RIAA Denies Hypocrisy in Royalties Dustup 85
Hairless ape writes "The RIAA is reacting to a story pointing out the group's hypocrisy in its attempts to have songwriter royalties lowered. The issue stems from attempts to get webcasters to pay fixed royalty rates. 'In short, the contention was that the RIAA wanted to pay a percentage of its revenue to songwriters as its profits have fallen, but pushed for a fixed per-stream when it came to earning money from webcasters.' The RIAA says that's not so, and that SoundExchange offered a similar model to webcasters. Either way, the rates sought by the two groups would have bankrupted many webcasters. 'Now you know; it wasn't about hypocrisy, but one of the seven deadly sins may still have been involved.'"
Deadly sins? (Score:1, Funny)
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joke [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irony [wikipedia.org]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarcasm [wikipedia.org]
And whoever modded this guy up needs to take the same remedial course on humor.
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Althought I can't see it on the new [timesonline.co.uk] list...
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Truly the RIAA must be one of the most tranquil organizations on the face of the planet.
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There aren't seven deadly sins. There are ten. [wikipedia.org] Wikipedia, unfortunately, does not quote the KJV. But then again neither does my preacher.
The "seven deadly sins" [wikipedia.org] were cooked up by Pope Gregory the Great in the 6th Century AD.
However, as to hypocracy, Judge not, that ye be not judged. For with what judgment ye judge, ye shall be judged: and with what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again. And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother' [holy-bible.us]
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Presumably one of the Vatican's new deadly sins (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually at least six of these new seven deadly sins apply to the RIAA, starting with "polluting the environment".
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A little off topic, but why am I suddenly reminded of all those AOL CD's?
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From their argument, they are implying that consumers are only buying individual songs, but that they, the overly generous music labels are paying songwriters and musicians as if we bought the whole album.
Revenue may be down, but payouts are down as well. The music industry hasn't been lowering the price of CD's OR lowing the price of individual songs on iTunes or Amazon. If anything, the majors 'profit margin' has increased, because they have significantly lower expenses AND g
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Everyone's guilty of that, and I don't see why the RIAA is especially guilty.
Let me guess, the exception, right?
Other than studies and surveys (which are experiments on human behaviour), what exactly have they done?
I'll give you that. They were certainly instrumental in unbalancing copyright law.
I don't think they've done much of that. If you're going to cite the artists as an example, I'
Fourteen deadly sins (Score:1, Offtopic)
This might be offtopic, but I'm willing to risk it. There are now fourteen deadly sins.
Article here. [allheadlinenews.com]
Mgr Girotti named the new mortal sins to be (1)genetic modification; (2) human experimentations, (3) polluting the environment; (4) social injustice; (5) causing poverty; (6) financial gluttony; and (7) taking drugs.
So, let's see. The RIAA is certainly guilty of the new 4, 5, and 6. They're also guilty of 3 if you count noise pollution from crappy manufactured pop bands. And probably 7, I think that's pretty much a given too if you read any of their justifications on their behavior.
So, all they have to do is clone Lance Bass and they'll have a hat trick on the new list.
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So, all they have to do is clone Lance Bass and they'll have a hat trick on the new list.
Okay, but what about human experimentation? *cringes*
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Lets see
(1)genetic modification - everyone from the biotech industry
(2) human experimentations - sadists
(3) polluting the environment - everyone who drives a car; nuclear power plant owners; electricity consumers
(4) social injustice - anyone earning more than 100K p.a. and not making a tax deductible donation (St. Peter will have to check with the IRS)
(5) causing poverty - some from the list above; politicians
(6) financial gluttony - anybody who is the
Re:Fourteen deadly sins (Score:5, Funny)
I wonder if the alcohol that Christ made out of water counts as drugs or not? If not, I'd like to hear why alcohol is not a drug.
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I'd like to hear why alcohol is not a drug (Score:2)
Using that definition, alcohols would be considered a drug. Of course, food, water, air, and every other foreign object introduced into a body could be classified as a drug. Your normal body function is to die. Taking drugs like food and water alter that and keep you alive. Air has that nasty habit also. I say let's ban drugs and see how long the human race lasts!
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Well, some religions (such as Southern Baptists) hold that alcohol is verboten. Others (such as Rastafarianism) have no problems with drugs. Most religions seem to uphold drinking as a celebratory or social act, and are silent on other drugs. So, I would say that religions tend to lump drugs and alcohol together, but the US is where they sent all the Christian groups that thou
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The whole idea of atlas shrugged was taken from the idea of using guilt as leverage in religion. Here's an oft quoted part changed to fit a religious context:
. The whole idea is to make people think they are doing bad things in
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Connection enough?
