Why Make a Sequel of the Napster Wars? 280
6 writes "Cory Doctorow has an interesting article over at Information Week about Hollywood's strategy of suing sites such as YouTube. Says Doctorow: 'It's been eight years since Sean Fanning created Napster in his college dorm room. Eight years later, there isn't a single authorized music service that can compete with the original Napster. Record sales are down every year, and digital music sales aren't filling in the crater. The record industry has contracted to four companies, and it may soon be three if EMI can get regulatory permission to put itself on the block. The sue-'em-all-and-let-God-sort-'em-out plan was a flop in the box office, a flop in home video, and a flop overseas. So why is Hollywood shooting a remake?'"
Well (Score:5, Insightful)
Unlike the Napster case, Youtube has revenue sources (and Google can invest the additional funds needed to keep it afloat).
The studios, quite rightfully see a source of revenue there. It's not just a bunch of cheap bastards sharing amongst themselves. It's a multibillion dollar company making money off of THEIR content.
Should copyright just be abolished because we want free access to tv shows and movie clips?
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Looks to me as if the de facto cat might already be out of the bag on that one.
Re:Well (Score:5, Insightful)
Nah; the copyright system should be abolished because it leads to our current mess in which a few giant companies use it to deprive the artists of their rightful income. We should toss such copyright laws, and devise a revised scheme that guarantees that the artists get most of the money.
Or we can continue along the path of zillions of skirmishes that hurt everyone, until it settles down to a new system. And hope that that new system can't find a new way to steal most of the artists' income and give it to a few fat cats who have a stranglehold on the distribution channels.
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Yes... because that is the fault of copyright law, and not the artists, who sign over the rights to their works for a pittance.
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If there was no copyright of course, they wouldn't get a penny. The media companies would just mass produce CDs with their music, sell them to the public and keep all the money for themselves.
Kind of like Youtube/Napster does/did in fact.
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When an artist on the Internet makes $10 million a year from their work and is so well known that 75% of everyone you ask knows who they are, call me. Until that is the case, using the Internet as a counter-argument to that point is intellectually dishonest.
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It's no accident that they behave much like an oligopoly in most things... It's because they're as close as they can legally get, without having been caught(yet)
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Walt Disney is one of the most repugnant aspects of modern American culture. It is one of the nastier corporations, and what it has done to world mythology, history and fable ought to be a crime. I watched Pocohantas, and the happy ending seemed to me to be one of the most vile slaps
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We should toss such copyright laws, and devise a revised scheme that guarantees that the artists get most of the money.
But who, exactly, is the "artist" in a movie? I saw the Simpson's film this week - a short animated movie - and the credits easily exceeded 100 people. Even in music, while the artist may be the one who created the work, s/he certainly did not work alone to get their songs recorded, produced, distributed, and marketed.
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But who's going to pay to pass legislation that abolishes the laws that over-protect the copyrights of the guys making money off them?
Not the artists - they're out-gunned by several orders of magnitude; us too.
Conversely, I can see who is going to pay to pass legislation to further strengthen those laws.
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If the majority of people don't respect a law (and they don't) then that law is unjust.
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Protecting lives and civil liberties is a very important issue. Keeping people sober by banning alcohol, not so much. Which of these two seems more like protecting copyrights to you?
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There are two types of basic people. Leaders and followers. Sometimes you have a follower leading by using a dead leader as the justification. There was or is a good amount of people who are influenced by those leaders. Politicians found themselves in a place where it was getting hard to get elected without the minority vote and started pass
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Since you brought up revenue sources, every most every current online music service seriously out performs Napster on the "bringing in revenue to the record company" front.
I don't see Hollywood attack (Score:2)
No one will see that kind of attack because there isn't a single point of failure. They can't totally destroy that kind of distribution but only sue some players for refund.
I can even say Holywood heads probably have no idea about many ways to defeat P2P or are doing a poor job because I often see significant points of failure in that scheme.
Holywood don't wan't to end the movie theater experience, that's the
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I think the point of the article was that Hollywood could embrace YouTube, providing it with advertiser-supported content. They stand to reap similar rewards to the kinds that they saw upon deciding to sell movies on Video Cassette, instead of fighting it as a piracy monster.
