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Napster Not To Blame

enjo13 writes "Slate is running an article on the music industries recent troubles. It articulates exactly what Slashdot has preached all along.. that the Music industry is suffering at its own hands and has no one to blame but itself. All I have to say is... finally." There's actually been a number of pieces like this, but I think this one says it best.

616 comments

  1. I feel that this article is in error by Tim_F · · Score: 0, Troll

    Napster is indeed to blame for the decline in sales. It is much easier to download something than to go to the store and pay for it. And besides, once downloaded, you can then burn it onto an audio cd.

    1. Re:I feel that this article is in error by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please provide links to studies supporting your opinion.

      Or go away.

    2. Re:I feel that this article is in error by Camel+Pilot · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It is much easier to download something than to go to the store and pay for it.

      I think the "easier" part is the crux of the issue. If record companies make it easy to download and pay (a reasonable price mind you) for your music then a majority of folks would. The key is to make it easy and cheap and this will destroy any blackmarket or free file sharing communities. Make so easy and cheap that it is not even worth saving it your disk in most cases.

      The video rental market is a great analogy. There was a lot of concern that when video rentals people would just copy video's and share them with their friend and sales would plummet. The opposite is true because it is just not worth the hassle and space.

    3. Re:I feel that this article is in error by FuzzyGuru · · Score: 1

      maybe it's the fact that we and the video industry already know they put out tons of crap, hence why we rent them. I hate paying for shitty movies (Get Carter for example). Maybe if the music industry would finally admit that ideas like PopStars and Backstreet Boys are moronic, and the majority of us do not care about them, maybe we could finally get some decent frig'n music!

      --
      OK - who stole my duct tape?
    4. Re:I feel that this article is in error by Matthew+Luckie · · Score: 2

      Tim, you are wrong, and that explains why you have been moderated into oblivion. I find it so much easier to drive across town and spend NZ$30 on a CD than to download it for free using one of the many P2P apps available. I am sure that the vast majority of slashdotters would hold the same opinion.

    5. Re:I feel that this article is in error by DavesError · · Score: 1

      Agreed... but, besides the reasonable price, they also need to make sure to have major hubs all around the country, if not the world. I have tried some of the other pay-for-download type music companies... the main problem that I had with them was not the price, which was normally pennies on the dollar compared to buying a cd, but the speed of download... I don't want to have to wait 30 minutes because the place I'm downloading from is swamped or just plain doesnt have the bandwidth to handle me. I can get on p2p and download the same file in a matter of seconds.
      So the moral of this rambling is that besides a reasonable price they also need to make sure they can handle people downloading from them.

    6. Re:I feel that this article is in error by Tim_F · · Score: 1

      Matthew,

      It would appear that you live in New Zealand. From what I have heard, CDs are very competitively priced there, when compared against places like the EU, or the USA. That is why it is beneficial for you to pollute the environment while getting new music to listen to. For the pirates in other parts of this world, this is not the case.

    7. Re:I feel that this article is in error by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For myself, if there is an album that I *really MUST* have, I'll go out and buy it. But I usually need to hear some of it first, on the radio, at a friends, etc...

      But, there *IS* a lot of just *crap* out there. Or maybe some albums where I really don't like the album at all, but I do like one song (usually, of course, the one killer track the studio puts on there to get you to buy the rest of the sucky CD). I'll download the one song I like and say screw buying it.

      Damn... I have like 600 *purchased* audio CD's (and probably 400+ vinyl audio albums), not including the damn computer CD's I have. So, it has to really strike my fancy for me to buy it. I buy maybe one or two a year since like 1995. If the music industry put out some really *good* music, instead of Brittany/et.al. boilerplate crap, I'd probably buy it.

    8. Re:I feel that this article is in error by 40000 · · Score: 1

      Downloading isn't the answer to everything. If a track cost 0.1 (of some random currency which may be either a $ or a £) and 120 of these could be fitted onto a CD, wouldn't it be cheaper for them to burn a custom CD and put it in the post?
      Bandwidth is always too small for what you want to do, that is a rule. You need a network for P2P because it's got to be kept kinda anonymous, otherwise you may as well knock on some guy's door and ask to plug a USB cable in the back of his machine.

    9. Re: I feel that this article is in error by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2


      > > It is much easier to download something than to go to the store and pay for it.

      > I think the "easier" part is the crux of the issue.

      Actually, a big part of the US economy is built on a "go shopping" culture. A lot of the sales of music, clothes, etc. is driven by a culturally driven desire to go out, spend some money, bring something home in a bag, and show it off to your friends. It's not clear that downloading will have much appeal to the "habitual shopper" crowd.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    10. Re:I feel that this article is in error by RazorJ_2000 · · Score: 1

      BAAHAHAHAAHAHAHAAHAAA!!! When Napster was alive, I was downloading like nuts and buying CDs like nuts. Now that it's dead, I don't get anywhere near the wide sampling of music that's out there so I simply don't buy CDs anywhere near the volume that I used to. Argue it all you want, Napster made me buy more. The RIAA killed it's own golden goose.

      --
      pi=sigma{n:0-infinity}[(1/16)^n][(4/(8n+1))-(2/(8n +4))-(1/ (8n+5))-(1/(8n+6))]
  2. Like DUH! by FuzzyGuru · · Score: 1

    gee.. so Napster was a good business model, eh?

    --
    OK - who stole my duct tape?
    1. Re:Like DUH! by flewp · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yeah, really. And Duh! According to the current poll it's the screaming dancing guy from MS. Sheesh.

      --
      WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
    2. Re:Like DUH! by uncoveror · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The mainstream press is finally reporting what sites like dontbuycds have been saying all this time. Maybe Congress will read the article, and stop listening when Hilary Rosen and Jack Valenti show up asking for corporate welfare. Manybe they will get it that piracy is a paper tiger.

      --
      The Uncoveror: It's the real news.
  3. yay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    let's preach to the choir some more!!

  4. like stones to a monster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    one word: yes.!

  5. Hasn't this been said... by basilisk128 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...many many times? The recording industry just wants to blame something other than themselves for the loss in profits.

    1. Re:Hasn't this been said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What loss in profits?

    2. Re:Hasn't this been said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in the past, if an music release SUCKED.....we said "man that SUCKED!"

      now all these music industry fucktards now get to all chime in unison "it's napsters fault it's napsters fault"

      oh boo hoo you fuckers....just because parents stopped giving their kids all this cash to blow on useless slick commercialed garbage.

      please.

    3. Re:Hasn't this been said... by Com2Kid · · Score: 1

      in the past, if an music release SUCKED.....we said "man that SUCKED!"


      In the past if I said that I got modded down -1 troll and yelled at that I need to 'embrace creativity' or some bull like that.

      Does this finaly mean that when something is crud people will actualy admit to it and move on?

      No?

      Darnit.

      *sighs* I guess that means more idiots listening to rap then. Bleck.

    4. Re:Hasn't this been said... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > What loss in profits?

      The reduction in recent profits that, to them, counts as a loss in profits.

    5. Re:Hasn't this been said... by purpledinoz · · Score: 1

      As they point fingers, and deny any problem with their business model, their profits will continue to dwindle. F EM! Let them lose profits. Every keep pirating music, stop buying these overpriced CDs! CD buyers are just allowing the record titans more time to deflect blame. Until their revenues crash, they won't change the way they think.

  6. What is this slate.msn.com? by youBastrd · · Score: 1

    Dumb question -- does anyone know what slate.msn.com is? Because we were all just suckered into going to a site with all these MSN ads everywhere.

    Is it a news page? I've never heard of it. Has Slashdot been inadvertantly used as advertising for this website?

    --
    No one has ever fired for blaming Microsoft.
    1. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by krinsh · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I've been reading Slate for many years; and often printed it before they charged a subscription fee (at one point - which I do believe was shortly after being taken over by MSN). It may be an MSN-centric publication in some ways but I've always found it to be pretty interesting. Of course, regardless of what the numbers say; and irrespectful of the fact that we ARE IN A RECESSION, it will be the music-swappers' faults this happened. Just like it was cassette tapes back in the day, right?

      --
      I think with the interesting people, their lives can't possibly be wrapped up into a nice little package.
    2. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by Roosey · · Score: 1

      Slate is an online news magazine that focuses primarily on contemporary issues and current events. It's part of MSN's conglomerate of websites and can be found linked in the sidebar as the 'Opinion' part of "News and Opinion."

      I found it through InstaPundit.com awhile back and I've been reading it regularly ever since. Their political and economic commentary is usually interesting (this article being an example of one of the better ones I've seen there) and fairly witty. Good stuff, at least in my opinion.

    3. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by KelsoLundeen · · Score: 3, Informative

      What are you, twelve years old?

      Slate has been around for years. Almost as long as Salon (if not longer.)

      Michael Kinsley used to edit it. (The same Kinsley who used to sit off to the side of Buckley's _Firing Line_ and goad good ol' Bill with nuggets o' thought.)

      Wait, if you don't know Slate, you probably have no idea who W F Buckley is either, right? Or his National Review?

      Last time I saw WFB was on Charlie Rose. WFB hosting for Rose. My god. What a painful experience that was.

      Anyway, do yourself a favor. Even if you think NR is fulla shit and WFB is fulla shit then hop on over to (a) Slate (occasionally), (b) National Review (occasionally), and (c) the New Republic (occasionally).

      You don't need to agree with the views -- but dear god, my boy, get yourself at least a respectable smidgeon of political knowledge -- and awareness of the "standard" political rags -- so you can refrain from posting bizarre stuff like "What is this Slate thing?"

    4. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes. it is a dumb question.

    5. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't be so hard on the guy. Slate is by no means on the same level as the New Republic or the National Review. It also hasn't been around nearly as long, at least not in the mainstream. I've been reading it for some time but it falls into repetitive satire most of the time, which makes it get boring fairly quickly. Not a bad read from time to time, but certainly nothing to base your political opinions on.

    6. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by KelsoLundeen · · Score: 1

      Okay, you're right. It hasn't been around for long. I apologize. It just seemed strange to me that he thought it was some sort of conspiracy to click on MSN ads. I figured most people -- even if they don't like Slate -- at least have *heard* of Slate. But maybe not.

      True, Slate is part of Microsoft. But it's by no means anything like the "astrology" section on MSN.com or whatever else MSN has on its portal to suck in clicks and generate revenue.

    7. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by leviramsey · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      I've been reading Slate for many years; and often printed it before they charged a subscription fee (at one point - which I do believe was shortly after being taken over by MSN).

      Slate was owned by Microsoft from Day One. They only merged it into the rest of MSN a few repurposings ago.

    8. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by PMadavi · · Score: 1

      It's not advertising if you don't pay attention to it.

      --

      --What, you ain't know about them country fried sessions?

    9. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by Com2Kid · · Score: 1


      What are you, twelve years old?

      Slate has been around for years. Almost as long as Salon (if not longer.)


      God I feel old, I remember when Slate was "that big new MS controlled thingy, their first venture into Media!"

      Weeeeeird, to now think that MS (once the definite underdog in Internet media content) is now, err;

      huge.

      man scary thought. -_-

    10. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ya, call me when a newssource that I've actually heard of is telling this news.

      Oh wait, they are all owned by the same company.

    11. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by nelsonal · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Slate is free, they have a lot of ads, but no subscription, or am I missing part of it?

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    12. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by gilroy · · Score: 4, Funny
      Blockquoth the poster:

      irrespectful of the fact that we ARE IN A RECESSION, it will be the music-swappers' faults this happened. Just like it was cassette tapes back in the day, right?

      I don't think the RIAA goes far enough. I blame cassette tapes for

      the 1979 oil crisis

      the hostage crisis in Iran

      the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan

      and El Nino

    13. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by Utopia · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      They were free at the start.
      They had subscriptions for a year,
      Seeing their readership go downhill
      they switched back to being free.

    14. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by The+Dobber · · Score: 1


      Following that logic, MP3's would then be responsible for 9-11?

      Surprised the RIAA hasn't come out with an ad claiming that "ripping" of music support Osama and his ilk.

      Give em time

    15. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by sjgman9 · · Score: 1

      They tried to sneak some crap into the patriot act. They are slimeballs and shysters every last one of them

    16. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by krinsh · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      At one point I was asked for a fee to enter parts of it; or at least to get the word-format print version which is what I'd usually do and take on the train home over the weekend (and back again on Monday).

      --
      I think with the interesting people, their lives can't possibly be wrapped up into a nice little package.
    17. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by InadequateCamel · · Score: 1

      You left out OJ. The economy went in the crapper because a good 1/3 of the country couldn't turn off CNN. I hear he burns CD's, sells
      multi-region DVD players, and supports communism.

    18. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      " Following that logic, MP3's would then be responsible for 9-11?"


      No - just 7-11
    19. Re:What is this slate.msn.com? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you, twelve years old?

      No, he's just an ordinary average slashdotter, i.e. an allergic reaction to the capital letter combination 'MS' causes him to start complaining to things he'd remain silent about in another context.

  7. blah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    "ditto ditto ditto"

  8. Napster is to blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I will be the first to admit it. I do not buy cd's because I can download all the music I like for free and burn them.

    1. Re:Napster is to blame by threeFiddy · · Score: 1
      I would bet that you are not the majority. I for one like to download music to see what I like and what I don't like. If I find something I like it is alot more convenient to simply go out and buy the CD, then to find all the songs in a Napster clone.

      The only difference is, I don't spend my money on garbage one hit wonder CD's...Which I wouldn't have wasted my time on anyway. Either way, the recording industry will get no money from me unless they make good music!

    2. Re:Napster is to blame by Com2Kid · · Score: 2

      I will be the first to admit it. I do not buy cd's because I can download all the music I like for free and burn them.

      And I'll be the first to admit (well ok not likely the first) that I just don't even LISTEN TO RIAA crap. /. has already posted a fair number of stories over the years showing that even listening to RIAA music helps further its popularity and eventually the RIAA's revenues.

      Well, I do occasionally accidently overhear a bit of RIAA produced drudge, but it is not willingly. ^_^

    3. Re:Napster is to blame by AdamD1 · · Score: 1

      I had long been uninterested in supporting the mega majors despite the fact they were what I grew up with, musically speaking. This whole Napster / file sharing issue has only furthered my distaste for major labels and the major music industry. If there is an artist I like who happens to be on a major label, I absolutely will not buy their CD. I will instead buy a ticket to see them live (and have. Often. All the time.) Occasionally - if it's not over $40 - I'll buy a t-shirt at the show. That's becoming too expensive for a measly t-shirt though.

      I think the day is fast approaching where more and more people will follow this pattern of semi-support and it's entirely the labels' fault, if you ask me. Yes "theft" is wrong. But this is precisely what the labels have been doing since the inception of the CD format. It was released at 2.5 times the price of LP's and cassettes and has never dropped significantly enough. This is only made clearer when comparing DVD prices to current CD prices.

      I purchased the new John Mayer CD for a friend two days ago at HMV. (Canada's major music retailer.) The "sale" price was $18.99. Regular white-tag price: $26.99. No joke. I had the option of buying two fairly new DVD titles for $40.00. Which do you think is the better deal? For me to be "thankful" that the price was *only* $18.99 is a scam. Major labels are ripping me and other consumers off and I hope they all suffer a hefty demise. It might be just the kick in the pants the entire industry needs. Think of the positive reorganization which would ensue? Producers and managers would scramble to figure out legitimate means of prividing music to consumers and would more than likely come up with something close to what Napster was in its earliest inception. They might also create some new formats while they're at it. Radio wouldn't go away, so the demand would still be there, for those who like to listen to radio. I do not. Well: with the exception of BBC1 now and then. Radio is horrible. I'll take ShoutCast any day. Producers and artists, given the choice, would probably like any option but the existing major labels. This is unfortunately the game they're forced to play.

      Babbling. I know. To people who already feel this way. But man: bring it on.

      BTW: a funny allegory is here.

      ad

      --
      Because I can! [Brainrub.com]
  9. the RIAA themselves said it! by garcia · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The RIAA found that young consumers are less likely to forge strong bonds to the music that they buy and are unlikely to either buy previous albums from an artist or subsequent albums.

    So. Music today basically blows. The major component of the music market are less likely to buy a ton of CDs from one artist and are instead more likely to just hop the bandwagon for a short time...

    1. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      Then why does the same audiance even take the time and enegry to rip and collect hundreds of CD's? There must be some status in collecting bad music they would never listen too :)

    2. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by garcia · · Score: 2

      it's not that. My roommate and I have a large MP3 collection that we use during parties. We have one of the widest and well-liked collections (so we hear).

      We collect a range of music (whether or not we feel it sucks, there's always the "next" button) so that just about anyone that comes over can hear something that they appreciate. It keeps the serious drunkards happy.

    3. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So. Music today basically blows.

      No no no. You're not thinking like a good RIAA stooge. There's nothing wrong with today's music. It is in fact todays young consumers that blow.

    4. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by i7dude · · Score: 1

      instead of saying that music today blows, why arent people doing something about it??? there are shitloads of really talented, brilliant, and creative people in almost every city in the country/world.

      dammit...get out, explore, go to shows, if you find something you like promote it, tell your family friends and coworkers. help out the people who really deserve to be noticed and have something to say...its more fun to discover somebody in a samll bar than to wait patiently for the drivel that the "boardroom musicians" dish out.

      nothing is more powerfull than positive word of mouth...

      dude.

    5. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by garcia · · Score: 5, Interesting

      nearly everytime something of this comes up I offer links to both etree and FurthurNET so that people can experience artists that allow the free taping of their events.

      These two sources are probably the best way to experience artists in their element.

      Just seems like people would rather rape and pilage the P2P networks instead.

    6. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by garcia · · Score: 2

      I disagree. The young consumers are following as they always have. The problem now is that the RIAA is charging more and more for music to "protect" the artists.

      Problem w/this protection is that it costs the young consumers too much. A new album that comes out is normally priced way lower than others (see previous statements by record store owners that lose money on new releases due to this fact). The older albums are priced too high (which distracts the interest of these buyers).

    7. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by 40000 · · Score: 1

      Once you start downloading mp3s, you reach a stage where you grab a song because it "could be useful" even if you don't really like it.

    8. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      and the "could be useful" by definition equates to "value" and economic losses.

    9. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      If you read the rest of the article, you would have also noted that those same artists are shunning the big lables. Locking them out from what could save them.

    10. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by byran+lei · · Score: 0

      >nearly everytime something of this comes up I offer links to both
      >etree [etree.org] and FurthurNET [furthurnet.com] so that people can
      >experience artists that allow the free taping of their events.
      >These two sources are probably the best way to experience artists in
      >their element.
      >Just seems like people would rather rape and pilage the P2P networks
      >instead.
      >
      >
      It more likely has more to do with your *ATTITUDE* I know I wouldn't want to visit or join anything that attracts people like you.

    11. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Doubtful, b/c "could be useful" means "its not the worst i heard." You really think someone buys a CD thats 'not the worst they heard?"

    12. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by pmz · · Score: 2

      So. Music today basically blows.

      Actually, some of it is so bad that it sucks and blows.

      Listening to popular music on the radio and television has become painful. It is about as creative and suprising as a stolen computer program that does nothing more than control a toaster (and some of it is even worse!).

    13. Re:the RIAA themselves said it! by SpaceJunkie · · Score: 1

      Good on to them. Sorry- you expect me to feel slightly sympathetic to a bunch of greedy fat cats who are happy to filter anything but the rubbish that 14yr old girls buy. Just because there sales are only up $20million on last year instead nof a forecast $1bn? They can fsck themselves - they are very rich, and getting richer, getting bigger. Piracy does hurt their profits- but to be honest compared with actual income they make its a drop in the water- they are already a multi-bn dollar industry - and will continue to be. So I vote for the independant artists - and I will be buying their works. After all - since the landscape of publishing and recording has changed - really an artist doest need a big record company, they need some reasonable studio kit(affordable or hirable), a mass-cd-producer(there are companies that provide this service, and only this service - not record companies - not contracts - but just a cd press service), possibly an advertiser to start the ball rolling. But all of this will never work is the music is no good - so above all they need talent. I see a distinct lack of that in most of the dross we get fed by the intravenous HMV drip....

      --
      OrionRobots.co.uk - Robots From sol
  10. Great - now will Someone ressurct Napster? by szyzyg · · Score: 2

    It'd be nice not to have to go and find another job....

  11. The problem is... by thelinuxking · · Score: 3, Funny

    Napster and its successors are obviously not the problem...its just like the article says...its those damn cassette tapes! Ban them!

