry" read "RIAA" in this instance.
yes I'm rambling - it's 12:20AM and I should be asleep. Bottom line is I can't see this one suceeding unfourtanately.
All Hail KaZaA (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm imagining this happening right before their CEO woke up in a cold sweat, screaming something about chaos. I can't see them doing anything like this unless they had some sort of hairbrained scheme to get most of this money, and/or dominate this new sharing industry. But that's preposterous. We all know KaZaA would never resort to such unscrupulous tactics.
I'm going to have to wait this one out, and see what happens.
bad idea; it's just a tax. (Score:5, Insightful)
all this "solution" would do would be to result in a tax on internet use applied to everyone "who benefit(s) from the availability of this content." Essentially this is the same thing as putting a surcharge on blank CDs. Also since it's legislated it would be difficult to change when we discover the bugs.
Re:bad idea; it's just a tax. (Score:4, Insightful)
Now that we have new technology that will change the way the bargain works the major labels are looking to tighten their grip and kill off the potential of new competition. Read some Larry Lessig, he refers to them as the dinosaurs looking to kill off the mammals.
The important thing to remember is that this is a bargain between all members of society. Don't believe free market drivel that tells you that you aren't a stakeholder.
Re:bad idea; it's just a tax. (Score:2)
Just for the record, a $1/month/user surcharge is a goofy stupid idea, but at least it's an idea. Without someone holding a bigger stick than the RIAA's control of virtually all rights to the music that you want to listen too, we're stuck with their ideas.
'jfb
You're right, but for the wrong reasons. (Score:2)
The problem, however, is how the distribution works. The laws we already have that function this way are a perfect example. They're basically highway robbery - we allow the 5 major companies at the heart of the RIAA and MPAA to collect a tax! They're supposed to distribute the booty to the artists... want to guess how much of it any of them actually see? And do all artists get the same? Or some more than others? Who qualifies as a "content creator" and who doesn't?
It's not pretty. I like the pre-DMCA status quo better (bootleggers are prosecuted, and "recreational" duplication is de facto permitted). As distribution technology gets easier, the content industry revenues gradually attenuate. It's too bad, but I won't lose any sleep - they were ushered in on a technological accident just a few years ago, and they'll be ushered out on one. There's no god-given right to become a billionare selling music. The first technological revolution in the content industry - the phonograph, and the radio - already caused a far worse tragedy, removing the livelihood of many millions of professional musicians. Life will go on.
I wouldn't be surprised to see the net effect of all this that the middle-man is simply cut out of the transaction, and the old "semi-voluntary" model where the audience compensates the artist directly comes back once again.
Re:bad idea; it's just a tax. (Score:5, Insightful)
Legislation is what makes Intellectual Property exist in the first place. It makes sense that changing the legislation could solve the problems with Intellectual Property law enforcement.
Re:If its new the xxAAs will fight it tooth & (Score:2, Informative)
You're misinformed wrt radio.
Yes, many labels opposed radio in the early days. Capitol Records, though, when they started in the early 40's, began the process of encouraging disc jockeys to play their songs on the radio. Within ten years, Capitol was the dominant label, mainly because they had built up relations with all the radio DJ's and had a much easier time geting their artists on the air, which resulted in higher sales (which they parlayed into being able to sign the bigger artists, such as Sinatra in the 50's).
no (Score:5, Funny)
No! I can not say anything nice about Verizon! I'll seize to be! Curses.. foiled.. gahh.... getting dark...
Re:no (Score:2)
They are just doing this so that they don't get cut out of the competition later. They're slow since they are so big, so it'll take them a while.
Re:no (Score:3, Funny)
And I'll take to go. There - let them try writing anything meaningful without those two verbs.
More like compulsory fees (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't like this idea one bit. It's the same principle that would end up letting a whole host of "fees" into the bill that we get from our ISPs at the end of the month.
It also reminds me of the college tuition bill. The tuition, and then the tens of fees tacked onto the bill, that end up summing at nearly $1000.