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Well, the Hummer needs fuel, the Lear needs a new paint job, and frankly, the yacht could do with a good barnacle scraping.
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since no one else said it, copyright should take into account that for all intents and purposes we can create and distribute an unlimited amount of video. Trying to hold onto short video clips is like trying to hold onto a saying.
Hey, motherfucker, I said that first! =)
There's a number of problems that have become entangled. The major problem with current copyright is that copyright has been extended beyond any sane term. It should be no longer than 10 years. On top of this, we've seen the entertainment business engage in many other abuses of the system. However, these are not the underlying problem. The underlying problem is only somewhat different from the problems that copyright was originally designed to address. The new twist
Curious (Score:5, Insightful)
How many of you would "share" then with your friends? (By "share" I don't mean watch the movies with friends. I mean make copies of the movies for friends.) If so, how many friends?
Would you see anything wrong with posting your copy to an FTP site or the equivalent?
Would you see anything wrong sending copies to your closest 100 friends?
Just curious.
Re:Curious (Score:5, Interesting)
Not MANY people would upload their copy to TPB, but it only takes ONE.
Something movie distributors have in their favor is their exhibition system. Showing movies on a big, bright screen in a large room with a great sound system is significant added value. If you want to defeat movies as they are, you must defeat the movie theater, and if you want to do that, you have to:
Just an opinion, but most people actively engaged in making commercial movies in Hollywood love the internet for promotion and secondary distro, but no business people, and crucially no artists, are talking about chucking the whole movie theater idea. Working in the status quo's favor as well, is the strong separation between commercial cinema, the clearly expensive star-studded vehicles that can be good or bad, but will generally be at least entertaining, and independent cinema, which can be more profound but often isn't, and is generally actively hostile to the idea of "entertaining" people (they regard mass entertainment in the way FOSS people regard configuration wizards).
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Change the directors and producers. I have many director friends, all young and trying to break in, but none of them are even remotely interested in making a film and putting on YouTube to tell their stories.
That's interesting because I know a bunch that are putting stuff up on youtube and elsewhere, and they seem to be getting the attention that they want from the studios and the cable networks. A few have been able to make a living as creators (and not just getting paid to work on another's project), while others have not yet crossed that line, i.e., they have to keep their day gig.
What is really telling is that even the ones that are successful or are becoming successful are still making their goofy little
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I found it interesting that the directors you knew where not interested in web video or youtube in particular, that's all. I looked over your credits and you've worked some pretty big shows as well as smaller ones. I don't know how much this skews it. I do know a few fairly big names, but they're older dudes, too, so their lack of interest in web video for anything other than promotion of their latest might go with age. They don't feel they have to make lit
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My friends from USC will do some stuff and put it on YouTube, but they don't count it -- they want to make money making movies, and who the hell remembers who directed "Lazy Sunday"? ;)
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It's a two fold thing. On one hand, yes, the internet + digital video does change the game radically. On the other hand, not quite so radically that it's going to destroy the movie business. So . . . . I think we're in basic agreement? Beyond that, I think that the movie business is being enriched by DV in a way that the music business is not being enriched by digital music. I think you might have already said that.
Anyway, I'm tired and rambling, so I'll lea
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As long as people are paying $80 for a 4 ft. Monster RCA cable, I'm dubious on this point. It just ain't the same. 50% of the acoustics is having a big room, thousands of square feet, and 50% of the visual experience is having 120 degrees of your field-of-view filled at meters distance. BTW, if you think you're getting theater resolution from HDDVD or Blu-Ray, you aren't -- that's still another generation up.
Re: Added Value (Score:2)
Movie Theaters ARE added value. And tastes ARE jaded. Yes, "some indie films have succeeded", because they are carefully written not to require cinema pyrotechnics. However, many low-budget imitations of big-budget movies that cheat on the special effects get *slammed* horribly as "cheese-planet".