  12. Slate is hardly unbiased journalizm by Totally_Lost · · Score: 0, Troll

    It is interesting to have this form crying about copyright violation of open source code today, while continuing to deny that the film/music industry has exactly the same copyright protections.

    1. Re:Slate is hardly unbiased journalizm by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2

      Sorry dude, there's a diff.

      Anyone sharing Britney doesn't claim that it's their own work (who would *want* to, but that's another item).

      SigmaDesigns copied code and claimed it as their own work.

      See the diff?

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    2. Re:Slate is hardly unbiased journalizm by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      SOrry dude ... anybody riping and collecting works they don't pay for are simply stealing - which IS a form of calling it theirs when they didn't pay for it.

    3. Re:Slate is hardly unbiased journalizm by Computer! · · Score: 2

      anybody riping and collecting works they don't pay for are simply stealing

      No, they are NOT. Stealing means depriving the original owner of the use of that material. The RIAA has a long way to go before they can make a direct link between music copying and loss of revenue. All P2P clients are doing is copying music. No more, no less. It's only in the last 100 years that artists and publishers can expect to make money while no one is physically playing their instruments.

      --
      If you fall off a building, go real limp, because maybe you'll look like a dummy and people will be like hey, free dummy
    4. Re:Slate is hardly unbiased journalizm by gilroy · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Blockquoth the poster:

      anybody riping and collecting works they don't pay for are simply stealing

      No. No. No. and a final time, No. They are "infringing" -- a well-defined crime, distinct from stealing. How do I know? Leaving aside the single-user issue, let's also consider: No court anywhere has ever set up guidelines for "reasonable theft" of physical property. But for intellectual "property", the courts have -- as much as the RIAA wishes to God they hadn't -- carved out an expanse called "Fair Use", wherein use of copyrighted material without compensation is considered legal. (I am not arguing that Napster was or was not Fair Use. I am just pointing out that Fair Use exists in well-codifed law.) Likewise, real property rights don't expire. If you own a car and never ever sell it to anyone, then guess what? It's yours, forever and ever, world without end, amen. But if you publish a copyrightable item, and never ever sell a copy to anyone else, do you know what happens? Eventually your "property" rights evaporate, again without compensation... it's not a government "taking", it's the (legal) nature of the beast.


      So unless you're willing to draw the analogy both ways -- that is, to allow "Fair Use" of your physical property and to recognize that your ownership is time-limited -- then stop BSing and drop the "infringement is stealing" crap.

    5. Re:Slate is hardly unbiased journalizm by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      "Fair Use" is not stealing, for all the reasons
      you state. However, the definition of "stealing" as defined in the english language as used in the US is much broader that you might try to ignore. Please checkout www.webster.com and what you will find is:

      "1 : to take the property of another wrongfully and especially as an habitual or regular practice"

      "1 a : to take or appropriate without right or leave and with intent to keep or make use of wrongfully"

      "1 d : to appropriate to oneself or beyond one's proper share"

      so, the courts have already ruled that P2P systems violate copyright by unauthorized distribution and the those downloading are willfully in violation since they have absolutely no "fair use" claim.

      In the definition of stealing, the community involved in illegal distribution of copyrighted works, is in clear conformance with all three of the definitions above, so "stealing" is absolutely the correct term for this act.

    6. Re:Slate is hardly unbiased journalizm by byran+lei · · Score: 0

      >anybody riping and collecting works they don't pay for are simply
      >stealing
      >
      Wrong. A lot of the stuff people are downloading from P2P networks is stuff you can't either find or buy in stores anymore. You can't even find stuff like the orginal version of "Kung Foo Fighting" in most stores any more.

    7. Re:Slate is hardly unbiased journalizm by StillAnonymous · · Score: 1

      Hmm, I didn't "take" or "appropriate" anything. I simply arranged bits on my hard drive to match what someone else had. I did not disturb, nor remove their bits.

      Not stealing.

      Try again.

  13. Wrongo. by 2names · · Score: 1

    Napster is not to blame for declining sales, the production of crap is. When the music industry puts out a good album/record/cd/whatever, people BUY IT. When they put out shit, people don't buy it. Lately they've been putting out gigantic fuckloads of SHIT. Simple as that.

    --
    "I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
    1. Re:Wrongo. by Matthew+Luckie · · Score: 2

      Yes, you are exactly right. Last time I pirated music i made sure it was shit music that I would never even consider purchasing.
      Nice logic.

    2. Re:Wrongo. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      is a fuckload more or less than a shitload of assloads?

    3. Re:Wrongo. by ShavenYak · · Score: 1

      Judging by the acceptability of the words on TV, I would guess that
      fuckload > shitload > assload > buttload
      but, there's no way to determine from that if
      fuckload > shitload * assload
      so the answer to your question is unknown.

      On the other hand, you asked if it was "more or less" so the answer is much more likely to be "yes" (it is more or less) than "no" (they are equal).

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
    4. Re:Wrongo. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those figures look fairly correct, but don't forget that there's also a metric fuckload, which is approximately 1.45 imperial fuckloads.

    5. Re:Wrongo. by The+FooMiester · · Score: 1, Troll

      I'm not sure about the imperial *loads, but a METRIC fuckload is equal to a metric shitload of metric assloads.

      HTH

      --
      The previous has been a secret message to my comrades.
    6. Re:Wrongo. by ripewithdecay · · Score: 0

      There's a difference between shit music and music that isn't worth purchasing, but worth downloading.

      If I'm going to pay 20 for a damn plastic disc, it better have some good shit on it.

  14. It's not the pirates... by thanq · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Britney Spears' latest album has moved 4 million copies--a big number, but less than half what its predecessor did.

    That's one statement that sums it all up: music industry's slumping sales are not because of the pirates, it's because of the crappier cookie-cutting kind of music that's being rewarmed over and over and over.

    I won't believe that Britney's albums are not selling as well as they used to because everyone wants to get them for free.

    (aside from the obvious, why would anyone listen to it, not mentioning OWNING a cd with her music???)

    1. Re:It's not the pirates... by i7dude · · Score: 2, Insightful

      its not just that... a lot of the 14 year olds who bought her earlier albums are now 16 and much cooler...so they dont buy them, being cool, and peer pressure are a much more dangerous to the 10-second-attention-span-entertainment industy.

      "like, you know...like briteny was like my favorite when i was 14...but i'm like sooo much older now and i like listen to cooler stuff now."

      dude.

    2. Re:It's not the pirates... by tiedyejeremy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "I won't believe that Britney's albums are not selling as well as they used to because everyone wants to get them for free."

      Take, for example, my neighbors kid. She's 14 and can't afford a $20 CD so she asked her mom. Her mom says something like: "All her music sounds the same. Just listen to the radio." She asked my son if she could download it at my house.
      I told her I was doing her a favor, and gave her 3 phish CDs.
      The good news... now she wants to download phish cds.

      The point? Well she wasn't buying CDs to begin with - this is not lost sales. Downloading the legally traded phish stuff does build word of mouth fan base for phish. Maybe it will generate sales for them in the future.

      --
      Anything you say will be held against you. ... "tits"
    3. Re:It's not the pirates... by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Hm. Well, people /could/ buy older CDs if they wanted to -- there are still people who enjoy classical music, or doo-wop, or 60's/70's rock, et al. Do they, or do sales for non-new music drop off that rapidly?

      (It wouldn't surprise me if they WERE very low; the few times I've ever been in a music store, older, presumably less-hip music generally seemed to be cheaper, which suggests to me that demand isn't that high.)

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    4. Re:It's not the pirates... by archen · · Score: 1

      I think the quote you wanted from the article was:

      Perhaps the most important factor, however, is the major labels' very success in dominating the market, which has squelched musical innovation.


      Innovation is still there if you know where to look for the music. But the music industry should realize they're in deep shit if the average sheep listener is getting tired of their garbage.

    5. Re:It's not the pirates... by slaker · · Score: 2

      ... except that those of us wanting those nonstandard , non-hip types of music aren't going to find a lot of it, either in record stores OR through filesharing services.

      There is very little incentive for a record store to keep a stock of non-pop/non-hip titles. They sell for less money, and far fewer people buy them. Classical music/jazz/international music are taking space AWAY from the umpteen billion copies of whatever the hell you pop music people are listening to. The very few brick and mortar record shops I frequent keep the same inventory of classical titles, at least, from year to year. THAT's how low tunrover can be.

      At the same time, when I jump on a filesharing service, I can't find anything more than the most basic catalog for those non-hip music styles ("Beethoven" returns 200 hits with Kazaa Lite, but if I do a search for something more unusual than that, I'm lucky to get any matches at all). These non-hip types of music, AFAIK, aren't being shared at all, except by oddballs. Personally, I maintain 57GB of classical music that I share through Fasttrack, as a favor to anyone who wants classical music. Maybe 10 people download something from me in a given day.

      I think that a lot of fans of "non-hip" music have just gotten to the point where they don't even try to collect recordings any more. Why should they? Record stores basically shit on them and the alternative distribution systemss don't work very well for anything but Britny and dubs of live Grateful Dead concerts.

      --
      -- I wanna decide who lives and who dies - Crow T. Robot, MST3K
    6. Re:It's not the pirates... by Com2Kid · · Score: 2

      I think that a lot of fans of "non-hip" music have just gotten to the point where they don't even try to collect recordings any more. Why should they? Record stores basically shit on them and the alternative distribution systemss don't work very well for anything but Britny and dubs of live Grateful Dead concerts.
      :-D

    7. Re:It's not the pirates... by killmenow · · Score: 1
      "like, you know...like briteny was like my favorite when i was 14...but i'm like sooo much older now and i like listen to cooler stuff now."
      ...like Shakira
    8. Re:It's not the pirates... by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      I would guess that your lack of downloads can be attributed to several factors besides relative popularity. First, most classical music fans are likely to be on average wealthier and less technical than your average bubble gum pop, hip hop, or rap fan. Second, classical music is less forgiving to bad compression. While I would guess that your rips are probably pretty high data rate, and sound good, but I prefer to buy a CD than risk someone's 64 kbps stream of "The Four Seasons." Even a casual listener could tell the difference between a quality 8 ogg and a CD. Wealthier listers are also more likely to go to the symphony or get SA-CDs, vinyl, or other high fidelity mediums. Also the time it takes to download a high bit rate stream it is getting close to the time reqired to rip your own copy.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    9. Re:It's not the pirates... by wompser · · Score: 1

      You know, I'm not sure I buy your arguement. The "crappier cookie-cutting kind of music that's being rewarmed over and over and over" is not the fault of the record companies. If you don't like Britney Spears, for gods sake, vote with your wallet. Go out and buy an alblum from someone you heard on your local college station.

      Let me make something perfectly clear: No matter what your definition of good music is, currently more exists now than ever did before.

      Let that sink in before you flame me back. I'll clarify: technlolgy has made creating music more accessable to 'the people' now than ever before, and more people are making better music. Additionally, because recording media now lasts longer we have a catalog of music to choose from exponentally bigger than our parents did. Exponentally bigger than last year even.

      Heck, I have 30,000 MP3 on my machine at home alone! Do you really think that all of that is cookie cutter music? If you really don't like what the record companies are trying to ram down your throat, close your farking mouth!! Drop off their radar and don't support them! Don't blame slumping sales on the music. Blaming the marketing is fine, but please, not the music.

      --
      .....
    10. Re:It's not the pirates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Take ... my neighbors kid. She's 14 ...
      ... phish ...
      ... held against you
      "Tits."
      Was this secret code for child porn?
    11. Re:It's not the pirates... by smoondog · · Score: 2

      I would very much like to know what percentage of 8 million album sales are followed up with greater than 4 million in sales.

      -Sean

    12. Re:It's not the pirates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I told her I was doing her a favor, and gave her 3 phish CDs.

      Some favor. Now instead of listening to bubble gum rock, she's doing bong hits. I bet her mom will really thank you for that. The girl's on the way to skankhood now.

      You dirty fucking hippy...

    13. Re:It's not the pirates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hey man, I was going to PHiSH shows when _I_ was 14, and _I_ wasn't taking bonghits! oh shit.. i was hehe
      sorry forgot.

    14. Re:It's not the pirates... by Zack · · Score: 1

      If you don't like Britney Spears, for gods sake, vote with your wallet. Go out and buy an alblum from someone you heard on your local college station.

      Are you being deliberately obtuse or did you not put any thought into it? That's the entire point of this. People ARE voting with their wallets. They're sick of it. Yet the RIAA choses to blame it on "pirates" rather than "people are sick of our crappy music"

    15. Re:It's not the pirates... by byran+lei · · Score: 0

      >I won't believe that Britney's albums are not selling as well as they
      >used to because everyone wants to get them for free.
      >
      It most likely has more to do with that Pesi ad that had that old pervert Bob Dole and his dog oggling Britney.......

    16. Re:It's not the pirates... by byran+lei · · Score: 0

      >Take, for example, my neighbors kid. She's 14 and can't afford a $20
      >CD so she asked her mom. Her mom says something like: "All her music
      >sounds the same. Just listen to the radio."
      >
      >
      Exactly. Listen to early Beatles music and compare it to the stuff they did before they broke up. You would almost swear that they were two diffrent bands. You'll never see anything like this from today's groups.

    17. Re:It's not the pirates... by xkenny13 · · Score: 2, Funny

      I won't believe that Britney's albums are not selling as well as they used to because everyone wants to get them for free.

      Of course not, Britney's albums aren't selling as well as they might because they don't include any naked pictures of her in the booklet.

    18. Re:It's not the pirates... by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      She wanted britany spears, she was already on her way to skankhood.

    19. Re:It's not the pirates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have anyone other than me noticed a shift in music trends the last year, year and a half? Boybands and Britney pop is dieing. People have seen it coming for a long time now. The reason Britney doesn't sell anymore isn't because of piracy, it's because there's a shift in customer demand. Bands like Linkin Park, Nickleback etc. is what's in nowadays. The top 20 type of lists is starting to get filled with rock bands again. I think this, together with the bad economy, can explain much of the decline in sales for the record industry. Of course they want to explain it with piracy to make themselves look better.

    20. Re:It's not the pirates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea, now daddy watches...errr.. listens to Britney. She has developed quite a body. I can only hope her music career dies and she goes into porn.

    21. Re:It's not the pirates... by Mupp252 · · Score: 1

      "That's one statement that sums it all up: music industry's slumping sales are not because of the pirates, it's because of the crappier cookie-cutting kind of music that's being rewarmed over and over and over.

      Hmm... good thing the article said the same thing as you said:

      "Although usually termed teen-pop, the music of 'N Sync and Britney Spears is not unlike disco: Both are intellectually underachieving, cookie-cutter styles that have made stars of performers not known primarily for their skills as singers, songwriters, or musicians."

      Karma Whore

    22. Re:It's not the pirates... by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
      She is in porn already. Listen to Bill Hicks (paraphrased here)

      "The dictionary defines pornography as anything that causes sexual thought without artistic merit".

      As the man says after that, it defines just about every advert on TV, and most of the pop industry. When watching a Britney video, no one is thinking about how clever and insightful the lyrics are, the range of her her vocal talents, or how the wonderful music tiggers emotions. We're just looking at her body jiggle up and down.

      Just because her nipples aren't showing doesn't mean it's not porn. Not a bad thing, porn is just fine by me, but let's just stop pretending shall we...?

    23. Re:It's not the pirates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Now instead of listening to bubble gum rock, she's doing bong hits.

      To be honest, I'd prefer my kids doing that instead of alcohol. Teenage pregnacy, violence, brain/liver damage and drunk driving. Or munchies.

      Tough choice.

    24. Re:It's not the pirates... by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
      Yes and no. I fully agree with you on the fact that there is lot's of great music about now. If you know where and what to look for.

      Unfortunatly, most folks buys whats theys hears ons the radio. That's the control of the cookie cutter music. The labels practically own the radio networks (in fact 0wnz is a much more fitting desciption, 'cos it's not ownership in the physical sense) and most folk go along with the flow. I really don't believe people aren't buying because it's rubbish, it's more to do with high CD prices and economic slowdown. Pop was invented in the 60s when it was realised that mass media can control what people like to do. That's not going to change.

      Now go back to your coffeehouse, Laz-e-boy or foosball. Nothing has changed.

    25. Re:It's not the pirates... by gorilla · · Score: 2

      There is very little incentive for a record store to keep a stock of non-pop/non-hip titles. They sell for less money, and far fewer people buy them. The problem is that this is a vicious cycle. The fans of a particular type of music are going to migrate to a store which best serves that type of music. That means that the other stores see less sales, and have less incentive to keep as much in stock.

    26. Re:It's not the pirates... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny... you didn't name a single rock band in there. Just suck bands.

  15. so flippin obvious by poil11 · · Score: 1

    the music that is coming out today sucks. there is no good albums. the only great albums that came out so far this year have been from independent labels in my opinion. there is no music for the teeny boppers who grew up and don't listen to nsync or birttaney. they are sick and tired of brittanty and want something better. but there is nothing better, cause the music industry just wants to make a buck. its there fault that more and more people are getting free mp3's. if they put out better music at cheaper prices that they should be. the industry would do much much better. 15, 20 dollars for a cd, BLAH. i remember hearing a rumor that they would lower pricesa long time ago. blah, hasn't happened. music industry is only faltering because the music that gets put out is crapola.

    1. Re:so flippin obvious by archen · · Score: 1

      the music that is coming out today sucks. there is no good albums. the only great albums that came out so far this year have been from independent labels in my opinion

      Um... you sort of contradicted yourself there. It is a good thing for smaller independent labels though. Generally they don't have the revenue for mass market hype, and I would imagine that music sharing is probably expanding their market since people are far more likely to hear their stuff.

      I'd really like to know, are independant labels such as Metal Blade making more money now?

    2. Re:so flippin obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure as hell are. There was a report in the Wall Street journal recently about how their revenues have soared, but that their expenses have gone up because artists now are starting to expect more from them in the way of contracts. I cant give you a link since it cost $$$ to access the journal online sorry :-(

    3. Re:so flippin obvious by kchris59 · · Score: 1

      LOL, it's funny hearing people complain about how expensive cd's are, and how cheap they use to be.
      the truth is, right now paying $19 for a cd is cheaper than paying $5 for a cd in 1960. It is called INFLATION!. So when u think buying a $19 cd is too much, just think about in between 1960-1989 and you'll realize the number may of been less, but the actual price value was more.
      ($5 dollar cd in 1965 would be $35 dollars today)

      PS: i read these stats in the Cleveland, Ohio's Plain Dealer, and i have not yet done the math for the stats, i'm just parroting a newspaper, to give the other side of the story from RIAA

    4. Re:so flippin obvious by legojenn · · Score: 1

      I could note that CDs were not invented until 1983, though I am sure most people didn't even see one until 1987/1988. So, I'm sure you couldn't get a CD for any money back then.

      I do assume you are referring to CDs today to LPs 37 years ago. You must realise that everything does not correspond exactly to inflation. Compare the cost of a colour television in 1967 (if they existed then) and today. I'm sure a contemporary TV would cost much much less. A more telling stat would be to chart the average profit per unit for the past 40 years or so.

      --
      I make a reasonable middle-class wage by going to work and not spamming blogs with scams.
    5. Re:so flippin obvious by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Did YOU read the article?

      The price of CDs has risen ABOVE the rate of inflation. The article meantions that.

    6. Re:so flippin obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "the music that is coming out today sucks."

      This is rubbish. You're just being lazy - try searching for good music, because it is out there. I never listen to the radio and don't bother following the charts, but I have a huge collection of outstanding music on vinyl. This is where you'll find the cutting edge of today's music - ignore the big labels. I don't even bother with CDs anymore.

      The fact is that you have to realise that the big companies haven't prevented good music from being created, they've just saturated us with shite, so that it's harder to get at the good stuff. However, finding good music in amongst the shite is a very rewarding pastime...

  16. It's not just the music industry by ch-chuck · · Score: 5, Funny

    Looks like Ford is getting into the act.

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
    1. Re:It's not just the music industry by jat850 · · Score: 1

      Holy CRAP, that article feels like it should have been posted on April Fool's Day...

      No, no really, please someone tell me that article was a joke and I missed it.

      --
      the blood has stopped pumping, and he's left to decay
      the me that you know is now made up of wires
    2. Re:It's not just the music industry by jat850 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, forgive my ignorance, I should have spent a few minutes looking at the rest of the page.