At least the Australian government is honest about it, you have to be a member of the church of England to be a member of parliament.
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So much for for the vaunted separation of church and state. Maybe not so bad for you but IMO, any theocratic state is bad.
Honesty not something you wa
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So much for for the vaunted separation of church and state.
I don't know what you are getting at. What social code should the US follow that would make it more separated? About the only thing I can think of is getting "In God We Trust" off of the currency. There's no government-sponsored church of any kind, no church is taxed, and there is broad freedom of assembly. Hell, even whack-job Scientology is permitted.
Honesty not something you want from government?
Honesty is disclosure, not forcing your politicians to join some bullshit church. Some of our most prominent politicians are Jewish. Many of them are Catho
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Hindsight is a wonderful thing, if life just had an edit button.
Re:Fourteen deadly sins (Score:5, Funny)
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#2, human experimentation. What's wrong with medical research, psychological research, etc.?
#3, #4, #5 need definition
#6, punish success and all suffer
#7, only the drugs you don't happen to like. Does everyone agree on which drugs are bad?
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Nothing new here... just because these sins were just recently listed didn't mean that the riaa execs weren't going to hell anyway: They were accusing innocents of "stealing" their "property" (that's perjury), engaging in monopolistic practices and asking too much of punitive damages (which would go against "thou shalt not steal"), etc. They were evil, and they know it.
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(2) I guess we'll never have cures for any more diseases, or does drug trials not count as human experimentation?
(3) CO2 emmissions? Everyone does it. Not even counting waste products (or trash).
(4) The Catholic church wants to talk about social injustice? Maybe they should clean their own house first.
(5) How much does the church pull in each year? it is important for all parishoners to understand that giving is not optional (it is actually one of the six precepts of th [memorare.com]
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Oh yeah, I know it's all extra silly. But the blurb made me think of it, and my SlashKarma could stand taking a hit for the sake of posting something interesting.
My list like yours would look like this:
(1) Does this cover reproduction? You're mixing your genetic material with someone else.
(2) Technically, human experimentation would apply to your tailor. He fits pants to you, then modifies them, then fits them again...it's experimentation with a human involved.
(3) Polluting the environment is re
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But, the O2 we convert to CO2 and then we exhale is the same CO2 other organisms convert to O2 and then exhale. Is that pollution or just the proper working of a closed system?
Payola? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Payola? (Score:4, Informative)
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<VOICE type="Emily-Latella">
That's very different. Never mind.
</VOICE>
Re:Payola? (Score:4, Funny)
He's too busy working up his bid to run for president.
Hey! It worked for Bill.
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If he had a prostitution bill comin at him, why didn't he just pay it?
Oh, wait...
I thought there was 14 now? (Score:2)
News? (Score:5, Funny)
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At least it is legal (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe now... (Score:2, Insightful)
Why the painfully inane comments today? (Score:5, Insightful)
I came into this thread with 10 shiny new mod points hoping to find someone insightful, but found not a single comment in the entire thread worth promotion. What's happened to slashdot? A story on a hot subject, and I see nothing but off-topic trolls and insipid banter about deadly sins taken out of context from the description at the top of the page. Not a single comment on the actual article.
Anyway, the RIAA's attempt to dodge the charge of hypocrisy is equally lame. First the new deal gives ridiculous profit to SoundExchange (30% of gross). And even though they do have a 'plan' to share with artists (an inequitable one, albeit), the lack of expediency is directly adding to the profit of the RIAA through this process. The artists are clearly an afterthought. The RIAA can't come close to hiding their real motivation: profit for its members at all costs, regardless of artists rights/needs.
Re:Why the painfully inane comments today? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why the painfully inane comments today? (Score:5, Funny)
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Did you forget you were on the internet?
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I seriously don't listen to any music that I don't have already. I only get music from friends and only if they highly recommend it, and I still don't listen to most of that. 90% of my music listening i
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First the new deal gives ridiculous profit to SoundExchange (30% of gross).
Especially when satellite radio networks pay 7.5%. And no tenable reason given by SoundExchange as to why it should be different, especially as internet radio revenue tends to be much smaller than traditional commercial radio stations.
the lack of expediency is directly adding to the profit of the RIAA through this process. The artists are clearly an afterthought. The RIAA can't come close to hiding their real motivation: profit for its members at all costs, regardless of artists rights/needs.
What sucks even more is that you have to become a member of SoundExchange to claim the royalties, too. Otherwise, SoundExchange 'holds' them for you, regardless of whether your label is RIAA-affiliated. (How else can they pay for the cocaine to snort off hookers' backs?)
E
Seven (Score:5, Funny)
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I call... (Score:1)