I certainly don't have any clear answers, but I'd like to see some kind of system that deliberately plays on the poor-student eventually feeling cram
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movie theaters depend on concessions for their overhead. Every last penny of the box office generally goes to the distributor (this is on account of the actors and director having first-dollar gross deals). This is why the markup is a little ridiculous.
Transformers was expensive, but still cheaper than Spidey 3 and Superman Returns, two flops. I would not defend Hollywood's profligacy per se (i think it was a big pissing contest to see who could have the biggest budget). But entertaining
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Then add in the random patrols of staff with night-vision gear looking for cameras, the sticky mess on th
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Sure, anyone who says they wouldn't share is probably lying, but that's not the point. The digital world has already turned certain aspects of our economy upside-down, and it has the potential to make even more changes. Its fundamental nature is to eliminate scarcity, and since so much of our current economy is based on scarcity, current business models don't function well in the digital world.
DRM is an attempt to introduce scarcity into an arena where none exists. It goes against the fundamental nature of
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Assume that the major movie studios produced high-quality full-length first run downloadable movies with no DRM whatsoever at a reasonable prices. (You define what is reasonable.) Any DRM-less format you prefer.
CSS = DRM-less already because it is so readily crackable. But ok, whatever.
How many of you would "share" then with your friends? (By "share" I don't mean watch the movies with friends. I mean make copies of the movies for friends.) If so, how many friends?
Everyone who wants a copy and can convince me to put in the effort to make it for them (cause I aint lending it to ya, you bastards never bring it back).
Would you see anything wrong with posting your copy to an FTP site or the equivalent?
No, but it would be an annoying upload time, and I doubt I'd get any benefit from it.
Would you see anything wrong sending copies to your closest 100 friends?
I think, on average, every one of my DVDs has been copied about 3 times. TV episodes I've downloaded I've copied for friends a hell of a lot more because they don't know how to use P2P program
Re:Curious (Score:4, Interesting)
Do you oppose copyright as a general principle? Without copyright, there could be no GPL.
Bill Gates: It's a total sellout for the government to give away my freedom to copy the Linux kernel to Linus Torvalds. If this means nobody writes free software anymore, than boo fuckin' hoo. I'd rather there'd be less free software and more freedom for me to sell it to people, preferably with a cute little animated assistant to help configuration.
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In the "copyright debate," the "without copyright you can't have GPL" argument is indeed an interesting one.
Actually I think that FOSS would do just fine if copyright disappeared tomorrow. Sure, some companies would create closed-sourced forks, but the community has enough momentum that it would do just fine. That having been said, I actually quite like the principle of the GPL and Creative Commons licenses, when it
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The "source material" definition gets more and more complicated with the medium, and it seems like it would be too elastic. Isn't merely the script the "source" of the movie, and the photography just compilation? Or is it principle photography, but it could take someone a month to rebuild the original cut of a film from the footage (it's a lot like reverse-engineering). But then you can't add a scene, so maybe you need access to the actors!
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I agree it would get tricky in practice. Then again current copyright law has plenty of ambiguity and gray area. It would have to be carefully worded. (Then again, that's true of all laws.) I'm not going to go through the exercise of trying to refine this idealistic law, since it's not realistically ever going to be adopted.
Re:Curious (Score:4, Insightful)
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Without copyright, the GPL wouldn't be necessary.
This is going to sound counter-intuitive... (Score:3, Informative)
Now, some would argue that this shows that people are mean or short-sighted, or somesuch. Perhaps. Another explanation is that the status-quo assumptions about ownership, distribution, and monetization of creative works are entirely out-of-sync with reality (wher
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I have friends that have tried this, and a big issue is marketing your donation scheme in such a way that you can find enough interested people to put up the money. If you were subjected to the Spiderman 3 ad campa
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One possibility is investors. The investors put money and expect a return. So the final "release price" is set to include the cost of advertising and investor returns. (Which, of course, is already the case for movies.)
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How many of you would "share" then with your friends? (By "share" I don't mean read the books to friends. I mean lend copies of the books to friends.) If so, how many friends?
Would you see anything wrong with posting your copy to a library or the equivalent?
