Canadian CD-R Tariff Proposal Explained
"The actual basis of these tariffs is a complex formula that involves (among other things) the percentage of the media sold to consumers, the fee payable to the copyright holders from an average pressed music CD, and the percentage of CD-Rs that end up as coasters. The formula can be found in the document that describes the tariffs for Private Copying 2001-2002 (Adobe Acrobat Reader required).
In the case of CD-Rs, the proposed increase from $0.21/CD-R to $0.59/CD-R is due to an increase in the percentage of CD-Rs bought by consumers (45% to 70% since late 2000), an increase in the percentage of CD-Rs used to copy music (56% to 62% in the same time period), and the advent of 80min CD-Rs that can hold more music. However, there is one more factor.
There is currently a "secondary value" discount on the levy to reflect the fact that copies are worth less than the originals. In the 2001-2002 decision the Board applied a 37.5% discount to that effect. The CPCC now claims that because so few copies are of the whole album (10% by their numbers) the discount should only apply to those."
Let me see if I got this right. The top reasons for raising the tariff from $0.21 to $0.59 per CDR are:
1) Increase in number of users who are purchasing CDRs and using them to copy music.
Ok, and why does this justify raising prices? Since the tariff applies to all CDRs, this means that more people are already paying, and they should be making proportionately more tariff money. How does one justify raising the cost of the product when more people are buying said product?
2) 80 min CDRs are now more popular
Let's see, because of the miniscule rise in the fraction of storage now available, they want to increase the price 2.8 times. Again, I haven't seen this magic formula, but that additional 50MB must sure weigh in heavily.
3) 37.5% discount should not apply because few are copying whole album.
Right, so copies should now be worth even less, as most of them are incomplete. To me, this is an argument for raising the discount instead of lowering it. How do you raise the price for something you're now arguing went down in value?
This whole thing is so screwy.
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I don't know about everyone else, but I don't particularly mind paying (even paying the record companies!) to listen to music. What I do mind is the amount I have to pay for music I don't want. I like a few songs by dozens of bands, but they want me to pay for the full album. Not a chance. If I can pay my $21per Gb to be legal on my MP3 player, and I can play ANY music I want, and change music as I wish, I'll pay it. Gladly. But if you want to charge me, make me pay for the music, and then still call me a criminal, then f*ck you.
Nathan Brazil?