Don't let people nickel and dime us to death.
Re:More like compulsory fees (Score:2)
$1-a-month.
$2 billion yearly.
For those of you who can't do math, I'll do it for you.
Let's err on the side of safety and say that this generates $1.8 billion a year. That's $150,000 a month. Now, how many people in America are subscribed to an ISP? Somewhere on the order of 50%. Since when did America suddenly gain 30,000 citizens?
I haven't seen a single news report yet that includes accurate statistics or sales.
Re:More like compulsory fees (Score:2)
1,800,000,000 / 12 = 150,000,000 per month. and where do you get off rounding down $200,000,000?!
this just says that there are 150,000,000+ people per year on the internet that would gain from these services. a fair claim.
Re:More like compulsory fees (Score:4, Insightful)
Your math is FUBAR.
$1,800,000,000 / 12 = $150,000,000. The U.S. population is somewhere around 300,000,000. About half of all Americans have Internet access. 50% of 300,000,000 is 150,000,000. So, yes, $1/month/customer =~ $2B/year.
Having said that, no audio file has crossed my router that wasn't perfectly legitimate, and I don't mean ``well, I'm gonna buy the CD, anyway.'' The RIAA is scum and its executives should be thrown in jail as the corrupt rackettering thugs that they are, but I'm not willing to ``subsidize'' something that I'm not using.
And who's to say that this new scheme won't be just as bad as what we now have with the RIAA?
Go to concerts. Buy knick-knacks. Break copyright laws if you must, but accept the consequences--be willing to pay fines or go to jail over that downloaded MP3 or warezed Photoshop when you get caught. Lobby your lawmakers and educate your friends.
I'll pay for my own entertainment. Don't make me pay for your yours.
b&
Oh yeah I'm shocked... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Oh yeah I'm shocked... (Score:2)
People say the RIAA is evil and I agree.
People say that the RIAA doesn't do anything and I disagree.
The labels do provide promotion and make famous the bands that they want to be famous with our money and the artists' money. Now, is it worth selling your soul as most musicians do? Debatable. I certainly believe that it would be better if the buying public made famous the musicians that deserve it.
That's all.
Could Change Some things (Score:4, Insightful)
I could do without it, thanks. (Score:2)
Don't say I would never be exposed to any new music either, since I discover most music I like myself, in ways that cost record labels little to nothing. I think artists would be able to pay for recording if they were getting a fair amount of compensation for their work.
In short, greedy labels do nothing nothing for me. Out with them.
Re:Could Change Some things (Score:3, Informative)
erm (Score:2)
RIAA panic (Score:2)
If a lot of recording artists put their support behind this proposal, the RIAA might be just a memory in a few years. I like it. Of course the devil is in the details - how to track usage while respecting privacy, how to pay artists...
but it might work...
This is What's Wrong with This (Score:3, Interesting)
This still presupposes that the consumers of the above items are going to engage in 'illegal' copying.
I think we should adamantly refuse to support any proposal which presupposes guilt - I think it's a dangerous precedent.
MjM
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Better the devil you know? (Score:5, Insightful)
Im not sure of whether a case of the lesser evil is really going to change things in the music industry.
The RIAA doesn't want the music control being handled by someone else, for obvious reasons. At the same time, they afraid to go into the online market properly for the fear of competition, thus they think that by suing the living crap out of anything online, it will eventually go away.
But trusting Kazaa to provide a music service? The same guys that have done a deal with brilliant digital entertainment?
Why can't a group of artists, group together, make their own online service, and provide it a lower cost than the RIAA? By being legal, this will literally force the RIAA to react with an online service thats cheaper, and thats good for consumers.
But until the RIAA have competition from the artist's themselves (and popular ones), they will continue to fight in the courts. The Kazaa/Verizon idea is a bad idea from the getgo.