Would you see anything wrong letting your closest 100 friends
Collapse (Score:3, Insightful)
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As the adage goes: Treat people the way you want them to act. However you treat them, that is exactly what they will become.
My personal experience at least, bears this out as truth. It's human nature.
No one can compete with FREE?? (Score:5, Funny)
You should teach an economics course or something!
Re:No one can compete with FREE?? (Score:4, Insightful)
As for the movie/music industry: Service. Download all you want from itunes without DRM for $10 a month? Hell yes. There's no way TPB could compete with THAT, because the service you receive is so much better it would be well worth the price. A service is something people are willing to pay for, even though that same service could be received for free (by e.g. washing your own car etc).
Cory: It's called money (Score:4, Insightful)
I personally like iTunes and the iTunes store. I don't mind the DRM and I re-rip the few songs I need to move. It's a pain, yes, but I think the price is fair. So I think iTunes is infinitely times better than napster because at least some money is headed in the right direction. Even if only 5% makes it through to the artists, thats an infinitely greater amount than Napster ever paid them.
Sheesh. I owe so much to the artists who've written songs that have gotten me through some tough times. 99 cents is nothing compared to the gifts they've given.
Re:Cory: It's called money (Score:5, Insightful)
Cory believes there was a huge missed opportunity for the industry to re-invent itself, and make money in a new age.
The success of iTunes drives this point home: everyone knows you can get free copies of music from various websites. However people are willing to pay iTune prices for the convenience. The labels are still caught up in an old business model ("each copy a person listens to must be a trackable sale we have made") rather than accepting a new business model ("charge people a monthly fee for access to an exhaustive catalog").
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REAL courage can be found hanging at the end of a rope.
it's generational (Score:5, Interesting)
these old mogul type guys are from an era when you DID solve the problems of piracy by suing someone. because in the good ol' days, piracy was done by some mafia dude with a cd press or vinyl press or a bunch of cassette decks in a warehouse or closet room somewhere, and there were about 6 pirates out there who were making any economic impact on their bottom line: a small group of slow easy targets, and it was easy to get the fbi to help you
now of course, anyone who can download a program and drag a file in to a folder is a "pirate". which is basically every single young, music hungry, technologically savvy, and, most importantly, POOR student... in the entire world
but the old guys just don't get that
the solution?
wait. the old geezers will just die off. the guys who succeed them in the boardroom will know what's up and what's down about the realities of the internet
give it a decade or so. these RIAA and MPAA lawsuits are obviously incredibly retarded. but your complaints about the obvious realities of today fall on deaf old ears
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Whoa whoa whoa there, the artist is entitled to be paid for his work. The point
bullshit (Score:2)
and guess what: technology is getting to the point that a teenager in his basement is as powerful as an entire studio in 1930. and let's say even if he never WAS able to do what pixar does in a decade or so... i'd rather be entertained by him than have a corporation suing people for downloading files
if the big studios have to sue regular people that to s
Why a Sequel? (Score:3, Insightful)
Policy about intellectual property is the responsibility of corporate lawyers, and they have a very primitive world view. They assume that all ownership is like physical ownership. If you own a theater, someone pays you to sit in the seat. If you sell songs, you sell the physical media. They don't understand that this model is no longer valid, and they don't have the flexibility to change.
This is why Apple has succeeded with iTunes. Apple understands the new online world, and they have figured out how to make money. It's not surprising that a tech company would be able to succeed, and old line traditional companies would fail.
Another side of the lawyer mentality is that you can only win by suing people. For some people in the law, not suing is like not breathing. (Insert shark joke here.) They see that their business model is going down the tubes. (Insert 'series of tubes' joke here.) Their first and only reaction is to sue. Why are you surprised by this? They are doing what they were trained to do, and what they are very well paid to do.
Na[ster 2: Electric Boogaloo (Score:4, Funny)
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I think you forgot: Transformers, Star Dust, Daddy Day Camp, Skinwalkers, Harry potter and the Order of the Phoenix, Hot Rod, Bratz, and Ratatouille, I know who killed me, Who's your Caddy, Becoming Jane, Talk to me, Rescue Dawn, Knocked up, Sicko and Evan Almighty to name just a few of the ones in theaters RIGHT NOW.