      /me takes off his gullible hat. :D

      --
      the blood has stopped pumping, and he's left to decay
      the me that you know is now made up of wires
    3. Re:It's not just the music industry by Ageless+Stranger · · Score: 1

      The article was a joke and you missed it. Are you happy now? :)

    4. Re:It's not just the music industry by jat850 · · Score: 1

      s/happy/feeling sheepish -- yes :)

      --
      the blood has stopped pumping, and he's left to decay
      the me that you know is now made up of wires
    5. Re:It's not just the music industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow a /. effect just off a comment link. Impressive.

    6. Re:It's not just the music industry by TheDanish · · Score: 1

      Yeah. They make it all to obvious it's a parody. On another note, their Slashdot title generator doesn't work very well. For example: Intel Rushes To Patch Bug In OSX AMD Says Fractal Geometry "Just A Fad" Bill Gates Says Focus Of Intel Should Be Total World Domination (Intel?!?!) Stephen Hawking Denies Relationship With Bill Gates (hey, cool)

      --
      Danish != nationality
    7. Re:It's not just the music industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The one I got on my second try, "Natalie Portman Discusses BeOS" will make up for any syntax challenged results in the future.

      If only it were true, and BeOS had lived long enough to reap those rewards.

    8. Re:It's not just the music industry by atta1 · · Score: 1

      I really like the way that some of the words are misspelled in slashdot headline generator, though... adds realism.

      --
      "The avalanche has already started. It is too late for the pebbles to vote" -- Kosh
  17. Those darned stats by Whispers_in_the_dark · · Score: 1
    "More than two-thirds of CDs bought in the United States sell to consumers who rarely or never download music files from the Web, Forrester concludes."

    What's the percentage from the general population that downloads music files from the web? If it's more than 15% I'd be amazed.

    "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damn lies, and statistics."
    --Benjamin Disraeli

    1. Re:Those darned stats by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      that's easy 2/3 of the population are morally straight, 19% of the population doesn't care about music CD's, and 15% are just plain thieves without any moral compass.

    2. Re:Those darned stats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, statistics can be lies of omission, but I don't understand how you think this one is. What you said, if true, only drives the point home. To make matters worse, you just made that statistic up.

    3. Re:Those darned stats by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      that's easy 2/3 of the population are morally straight, 19% of the population doesn't care about music CD's, and 15% are just plain thieves without any moral compass.

      You know, just because someone's moral compass points in a different direction than your own, doesn't imply that they don't have one. But then, people who can throw around phrases and judgments like that are generally terrified by the idea that someone might believe legitimately other than them, and so must tar everyone with a broad brush. What a sad world to inhabit.


      For the record, I don't download anyway. So you can just close the reply you'd opened saying "You're just trying to justify your theft."

    4. Re:Those darned stats by 40000 · · Score: 1

      Maybe about 5%. Not many people download music for themselves, I've seen a lot of people with very realistic looking copies of audio CDs (printed disc and cover) and they didn't do it themselves, it'll be a "friend who is good with computers". They probably weren't even done from mp3s as in this area most people still have 56k dial up connections.

    5. Re:Those darned stats by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      The words Civil Disobedience mean anything to you? Didn't think so.

    6. Re:Those darned stats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, it's not "civil disobedience" if you try not to get found out. Civil disobedience is about making a statement and standing up for what you believe in, mmkay?

  18. One Problem by jwilcox154 · · Score: 0

    It doesn't matter how much evidence there is supporting Napster (or P2P in general), the RIAA will bri, er, I mean Lobby congress and have some compelling evidence of their own to present to them.

    If CON is the opposite of PRO
    Shoudn't that make CONgress the opposite of PROgress?

  19. One question.. by ROBOKATZ · · Score: 0, Troll

    What the fuck is LNUX doing at 1.54? Buyout rumors?? Why would anyone want them?

  20. This is speculation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want solid proof. Can you show me what the recording industry did at the exact same time as napster, without napster existing?

    No?

    Then you cannot claim that napster did good or bad in the music industry, period.

    Feel free to speculate all you want, but don't pass it off as fact (btw - file sharing still exists, btw).

    1. Re:This is speculation... by demastri · · Score: 1

      I can't imagine a more ridiculous statement.

      If I own a gas station, and someone moves in across the street with another gas station (at the same prices, let's say), and my revenue is cut in half, and his are about the same as mine, then I have a pretty solid claim that the total gas revenues on that corner are about the same, and he took half.

      Without having to show results from the same time without him being there.

      On to the real question at hand, however. Napster (and all the P2P's) moved in, with a zero price product. In the above analysis, the pricing model was picked to show that revenue movement is not due to price or other factors, just likely convenience. Therefore the analysis above must be slightly changed to reflect that. There are now three classes of consumer, rather than one. 1) The consumer who gets music from the P2P's INSTEAD of from shrink-wrap CDs - some percentage of this group would have bought some of their music by CD if P2P was not an option, 2) The consumer who only gets music from shrink-wrap CDs, and 3) The consumer who gets some music from P2P, and some from shrink-wrap.

      There's no way to deny two statements:
      a) Any downloaded music that would have been purchased IS lost revenue,
      b) Not all of the revenue claimed lost by the labels is valid because at least some of that music would never have been purchased anyway.

      NOTE THAT EVEN IN THAT LAST CASE, while it's not strictly lost revenue, it IS a copyright infringement because the legit CD owner that held a fair use license exceeded his rights by sharing it.

      Since there's no coherent way to claim that absolutely NONE of the downloads represent lost revenue, your statement can be safely dismissed...

      - John

    2. Re:This is speculation... by Morphine007 · · Score: 1

      you're forgetting the 4th type of consumer: The consumer who bought a CD they never would have, but for the fact that they heard it on napster....
      There's an author who gives away his books online... his sales have increased since he started, ergo (always wanted to use that word) piracy INCREASES sales....
      but, as you so succinctly point out, piracy can also decrease sales. Now, the question is, CD sales started climbing a FULL YEAR after I had even heard of napster, is this because of napster, or in spite of it? and now napster has been around for a while, but people have noticed a lot of draconian policies come to light. Was it these policies or napster that has caused the decline in sales?... or was it just the economy and really neither of the previous two... either way, your statement is at LEAST as full of shit as it's parent comment.

    3. Re:This is speculation... by demastri · · Score: 1

      Actually, your case is fully included in my third option above. It's clear that piracy can generate legit sales (especially when the purchased product is of higher quality than the pirated app). It's also clear that in many cases, such as lower volume niche products, giving away samples of product can also increase sales. As I'm sure you're aware, books CDs for many reasons, making your example irrelevant, even if your intended point is less so.

      The question I was answering (not sure if you actually understood...) was that it was ridiculous to state that (paraphrasing) "it's impossible to state that piracy could have an effect on revenue without having parallel sales data available."

      I answered that question.

      You've added nothing of value to the discussion, by stating the obvious but not refuting anything I actually said, and can also be safely dismissed.

      - John

    4. Re:This is speculation... by demastri · · Score: 1

      edit above comment "... books are NOT EQUAL to CDs for many reasons ..." - John

  21. finally... by jukal · · Score: 2
    ...we have reached the point in which it is impossible for people to understand that music business is - business.

    Even if that CD costs $4242 in the store, it's a product. If you want it, buy it.

    1. Re:finally... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's not impossible to understand.

      in fact it's very easy to understand....and most well adjusted MATURE people do....and their purchases of slick, commercialized garbage are reflected in sales...accordingly.

      why do you think the music industries number one demographic of choice is ignorant kids?

      this is the result of an affluent economy with disposable cash.

      though...you may have a point...DON'T BUY IT...well kids are stupid and WILL buy the crap...but parents have cracked down in a tight economy.

      so the kids turn to other avenues, like sharing mp3's with their friends.

    2. Re:finally... by RatBastard · · Score: 1
      If you want it, buy it.

      And that, Sir or Madam, is the crux of the bisquit: I don't want it. I go to the local record store every week as part of my normal shopping routine. I have bought three CDs in the last four months. Each was an album over ten years old (one was 20), and they were all on sale for $10.00 or less.

      Why? Because I'm picky and almost all new music is crap, IMO. Now, I don't download music, save for that which has been released by the artist. I probably represent far more disafected CD purchasers that most Napsterites do. I have a CD collection that has at least 500 CDs, spanning over 14 years of CD purchases. It has not grown much in the last few years.

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    3. Re:finally... by Master+Bait · · Score: 1

      Just let thenm go out of business, then, instead of coming up with all sorts of draconian laws and schemes to quash my rights in the pretense of giving them a profit.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
  22. I wouldn't be so sure by targo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Personally, I can definitely say that the labels are getting less money from me than they used to.
    The main reasons are:
    1) Very often I want to listen to just something very particular, and I believe it is silly to pay (and ask) $15 for just one song.
    2) Convenience. Using file-sharing programs, I can get anything I want in a minute or two, in a convenient format that I can copy to my laptop and listen in my car or whatever. Buying a CD will never give me that. And yes, I know that there are ways to buy single songs online etc but the choice tends to be crappy, (the late) Napster and its clones have always had a better and more interesting choice.
    I believe that there are many people who share these reasons and there's going to be more and more every day. Now, the point is that the music industry could definitely do a better job here by making it cheaper and more convenient to get what I want but it is also wrong to say that online music sharing has no effect on their revenue.

    1. Re: I wouldn't be so sure by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2


      > Personally, I can definitely say that the labels are getting less money from me than they used to.

      I went on an extended CD buying spree from ~95 - ~00, buying up all the remastered editions of my favorite "classic rock" albums as soon as they hit the shelves. But that's pretty much over with, so unless they can think of another way to sucker me into buying my old faves for a fourth time, my purchasing habits will remain at a background level from now on.

      I'm somewhat on the tail end of the Baby Boomer generation, but if lots of other BB's did the same thing, you can imagine how the music industry might be feeling a morning-after effect from their remastering binge.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re: I wouldn't be so sure by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      They also got the end of the CD replacement cycle boom, as users across the spectrum finished replacing all of their old tapes and LPs with CDs. I recall an article from 1996 or 97 that was predicting a really poor outlook for the music companies then. That was long before anyone, but a few FTPers were swapping really poor quality songs.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    3. Re:I wouldn't be so sure by nerdynerd · · Score: 1

      Just last night I had a conversation about a similar topic with a friend of mine who happens to be a musician. He is about a week away from getting his first album pressed and printed. He is getting 1000 copies pressed at ~$.73 a piece. That includes the book, the cd, and the jewel case. Where in gods name did the recording companies come up with charging even upwards of $10 for a CD? I havent bought a CD in roughly 5 years, much longer than ive been downloading my music for. Until I can hit up Target and get a CD for 5 bucks at the most, I'm going to continue my abstinance.

    4. Re: I wouldn't be so sure by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2


      > They also got the end of the CD replacement cycle boom, as users across the spectrum finished replacing all of their old tapes and LPs with CDs.

      That's true. Some of my less-mainstream stuff has only come out in the past five years.

      > I recall an article from 1996 or 97 that was predicting a really poor outlook for the music companies then.

      Surely the remastering craze was driven primarily by a desire to extend that boom. You can bet they're desperately trying to find a way to do it again with DVDs right now.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    5. Re:I wouldn't be so sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then you would be a statistical sample pulling the curve the other way, but no more than that. That you do it doesn't mean most do also.

    6. Re: I wouldn't be so sure by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
      replacing all of their old tapes and LPs with CDs.

      They must be really annoyed that we can transfer from CDs to the next-generation media freely at home, with high quality results. It's completely stopped that whole business model.

    7. Re:I wouldn't be so sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why are video games on cd 50 dollars?

    8. Re: I wouldn't be so sure by porges · · Score: 1

      unless they can think of another way to sucker me into buying my old faves for a fourth time, my purchasing habits will remain at a background level from now on.

      Don't forget to buy all the Rolling Stones albums next week on SACD!

  23. Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by superdan2k · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Even proven acts that I've been a long-time fan of have been getting worse and worse. Two prime examples: Bad Religion and Public Enemy. (I like my music with a social/political bent.) Bad Religion hasn't put out a *solid* album since 1991's Stranger Than Fiction, but I buy them anyway, in hopes that they've gotten back to their ass-kicking roots. The newest Public Enemy album (Revolverlution), which I purchased yesterday, is worse than Bad Religion's recent efforts -- there are a few original, new songs on the disc, but there's also live performances of old songs, remixes of old songs, an interview track, and two PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENTS by Chuck D and Flava Flav.

    Don't get me started on the dogshit that passes for Aerosmith music as of late.

    The point is, it's not just new artists targetted at the 18-25 market...all of music is sucking ass lately. Sometimes, I think that there was more to the move to ban Napster and other P2P systems than just the "loss of sales" argument. I found some real gems on Napster -- stuff I'd never listen to before, Napster started me on a blues kick that continues to this day, for example. God forbid that the record companies should have to start dropping their NuMetal Poserbands and Bling-Bling Flash-in-the-Pan Rap Acts in favor of signing some bands with real musical talent, because real musical acts are harder to sell than a prepackaged pseudo-lifestyle.

    I guess part of why music sucks is that the idiots in the RIAA know they have a losing formula, but stick to it because it's all they know.

    --
    blog |
    1. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Add the falling quality of music videos to the falling quality of the music itself. I'm all in favor of looking at beautiful women, but I'm really tired of the gratuitous jiggling women that populate all the videos MTV shows these days. There is the occasional cool video, still, but it looks like the majority of video producers have not the slightest amount of creativity.

      "Uhh, what should we do now?"

      "Hey, let's have some naked chicks dancing!"

      "Yeah, that's cool! You're such a hipster. Let's do the same thing for the next video."

    2. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by illsorted · · Score: 2, Informative
      The point is, it's not just new artists targetted at the 18-25 market...all of music is sucking ass lately.

      Well, perhaps not all music. For my money, there are still some acts out there with real musical talent.
    3. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by Tyler+Eaves · · Score: 1

      Can I get an amen from the sinister minister? Great article.

      --
      TODO: Something witty here...
    4. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by happyhippy · · Score: 1
      Damn right!

      There are so few good videos on MTV now. Its either numetal 12 year olds standing in car parks or (c)rappers trying to pretend they're studs.

      All the watchable videos only appear at night when the targeted 9 year old audience demographic are in bed.

    5. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by Izang · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. I have purchased only two CDs this year and the RIAA would say that it is because I can download entire albums at no cost. The RIAA is partially correct. Now that I can quickly sample music before I purchase a CD there is no reason to waste my money on a gamble. The best thing about online trading is that it introduces you to bands that you never knew existed.

    6. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This deserves a +5 funny for putting "phish" and "talent" in the same sentence.

    7. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The best music with a political bend is Russian music. Those old Soviet dissidents should rocked. I learned Russian because of the music of Vladimir Vysotsky. Vysotsky had no record label, no manager and never made a dime on his music. Its all in the public domain and always has been. The only place outside of Russia you can find it is on P2P networks like Grokster. Russias new record companies and new acts have had no complaint about P2P and you can find tons of their music online because they are still making plenty of money on CD sales and because American stores refuse to carry Russian music so how else are they going to distribute it? Tons of Russian acts today have adapted the NSync model, but many are still true to the old style and some have created interesting new styles that get ZERO mention or repect in the west. Russian rap for instance is very good and some of their heavy metal can teach many US bands a lesson in what it means to rock.

    8. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by unicron · · Score: 2

      I'm not exactly sure if "The Gray Race" came out before or after "Stranger than Fiction" but that album rocks. I've been listening to "No Substance" on my home from work lately, and while nothing on there can even compare to "Struck a Nerve" or "American Jesus".

      --
      Finally, math books without any of that base 6 crap in them.
    9. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      also check out Apocalyptica... great group, rock on cellos!

    10. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by carrier+lost · · Score: 1
      Sometimes, I think that there was more to the move to ban Napster and other P2P systems than just the "loss of sales" argument. I found some real gems on Napster...

      ...the RIAA know they have a losing formula, but stick to it because it's all they know.

      If there was an award for succintness...

      MjM

      I only mod up...

    11. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by Gonarat · · Score: 1

      I didn't know MTV still had videos...okay, a wee bit of sarcasm, but I miss the days (1983, 1984) when I was in college and could come home and turn on MTV and watch music videos. After MTV started going away from music videos and into programming, they started VH1, which was originally like MTV was back in the early 80s. Now even VH1 doesn't have videos much of the time. As far as kids -- my daughter (11 yrs old) was into N'Sync, Brittany, etc. for awhile, but now she wants movie DVDs. It is really sad when the DVD is the same or less than the Movie Soundtrack on CD.


      --
      Beware of Sleestak
    12. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by mrcparker · · Score: 2, Funny

      18-25? 18-25 I wish. It is more like 12-18 now days.

    13. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by Conanymous+Award · · Score: 1

      Er, Bad Religion's Stranger Than Fiction was released in 1994.

      Also, their latest effort, The Process of Belief, is IMHO a *very* solid album. Mr. Brett is back and BR is back at Epitaph, after that nearly-disastrous stint at Sony/Atlantic.

    14. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you serious? Process of Belief is the best BR album yet! The albums between Stranger Than Fiction and this one sucked, but this one rocks... Brett is back. I agree about the PE, though.

    15. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by zerocool^ · · Score: 2

      I found some real gems on Napster -- stuff I'd never listen to before...

      And I feel the exact opposite. Back in the day when I used to get MP3 files off of IRC and FTP Servers, I wouldn't look for one specific artist. I'd check and see what they had. And I'd see a band and say to myself "self, I'd like to have some songs from that band and get them". Nowadays, the search button napster/kazaa/direct-connect has made it next to impossible to randomly find new music. I only get on P2P networks now when i'm lookin gor something specific.

      Which means I'm not finding new music anymore...

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
    16. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by jafuser · · Score: 2
      I can explain this in three words:

      commodification of dissent

      Are you the consumer or the product?

      --
      Please consider making an automatic monthly recurring donation to the EFF
    17. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by Rader · · Score: 2

      heheh. That's kind of funny. I can picture the next round of RIAA complaints:

      File sharing is causing our customers to weed out our crap! We need new laws where a customer must buy at least 2 crappy cd's before they buy the one they like.

    18. Re:Even the Once-Cool Now Sucks by Marasmus · · Score: 2

      Yes... It's a business-model problem that is dropping the quality of available mainstream music. First, you have music distribution companies who will sign anyone who provides them a short-term spike in volume sales. Typically this will be 'musicians' who are trying to stay at the leading-edge of teeny-trends. Music quality generally sucks because the record companies get the highest return on investment from short-term trendies, not quality music. Second... the modern radio payola system. In order to get your music on the radio, the radio station essentially buys the rights to play a particular new song on the radio. Reports say this can be at a price of $100,000 - $700,000 per song, per station! It's insane! The 'song vendors' that the stations go through will threaten to stop selling to them (or hike up their rates) if the station starts playing a lot of indie music. So the radio station, to keep its user base (and thus advertising profits) high will stick with the super-mainstream music. It really stifles the small and independent bands from getting their music on the air.

      As far as Napster, GNUtella and other P2P systems go, I've found it most useful to find independent artists whose music isn't sold at all through the major vendors. I can easily find new mainstream music by turning on the radio and flipping channels. It's a hell of a lot harder to find good indie music, and that is the greatest offering that Napster gave me. I can't even count how many excellent bands I found by doing random searches for weird words on Napster and GNUtella. My best find ever was The Shizit - a Seattle digital hardcore duo (now a trio) with an absolutely awesome style and powerful political viewpoints. They're something like mixing Ministry, Fear Factory, Atari Teenage Riot, and Rage Against The Machine. They (and a number of other bands) had a lot of CDs purchased by me that would have otherwise never been sold, had it not been for P2P music-hunting.

      --
      .... um, i lost you after "0110100001101001".
  24. i don't believe the RIAA is so clueless.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sure they know exactly why they're losing sales. I'm sure they don't care.

    Blaming 'piracy' is not only easy, but the laws that have been passed to prevent it give them a much tighter control over their industry than they ever had before.

    Pirates be damned - they want us to pay a royalty every time we press play on our WalkMans, no matter whats in there. And they inch closer and closer to this goal every time a P2P client goes online.

    I mean you're going to tell me Britney's latest only sold 4 million instead of 8, because 4 million of us pirated it, and not because our throwaway culture simply tired of her? Or it perhaps simply wasn't as good as the original?

    (myself I have no way to rate which album is better, my crap-o-meter is broken)

    1. Re:i don't believe the RIAA is so clueless.. by Rader · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You hit the nail on the head!! Their wet dream is to charge us each time we hear a song. They're not alone: software companies want to move to a application server environment where you'd pay per for each use. Cable/movie industry would probably put all content up if they could charge per-show, per-movie watched. (with commercials of cours)

      Reminds me of Futurama with the commercials shoved into your dreams... Would the Music Industry throw you in jail if you hummed a song to work? Or dreamed about music?