Re:Better the devil you know? (Score:2)
people may not like it but artists probably will (Score:2)
$1 per month? (Score:5, Insightful)
Uh, NO, you charge the people who are using the service. Why the hell should my grandmother, who has no idea what an MP3 is, pay this fee? Make it $1 per month per file-sharing user. Hell, you could set it up like adult-check, where every P2P app queries the same database before allowing you to login. You pay a buck a month to the database administrators and they distribute the funds where appropriate.
Re:$1 per month? (Score:2)
You think that's bad? Just wait until they start charging her a "porn access" fee!
All those copyrighted images being traded, and no way to make money off them...
More details please... (Score:2, Interesting)
What the article doesn't expand on is what computer manufacturers and blank CD makers will contribute. Define computer manufacturers first (Gateway, HP, Dell, et al or does that include the guy slapping clones together in his garage?).
And I'm 100% against taxing blank data CDs to pay artists. We distribute our own software on CD-Rs; why should we have to pay artists for distributing our own software? Or why should someone burning Linux distributions have to pay up too? What about the other myriad non-music CD-R uses?
Uh oh (Score:5, Informative)
"The music business is a cruel money trench." (Score:3, Interesting)
What we have now: "The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side." -- Hunter S Thompson
Compulsory licensing is a great idea. We have that now with radio play and with some kinds of patents. We would apply directly to the artist, or to the artist's designated representative, for a license. Instead of a band making 2 cents an album, it would get all the money.
This charges people who don't use the service! (Score:2)
Re:This charges people who don't use the service! (Score:2)
What about writers? (Score:2, Troll)
Let's be honest about it: music is just a branch of the sex industry. (Okay, we still have military music too, but you're downloading that, right?) So if we don't want a tax supporting the sex industry, we should probably disallow erotic artists, whether visual or aural. Still, shouldn't Net users everywhere pay a tax to subsidize the valuable time
___
Re:What about writers? (Score:2, Insightful)
Do you think music is nothing more than MTV? Britney Spears is nothing more than a pair of singing, bouncing tits on your TV? Fine, but don't be honest with us, be honest with yourself.
Don't confuse musical creativity (or whatever it passes for in 90% of all music) with anything related to sex. It is possible that a song was written by someone hoping to get laid, but that's not the same thing.
I'm confused (Score:2, Insightful)
how will they decide who gets the money?
What did I miss?
Does this mean... (Score:2, Interesting)
Encryption to the rescue (I hope)!
Yay for communism! (Score:2)
Anything is better than a this proposed tax and commercial welfare system. Well, except perhaps outlawing general purpose computers and network equipment (such as by mandating universal DRM).
Re:Yay for communism! (Score:2, Interesting)
Yeah, but it is a little bit late to post this since that's how RIAA is taxing everyone's purchases of items such as CD burners, blank CDs, tapes, etc. I guess the proposition in the article would create a similar taxation system by "artists".
I agree that this is wrong since you cannot charge everyone their adequate share of downloaded or shared music; much less distribute the money fairly to these "artists". But what's wrong here is the principle, not the plan.
Since the principle says people who share or download have to pay somehow no matter what. While it is true that if you are hosting several terabytes of copyrighted content solely for the purposes of redistribution and financial gain can be considered stealing, I do not think running a Gnutella client casually comes to anything close to it. Just because the distribution is cheaper due to improvements in technology does not validate the older distributors' right to their old distribution model.
Courts have said that size and quantity matters when distributing or setting up a system that eases distribution of copyrighted content. So while Napster was found to be out of bounds, again, casual sharing will not. And, in general, the numbers have so far shown that casual sharing does promote the industry growth, innovation, and other good things.
Labeling this activity as pirating or stealing is just a dumbfounded response from "old guys". And asking for the legislation to require copy-protected hardware everywhere will do nothing but stall the industry.
So, the solution is for RIAA and MPAA to stop pointing fingers and lobbying for legislation, only go after blatant copyright violators. It will benefit them in the short and mid term by raising their revenues and profits while they rip off the "artists". In the long term, please solve the distribution problem that will be antiquated pretty soon. That means offer *more* at a lower cost, not the other way around, like they want to at present.