As far as sequels, you missed Fantastic Four Rise of the Silver Surfer and The Bourne Ultimatum.
The fact is there are always a number of sequel
Because the law is the law!! (and other stupidity) (Score:2)
Now, one thing that must be said in their defense is that if you do NOTHING to defend your intellectual property, what's likely to happen is that you'll lose your rights altogether. Under certain IP laws, you are require to defend your IP. But
Re:Because the law is the law!! (and other stupidi (Score:2)
nonsense (Score:3, Interesting)
I call bullshit. I played "stump the DJ" with a friend who has rhapsody, and it was no less impressive than Napster, at least for all the obscure titles I know that I was amazed to find on Napster.
TFA is *not* about piracy vs. legal access (Score:4, Insightful)
But what Doctorow is saying is that both Napster then and YouTube now *want* to do deals with the copyright holders, but they only see a revenue stream coming from lawsuits (especially given Google's deep pockets). He points out that both the recording industry and cable television started out by poaching someone else's IP (sheet music and already-broadcast material, respectively), then doing a deal with the copyright holders after they were able to make money doing it.
Please, read the fine ar... oh, right.
Tired of all this "illegal" crap (Score:2, Interesting)
It is perfectly legal to:
1. Record a show on VHS
2. Invite people to then watch this VHS (given no $$$ is involved)
3. There are storage/cables/wires (in this case RG6 coax, whatever speaker cables you have, home theater systems, etc) involved in getting the media on the VHS to the TV for people to watch
Now all of a sudden, it's illegal to:
1. Record a show on HD (hard drive)
2. Invite people to then watch (download) from this HD (
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Even better - people have had their houses searched and have been arrested for having devices that permit them to use pirated console games, and yet no one has ever had their door kicked in for owning a dual cassette player.
The big problem (Score:5, Interesting)
In the 20th century, when culture in the US, at least, was much more homogenic, stars like Elvis'es, Marilyn Monroe's, Beatles were more universally loved and demanded (paid for). Now, nobody is interested to that extent because there's so much more to see/hear/watch/read. Sure, a few hundred thousand kids may want to pay $5 for the new April Levigne CD, they're not interested enough to want to pay $20 for a CD.
Entertainers are simply not able to earn the money they used to make. Neither are the distribution company. We're seeing an overdue shift down in the amount of money that we are willing to pay for entertainment. Supply of entertainment shot through the stratosphere at the end of the 20th century, and demand merely shot through the roof increased with the population increase and populations joining the modern world (as far as entertainment is concerned).
All of this stuff that this article was about are simply the transitional pains. I predict that in 20 years, very few entertainers of any kind will be able to earn much more than say, a big city local television news personality. The days of Michael Jackson buying amusement parks and Elvis collection gold Cadillacs is over. The days of $20 music albums are over, too. The problem is that the large entertainment industry, as a whole, are going to go kicking and screaming, whether they're actors, musicians, or distribution companies (which are even less relevant now than the entertainers themselves).
The distribution companies do, of course, represent the entertainers demands for more money, of course. The problem for them is compounded by not only are peoples tastes diverging into more and more entertainment options, but people are especially not willing to pay for distribution. They're going the way of buggy whip makers.
What does this mean? It means that in 20 years, celebrities will be everywhere, but few will be massive, massive stars. It also means that they'll be more like actual, working people, and might have to work on their own distribution, if they want to make a good living from it.
Perez Hilton is a great early example of what most of tomorrow's celebrities will look like: organic, diverse, earning money by giving their "art" away for cheap or free, and making money from ads and sponsorships, while handling their own distribution straight to the people.
That's all people are willing to pay for. Why? Well, even if the distribution companies lock it down perfectly, it won't work. The demand isn't there. If you don't want to pay $20 to watch a shitty movie that you'll forget 10 minutes after you watch it, you can hop over to YouTube, and watch some rapidly improving, amateur stuff for free or cheap.