      As far as "loss of sales" last year.. give me a break. It was a recession. Some companies actually lost REAL sales. Not some made up, "wish we made 9 billion" dollar sales.

      And believe it or not, some companies go out of business when their services are too expensive or simply suck ass. The music industry as a business shouldn't be immune to this.

    2. Re:i don't believe the RIAA is so clueless.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why does the original post get modded 0, but the follow up that says the original was a good post, and agrees with it gets a 3-interesting?

      things that make you go hmmmmmmmmm

    3. Re:i don't believe the RIAA is so clueless.. by david.johns · · Score: 1
      And believe it or not, some companies go out of business when their services are too expensive or simply suck ass. The music industry as a business shouldn't be immune to this.

      So, can we give them what they want with a sunset provision and let them, and their lobbying money, die off like the dinosaurs they are? Poof, Voila, the bad law disappears and everyone is happy. Suddenly the digital age is back in full swing.

      Or are you not confident that their business model is toast? Or will it take rampant copyright infringement to euthanize the dinosaurs? If you have to infringe on their materials for their business model to fail, doesn't that imply that it would succeed without the infringement?

    4. Re:i don't believe the RIAA is so clueless.. by Rader · · Score: 2

      If you have to infringe on their materials for their business model to fail, doesn't that imply that it would succeed without the infringement?

      Did you bring this question up in general, or in response to me? I never said anything about copyright infringement. In fact, this article suggests other reasons why the Big-5 have lost money.

      I believe they are grasping at straws when they blame pirates instead of the recession for their "loss" of revenue last year.

      The big-5 didn't even LOSE money last year. They just didn't MAKE MORE money than the year before.

      Other entertainment is fighting for our dollars. DVD's are very similar in cost to CD's, and you get much more out of it. (There was a great aticle earlier interviewing kids buying DVD's instead of CD's)

      Computer game sales have also continued to rise a LOT. This extra money has to come from somewhere! (I'll tell you where my money went -- towards inflation, because I wasn't given the yearly bonus OR a raise last year)

      Although I don't think you can actually measure file sharing damages to the industry, I would bet that the industry would have felt this pressure (or a very high percentage) in an alternate Slider's universe where there was no file sharing. It would be interesting to see.

      And as far as their "business model" working. Most monopolies succeed quite well by just being the monopoly. They've had this luxury for decades. And they fought technology the whole time: tapes, vcr (different industry-sorry), cd's, and now digital.

      And what is their business model anyway? Exploit the artists. Control all of the medium. All of the distribution. Control the airwaves (oops, that's medium too). Price fix. Buy legislation.

  25. Both sides make stupid assumptions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    "The RIAA, of course, has studies that say otherwise."



    But we'll ignore them because this one says what we want it to say. Don't fall into the same trap as they do. Just because you may buy more CDs because of downloading music doesn't mean everyone does. Just because you enjoy the ability to download music doesn't mean it's not detrimental to the music industry. I do believe that p2p services harm the music and entertainment industries. However, I believe that the benefit to consumers is greater than the detriment to the industry. The ability to be able to find any music, whether new, old, rare, or common, is wonderful. The music and entertainment industries (although with Congress) need to step up and start giving consumers what they want, because eventually it will end up biting them on the ass.

    1. Re:Both sides make stupid assumptions by Doppleganger · · Score: 1

      "Don't fall into the same trap as they do."

      They don't. The RIAA acts as though contradictory evidence doesn't exist, and that their statists are the only correct ones. At least the people on the other side of the issue are willing to acknowledge the existance of other evidence, and point out reasons why that evidence is less likely to be correct.

  26. Hold on. by FortKnox · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Now don't tell me that you can look back and say "well, it isn't napsters fault".
    You CAN'T. You need a study that shows what happened when Napster came around. We have plenty of those. Now you need a study that shows what happened, in the exact same time period as napster, without napster. Anyone got a time machine?
    Napster (and other file sharing programs/piracy) MAY OF done the music industry bad. Napster (and other file sharing programs/piracy) MAY OF done the music industry good.
    But there is no possible way you can say it is one way for sure. File sharing still exists and is still widely used (KaZaA and Morpheus come to mind), so there is no possible way we can look at stats and compare.

    So take this article with a grain of salt, not with absolute conviction.

    --
    Good quote, too many chars. Seriously, the slashdot 120 char limit sucks!
    1. Re:Hold on. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      MAY OF

      It drives me up the fucking wall when I see this. The last time I saw it was when I was 14 and was proof-reading someone else's writing assignment.

      MAY HAVE!

    2. Re:Hold on. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      proof-reading

      It's 'prove-reading', nukelhead.

    3. Re:Hold on. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's not, moron.

    4. Re:Hold on. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes it is, idot.

    5. Re:Hold on. by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      It's 'prove-reading', nukelhead.

      I assume that, from the mis-spelling of "knucklehead", you're being cute. But in case not: (from Merriam-Webster)

      proofread: to read and mark corrections in (as a proof )


      proof: a copy (as of typeset text) made for examination or correction


      So, no, it really is "proofread". And it really is "may have", too.
    6. Re:Hold on. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you, sir are an dummass!

    7. Re:Hold on. by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      Facts: Napster unmolested in in it's heyday: Record highs in sales and profits for the music industry. Napster eliminated by music industry: Sales and profits dip significantly. Even an MBA should be able to put this one together.

    8. Re:Hold on. by iconian · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Using the RIAA's logic, the movie industry should be experiencing low box office numbers and DVD/VHS sales because of P2P programs. I have yet to hear the movie industry complain of low revenues.

    9. Re:Hold on. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Napster (and other file sharing programs/piracy) MAY OF done the music industry bad. Napster (and other file sharing programs/piracy) MAY OF done the music industry good."

      I believe someone MAY HAVE made a grammatical mistake. :P

  27. And to think, increased constraints are just.... by 3seas · · Score: 2

    beginning to happen..... The Dark Ages again....

    Was watching a Voyager rerun last nite - it was broadcast in digital and had more digital corruption in it and the analog air wave static..

    First time I saw that epsoide, it wasn't being broadcast in digital format and look fine...

    Like music I guess TV is going down hill too.

    All in the name of anti-piracy.....

    It works too......if nobody wants it.....who's gonna pirate it?

    The ultimate in piracy protection!!!! yeah buddy.....happy now?

  28. Occam's razor again by r_j_prahad · · Score: 2, Insightful
    For the past few days I have been seeing on TV some extremely negative reviews about Eminem's new music video. I have not seen it myself, but if the news is accurate it is one of the most revolting pieces of putrified garbage that the U.S. music industry has ever perpetrated on the American public.

    So they are staying away from this trash in droves, and the RIAA is blaming piracy? The truth is more likely that there has been a sudden unexplainable outbreak of good taste by music-listeners.

    1. Re:Occam's razor again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
      So they are staying away from this trash in droves, and the RIAA is blaming piracy?

      Eminem is a bad example, his album is riding high at #2 on billboard after 13 weeks, so the public is not staying away from his album in droves. There is overhyped crap like Andrew WK and The Strokes that might serve as a better example of trash.

  29. Napster has nothing to do with it, nor does RIAA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are no self inflicted wounds here. It's simple economics. When the economy was great, people bought music. Now that it's not, they're not.

  30. I think it's finally just time to stop... by TheCrayfish · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...making new pop and rock music. If we arbitrarily assign 1957 as the first year of Rock and Roll, then we've got 45 years' worth of music we can all go back through and mine for gems (as long as it all stays in print, of course.) I mean, until everyone owns "Marquee Moon" by Television, and at least one album by Nick Lowe, The Clash, Argent, 10cc, Pilot, The Soft Boys, The Undertones, The Velvet Underground, The Sex Pistols, Eddie Cochran, Elvis Costello, XTC, Radiohead, Badfinger, The Who, The Flaming Lips, and Love, why do we need anything new?

    1. Re:I think it's finally just time to stop... by happyhippy · · Score: 1

      Some modern music is just as brilliant as those are. It takes some digging past the crap to get to them but believe me they are out there.

    2. Re:I think it's finally just time to stop... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... why do we need anything new?
      because we don't want to be a pinhead like you...

    3. Re:I think it's finally just time to stop... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      too bad for those who want to MAKE music...

    4. Re:I think it's finally just time to stop... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure the parents of the 1957 asked the same thing. Why can't the kids listen to classics. Why do they need to listen to this evil rock and roll that the devil has spawned onto this earth...

      I know why you listed the artists that you did. But where's the Techno and Trance? Where's my NOFX and the rest of the great punk that came after the pistols? And your totally missing the classic blues list that help form half the bands you listed.

      And look at hip hop. A very recent genre that is HUGE with the younger crowd, yo.

    5. Re: I think it's finally just time to stop... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2


      > If we arbitrarily assign 1957 as the first year of Rock and Roll, then we've got 45 years' worth of music we can all go back through and mine for gems

      When the "Classic Rock" radio format first came out it was really nice, because they would play lots of B-sides and other non-warhorse material, and you could hear lots of stuff you missed during the Top 40 radio era.

      Unfortunately, the broadcasters have the same "sure thing formula" mentality that the recording industry does, so they started airing all those "vote for your favorite tunes" programs, and five years later the top-voted tunes was all you ever heard on those stations anymore. Some of us tuned them out. I, for one, don't need to hear Bob Seeger sing "Old Time Rock and Roll" three times a day.

      Maybe that's the same effect the RIAA is seeing?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    6. Re:I think it's finally just time to stop... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some of us don't share that elitist point of view. There are plenty of new bands that put out great music - even if you can't find it on the radio.

    7. Re:I think it's finally just time to stop... by TheCrayfish · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'm well aware that new bands keep releasing great new music. My original comment was mostly intended tongue-in-cheek. I love new bands and recent releases from folks like The Mockers, The Shazam, Guided by Voices, The Flashing Lights, The Apples in Stereo, etc. My point was just that a LOT of great pop, rock, rap, trance, dance, techno, punk, and heavy metal music has been made over the past 45 years, and most fans, myself included, have yet to explore and listen to the MAJORITY of that catalog. (For more great old and new music, check out my streaming webcast .)

    8. Re:I think it's finally just time to stop... by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      Right on!

      I look at my collection, and am heartened by the fact that I can't find new stuff to like. It'll take me years just to fill in the stuff that has gone before me. Hell, it would take several thousand dollars to replace my father's collection of vinyl (But I'll be ripping and burning that...)

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    9. Re:I think it's finally just time to stop... by Psx29 · · Score: 1

      The problem is there is not so much music (in the US) that pokes fun at society today, such as the US Gov't(Bush Administration) and other issues that are going on now....

    10. Re:I think it's finally just time to stop... by nathanh · · Score: 2

      How can you put Flaming Lips in a list like that?

    11. Re:I think it's finally just time to stop... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And look at hip hop. A very recent genre that is HUGE with the younger crowd, yo.

      Hip hop is nothing but nigger noise corrupting the youth of America. It's attempting to turn honest hard working well raised white boys into the fucking dirty jungle bunnies that live in South Central LA and Africa. I do NOT want my kids listening to that fucking nigger trash and jumping around like a bunch of fucking coons. It's classical music all the way for them. Nothing like a good 17th century German composer to lift the spirits.

  31. Napster started it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I used to buy a lot of CDs (40-50 a year), happily laying down $15-20 each, sometimes for a CD I would listen to once - which is my point: Napster may not be hurting the sales of the U2s, Pink Floyds, and Rolling Stones of the industry, as these are quality bands who put out quality albums (mostly). But imagine the effect on the sales of some of the recent spate of flash-in-the-pan acts... I liked Linkin Park's last few singles, but the truth is that I was sick of them long before I bought the CD. The same is true for a lot of acts.

    Napster popularized P2P, and really brought about the try-before-you-buy mindset that alot of people have developped since in buying CDs; the effect has been lowered sales of mediocre products. David Bowie will continue to sell millions of CDs despite P2P, good luck to the middle-of-the-road acts though.

    Also, P2P brings about lowered "thought-out" purchasing decisions much more than impulse buys. I would think that music that appeals to teenagers who have less disposable income (and thus are more prone to thinking out how to spend $20) will be much harder hit than music which appeals to the more affluent "older" crowds. It's a terrible thought, but I bet Britney Spears would have sold many more albums ten years ago - wheareas I doubt that an artist like Eric Clapton is much affected either way.

    1. Re:Napster started it all by Jhon · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry you decided to post anonymously. You made some good points. I hope you get modded up.

      My older buying habits were the opposite of yours (buying little to no CDs due to the cost and not wanting to spend that much for a single song).

      However, like you, P2P has allowed me to "try before I buy". 3 or more years ago, I bought 3 CDs any given year. Now? Now I average about 1 a month.

      I would be interested to see which buying trend is more common (your MORE to LESS or my LESS to MORE).

      -jhon

    2. Re:Napster started it all by number11 · · Score: 2

      I don't know about trend.

      But before I did P2P, I never bought new CDs. Except for presents. Or maybe once a year doing that BMC "15 CDs for the price of 1" deal, and then getting out of the "club" immediately. Ok, not exactly immediately. They'd send me CDs, and I'd scrawl "REFUSED" on the carton and throw them back in the mailbox. Eventually they'd expel me from their club. But 6 months later, they'd be missing me and asking to get me to join again. Anyhow, and I'd buy a few used CDs, the price being much more reasonable.

      Now that I do P2P, it's pretty much the same. Except that I seem to know more musicians, and buy their CDs new, from them, more as a social obligation than anything else. But none of them is on a label that's a member of the RIAA, so they don't count.

    3. Re:Napster started it all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would like to humbly disagree. Napster is not the problem with flash in the pan bands. The problem with flash in the pan bands is that, well, they are flash in the pan bands. People are finally just getting sick of buying their music. You say napster popularized the try-before-you-but mindset, but I think radio did that before napster ever came around. I won't buy the new linkin park cd, not because I got the singles off the internet, but because I've heard them on the radio so much it's painful.
      All of this attests to the fact that music today is cookie cutter and boring in the mainstream. I will continue to buy the music that I enjoy (which never seems to make it on the radio) so long as I don't get sick of it within the first week because it's overplayed and hyped out.
      Don't blame napster, blame the lack of creativity of our pop world.

    4. Re:Napster started it all by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 2
      "Napster popularized P2P, and really brought about the try-before-you-buy mindset that alot of people have developped since in buying..."

      Napster did not popularise P2P. It popularised filesharing and was based on a centralised server and did not use a peer to peer model. It was Morpheus/Kzaaza that popularised P2P.

      But I agree with your comments about Napster popularising the try before buy attitude.

  32. Napster to blame?! by bDerrly · · Score: 1

    What I find annoying is this...who among us actually used Napster for any period of time? Sure I used it for a few weeks right before the huge craze. But after that I decided IRC was still better than Napster. Napster didn't do anything besides create a media craze for this thing called "mp3s" which then spawned innovations like "mp3 players." The only reason Napster made it so big was the response of the millions of automaton drones spread across American that only know how to follow the latest trend.

    --
    Animals have rights! ...TO BE EATEN!!!
    1. Re:Napster to blame?! by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      The only reason Napster made it so big was the response of the millions of automaton drones spread across American that only know how to follow the latest trend.

      And, ironically, those automatons had been trained to fanatically follow trends by none other than... the marketing army called the RIAA. :)
    2. Re:Napster to blame?! by bDerrly · · Score: 1

      Very nicely put, too bad I didn't think of that. :)

      --
      Animals have rights! ...TO BE EATEN!!!
    3. Re:Napster to blame?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's hi-larious to see such an elitist attitude coming from User #246981 of slashdot. If you want to see "millions of automaton drones," look no further...

    4. Re:Napster to blame?! by bDerrly · · Score: 1

      So it makes me an automaton to get my daily tech news from slashdot? I guess if you want to see it that way, fine, I am. But, where pray tell do you get your daily news? If not from slashdot, Mr. Anonymous Coward, then where? You must read here enough to have noticed my comment...

      --
      Animals have rights! ...TO BE EATEN!!!
  33. Boycotts ahoy by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I think a lot of the decline is sales is the price of albums nowadays. It's ludicrous to pay $20 for something that costs less than $1 to produce. THAT'S probably what's killing consumer interest, but digital piracy makes a handy scapegoat. If piracy ended tomorrow, the sales would barely move I think.

    Don't know about anyone else, but I've boycotted the recording industry for over 2 years now. Haven't bought an album since late 1999. There's albums I want, I'm a music junkie, and it's been like qutting heroin, but I flat out will NOT part with one single cent to the bastards anymore until they get a clue and stop publishing LIES.

    For the record, no, I haven't pirated albums I would otherwise have bought. I've simply gone without, which given how much into music I've always been has bee REALLY hard at times, but I just can't, in good conscience, finance this insanity.

    1. Re:Boycotts ahoy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about independent labels? Check out Touch and Go or Thrill Jockey.

    2. Re:Boycotts ahoy by ivan256 · · Score: 2

      Well, I don't know about it costing less then $1.00 to produce an album, but I agree that $20 is rediculous.

      I haven't bought a CD from an RIAA member company since 1998. It wasn't so bad for a while, because there was an excelent independant radio station in my area (WAAF, Boston), but just over a year ago they sold the station and have been playing crap ever since*. I was pissed for a while, but I soon found that there are lots of good bands around that you and a friend can go and see play over a few beers for less then the cost of one ticket (or CD) to some "major" rock group, and the music is as good or better. The best part is, when you buy their CD you're handing cash to the artist (usually literally), not to a glorified lobying group that is trying to take away your rights.

      If you don't live in an area with a good local music scene you can still find almost all of these bands on the internet. Download their songs, if you like them buy the CD, and you can go back to loving music again.

      * If I turn on the radio and flip to AAF nowadays there's like a 10% chance that they'll be playing "Rooster" by Alice In Chains, a 20% chance that it'll be something by the Beastie Boys, and a 50% chance it'll be a commercial. They never play anything that's not on the 30 song long playlist on their website. I don't understand why they still have listeners.

    3. Re:Boycotts ahoy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My wording was shit, it costs less than a dollar to PRINT a CD. That was what I meant. (Anonymous to save my karma.)

    4. Re:Boycotts ahoy by NamShubCMX · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry but I don't think the "1$ to produce" arguments is good. You don't pay for the CD itself, you pay for its content. Which means, in many cases, years of labour by musicians. That's what you pay for. If you'd pay only for the CD, then it would be ok for the company to say you can only listen what's on the CD in some type of format. But you're buying the content. You're hopefully playing the right to play it anywhere and use it according to the laws of fair use. But I'm getting offtopic. I only wanted to say that this argument is somewhat invalid because if you'd only pay for the media (the plastic CD), nothing would go back to the artists. I'm not saying that 20$ is justified, but the artists, if they choose to, should get their share. Now this may seems to conflict with the the reply I posted 5 minutes ago in this same conversation... but I do think artists deserve to get paid for what they do, but it shouldn't be illegal to get samples of their work of the net. I know a few people playing in a couple of bands. They are selling their album 12$ (CAN, that makes 8$US) Since they are not producing millions (more like hundreds) it costs them alot to record, print etc... but they still manage to make maybe 20c each for each sale (which is ridiculous) So they'd save the trouble of distributing it if you could get the music for free... And they all believe it's great to go to an unknown city but people are singing along to your songs because they got your music off yout website...

      --
      We've always been at war with Eurasia.
    5. Re:Boycotts ahoy by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 1

      Your argument has one flaw.

      Back in the day, albums were released on casette and CD. Casette is MORE EXPENSIVE to produce, but was sold for about $5 less. That's the point I'm trying to make.

    6. Re:Boycotts ahoy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not quite sure why most keep citing CD prices as $20. I buy all my CD's from http://www.theendrecords.com mailorder for $9-$12 with free shipping. I mean..my friend bought a Double-CD for $14! In all honesty, it really is a good place to buy the more "obscure" variants of rock and metal.

    7. Re:Boycotts ahoy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so when was the last time you went to the movies? if your gonna boycott do it right. as for me i haven`t been to the movies scince best of the best 2 (i think) and haven`t missed the theater at all. besides i`d rather spend the money on someone i love instead of something that doesn`t even last. getting your wife or girlfriend something nice is just a class act when she is happy your happy.

    8. Re:Boycotts ahoy by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 1

      Happy wife = Happy life (I speak from experience).

      Last movie I saw on the big screen was Dogma. Last movie I actually PAID to see was Sliver in 93 or so. (Since then I've gotten free passes.)