Very Brief Then I'll Shut Up (Score:2)
This is not about the RIAA.
Repeat, ad nauseuem.
The only people I wish to benefit from listening to (say) Radiohead are... Radiohead.
Sure, they will have financial backers. But the the 'closed shop' where the RIAA acts as toll-keeper on music is repellent.
Please, please, please can the RIAA put its head back in the sand and shut up.
How kazaa fits in. (Score:2)
Good idea, but what's KaZaA's business model? (Score:2)
Re:Good idea, but what's KaZaA's business model? (Score:2)
Consider the consequences (Score:3, Interesting)
The proposal is similar to what's being done with the blank audio cassette levy in the US (see Title 17, section 1004 [cornell.edu]) and the Canadian CD-R Levy (see this random link I found on Google [neil.eton.ca]).
But the question is: how does the collected money get back to the artists? There are two ways:
1. Use the BMI or ASCAP system that already exists to pay artists for music rebroadcast.
Of course, this has problems of its own (see ASCAP & BMI -- Protectors of Artists or Shadowy Thieves? [woodpecker.com]). This is unlikely, because the sampling method used to dole out royalties is even less valid for the Internet than it is for rebroadcast and live performances. Additionally, it's unnecessary because they could just...
2. Track actual downloads from the Internet.
Think about it -- to accurately divide a >$2B pie will take a very thorough analysis to get all parties comfortable. It's easy to legislate: either all download sites or sharing systems aggregate their download data in a central database or they will be considered illegally supporting piracy. IMHO this will very shortly be a part of the proposal.
Note that this could use unique IDs, assuring that your actual music listening habits won't be tracked, etc. But do you really believe this will happen, when there's yet another advertising vector to exploit? Think about the metadata that could be gained from this data...the licensing opportunities...the marketing...the potential for privacy intrusion....
Who would control this big usage database in the sky? Who would you trust?
Sony's CD Protection bypassed by a felt pen (Score:2)
Ah, here we go again. (Score:2, Insightful)
YES! Cut the RIAA off at the knees. (Score:2)
Utter garbage. (Score:2, Insightful)
Hilary Rosen can suck my knob. (Score:5, Insightful)
Jack Valenti and Hilary Rosen can find a nice place in Hell and burn there in agony for all eternity like the creativity deprived fuck-wited Luddites they are.
God. Just thinking about 'em makes me reach for Piperazine.
GNU and DAT (Score:4, Interesting)
Thought it was relevant to this, but didn't think the slashdotters would let me do a feature
Anyhoo, here's some reference links
The right way to tax dat [gnu.org] by RMS
Phillip Greenspun [greenspun.com] comments and gave testimony before the Senate.
What happens [copyright.gov] to the money that the Library of Congress collects.
cept that Kazaa and Verizon are as bad (Score:2)
Does this mean deaf people would also be charged? (Score:2, Interesting)
Now they will be made to pay for downloading music that they never download nor ever listen????
I've got a brilliant corollary (Score:2, Insightful)
There's rampant piracy of software on the 'net, too. So, how about we place a modest fee on everyone's Internet service account, to license all of the software for everyone. The money raised would be distributed amongst the commercial software vendors. Then, downloading any software will be legal.
Just a guess, but the average American on the net probably downloads, buys, or upgrades maybe $10 a month worth of software. That would be a reasonable fee.
Give me a break.
This is ludicrous. This is wrong on so many levels that I fear enumerating them, since I won't even come close to a complete list!
The chief problem:
I don't use commercial software, nor do I pirate it!!! There's no way in hell I would allow myself to be subjected to such a tax!
The proposal from Kazaa and Verizon is dumb for exactly the same reasons. In analogy to the example above, I don't download illegal copies of music!
Hell No... (Score:2, Insightful)
It would be passed on to the consumer, it would be inflated by the ISP's due to handling costs and the increase in bandwidth being used.