The future of film (Score:2)
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Honestly? Not really. Oh the teenagers love those, but teenagers love whatever you tell them to love. So does Hollywood prefer to make $360M with a $150M movie, or $100M with a $5M movie? Which has the better ROI, I wonder?
It's Simple (Score:2)
The movies you like... (Score:2)
If there was a way to make 'em cheaper, we'd be doing it.
Thad
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Of course if Hollywood keeps feeding us crap, then the people are going to eat crap. However "how many millions can we spend on this movie" seems to be the official "my dick is bigger than yours" contest between Hollywood film studios nowadays.
Why worry about something new? (Score:2, Redundant)
The sequel doesn't have to be the same movie... (Score:2)
Why? (Score:2, Redundant)
It's Not About Copyright Violation (Score:3, Interesting)
The Internet allows artists to get their work out without signing away their copyrights to the big media companies for a song and a prayer. That's what scares them. If they're not necessary for artists to make it big, then they're not going to be able to goad those artists into contracts that leave artists with a double-platinum album deep in debt to the record company.
It's about control, not justice.
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Hotline the origin of media piracy? The original internet scene was founded on IRC, FTP and USENET.
Hotline was for point and clickers.
Re:Napster, WTF? Hotline Servers (Score:5, Funny)
The original internet scene?
I'd actually began to mention BBSs and then erased it, because I figured if I start down that road, people are going to say, "Actually, it started with people copying each others punch cards."
you insensitive clod (Score:5, Funny)
you young whipper snappers and your pirate ragtime player piano paper scroll scene, you have it so easy today... YOU try hauling around 50 pounds of brass machinery under YOUR overcoat!
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I'd actually began to mention BBSs and then erased it, because I figured if I start down that road, people are going to say, "Actually, it started with people copying each others punch cards."
Home taping was the first worry of the media companies, I remember reading an article in 1970-71 Hi-Fi mag aout the ethics of taping records (tape recorders had been available since the 1950's). Similarly, one of the reasons why Ampex never got serious about a home video tape recorder was that they knew they were going to be sued by the media companies (Betamax decision...) - they figured that the Japanese with their assets offshore would make a much harder target for the media companies.
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I was "pirating" mix tapes with friends before home computers could play anything approaching recorded music.
pickup basketball with old guys (Score:5, Insightful)
the lawsuits are that old guy - taking a speedy process and slowing it down to their pace in order to give them time to catch up. they call fouls all the time and make the whole process generally unpleasant at times. But they are doing what they need to do to WIN.
pointing out that the lawsuit strategy failed is assuming that it was to attempt to deter change - it's not. Big companies are about slowing down the process and milking every dime they can out of it. Innovating is an interesting thing. For every innovator who succeeds, countless others fail for reasons other than technical viability. The smart thing to for large moneyed firms to do is to wait - let the innovators do their thing; when the market reacts in kind - bully into the market with dollars and positioning. It's the lion chasing off the hyenas after they've made the kill. The king of the jungle feeds off carrion something like 30% of the time.
I'm certain I'll get modded down for this, but the future of this business is not in selling music. What the internet has taught us is that content is devalued by an inability to secure exclusivity of access. The future of media is not ITUNES - that's another example of slowing down change. It is not change itself. It is still selling music. the paradigm shift is that they are not going to sell MUSIC at all.
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The ones I played with kicked my ass. I had to quit.
I'm such a basketball n00b.
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Re:Yeah free trumps "not" (Score:4, Interesting)
Same thing happened with music. No one purchased records and tapes due to all that music broadcast over that free medium of radio.
What trumps everything is the basic building block of a business: customer value.
Companies that figure this out grow.
--- check it out thousands of video podcasts on your phone: www.mywaves.com ---
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The problem with music piracy (and to a lesser extent with web radio) is that you get the higher level of contro
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I'm not sure which is worse!
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Yeah well next time you speed I hope you get caught and sentenced to life in prison. Your own fault for putting lives at risk... oh, life in prison a little harsh for you? I think it's fair. Just like a couple years in jail and 6 figure fines are fair for copying a DVD.
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Funny you had to bring color into this. Like "rap" songs are completely different and original and have been for the past 30 years...