    9. Re:Boycotts ahoy by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 2
      "I think a lot of the decline is sales is the price of albums nowadays. It's ludicrous to pay $20 for something that costs less than $1 to produce. THAT'S probably what's killing consumer interest, but digital piracy makes a handy scapegoat. If piracy ended tomorrow, the sales would barely move I think."

      I do agree that the price of CDs is outrageous and that they are charging way too much, but I think it costs more than $1.00 to produce a good CD.

      The materials (plastic holder, punching the disc, printing the inserts) probably cost less than $1.00 but there are other costs. You have to pay a typesetter to put together the inserts. A photographer is paid to take those shots of the band. A sound engineer has to mix the tracks and produce them for CD format. Oh yeah, and I suspect that even today, the artists get a few cents in royalties.

      Still, I expect that the price charged is ludicrous.

      Hypothetically, if the royalty portion of the price was doubled, but the profit margin was reduced to, say, 100% (which is still outrageous) I bet the labels would make MORE money because more people could afford to buy the CDs.

  34. Not really. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever copy a tape? Copies of VHS blow chunks.

    Not to mention the fact that VHS, original or copy, is prone to rapid decay. (Call me crazy, but I'm one of the people who *watches* the movies they own, because, damnit, I *like* watching them.)

    CD's don't decay, at least not from use, and if we're talking mp3s sitting on a hard drive, there is no decay.

    That said, you're right - if they made it easy and cheap, people would buy their music online and download it.

    I don't know about not saving it - the vast majority of people are still on modems. (But then, the vast majority of music thieves (I refuse to use the word pirate. Arr.) utilize broadband.)

  35. yay by greymond · · Score: 1

    another good common sense article - to bad it still wont make that much of a difference.

  36. Ever take economics? by nsanit · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nowhere did the article bother to talk about the woes of the economy.

    Maybe I'm just a freak, but I know if I'm trying to curtail my spending, as many are in the uncertain economy, music purchases would be one of the first things I'd stop.

    I know, their sales have been diminishing since before the US economy started heading south, but it's a possibility.

    Maybe if the price of a cd was less than 700% profict for RIAA (dont know the number, but I know it's HUGE), and they cost what they were worth they would sell more.

    I know this is theory, but I was taught in my econ class back in college that the sale price was where the supply and demand curve met. That point was the price that the consumer considered 'fair'.

    Maybe RIAA needs to think about THAT. Maybe more and more consumers are thinking that cd's are just not worth the money and are settling for what's on the radio and not buying cd's. I'm sure some are turning to P2P software too, but I imagine that really is the minority.

    I dont download music (used to - delted them all) and I will buy cd's. I've not bought one in almost 6 months because there hasnt been one that I think is worth the money.

    Maybe I didnt think there were any worth the money because they are cookie cutter as the article stated. Maybe it's because it's just too damned expensive.

    :wq

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.-Franklin
    1. Re:Ever take economics? by questionlp · · Score: 1
      Actually... they mentioned it in the article... although quite briefly though. From the last couple sentences of the second paragraph:
      There's also been a recession, of course, and resistance to CD prices that have grown much faster than the inflation rate. Perhaps the most important factor, however, is the major labels' very success in dominating the market, which has squelched musical innovation.
      I guess the fat rich execs don't even see a recession because they themselves have a load of cash somewhere (be it in stocks, banks or off-shore accounts).
    2. Re:Ever take economics? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe, but DVD and Movie Ticket sales are way up this year. The video game industry is rallying also, according to an article today on CNN.

      More likely is that the RIAA has gone out of their way to alienate their customers in the last few years.

      Michael

    3. Re:Ever take economics? by BACPro · · Score: 1

      >>There's also been a recession, of course, and resistance to CD prices that have grown much faster than the inflation rate.

      recession != economics??

    4. Re:Ever take economics? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with the RIAA is that is consists of all lawyers and CEO's and no economists.

    5. Re:Ever take economics? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know, their sales have been diminishing since before the US economy started heading south, but it's a possibility.

      It's called a leading indicator. You already said it: purchasing CDs was the first thing off your list, thus the recording industry is one of the first to feel the effects of the economy going sour.

    6. Re:Ever take economics? by moonsammy · · Score: 2

      Maybe more and more consumers are thinking that cd's are just not worth the money

      And this will just become more and more the case as dvd players become more common. I can't *not* think that Joe Consumer will start to realize, however slowly, that when you can buy a 2-hour movie with multiple audio tracks, subtitles, trailers, behind-the-scenes documentaries etc etc that purchasing a 1-hour cd with maybe 4 good songs on it for the same frickin' price is a bad deal. Hrm, Lord of the Rings dvd or Lord of the Rings soundtrack cd... hrm...

    7. Re:Ever take economics? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I dont download music (used to - delted them all) and I will buy cd's. I've not bought one in almost 6 months because there hasnt been one that I think is worth the money.

      Yeah, this reminds me. Used record stores - you know, actual vinyl - are the best alternative to downloading. Punk still sounds pretty good with static anyway.

    8. Re:Ever take economics? by AlexCompy · · Score: 1

      Well, here's some economics for you. Beware: the comparison is not 100% perfect, but it should paint a picture...

      Over the course of 2001, CD sales were down 6.4% (per the article). Let's look at some share indices:

      (closing prices)

      Jan 02 2001
      UK FTSE-ASE: 2963.67
      US DJIA: 10646.2

      Dec 31 2001
      UK FTSE-ASE: 2523.9
      US DJIA: 10021.6

      This gives a decline of 14.8% for the UK and 5.9% for US.

      Now, you might think that the stock market is just some esoteric thing that economists use, but in reality the value and performance of the market reflects the real economic performance of a nation very closely. Remember that many people's incomes depend on the performance of listed companies (and non-listed companies are usually indirectly dependent on the performance of listed suppliers/customers). Even things like pensions (in which there has been a massive UK crisis lately) are VERY closely related to the stock market (this is particularly important given that according to the article over 40% of the CD market are people over the age of 40 - ie people at an age who are pretty worried about their pensions, and their jobs etc.).

      Anyways, make of it what you will...

  37. Hypocritical bastards... by tempest303 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Yes, that's it! It's ALL the RIAA's fault! They MADE you download the software, and held a gun to your head to click that "Install" button. Then they theatened to asault your families if you didn't "share"* as many MP3s as you could!

    * what a laughable term for what Napster was about. Yeah, it wasn't "stealing" in the traditional dictionary definition, but what would you have said if someone were "sharing" binary-only modified copies of GPL'd software? Would that still be sharing? Or would it now be stealing?

    For that matter, if the music the RIAA put out was SOOOO bad, why are all you jerkoffs so desperate to get your hands on it via Napster, Gnutella, et al? You're as shitty as the **AA fuckers you're supposedly against.

    Finally, for the record, I am a GPL-phile. This doesn't mean I'm for "Everything should be Free Beer!", but rather that I feel I must have a degree of respect for ALL intellectual property rights, even the ones that I think suck, excepting, of course, anything that skirts honest Fair Use.

    That said, dare to challenge your views! And feel free to mod me down, bitches! I have no fear of /. hypocricy!

    1. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong, many bands support things such as napster and audiogalaxy. It's when the RIAA speaks for everyone and gets them shutdown is when people get pissed.

      I have a friend in a band and all his stuff on audiogalaxy that he would be glad share with the world is now blocked because of the RIAA.

    2. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by tempest303 · · Score: 2

      ...is now blocked because of the RIAA.

      No, it's blocked because Napster set up a service specifically designed to allow people to "share" their MP3's. You can't honestly tell me they were trying to capitalize on legal trading. There isn't (yet) much of a market for that. Same thing with AG. If Napster, AG, et al were really into legal trading, they'd make a Napster-like frontend to MP3.com.

    3. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by J.+J.+Ramsey · · Score: 2
      Yes, that's it! It's ALL the RIAA's fault! They MADE you download the software, and held a gun to your head to click that "Install" button. Then they theatened to asault your families if you didn't "share"* as many MP3s as you could!
      Oh, please. You absolutely missed the point. The article basically said that Napster's impact was minimal, that it wasn't the big money drain the RIAA made it out to be. Compared to the combined effects of the recession and the dubious creative output of the labels, Napster was a love tap, not a sucker punch.
    4. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 3, Informative

      Except that what you describe existed a long time ago. It was a service hosted at, unsuprisingly, my.mp3.com. You could download anything from a huge library, the only catch was that before the server would give you a digital copy of your CD you had to provide it with a checksum of the data off your CD. Sure you could hack around this, but for 90% of people it meant that you had to prove you already owned it before you could download it. Legal sharing.

      3 guesses what service was the first target of the RIAA, long before Napster even existed, and the first two don't count.

    5. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      * what a laughable term for what Napster was about. Yeah, it wasn't "stealing" in the traditional dictionary definition, but what would you have said if someone were "sharing" binary-only modified copies of GPL'd software? Would that still be sharing? Or would it now be stealing?

      Its not stealing in neither case (See definition's emphasis on stealing being the removal of something from its rightful owner), in the first case it would surely be copyright infringment, and in the second case, a license violation, perhaps too a copyright infringment.

      As long as copyrights are used against their explicitly mentioned goal ("To Promote Science and Useful Arts") and as such have unlimited times [in practice] and do not require publishing the information (keeping programs closed, etc), they will not be honored and protected.

      That is, I will not respect copyright in its current form - to make profit for the large companies that funded its legislation.

    6. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by tempest303 · · Score: 2

      wuh? that was called "beam-it", and it wasn't about sharing. It was about availablity of your music digitally at any location. Where exactly did "sharing" come into play with this service?

    7. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Yeah, it wasn't "stealing" in the traditional dictionary definition, but what would you have said if someone were "sharing" binary-only modified copies of GPL'd software? Would that still be sharing? Or would it now be stealing?

      What Napster did was "filesharing", in the traditional and well-known networking sense: A given file was placed on a network and made accessible to others on the network. Or are you morally opposed to MS Windows "share folder" mechanism, too?


      Now, it's legitimate to feel that supporters of Naptser liked to use the word "fileshare" because "sharing" has such a nice connotation -- everyone's all nice and friendly and Sesame Street-like. But then, the RIAA chose "piracy" to utilize the negative connotation of the word, even though infringing a copyright is nothing at all like raping and pillaging on the high seas. But at least in Napster's case, the word has a legitimate technical meaning that is actually related to how it's being used.


      If someone took GPL code but violated the license, well, that would breach-of-contract and also copyright infringement -- both well-defined crimes but neither "stealing".

    8. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by tempest303 · · Score: 2

      My questions were rhetorical, and not aimed at someone with a clue, which you appear to have.

      However, if you won't respect copyright "in its current form", how do you make the distinction between what is and isn't acceptable? (note: that *wasn't* rhetorical ;) Do you believe the GPL, or any other Free/OSS licenses are valid? They rely on the very same assumptions about IP...

    9. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by atticusfinch1970 · · Score: 1
      The cost of music has steadily risen over the past 10 years, the media giants are ripping off the artists, and pushing legislation that would wipe fair use out of existance. To add insult to injury, the industry lables the consumer as a criminal for making copies to use in the car, at work, on a second or third computer. These are rights we had before napster.

      Instead of working out a system of fair use that gives the consumer what he's always had, the industry tries to bury technology, and take away your ability to make copies of your own music. THIS PISSES PEOPLE OFF and of course pissed off people are just so darned unpredictable! They may even (gasp) download an mp3 they didn't pay for.

      "Hmmmm...$20 for 1 or 2 good songs, or those 1 or 2 songs for free? What was the first choice again?"

      By adjusting their business model to make things convenient for the consumer, and charging a REASONABLE price for their product, everyone wins. Of course, there will always be people swapping songs, just like way back when tapes were relavent, but DEAL WITH IT. Yeah, you'll probably loose sales at first but the potential revenue gained from digital downloads -and being able to use those downloads anywhere- would more than make up for those losses.

      Lastly, I'm not saying it's ok to download copyrighted music because the music biz sucks, but until sanity is restored, my rights as a consumer are protected, and the artists get their fair shake, I say fuck 'em.

      Big Business not getting their fair profits? Boo-fucking-hoo...

    10. Re: Hypocritical bastards... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2


      > For that matter, if the music the RIAA put out was SOOOO bad, why are all you jerkoffs so desperate to get your hands on it via Napster, Gnutella, et al? You're as shitty as the **AA fuckers you're supposedly against.

      Boy, did you ever miss the point.

      I have never downloaded any IP-restricted music off the internet, but I've still cut way back on my CD purchases.

      Some of us aren't trying to justify theft; we just want to point out that the RIAA's finger-pointing game is utter bullshit.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    11. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by tempest303 · · Score: 2

      What Napster did was "filesharing", in the traditional and well-known networking sense: A given file was placed on a network and made accessible to others on the network. Or are you morally opposed to MS Windows "share folder" mechanism, too?

      No, because it wasn't explicitly designed to capitalize on others ripping off artists (though also, by happy coincidence, ripping off crap corporate entities like the **AAs)

      As I said in another post, you're right, it's NOT stealing or piracy, just as much as it's not really *sharing* either. It's copyright violation, which is something related to theft, but not the same, as it doesn't deprive the original author of the property itself. What's needed is a concise term for that sort of thing, as "copyright violation" is a mouthful, and covers too broad a range - some copyrights are bullshit, like Disney's proposals to extend copyright to infinity, ie: no Public Domain-ing of works, ever. Unfortunately, I don't think such a term is forthcoming... people are generally too polarized on the issue to agree on a non-polarized term for the kind of copyright violations that occur on p2p networks.

      If someone took GPL code but violated the license, well, that would breach-of-contract and also copyright infringement -- both well-defined crimes but neither "stealing".

      I know that, but some people think of it that way, and I was trying to provoke thought rhetorically, and at the same time, amuse myself with a little flamebait. ;)

    12. Re: Hypocritical bastards... by tempest303 · · Score: 2

      I think you missed my point, too. That comment wasn't aimed at you, obviously. My point was that the people that bitch endlessly about the RIAA, but then go and DOWNLOAD RIAA music anyhow, are hypocrites and are ruining the potential of p2p for legit uses by invoking the unholy wrath of the RIAA/MPAA on *everyone*.

    13. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by tempest303 · · Score: 2

      Big Business not getting their fair profits? Boo-fucking-hoo...

      Agreed completely, but...

      I'm not saying it's ok to download copyrighted music because the music biz sucks, but until sanity is restored, my rights as a consumer are protected, and the artists get their fair shake, I say fuck 'em.

      And by "fuck 'em", I assume you mean, "I'll download their shit anyhow and not give the sods a red cent!" I wish I could go along with this, but I can't. Even though they rip the artists off, it's still breaking the law, and instead of getting a meager proportion of that sale, when people just *take* it without paying for it, that GUARANTEES the artist gets NOTHING instead. This just turns bad into worse! I'm not for putting up with it, either, but my point is: two wrongs don't make a right. It's wrong ethically, and it's wrong practically too. When you pit a (somewhat justified) law breaking public againt moneyed scumbags that ARE in the scope of the law, guess who wins? It's not us...

    14. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "That said, dare to challenge your views! And feel free to mod me down, bitches! I have no fear of /. hypocricy!"

      I'd mod you down as Flamebait if I could. You over-simplified a well-known situation and twisted it into an attack.

      If there was any legitimate point to what you were saying, your solution wouldn't be so simple. Frankly, I think the GPL comment you made was icing to earn karma.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    15. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by NanoGator · · Score: 2

      "You can't honestly tell me they were trying to capitalize on legal trading."

      Yes they were. They created an audience ready to acquire music. If the RIAA had any intelligence, they would have taken advantage of this, charged modest prices, and let the money roll in. Napster would have become a promotional tool that the RIAA would pay $$$ to keep running.

      Let me be clear about something: Before you tell me I'm wrong, tell me how Napster could have possibly made money off of people illegally trading files.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    16. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by crosbie · · Score: 1

      Artists can still earn money, by releasing the perfect copies (as opposed to low quality demos) only after sale. File-sharing does not make it impossible to sell music - even without copyright.

      www.digitalartauction.com

      .

    17. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by tempest303 · · Score: 2

      Well of course it's flamebait. Duh. It was trolling satire of the sadly frequent attitude of "Fuck the man! I want Free Beer! The world owes me, dammit!", seen here on /. that oversimplifies just as badly as my *intentional* oversimplification. It was meant partly as thought provocation and partly as my own entertainment. >;-)

    18. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      Ah!

      I find your honesty refreshing! Heh.

      You musta laughed your ass off when you got a +1 heh.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    19. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by tempest303 · · Score: 1

      Why, thank you!

      Actually I figured I'd get modded up at least once - it was flamebait, but I figured it was satirical enough to get +1, Funny... but not +1, Insightful. THAT'S comedy. ;-)

    20. Re:Hypocritical bastards... by Peaker · · Score: 2

      The free software licenses also depend on copyrights, but they use them in their originally intended way (To Promote Science and Useful Arts), which is very acceptable.

      I don't care about the current copyright laws, but I do care about Promoting Science and Useful Arts, and if evil laws can be used to promote them, so be it. Fight fire with fire.

  38. The RIAA Sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have found the RIAA's behavior over the last few years intolerable, and refuse to have MY culture owned by a bunch of big greedy corporations. I simply do not buy new CDs anymore. Instead I just listen to the music that I already own, and look for music online that is non-RIAA encumbered.

    Michael

  39. NAPSTER NOT TO BLAME? by _ph1ux_ · · Score: 2, Funny

    of course not... we've known all along - its Canada!

    1. Re:NAPSTER NOT TO BLAME? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You bastards will never let us live down Celine Dion!!

    2. Re:NAPSTER NOT TO BLAME? by MrYotsuya · · Score: 1

      Utterly fucking lame

      -1 tired South Park reference

    3. Re:NAPSTER NOT TO BLAME? by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 1

      of course not... we've known all along - its Canada!


      Just you wait...

  40. (* 0.19 0.33) = 0.627 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Haha... Well, I'm for downloading, but I thought the fact that the article implied downloading couldn't account for the 6% slump was funny since of the 33% of cd buyers who download (according to the article), 19% don't say that they are buying as many or more cd's as they used to.

    What do you know? 19% of 33% is 6.27%

    1. Re:(* 0.19 0.33) = 0.627 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmmm... If only statistical analysis were that
      simple. Still, it is interesting. Everyone is so quick to downplay the effects of downloading that they don't give both sides fair analysis.

    2. Re:(* 0.19 0.33) = 0.627 by ShadowDrake · · Score: 1

      They're saying that they aren't buying as many or more discs. That doesn't mean they're buying NONE. Important distinction.

      If 6.27% of the market is buying less discs due to downloading, the total sales will drop .0627 * X

      where X is the proportion of CDs they're not buying that they would have otherwise. If X is 0.1 or 0.5 even, it's insufficient to blame the big nasty Internet boogeyman for this.

      --
      It's just like a fascist dictatorship, without the punctual rail service!
  41. The why rip and collect it if so bad? by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

    This is a totally BS argument - people don't rip and P2P share a million copies of shit. It's pure theft, with an everybody is doing it excuse.

    1. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by tiedyejeremy · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's not shit. Maybe some people REALLY like it. That is not the point. The point is, people are not willing to pay the asking price and are seeking other means of acquisition. This is not the fault of the P2P networks. If the music were of a quality and price that would lure consumers to the store to buy, the p2p networks would decline. Give the people what they want and they'll buy it. Push them less than they want or charge too much and demand will decrease.

      --
      Anything you say will be held against you. ... "tits"
    2. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by hawkbug · · Score: 2, Informative

      People don't rip? Myself, and 4 other people I know with mp3 players in our cars or portable mp3 players sure as hell do. Granted, I download some songs here and there, but also rip 10x more than I download from purchased cds. I don't want my cds sitting in the car melting from the heat, or getting scratched because some fool doesn't know how to handle them correctly. I love groups like 311, and have gone to great lengths to even purchase their unreleased stuff off their own website. Don't tell me people don't rip music just because you don't, and as a result end up stealing everything you listen to.

    3. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      There are lots of people that don't think money is worth the normal "work" effort it takes to "purchase" it ... we call them robbers, thieves, scum. What's the difference with the property is something other than money?

    4. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by killmenow · · Score: 1

      When you steal property, you deprive someone of it.

      When you steal something you otherwise would have paid for, you deprive someone of the revenue they would get from the sale.

      When you make a copy of some digital bits that you only are willing to copy precisely because it costs you next to nothing, and honestly (there's the rub) would rather do without if it cost you more, you do not deprive anyone of anything.