On top of it, I don't find file-sharing all that damn great of a service. If I want to hear music, I'll turn on the radio, or download some indie stuff. If I want to buy it, I'll buy it. I don't want to pay artists like Britney Spears for her bubble-gum pop, or anybody else for that matter, if I'm not going to listen to it.
"So it's only a buck?"... You can buy alot with a buck.
Geez... Why don't we all just pay a portion of our paycheck to a system where people get to stay home and not work and get paid.... oh, wait...
Compulsory licensing yes, compulsory payment no (Score:3, Interesting)
"MONETIZING"??!!!?? (Score:3, Insightful)
MONETIZING!?
What the hell is wrong with 'paying'? Why is it that buisiness community has to constantly make up stupid longer words to use instead of already existing ones?
It's not big, and it's not clever.
Don't say 'leverage' when you mean 'lever'.
Don't say 'burglarized' when you mean 'burgled'
Don't say 'monetized' when you mean 'paid'
Really, it's not that difficult...
Re:Not going to work... (Score:3, Insightful)
The RIAA is somewhat powerful, politically and financially - but going up against the computer (hardware and software) industry, ISPs, the artists themselves and basically everyone who listens to music is a losing battle. They're making a lot of enemies and no allies - politicians are getting heat for siding with the RIAA. The RIAA is completely unnecessary - and by making so much noise, they're causing a lot of people to ask why they exist and why so much money should be being diverted to the RIAA's coffers. It's my prediction that Hilary Rosen is going to be looking for a new job in a few years, because the RIAA is going to go the way of Enron and Andersen. This particular idea may or may not work out, but they're making it clear to everyone that the continued existence of the RIAA is not in the best interest of the artists, the customers or other companies that deal with music in some way.
Re:Big words.. (Score:2)
Begs asking the question... (Score:2)
Imagine a different scenario. Let's say some brilliant mixing artists takes a recording of a busy intersection and somehow turns be honks, beeps and shouted curses and turns it into a hit song, is there really anything owed to the original people honking and cursing?
Admitedly, your goat analogy is a little off the wall, but if somone can make a million from selling goat bleets over your music, it stands to reason he could have made just as much selling goat bleets over ANYONE'S music, so the fact that he happened to chose your is moot. If anything, he will be generating sales for your de-goated original, that you still own, that otherwise you would never have gotten.
Re:Queen? (Score:2)
Re:Queen? (Score:2)
It's actually both, but the song first appeared on a Queen album. 'Greatest Hits', I believe.
Re:Someone still has to do the job of the RIAA (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Rather stupid article (Score:2)
Re:Rather stupid article - Courney Yes, you No (Score:2)
You're right. I'm not a recording artist (be thankful). However, I do have about 5 books that have been printed by big publishing houses. I can certainly say that my book contracts are nothing like music contracts. I get a fixed percentage per book - that's it. The only recoupable cost is the advance. At signing, I received a (non-recoupable) stipend for purchasing supplies, and there were a few cases where I needed some hardware and the publisher provided them free of cost. My first two books barely sold enough to cover the (small) advance I was paid. Writing Linux books in 1995 was a rather bold move.
Distribution and manufacturing? You gotta be kidding. Compare a $17 CD to a $50 book. Which do you think costs more to ship across country in quantity? Which costs more to make? My books are make in the range of 10k-20k units. Probably harder to make than just stamp a piece of metal, huh? Which costs more to sell? Hell, there's noone reading my books over the (public) airwaves. Maybe I should suggest it for my next book. Funny, I don't see deductions on my royalty statements for advertising or manufacturing or...well..*anything*. I also don't think I'll be going into bankrupcy anytime soon either.
If the labels are really doing these kinds of things, it's no wonder people hate them so much.
Compulsory Music Listening (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Did anyone else read this as "music listening" (Score:2)
Thanks for speaking up! Guess I'm not entirely nuts..