      You cannot steal revenue that would never be realized in the first place.

      Let's say you like this one song, but not so much that you would ever pay $15 for a CD or even $5 for a single, even if that were the only way to get it...instead you'd just call up the radio, request it, wait for it, and enjoy it while it lasts...or otherwise just do without.

      If you found yourself in this situation, downloading this song to listen to on your computer is not (do I actually need to add an IMHO?) stealing.

      Copyright infringement, maybe. But stealing, no.

      That being said, if the music industry offered product these "pirates" were interested in at *realistic* prices (as opposed to artificially maintained fixed prices) they might find a large contingent of "pirates" buying their product instead of "stealing" (wink, wink) it.

    5. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by IIRCAFAIKIANAL · · Score: 2

      I second that - every mp3 I own I ripped myself. Some of the CD's were lost/destroyed and a few were given away, so I am not 100% legal (w/ regards to the ones I gave away), but I'm pretty damn close.

      I have an MP3 CD player for use in the car, my home stereo plays MP3 cds, and I have a portable matchbook sized MP3 player for commuting on the train.

      The sick thing is, I spent $36 CAD on a cd recently. That's more than a 4 disc DVD box set - and yet I am the pirate :)

      * I'm not sure if the label I purchased the CD from is a member of the RIAA, but the point remains the same, since at least some of the music I buy must be...

      --
      Robots are everywhere, and they eat old people's medicine for fuel.
    6. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by 40000 · · Score: 1

      "There are lots of people that don't think money is worth the normal "work" effort it takes to "purchase" it ... we call them robbers, thieves, scum. What's the difference with the property is something other than money?"

      You missed one off the list. Shareholders.

    7. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      First your comment "When you steal property, you deprive someone of it.", which is far to narrow a definition of "stealing". If you go to www.websters.com and look up "stealing" you will also find:

      "1 : to take the property of another wrongfully and especially as an habitual or regular practice"

      "1 a : to take or appropriate without right or leave and with intent to keep or make use of wrongfully"

      "1 d : to appropriate to oneself or beyond one's proper share"

      which by US law includes unauthorized duplication and distribution of non-tangable intelectual property of obvious value,especially where copyrighted.

      Your second comment "When you steal something you otherwise would have paid for, you deprive someone of the revenue they would get from the sale. When you make a copy of some digital bits that you only are willing to copy precisely because it costs you next to nothing, and honestly (there's the rub) would rather do without if it cost you more, you do not deprive anyone of anything." is also false.

      Take the example of someone hacking your bank account and transfering is entire value out of your account. If that person would never choose to work a normal wage paying job, then their transfer of your assets (not reall cash) out of your bank account by your definition is not really stealing since they would never work to earn it in the first place. If such a thief, empty's your bank account I strongly suspect you are going to be crying foul to the bank, the police, and the community for the theft. I call it "stealing" by the above definition. You can rationalize it however you might to ignore the obvious theft as already ruled by US Courts.

    8. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by tiedyejeremy · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Theft is theft.
      For this reason, I abide by the rules laid out by the bands whose music I download. Pearl Jam, Phish, Grateful Dead, Dave Matthews Band, etc.
      My point is, while the RIAA spends so much time and effort fighting the symptoms - napster, kazaa, gnuntilla, what ever they are called, i don't use them -- they could be increasing revenues by providing a product people are willing to buy at a price they are willing to pay. They [riaa] whine about lost profits continually and fight for ways to control control control (read: protect the future of the oligopoly) and dismiss the tools they have at their disposal to increase profits: good product at acceptable price at proper location.

      I have to question what the real rub is? control or short term profit.

      --
      Anything you say will be held against you. ... "tits"
    9. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by killmenow · · Score: 1

      Websters does not a definitive legal answer make.

      Your comment that my comment is false is false.

      The example of someone hacking a bank account is a flawed analogy. Those bits in the bank's computer are a digital representation of a physical thing: the money in the bank's vault that belongs to me. If someone alters the representation that says that money belongs to them now, they deprive me of that physical thing: the money. Hence, they are stealing.

      I am not rationalizing anything as I agree the US Courts would likely disagree with me if I were to use this argument as a legal defense of the action. But then, the US Courts for many many years believed that black persons were property, that women had no right to vote, that it was perfectly acceptable to discriminate against homosexuals, etc.

      Point being, a court ruling may make it legally binding, but it doesn't make it the truth.

    10. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      I agree the bits in the banks computer are your money - was obvious from my assertion you would cry foul when somebody played with them.

      But in exactly the same way, the bits that hold the pirated MP3 music are EVERY bit as tangible to the authors and copyright holders as is YOUR money. Both are totally intangable assets of value to the real owners.

      To claim the music owners bits are different from yours, is well ... self serving and short sighted.

    11. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      You Say "Those bits in the bank's computer are a digital representation of a physical thing: the money in the bank's vault that belongs to me."

      The music industry says EXACTLY the same thing, the MP3 bits are a digital representation of a physical thing - the music CD they own - and those bits belong to them till you purchase a copy.

    12. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by reverseengineer · · Score: 1

      and those bits belong to them till you purchase a copy.

      Once I purchase a copy, do the bits belong to me? They do? OK, since I really don't like keeping my bits on a compact disc, I think I'll rip them to high-bitrate mp3. I can't tell the difference anyway. Also, since I like these particular bits, and would like others to experience them, I think I'll share a few with my friends- either the ones across town, or some people I don't know very well that I just met using Limewire. Since they're my bits, I think the decision should rest in my hands.

      --
      "FDA staff reviewers expressed concern about the number of patients who were left out of the study because they died."
    13. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      Your bank-robber analogy is utterly wrong. The bank robber has denied you something: your assets. Once he takes them, those assets are not there and you cannot use them. Copying or downloading tracks does not deny the artist (or record company) the ABILITY to sell the work. They still can and still do. If you downloaded it because your utility for the product is far below the price fixing scheme the labels sell at, then you have denied them nothing because you would never have bought it in the first place. This is not theft, it MAY be copyright infringement, and yes there is a huge difference. I say may be copyright infringement because copyright is there to prevent someone from SELLING the artist's work without permission, not to prevent anyone from making copies, or sharing the cd with friends, or giving it away. There is a massive distinction there that many of you rule-mongering half-wits miss, and the RIAA is desperately trying to change. The basic problem here is a well established and well documented phenomenon called a black market. Black markets exist ONLY in market inequities. The labels have formed a CARTEL through the RIAA and are COLLUDING to act as a monopolist. The DOJ has already convicted them once for price fixing, but in typical DOJ-save-corporations-mentality has not punished them at all, much like the Microsoft case. So if the music industry would give in to MARKET pressure and give the consumer what they want: lower prices and online distribution, then they would be massively profitable again rather than just merely monstrously profitable. Until the music companies compete against each other and become responsive to market conditions, a black market will thrive and users will exercise their most powerful weapon: the right NOT to buy what they're selling.

    14. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      I'd like you to meet my freind logic. He's a stoic little fellow, but he has some really interesing things to say, and they make a lot of sense. Like if the money in your account was stolen, you have been deprived of the money, and being deprived of something is under his definition of stealing.. Perhaps a better example would be if he made a copy of your account, so he had just as much money as you, but you don't have any less money. But then your childish arguement falls apart.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    15. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by killmenow · · Score: 1

      The bits in the banks computers are not my money. They are records. Just like paper records before them. They indicate that a real object somewhere belongs to me. Altering them so they say a real object somewhere belongs to someone else deprives me of that real object.

      The bits in an MP3 represent sound. They do not represent a record of ownership of the music.

      If someone copies the records in the bank that says I have X number of dollars, I still have X number of dollars. I couldn't care less. They aren't stealing them from me.

      If I change the music stores computers to say whenever they buy those CDs to send the money to me instead of RIAA or some record label, that'd be analogous to your bank reference, and thusly would be stealing.

    16. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by lsdino · · Score: 1

      I agree the bits in the banks computer are your money - was obvious from my assertion you would cry foul when somebody played with them.

      But in exactly the same way, the bits that hold the pirated MP3 music are EVERY bit as tangible to the authors and copyright holders as is YOUR money. Both are totally intangable assets of value to the real owners.


      The better money analogy is counterfeiting. If you produce money which is identical to real money you are depriving no one of anything. In the US at least, money is not backed by gold. So it really represents nothing. It is artificially priced due to it's scarcity. Music is artificially priced due to it's scarcity. The only thing that keeps either of any value is stopping illegal reproduction.

      "But if I didn't counterfeit that money I would have just bought a smaller house! I could live without it!"

      If a money supply could be reproduced illegally without checks, it's value would be zero. The same principle applies to intellectual property.

      Now, someone will probably say by copying money you will make everyone lose a little bit of value. But this is exactly what many people want to happen with music. Many complain it costs too much. Pirating it will certainly solve that problem by decreasing it's value.

    17. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by chefren · · Score: 1
      When you make a copy of some digital bits that you only are willing to copy precisely because it costs you next to nothing, and honestly (there's the rub) would rather do without if it cost you more, you do not deprive anyone of anything.

      Am I to understand this that downloading music illegally is "kinda legal" as long as you don't like the music you download and thus would never have bought that piece of music? What a bunch of crap. You download music because you don't want to cough up the cash and know that you'll never get caught. If it's about "try before you buy" you should look for a better music store, one that allows you to listen to any record in the shop (except maybe that 1000 mint condition 1950s collector's vinyl they have on the wall) before buying purchasing it. Thinking like you makes software piracy, sneaking into the movies, not paying your bus tickets and other similar things "kinda legal" as long as you state that you would never have paid for it anyway, so what's the harm?

    18. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      You say "Your bank-robber analogy is utterly wrong. The bank robber has denied you something: your assets. Once he takes them, those assets are not there and you cannot use them. Copying or record company) the ABILITY to sell the work. They still can and still do."

      The bank robber stole a few days of your work, in the form of money - that does not deny you YOUR ability to sell your work either. So if a robber takes your money, or one or more of your sales, it's the same thing - each party had THEIR property stolen. Legally, and morally.

    19. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      All analogies have some flaw because they do not represent exactly the identical situation. The critial point here is that a music artist that has one copy of his work stolen is out some portion of the payment for his work. Anyone who has part of their bank account stolen is out of some portion of the payment they recieved for their work. The analogy was formed because of a flawed statement that electronic bits have no value, I respond with the arguement that virtual money and virtual music bits both represent a real asset of value to the rightful owners - legally and morally. Just because they are represented in bits, rather than physical paper doesn't mater a bit.

    20. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      Many of us seldom handle paper money any more, in fact the vast majority of all "money" transactions do not actually use real government minted money anymore. The bits in the bank are the only money.

      Likewise the sale of music has historically been physical, just like the handling of physical money. As we move into the electronic age, with computer bits for tangible assets, then a sale no longer is the replication of a physical CD, but the replication of the bits that represent the product. In this environment, unauthorized replication of the bits, is absolutely no differnet than unauthorized replication of a physical CD or record or tape. Your right to ownership of one copy hinges on your purchasing the right to make one copy (plus whatever fair use copies) - and that right is documents as a record of ownership, just as your right of ownership to the virtual bank money.

      If someone transfers your bank account, they have stolen one or more units of payment for work you have done. If someone illegally distributes an artists work, they are depriving that artist (or other owner of the work) of one or more dollars of revenue for their work.

      If you go back a few levels you will note that the poster I responded stated that bits had no value ... in an electronic paperless world, bits do have value ... both as money, and as real product.

    21. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This guy's a troll.

      The bank's bits represent OWNERSHIP of a finite item - the money backed by the full faith and trust of the gov't.

      If you duplicate the bits, it doesn't hurt the acount holder or the bank. Napstering mp3's doesn't erase the original recording, or any other copy of it. Thus there is no actual harm done. Your interpretation that it does is as twisted as suggestion buying a Honda is stealing from BMW because BMW would have got $20,000 more if you bought their auto.

    22. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think the argument was that bits have no value, and therefore cannot be stolen. It was that music bits have far less value than their rightful owners ascribe to them. And, that the record company's may be better off by paying attention to the market, rather than attempting to control the market. When selling a product, the value the consumer ascribes to it is just as or more important that the value the rightful owner ascribes to it.

      If I give away donuts at the office, am I stealing from the donut shop? How about if I give away donut recipies? Both of these actions could deprive the donut shop of potential sales. I could even drive them out of business by giving the donuts away right outside their door. But is that stealing? It might not be nice. It might not be fair. But, I don't think it is stealing. Stealing customers maybe, but that in most cases is legal. If they have an exclusive distribution contract with my place of business, I may be violating some law or contract, but I still don't think it is stealing.

      Folk who download music are not really getting it for free. They are investing money in equiptment, access fees, and time. In fact, if you factor in the time, for most it would be cheaper to go buy the CD rather seach for and download all of the files.

      There is money to be made in shifting that investment, and the recording companies are ignoring it. Rather than whining, they should realize that they are getting a hell of a lot of free marketing, and focus on how to get their cut of this new distribution channel. They could be saying "hey, now our artists are getting heard by millions of people, and we don't even have to bribe radio stations!"

      I haven't ever heard them mention how much they are saving in terms of (new listener)/(marketing dollar). But then, that "potential profit" is not the one they are interested in.

      No one is ever guaranteed thier potential profits. No one is guaranteed to get the value they ascribe to their work. You get the value the market ascribes to your work, or you don't sell. At least, in a working market.

      Potential profit is profit you might have if the world were different. While attempting to change the world may maximize your profit some times. In general it seems wiser to run your business in the real world, and take advantage of the opportunites that exist. Instead, they are attempting to legislate those opportunities out of existance.

    23. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by killmenow · · Score: 1
      Am I to understand this that downloading music illegally is "kinda legal" as long as you don't like the music you download and thus would never have bought that piece of music?
      Only if you understand wrong. I clearly stated that the copier likes it. Why the hell copy it if you don't like it? The point is the value associated with it. If the record company wants to say its value is $15, fine. If someone else believes it's worth $1, that's the value they apply to it...and if they can't get it for that amount or less, they'll do without. If a black market exists that lets them get it for $1, they are not robbing the music industry of $15. They would never buy it at $15 because it's only worth $1 to them.

      As for sneaking into movies, etc., well if you sneak into a movie, you are possibly depriving the theatre of a sale of the seat you occupy to someone willing to pay...if the theatre is half-empty when you sneak in, and you're sneaking in not because you wanted to save the $8 for popcorn or whatever but perhaps because you haven't got the money, what is the harm? You're not hurting anyone and you accept the risk that if you get caught, you get thrown out. Big deal.

      I think what people on the "copying is stealing" side of the argument fail to acknowledge is that with digital copying, the original is left intact. Sneaking into a movie takes a seat that would otherwise be occupied by a paying customer. Not paying your bus ticket does the same. These actions quite possibly do deprive someone of something. If I copy a song that I ain't gonna buy nowhere nohow from a friend, I am not depriving anyone of anything. The original is still intact. The company selling it can still sell it to customers who want to buy it.

      Now, if I turn around and distribute that en masse to a bunch of strangers, I may be depriving someone of something because I have no way of knowing if those people would go buy that CD or not if I hadn't let them download it from me for free. So you see, I think there is a clear distinction between copying and distributing.

      Also, I sense there's disdain that the argument I make gets into "intent" on the part of the downloader/copier. You seem to think I'm full of crap because I think intent has a lot to do with it. Well, a lot of laws on the books in a lot of countries deal with intent. You can do many a thing and if intent to do harm is not shown, it may not be considered a crime by the courts. So don't tell me intent is a bullshit argument. It's all over lawbooks and is obviously a globally understood principle of ethics.

      And as for "try-before-buy", forgive me if I don't have the energy to trapse through a music store with my three kids, trying to get them to sit still for an hour while I listen to a CD before I decide whether it's worth the purchase. It ain't gonna happen. If I can download it or (even better) borrow it from a friend and listen to it on my way to/from work over a couple of days, I can decide whether to buy it or not without killing my children. There are fewer and fewer music stores that will let you return opened materials for a cash refund and I've found a perfectly acceptable (to me) alternative way of finding things to try before I buy that doesn't involve being hassled by store clerks and managers only to receive in-store credit.

      I guess, overall, what I'm saying is that just like before "the digital age" when music was on cassettes, you could occassionally borrow and copy a friend's cassette, or even tape songs off the radio (I've done it) and there is no harm done. The music industry even got acclimated to it and only get their panties in a bunch when the *scale* of it gets big. So I would not share my music with anyone I didn't know personally offline because as much as people say people you know online are "friends" you can't really know someone until you've been around them physically for a while. And you can't really measure the intent of strangers...and intent matters.

      But I don't think me ripping a track off my friend's CD is any more wrong than taping a song off the radio.

      Feel free to call me crazy.
    24. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by killmenow · · Score: 1
      Many of us seldom handle paper money any more, in fact the vast majority of all "money" transactions do not actually use real government minted money anymore. The bits in the bank are the only money.
      I respectfully disagree. Even paper money and coins are faux representations of gold sitting in Fort Knox. Well, actually, it started out that way, but the dollar is not really based on the value of gold anymore. It's more the promise of the US government to honor the amount printed on the paper.

      At any rate, the bits themselves have no intrinsic value. And again, if someone alters the bank records to indicate the money I'm supposed to have belongs to them, they are altering the original. If they copy it such that they now have their own copy of the records that say some money belongs to me, it does no harm.
    25. Re:The why rip and collect it if so bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shockingly lame argument. IP >is a more complex issue than you are trying to make it.

      You can't believe your comparison (duplicating digital objects v. altering digital bank records) is valid. No point addressing that.

      How fast did you drive to work this morning? Do you think the music industry is having its rights violated by PRICE PRESSURE? Genius.

  42. Finally? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Finally what?

    Slate isnt exactly mass media.

    this isnt finally anything .. this isnt new .. we all know music companies fucked themselves .. and this article isnt going to change anyuone minds or inform more people. Not the fault of the article, but sad fact is that slate is read by tech savvy people who are already on our side and/or know about all the p2p issues anyway.

  43. Sounds like my daughter by gregw51 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    She likes the teen-pop stuff, but it doesn't stick. She figures out that the new album from band A sounds just like their last album, so she moves on. Pretty much the same stuff with a slightly different twist, but she sure wants a lot fewer CD's now than she did a year ago.

  44. I think you are correct. by InTenCity · · Score: 1

    It costs a lot of money to manufacture a CD, but it would cost the music industry very little to sell downloads of there music. If they sold there songs at say $.50 to $.30 USD for one downloaded song, they would probably sell a lot of music.

    1. Re:I think you are correct. by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      It costs a lot of money to manufacture a CD...

      Yeah, if you think $0.50 is a lot of money - and I've seen that kind of pricing in quantities of a few thousand, I can only guess how low it gets if you press millions.

      Perhaps you meant to include the cost of recording, mixing, mastering, graphic design, and such, but those are one-time expenditures and get spread over all the CDs, adding another fraction of a dollar to the cost (at least for major labels).

      That said, you're probably right that folks would be willing to pay $0.50/song for downloads, but only if none of their friends had already downloaded it and copied it for them.

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
    2. Re:I think you are correct. by ripewithdecay · · Score: 0

      You cheap piece of shit, it takes 50 -cents- to manufacture a CD.

      And probably not even that!

  45. Don't get it by PEdelman · · Score: 1

    I still dont get it; everybody and their dog downloads music and burns it on CD instead of buying it in the store. Yet, every story here on \. claims that the drop in CD sales is not caused by illegally copying and how bad the RIAA is (sure, the RIAA is bad). Could somebody please explain this to me -- I've never followed economy class, but to me all the music industry bashing just sounds like some crappy arguments to cover the fact that file sharing is just convenient (in many ways, not just economically).

    --
    Like science? Comics? Wicked...
    Funny By Nature
    1. Re:Don't get it by Tiny+Elvis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your premise is flawed: "everybody and their dog downloads music and burns it on CD instead of buying it in the store."

      Some people download only. Other people download to find new music, which they then purchase. Personally I have bought a lot of CDs because I downloaded music from a band I read about first. In any case the situation is much more complex than you portray, so don't act so confused when it doesn't add up.

    2. Re:Don't get it by RatBastard · · Score: 1

      The reason you don't get it is because your basic assumption is wrong. Not "everyone and their dog" downloads music. Sure, a lot of college kids do (and they swapped cassette tapes before Napster came along), but most people do not.

      CD sales are fown for three basic reaons:
      1: Most newer music is crap.
      2: CD prices are too high.
      3: The US ecomony is in the shithole.

      Items two and three would decrease CD sales even if number one was not true.

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    3. Re:Don't get it by Bartab · · Score: 2

      Wrong.

      I have never burned a single CD of music I have downloaded. In fact, every piece of music that I've downloaded and since kept have been added to my list of CDs to purchase. As many of these have been out of print for awhile and of limited quantity to begin with, that can sometimes take time. I am, however, on a complete RIAA boycott and while my CD purchases have gone up over a hundred fold in the last two years, none of it has been published by a member of RIAA.

      I suspect that my actions more represent the majority than your "everybody and their dog" comment. Neither, of course, are very accurate.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    4. Re: Don't get it by Black+Parrot · · Score: 2


      > I still dont get it; everybody and their dog downloads music and burns it on CD instead of buying it in the store. Yet, every story here on \. claims that the drop in CD sales is not caused by illegally copying and how bad the RIAA is (sure, the RIAA is bad). Could somebody please explain this to me -- I've never followed economy class, but to me all the music industry bashing just sounds like some crappy arguments to cover the fact that file sharing is just convenient (in many ways, not just economically).

      It's never safe to assume that everyone on Slashdot has the same motive, but I suspect that for some of us it's merely an expression of rage at the RIAA for the crappification of the commercial music scene, with their facile attempt to pin the blame on someone else being seen as insult added to injury.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    5. Re:Don't get it by legojenn · · Score: 2, Informative

      I just wonder if CD sales are also down because people^H^H^H^H^H^H consumers are getting music delivered to them in other ways than file sharing or purchase. On my ExpressVu satellite receiver, I get 30 audio channels and I do listen sometimes to the 80s, folk, jazz and classical channels, and I'm sure the record companies are not licencing the broadcast of the music for free.

      I do this is mostly because radio sucks, but it is annoying to go to a record store, indy or chain, and just not be inspired to make even one purchase.

      Other than via satellite receivers, there must be other ways that people are listening to music that are not traditional. Internet radio, digital radio etc....

      --
      I make a reasonable middle-class wage by going to work and not spamming blogs with scams.
    6. Re:Don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While some people here on /. do download and rip, many others have this weird thing called "ethics." We believe the artists should be compensated and even the companys that publish them deserve a fair profit. "Fair" being a key issue here. They seem to be getting more than a fair profit but let that pass for now.

      My real complaint is that so far the music industry has done their best to reject new technologies rather than embracing them. It would be so nice to be able to legally download music, try it, and, if it's something worth keeping, pay for it. Pay a reasonable amount. So far, the big five are too afraid of digital music to give us a legal way to do the smart, convenient thing.

      Last night I perused listen.com's latest offering: a service called rhapsody. It's a subscription based streaming service. They are headed in the right direction. This is what I'm looking for. I am unhappy with the RIAA because they refuse to recognize reality: they are selling schlock at too high a price in an old format. Change a few of these variables and you might sell more product.

      One more point, and I think it may be common here. There are at least five CDs I would run to the store and buy today if they were available. (Two by Warren Zevon, two by Sniff 'n' the Tears, and one by Brownsville Station, since you ask.) Trouble is, I can't buy them since they are not making them. If the industry embraced a digital, over-the-net product delivery mechanism, they could afford to allow people access to less hot-selling stuff that people are willing to buy.

    7. Re:Don't get it by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 2
      "Other people download to find new music, which they then purchase. Personally I have bought a lot of CDs because I downloaded music from a band I read about first."

      I think that this is part of the whole point. The RIAA does not like it because they don't control the distribution, and it's one brick in the wall between them and control of their profits.

      I also have a whole bunch of CDs that I bought because of hearing the artists when I downloaded their tunes. Populations now are so diverse that most people simply can't find anything worth listening to on mainstream TV or HITMIX 99 radio. This is why I find online samlers from unknown artists and listen to community radio stations. Occasionally, I hear something I like and take note, then look the CD up at Sam's because HMV never seems to have what I want. (For radio, I record the time it played and then look at the station's web site and find what was on their playlist at that time.)

  46. If the artist shows up on a lunchbox ... by Raiford · · Score: 1
    Here's the indication that you have a weak product. If the artist shows up on a kids lunchbox you will eventually lose money. This will probably occur after the initial flash. The truth comes out that there is no real talent there and your big product has no sound market base. The base will shift to the next big no talent flash.

    Here is the big difference in today's music world compared to the past: past markets were more stable because you promoted talent and not product. Additionally, your target audience had an average age > 13 years old.

    --
    "player 4 hit player 1 with 0 stroms"
  47. Why I hate the RIAA and loved Napster by Angus+McNitt · · Score: 1

    I don't like the music industry. I know that is an amazingly profound statement, but the majority of bands I like and music I like get suppressed by the US record lables. Most of the indie bands I like now publish mp3 (or ogg) not audio cds and just request donations for studio time. I loved napster 'cause it gave these bands national or international exposure.

    Sometimes I wonder if they, RIAA, feared that more. They are on such a power trip, that the lost or degradation of that power was a bigger threat to their way of life than lost profits. If bands could get direct access to the fans, without needing the corporate ties to get an album out and get it airtime, why bother?

    --
    "To Do Is To Be" - Socrates, "To Be Is To Do" - Sartre, "Do Be Do Be Do" - Sinatra
  48. Napster not to Blame by gn08979 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Hmmmmmmmm. I could buy the Shrek soundtrack for $19 or I could buy the Shrek DVD for the same $19. Whats wrong here? Seems we get a lot more content on the DVD. I can download movies from the net, why isn't that hurting the studios? Perhaps, and this is just a hunch.......there are far fewer stupid people willing to buy the crap that the record companies are trying to shove down out throats? Could it have anything to do with content? Now I now that there are some DVD's that I just "must have" the first week they are out. I can't remember the last time I anticipated such a CD (OK, I bought the last Chili Peppers CD on the first day it was out, BUT, that is partially because Best Buy sould it for $13 for the first day of release only)

    1. Re:Napster not to Blame by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Hmmmmmmmm. I could buy the Shrek soundtrack for $19 or I could buy the Shrek DVD for the same $19. Whats wrong here? Seems we get a lot more content on the DVD.

      I've seen this argument 4 times today. You know what the end result will be, if we relentlessly point out this disparity? $50 DVDs. :)
    2. Re:Napster not to Blame by killmenow · · Score: 1
      I could buy the Shrek soundtrack for $19 or I could buy the Shrek DVD for the same $19.
      Example:
      • I purchased the Moulin Rouge DVD when it came out.
      • I *downloaded* the Moulin Rouge Soundtrack
      • Now I know the soundtrack is not to my liking
      • Now I will rip the audio from the DVD and make my own freaking soundtrack with the songs I want
      This was the first album I downloaded off the net and I'm glad I have that "try-before-buy" option. Otherwise, I'd have a CD that I would be unhappy with that I couldn't return.

      As it is, I get to make my own Soundtrack from the DVD and not only will I get what I want without paying for the soundtrack CD, it will be more fun than shopping.
    3. Re:Napster not to Blame by drsoran · · Score: 1

      I can download movies from the net, why isn't that hurting the studios?

      15 songs in MP3 format downloaded from P2P network would be about 60-80 megs at around 160Kbps. 2 hour movie downloaded in DivX format in any decent quality would be about 1500 megs. Even at 1.5 Mbps DSL speeds that takes quite awhile to download. In fact, I'd be more willing to just pop over to the store and plunk down the $20 to get the DVD than sit and wait hours for a low-quality rip to download. It all comes down to how convenient it is to get the information into a quality usable state. Ripping a CD and converting it to MP3 takes hardly any time at all. Ripping a DVD and converting it to DivX could take up to 6-8 hours.

  49. the economy is down in general... by osterday · · Score: 1

    i realize that there are a few posts like this, but anyway...

    with the economy on the down side and unemployment on the rise and in the middle of a "recession", doesn't it make sense that there is less disposable income out there so sales will be down? look at all the layoffs, etc. does the music industry think it's immune to the world around them? i work for a .com still in start up mode struggling to stay afloat. i used to buy cds all the time. recently i think i've only bought three cds in the last six months and not many more in the last year or so. also, most of the music coming out isn't as good as the stuff i can _listen_ to on the 'net. i'm sure there is some impact of the p2p networks that has hit the music industry - maybe now they'll take notice of us - the music listeners.

  50. When it comes to music.... by Query_Squidier · · Score: 1

    Radiohead. Most intelligent, gloriously groovy music in existence. Sorry for the off-topic, had to retort to Britney Spears... ack.

  51. You're both right by xant · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not just new music, but it is caused by the music industry. Haven't you ever noticed how frequently good bands break up and reform into other, newer good bands? Personal conflicts with the other band members are usually cited as the reason for the breakup, but the truth is good bands break up because they get bored doing the same old shit, and they need fresh blood and fresh directions to keep making good music. Band breakups sometimes result in less good music, but I think the new (and different) bands that result are better for music quality on the whole. Think of it as sexual reproduction for music; more genes being passed around means more advantageous adaptations.

    Yet at the same time, the music industry wants bands like Aerosmith to stay together for album after ass-like album, and usually, they have legal language in the contracts to enforce it for the first few albums. (After those few, if a band is still popular, they may have the clout to be able to write their own contracts. But they're usually dead by then.)

    With very few exceptions, bands that have been around forever suck because they've been around forever, and their sound is tired and dead. But people keep buying their albums, as you just said yourself. The music industry, including the artists, realizes this: big name = more sales. New artists have little choice in the matter but to stay together. Big artists who get greedy try to stay together; big artists who care about the quality of their music go on to try different things. Those different things may not sell as well, but they sound better.

    --
    It's rare that you're presented with a knob whose only two positions are Make History and Flee Your Glorious Destiny.
    1. Re:You're both right by electroniceric · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're on to two good things here:
      but the truth is good bands break up because they get bored doing the same old shit, and they need fresh blood and fresh directions to keep making good music. Band breakups sometimes result in less good music, but I think the new (and different) bands that result are better for music quality on the whole.

      Absolutely, but here's the $64 billion question:
      Do you want to bother dealing with the new bands' sounds? Recall that this means:
      a) some of their albums will suck. Music is art, not craft or science, and that means like in baseball, if you bat above .300, you're pretty a prodigious artist. But as an out-in-front consumer it means that you have to acquire 3* as much music as you expect to keep.
      b) you have to get accustomed to a new sound. This sounds lame and staid, but how often have you dismissed an album only to come back to it later and discover that you can really get into it? This is why pump the same songs over the radio works - often people's resistance to a song is grounded in not liking something new.
      c) There seem to be a lot of people who don't care that much, they just want some kinda music for their days. And they've got it - music is more ubiquitous and commoditized than ever. The record companies may want every band to be a U2, but they'll probably settle for a Cypress Hill.

      You also pointed out:

      But people keep buying their albums, as you just said yourself. The music industry, including the artists, realizes this: big name = more sales.


      This is brand development, the lifeblood of any consumer-driven corporation (hell, just about any corporation). In a market of infinite choices, what do people want: a lot of them want a stable choice that they can trust - hence the brand relationship. The more stable and reliable the conneciton between the brand and the product, the more durable it will be. Anyone who's reading this knows exactly what a McDonalds hamburger tastes like - the taste is a brand. The much-loved Microsoft is probably one of the most brilliant branding engines of all times - you can recognize a Microsoft program from 50 miles away, and damn if they don't all work the same.

      Recording mavens are businesspoeople, and they're just using the standard things they learned in business school. Problem for us and for them is, people are incredibly fickle when it comes to music, (for reasons I don't really understand, or articulate, but I surmise have a lot to do with how strongly popular music and identity are related in modern society) so building a brand is counterproductive. Until someone comes up with another way to describe building a stable place in a fickle market, these guys are gonna be hammering the square peg into the round hole. The question is, who's got the clout to do build a new way of doing thigs? Could actually be that the consumers refragment this market on their own - that'd be a damn good historical precedent. I ain't holdin my breath tho.

    2. Re:You're both right by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      You wouldn't happen to be talking about Metallica, would you?

    3. Re:You're both right by Prior+Restraint · · Score: 2

      ...you can recognize a Microsoft program from 50 miles away, and damn if they don't all work the same.

      Let's see... I could be an offtopic troll and say, "yeah, they do work the same way: not at all!", but I believe I shall pass.

      Actually, the funny thing is, just earlier today, I was complaining to a co-worker that MS programs don't all work the same way. I'll concede that nearly all products within the same "generation" tend to work the same, but there are a Hell of a lot of gratuitous changes made between successive versions of the same product, especially to the widget set.

      </rant>
  52. Heh...Ad at the "bottom"... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone else notice the Joranda ad at the bottom of the article?

    Jornada 568 Personal Digital Ass
    $549.95
    Meetings, appointments, projects, and deadlinessometimes its hard keeping it all together. Organizing isnt the issueits about...
    Dell
    Up to 20% off everything you ...

    Wow! My own Personal Digital Ass! I'm *so* excited!

  53. Color me unimpressed by shaldannon · · Score: 2

    OK so we got a story on Slate. Slashdot says this all the time. Big Woop.

    Let me know when it shows up in Business Week, the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, or some of Jack Valenti's ti^Hrade mags.

    The issue really isn't about "someone else just joined our bandwagon." It's about who just joined your bandwagon, and if the who doesn't include the folks making, marketing, and distributing the music, then it really doesn't make a whole hill of beans worth of difference, does it?

    --


    What is your Slash Rating?
    1. Re:Color me unimpressed by rmohr02 · · Score: 3, Funny
      Let me know when it shows up in...USA Today
      Ok.
    2. Re:Color me unimpressed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      .. read the comments. Above someone said a similar article was in USA Today on June 5.

    3. Re:Color me unimpressed by reallocate · · Score: 2

      >> if the who doesn't include the folks making, marketing, and distributing the music..."

      Add in the people who are really in charge here -- Congress -- and you're on your way.

      --
      -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
    4. Re:Color me unimpressed by dragoncortez · · Score: 1

      something was printed in USA Today. there's a link a number of posts back...

      --
      Making stupid comments so you don't have to.
    5. Re:Color me unimpressed by Utopia · · Score: 1

      May be you are new to Slate.
      But Slate has a bigger reader audience than slashdot, salon put together.

    6. Re:Color me unimpressed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's also more than a little Slashdot revisionism going on here.

      Remember the stories of a few years ago? Slashdot editors consistently claimed that the use of p2p software actually increased CD sales.

      Now that CD sales have actually decreased, their spin has changed to "p2p doesn't affect CD sales."

      In my opinion, this should have been their position from the start. By changing their interpretation of the data to get whatever results are most favorable to their position, they have really discredited themselves, (to me, if to no one else).

  54. Innovation is still out there... by Kraegar · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Maybe the Big 5 will learn from people like Ani Difranco - new, original, heartfelt music. She has her own label, Rightease Babe and is doing quite well in both CD sales and profits.

    She even does things like put *full* sample tracks on her website. *gasp*

    And her sales and profits climb...

    And her music continues to be her own...

    And her music continues to kick ass.

    Are you reading, RIAA?

    1. Re:Innovation is still out there... by mochan_s · · Score: 1

      You cannot base your entire theory on 1 example!!!!

    2. Re:Innovation is still out there... by Kraegar · · Score: 2

      That one example was a label that has several artists on it, effectively making it not just several examples, but one damned good one. Follow the link.

    3. Re:Innovation is still out there... by tmark · · Score: 3, Informative

      Give me a break. Someone puts out a record, and has free downloads on her website, and is making money, and THAT is supposed to be an indictment of whatever the RIAA is or is not trying to do ? For all we know, she would sell MORE records if she had a big music company pushing her with the marketing force that only a big music company has. I'm not saying she would or not, but my point is that ONE (or two, or ten) EXAMPLE(s) DOES NOT THE ARGUMENT MAKE.

    4. Re:Innovation is still out there... by Kraegar · · Score: 2

      Gah, I suck at spelling. How the hell did "Righteaous Babe" Turn into "Rightease Babe"? Sorry Ani!

    5. Re:Innovation is still out there... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      according to RIAA.com, Righteous Babe Records is a RIAA member.

      curiouser and curiouser...

    6. Re:Innovation is still out there... by DeComposer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, I must laud her for trying new things, both musically and culturally, even if I do find her worldview to be so bleak as to depress an entire generation into suicide. Are there any bands/artists who don't view life as a festering sore who are doing something similar? Is there a proper web forum for fresh acts to present their product? A web site that recognizes MP3's for what they really are: Promotional Tools???

      --


      Karma
    7. Re:Innovation is still out there... by cpeterso · · Score: 2

      Rightease Babe? that is quite a Freudian slip! ;-)

    8. Re:Innovation is still out there... by BryanL · · Score: 0

      "Are you reading, RIAA?"

      Actually they are, and it makes them very scared. Hence they tighten their grip on the distribution channels.

    9. Re:Innovation is still out there... by alphaCoward · · Score: 1

      If you'd read anything about Ani you may understand that she is not obsessed about sales or money, she wants to make / distribute good music for fans that will appreciate it, not to bribe fans into liking her by a bunch of advertising and sexy girls in film clips. Ani hasn't made film clips for her songs for a long time, i think she feels that it makes her music trivial.

      Point is, she doesn't need a porno film clip to make her music sell!

      My point is, if you want to look a porn while listening to music, put a cd on and get on the internet....

    10. Re:Innovation is still out there... by narftrek · · Score: 1

      Sorry but I am hard pressed to find ANYTHING fresh & innovating about her music. As a matter of fact it sounds like more Bonnie Raitt/Sheryl Crow country/rock shit. I am sure it's what she loves and so I can't knock her for that but as for me, kicks ass it DOES NOT. BTW did anyone else notice how depressing sounding it was...hell I didn't even pay attention to all the words and it still made me want to lie down and die....

    11. Re:Innovation is still out there... by alphaCoward · · Score: 1

      Also, her CD's state that: "Unauthorized duplication, while sometimes necessary, is never as good as the real thing." as opposed to the normal copyright clauses found on other CDs

    12. Re:Innovation is still out there... by BollocksToThis · · Score: 1

      Gah, I suck at spelling. How the hell did "Righteaous Babe" Turn into "Rightease Babe"? Sorry Ani!

      Hey, at least you noticed... and the second mistake makes it even funnier!

      --
      This sig is part of your complete breakfast.
    13. Re:Innovation is still out there... by AftanGustur · · Score: 2


      Someone puts out a record, and has free downloads on her website, and is making money, and THAT is supposed to be an indictment of whatever the RIAA is or is not trying to do

      RIAA's strongest claim is that easily downloadable music, hurts sales. And even though it's not a scientific study, at least we have a real-world-example here. Personally I think Eminem's last album was also a good example of that claim's nonsense.

      --
      echo '[q]sa[ln0=aln80~Psnlbx]16isb572CCB9AE9DB03273snlbxq' |dc
    14. Re:Innovation is still out there... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The funniest part is that his second mistake is probably not a typo. Must not be a fan of the Righteous Brothers...

    15. Re:Innovation is still out there... by mother_superius · · Score: 1

      She is IN the damn RIAA.

      Havoc Records is a great label from Minneapolis with tons of great bands, and it allows total creative control by artists and minimal profit margins. I own probably 30 records from this label. (havocrex.com)

    16. Re:Innovation is still out there... by Zoop · · Score: 2

      Thanks for that link. Now I feel much better about buying progressive rock, as none of the labels I listen to (except for the big 70's acts) are on there!!!!

      Yes, I can buy new music again!

    17. Re:Innovation is still out there... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

      Several known artists have complained about how most of them are in perpetual debt with the record companies to pay for the production of their next album.

      Examples like this make the argument in my book.

      --
      IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  55. Not again by porkface · · Score: 1

    Everyone is correct to say that there was a problem and that something had to be done. That does not make Napster et al right. It was widespread looting. There is a system folks. Follow it or lose it.

    1. Re:Not again by WhiteKnight07 · · Score: 1

      The current system (RIAA, MPAA, ect...) is corrupt, bloated, and no longer needed. It must be torn down and rebuilt. A little revolution, now and then, is a healthy thing.

      --


      We're going to make information free Mr. Anderson, whether you like it, or not.
    2. Re:Not again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was this the "Put out something people want at a price they agree with and make a profit" system you were referring to? Who's losing what here again?

  56. A half-done article? by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 3, Insightful
    They seemed to start to go in the direction.. they talked about how MTV, for example, managed to launch the video-based British (re)invasion by providing an avenue for a 'different' musical style to enter the market, and how the current market has become monopolized and bland.

    They didn't however, go the the next stage of the argument -- that P2P networks have provided an avenue for (currently) non-mainstream artists to get exposure and market share.

    They also seem to miss the question of whether the rise and fall of Napster coincided with the rise and fall of CD purchases. These seemed like obvious next steps for the article, but then it just seemed to .... stop.

    --
    Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    1. Re:A half-done article? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Napster didn't help me discover shit. Because you have to search by name, it's hard to discover anything you hadn't heard of. Shoutcast and other internet radio were what turned me on to hundreds of new groups.

  57. Re: um, no by subgeek · · Score: 2

    you obviously aren't involved in downloading music and never really were.

    sure the kids download stuff instead of buying it, but they wouldn't buy as many anyway. sure when people were introduced to napster, they downloaded tons of music. i'll bet most of it is a listened once or twice and never touched again. i wouldn't buy a cd i would only listen to once or twice.

    but i have downloaded music. if i like a song or a band, i buy the cd. if i don't like it, i erase it. it's more of a try before you buy thing than not paying at all.

    i hope all of the corporate propaganda tasted good when you swallowed it all.

    on an aside, it would be interesting to see how the sales of blank cassette tapes have changed since the sales of blank cd media has increased. i'd like to see them compared on a minutes of storage basis, as well as dollars.

    --
    you probably shouldn't have read this.
  58. Don't know if it counts... by JasonMaggini · · Score: 1

    ..But I haven't bought a *new* CD in ages.. either by way of half.com or the local megachain, I stick to used.
    If enough people are doing that, maybe it is taking a bite out of sales.
    Of course the RIAA is no doubt trying to weasel in on that, too...
    Plus, as noted above, music as of late is proving Sturgeon's Law - 90% of everything is [crud|crap].

  59. Re:First Strong Bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    s/First Strong Bad/you suck ass, motherfucker/;
    while (1) {
    print "you also lick my nutsack\n"
    }
    unpack( "My_Dick", "into your mouth" ) and
    do { "lick my nuts again" }
    while you_lick_my_nuts_just_once_more();

  60. Things change by Checkered+Daemon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When I was a kid back in the late '60s (yeah, I AM that old) everybody wanted a guitar, or drums, or a PA. We all wanted to be rock stars.

    Now, instead of instruments, all the kids I hang out with are buying mixing decks. They all want to be club DJs.

    They play four hour sets of techno. House, trance, bass&drums, whatever. It's got no lyrics. It's got no melody. It's got a GREAT groove. And without a melody, or lyrics, it's REALLY HARD to copyright. I like a lot of it.

    They've done it again. Rock, punk, whatever it takes to take the music back from the corporations. The kids are alright.

    Fuck the RIAA. Just wait, they WILL try to copyright 120 beats per minute.

    1. Re:Things change by reallocate · · Score: 2

      I'm from the same slice of the demographic pie, and my own music buying days wound down a long time ago. Seems apparent to me that pop entertainment sales will closely track alongside the the size of the adolescent and under 25 (or so) crowd. The population of the U.S. is getting older, so I'm not surprised to see sales drop.

      Another reason for reduced sales might just be too much production. If pop entertainment isn't almost entirely derivative, I don't know what is. Keep trying to sell the same thing over and over, and even the pre-puberty crowd will pick up on it.

      --
      -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  61. What about people would would want to steal mp3's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but are too stupid?

  62. Napster not to blame: I am (n/t) by sjonke · · Score: 1

    n/t

    --
    --- What?
  63. RIAA: Biting the hand that feeds you by thorjansen · · Score: 1

    By ferociously going after Napster and consumers of other P2P technologies, the music and movie industry has "succeeded" only in polarizing the buying public and fragmenting their market even further. They can try to outlaw pirating and enforce the laws against illegal copying and distribution of copyrighted material, but they're ultimately doomed to fail. They're just going to piss off legitimate buyers with technologies that sacrifice quality and their ability to legitimately archive their media, and will drive illegal traders further underground where they can't be found. In the end, they're just pissing everyone off, making them as much an ogre in the marketplace as Microsoft.

  64. lOLoLOLOLo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lOLoLOLOLoLolololoLOLololoLoLoLOlOlOLOLOLoLoloLoLo lOLololoLOlOloLoLololOLoloLOLolOlOlOLoLoLoloLOLOlo lolOLOloLoloLoLoL!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11

    lament sux!!!

    1. Re:lOLoLOLOLo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      laments moderation points are so fat they has to buy two tickets ehn going to the movies.

  65. How to run your business into the crapper by Target+Drone · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This article seems like a case study in how to ruin a business. Let's see
    1. Snub the over forty crowd that makes up 44% of your business.
    2. Make sure you stagnate so that you don't come out with anything fresh.
    3. During a recession raise your prices.
    4. Forget any lesson you might have learned from the late 70's when the industry underwent a similar crisis.
    The only thing left to do to put that final nail into your coffin is to implement some "creative accounting" practices.
    1. Re:How to run your business into the crapper by sys$manager · · Score: 1

      5. ???
      6. Profit!

    2. Re:How to run your business into the crapper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, whada'ya know? Creative accounting practices are already happening:

      http://www.stereophile.com/shownews.cgi?1420

    3. Re:How to run your business into the crapper by *xpenguin* · · Score: 1

      7. Slaughter anyone that repeats this old "joke".

    4. Re:How to run your business into the crapper by sys$manager · · Score: 1

      But it's such a perfect contextual fit!

    5. Re:How to run your business into the crapper by Faux_Pseudo · · Score: 2

      By creative accounting do you mean like when they payed Mariah Carey some 40 million dollars not to produce anything new for them?

    6. Re:How to run your business into the crapper by cburley · · Score: 1
      they payed Mariah Carey some 40 million dollars not to produce anything new

      Maybe they're just responding to market pressures?

      ;-)

      --
      Practice random senselessness and act kind of beautiful.
  66. RIAA is their own worst enemy. by johnlcallaway · · Score: 3, Interesting

    For some reason, downloading music never appealed to me. I like to browse music stores, pick up and handle CDs. But I always balked at paying over $12.00 for a cd if it wasn't a greatest hit's CD or I hadn't heard most of the songs before. I had downloaded a couple of pieces, but found it to be too much of a bother and the quality was too unpredictable. Music on the Internet?? It just wasn't worth it.

    Recent events have changed all that. I had put my CD collection on my hard drive so I could listen to them while I worked. But, through a series of events, I had to rebuild my entire system. Unfortunatly, I couldn't reinstall my purchased copy of RealPlayer/RealOne/Real and didn't want the new one because of their stupid subscription based service.

    I dumped Real and bought MusicMatch at a real store, intending to dump my CDs to my new 40GB hard drive. In the box was an offer for MusicMatch radio. I had done Winamp before, but again, the quality just wasn't there. To my surprise, I discovered that for $4 a month, I can get crisp, clear music delivered over my broadband, and was able to create my own 'stations' based on the music I liked. I could skip tracks too if I wanted. The best part was I could click on the playlist and create lists of CDs to buy later, or buy them right on the spot. Wow .. this was cool. Now, my music collection is growing a couple of CDs a month, even though I still hate paying over $12. Internet music (which I paid for) was STIMULATING me to buy CDs. It really dawned on me then how stupid RIAA is for not encouraging access to music over the Internet. I was proof that the Internet actually increase music sales.

    Then, a few days ago, RIAA announced their legal action regarding list4ever.com. Curiosity got the best of me, so I fired up Google and started looking around. Know what I discovered?? Hundreds of sites where I can download music and videos, sites I never knew about before. I still haven't downloaded anything, but now I know where to go if I want to, all thanks to RIAA.

    I never did dump my CDs to the new hard drive.....

    --
    I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
    1. Re:RIAA is their own worst enemy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it just me, or does this post reek of astroturf? :-\

    2. Re:RIAA is their own worst enemy. by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You are but a minute minority in this music world and I applaud you for that. If most people were like you Napster wouldn't die as soon as they switched to a subscription-based service and the RIAA would have absolutely no problems with p2p file sharing. The fact is, most of the music downloaders out there (of which an overwhelming majority seems to like hanging out at /.) are nothing but common thieves. I remember back in the day when Napster was still popuplar and the RIAA was suing them... how the /. users were saying "if we could download songs at $0.01 per song I'd go for it". Guess what happened now that Naspter is obliging? They all left and found themselves another p2p place to share. These petty thieves like to justify the crimes they do with any excuse that comes to mind. To me they're just as evil as what they claim RIAA is.

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    3. Re:RIAA is their own worst enemy. by The+Electric+Messiah · · Score: 1
      Yahoo has a similar service to the one you describe. Check out http://launch.yahoo.com

      I've found quite a few blues artists I've never heard of. You can skip tracks, and you can rate tracks, albums, or artists. Over time your personalized station reflects how you rate the three categories mentioned above. Plus, you can add specific artists or albums. And the quality is fine, as long as you have broadband.

      --
      "Bold as Love"
    4. Re:RIAA is their own worst enemy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > most of the music downloaders out there (of which an overwhelming majority seems to like hanging out at /.) are nothing but common thieves.

      Some are. Many are not.

      It so happens that people will find ways of fighting their abuse, typically through disobedience first. If CD's were priced effectively, Napster et. al. may never have come into being.

      There is a cost to downloading. I did exactly 5 downloads, 3 sucked, and 2 were worth hearing. No, I didn't buy the CD 'cus for $20 each the 2 tracks just weren't, anywhere, worth the price.

      If it had been $5, the story would have been different. The sad bit is, I don't see the work done by these so called "artists" to be worth a paycheck measured in the millions of dollars. I work hard too, and have a real problem paying somebody a few life's wages for such a small amount of actual work.

      Pay the artists $100K/year. Pay the RIAA exec's a similar wage. See what that does to the cost of a CD -- I'd bet you $1 I'd gladly pay that.

    5. Re:RIAA is their own worst enemy. by otmar · · Score: 1

      > http://launch.yahoo.com

      I get:
      "Sorry, we only support Netscape and Internet Explorer."

      Well, they won't get my business.

    6. Re:RIAA is their own worst enemy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, reminds me of the article about people being paid to post positive comments on websites!
      Don't know, I think it's the language and the heavy use of specific product names. Oh, and the way the writer uses a very personal approach to present his opinions on the products... But hey, I could be wrong :)

    7. Re:RIAA is their own worst enemy. by The+Electric+Messiah · · Score: 1
      My apologies. I had only listened to it at work to pass the hours. And yes, I tried with Mozilla and Opera and it didn't work.

      However, for those people out there who are unfortunate to run Windows at work (like me) I still think Launch is good service. And it's free.

      --
      "Bold as Love"
    8. Re:RIAA is their own worst enemy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sir, what you're in need of is to go and live in a Communist country. It's losers like you who can't compete with the more successful people that's causing this warez scene to be so popular. What entitles you to say what others can and cannot earn? If a singer is able to bring in tens of millions of dollars in sales, who are YOU to say they should only be limited to $100k/year?

      It's sophomoric pimply teenage nerds like you in this world and all the freaking aholes on /. that's threatening to bring down the successful world of capitalism. People like you are short-sighted fools who can only see what's 3 inches in front of you. Do you ever consider the detriment to innovation by limiting all business entrepreneurs a ceiling of income potential? Maybe when your ass finally gets out of high school, you should go take a class on basic economic theory. Go see what happens when rent control is forced upon a city.

      You /. users are all PATHETIC.

    9. Re:RIAA is their own worst enemy. by johnlcallaway · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's because the writer chose to use adult language and facts to suggest a viewpoint instead of being vague and condesending.

      Heaven forbid that someone actually mention a product they paid for and like instead of finding fault with everything that is commercial. As if the bells of Quake and nVidia not rung too often in postings.

      But then, since I wrote it, I might be biased. But hey, I could be wrong :)

      --
      I rarely read replies, it's my opinion and if you thought about your opinion a little more, I'm OK with that.
  67. It's the economy, stupid. by DrMaurer · · Score: 1

    I know I'd buy more music if I had a job. Unemployment has cut out most unessentials, I can barely keep gas in my car to look for a job, esp. in my area, where industrial work is a heavy part of the local economy.

    Maybe I put too many things I know on my resume.

    Any how. It doesn't help, as the article states, that a lot of newish pop music is throw-away stuff. I don't care about Ms. Spears and how many records she sells. Gimme good music, and I'll support them. (New Godspeed You! Black Emperor in Nov.! Yay!)

    --
    Dan
    1. Re:It's the economy, stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe I put too many things I know on my resume.

      Maybe it is because you cannot spell resumé correctly.

  68. Their price model is BAD too.. $15 a CD?! NUTSOS by Viewsonic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I could buy a DVD for that much! Full digital 5.1 audio that is over 2 hrs long! Whats a $15 Audio CD provide? 60 mins of stereo music... Joy.. Their business model has DIED, they need to start selling Audio CDs for $5 to sell them.

  69. If songs were a quarter... by Lendrick · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've always thought that I'd very enthusiastically pay for music if it were sold at $0.25 a track. The music companies don't want to do this, because presumably it devalues the music that they've tried so hard do inflate to over five times that value.

    What I'd like to know is, if they did start selling tracks at a quarter apiece, how much more music would people have to buy to make up for the drop in price? (Not taking production or bandwidth costs into account, it people would need to download about 60 songs for every CD they purchase now). Is it plausiable that you'd buy five times as much music if it were a fifth the price? I probably would myself, but I very rarely buy CDs.

    1. Re:If songs were a quarter... by Alsee · · Score: 2

      Not taking production or bandwidth costs into account

      I can't say much about production costs, other than that they are fixed costs that tend to approach zero as volume of sales increases.

      As for bandwidth costs, I did the math a while ago. I based it on my cable service. About $30/month and tested at just under 100k/sec peak upstream. I also assumed 50% utilization and 4 or 5 meg per song. It worked out to 1/10th of a cent per song. I'm certain a corporation can buy bulk bandwidth much cheaper than that. For all practical purposes the bandwidth costs are zero.

      Even at $0.25 per track it is almost pure profit when you abandon physical distribution of media and sell internet downloads instead.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    2. Re:If songs were a quarter... by FFFish · · Score: 2

      Um... they'd have made at least $700 off me. That's pretty impressive, given that I've purchased fewer than 16 CDs at retail prices (most of my collection came via closing-out/bankruptcy sales, and pawn shops).

      --

      --
      Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
    3. Re:If songs were a quarter... by clickety6 · · Score: 2


      Unfortunately, a CD single here in germany is 5.99 euros for what is essentially one song. (Yep, that is almost $6 !). Ignoring the costs of CD/packagaing/distributing and I'm pretty sure that the record compnay is making a lot more than 25 cents (or 25 euro-cents) per track!

      --
      ----------------------------------- My Other Sig Is Hilarious -----------------------------------
  70. twisting the numbers by epine · · Score: 2


    I dislike the politics of the content industry so much that I avoid full price movies and I mostly content myself with the music I already have. This is an effective form of protest which I would like to see more people employ.

    Except. Except that the content industry is pointing to their loss of sales as evidence that everyone not giving them money is a crook and that they are therefore justified in destroying the PC as an open platform.

    Who needs clever accounting with logic like that?

  71. Stupid people. by spacecowboy420 · · Score: 1

    Ever notice that idiots and egomanics are the last to accept responsibility for their actions? Although it seems obvious to us, what manufacturer would admit to producing a known inferior product.

    --
    ymmv
  72. what/who IS to blame? by r3volve · · Score: 2, Insightful

    this whole recording industry situation has prompted eveyone to play the blame game, but it seems evident to me that it's not possible to single out one single thing as the bad sales turn.

    are there people out there downloading music who would have otherwise bought it? yes.
    but aren't there people out there downloading music that will spur future purchases? yes.

    are cdr's used to copy cds? yes.
    but aren't they used for other purposes as well, and doesn't a percentage of cdr sales go to the riaa? yes.

    is the nation going through an econonic downturn on the whole? yes.
    but aren't other countries' music industries being affected as well? yes.

    i'm certainly against the **aa and all for fair use, but i think this situation is much more complicated than most people realize. and i think the best way to figure out what's wrong (if anything), is to conduct more independent (and independently-funded) surveys, especially outside of the united states. we get nowhere by propagating lies/rumors/FUD on either side, so it may be best to get as accurate and truthful a view of the problem as we can, whether we like it or not.

  73. Fate of Monopolies by jazman_777 · · Score: 1

    Is to become complacent and stagnant. As long as there is some freedom to compete, competitors will arise, and flourish. That is why the RIAA is trying to use the State to reduce that freedom. And watch Microsoft--it's inevitable that they, too, will try to bend the State to do their bidding in impeding competition. Note the Orwellian turn, though, as the State went after MS and they defended themselves in the name of "innovating."

    --
    Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
  74. Janis Ian by Russellkhan · · Score: 1

    Janis Ian wrote a very good article on this subject.
    Interesting to see an artist's perspective on the matter.
    Russ

    --
    Information doesn't want to be anthropomorphized anymore.
    1. Re:Janis Ian by Cialti · · Score: 1

      Janis Ian actually wrote two excellent articles specifically addressing the argument (from the RIAA) that free downloads are hurting the artists.

      http://www.janisian.com/article-internet_debacle .h tml
      http://www.janisian.com/article-fallout.html

  75. Who's Napster? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    dumb question, but what is a napster?

  76. Hey genius... by ?erosion · · Score: 1

    I think you misunderstand. Forget piracy. Our friend was saying music is bad and people don't buy it. If music was better, people would buy it.

    To clarify further, let's say an album comes out that I don't want to hear. Say, the soundtrack to Attack of the Clones. Since I don't want to hear it, I won't buy it. Also, since I don't want to hear it, I won't download it or have a friend make a copy. I won't listen to it at all.

    I know that's complicated, so give it a few minutes to soak in.

    --

    I assert ownership of all trademarks and copyrights on this page.
    1. Re:Hey genius... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sarcasm is a bit much for some, it seems.

    2. Re:Hey genius... by ?erosion · · Score: 1

      Pssh.

      Yeah, tell me about it.

      --

      I assert ownership of all trademarks and copyrights on this page.
  77. NoOne is to blame by xagon7 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If it can happen, it will. One can copy and move intellectual property at virtually no cost. It was inevitable. "The computer is to intellectual property what a matter replication device is to matter" - me

  78. Novel idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The music industry is failing because they are not reacting to a changing environment. The technology is easily available for music stores to offer customers composite CD's that are burned in a custom fashion for music fans. Because the stores are still trying to sell music in the old fashioned way - complete CD's that contain a bunch of crap in addition to the music of interest - music fans are innovating themselves by creating their own composite CD's from downloaded music or borrowed CD's. The music industry has to get with the times and stop trying to stem the flow of technology.

  79. Making the customer happy is their job... by kcbrown · · Score: 5, Insightful
    ...and that's something they've completely forgotten. Now their customers are telling them that they're not happy and the RIAA still isn't listening.

    The customers' message to the RIAA will get louder and louder until they finally hear it or until they go under. Which one happens is ultimately the RIAA's choice.

    The RIAA probably believes that because it's a monopoly (or oligopoly ... same thing from an economic perspective) like Microsoft, that it can get away with the same market tactics that Microsoft does. But what they haven't figured out is that unlike Microsoft's products, which are essentially required to keep a business running (Openoffice and friends aside), the RIAA's products are not required, they are optional. Having a monopoly doesn't help you if your customers can get away with not buying your product -- and that's exactly what's happening now.

    So my message to the RIAA is simple: you'd better figure this shit out, and fast, because your number is coming up.

    What sucks the most is that the RIAA is going to do a hell of a lot of damage before they either finally learn or go under.

    --
    Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
    1. Re:Making the customer happy is their job... by jpmorgan · · Score: 2

      This is a nitpick, but an oligopoly != a monopoly. Oligopoly dynamics are incredibly hard to model, and frankly you can't predict it; they can be as bad (or worse) than a monopoly if there's lots of collusion, or you can have extreme levels of competition that nearly puts them all out of business, before they call a truce.

      Of course, the RIAA are all colluding bastards, so it's safe to say they're as bad as a monopoly, but you shouldn't automatically make the assumption that oligopoly == monopoly, since it won't always be true.

      Of course, speaking of collusion, isn't that illegal? It's too bad it's almost impossible to prosecute, I wouldn't mind seeing the RIAA get screwed over for artificially inflating prices.

  80. Digital Ass by Clipper · · Score: 1

    At the end of the article, right above where it says "Mark Jenkins reviews music and film for...", there is an advertisement for a wireless device (in fact, it even says Advertisement). The ad is randomized so that a new device is featured with each page reload. When I was reading the article, I saw:

    Jornada 568 Personal Digital Ass

    You may have to hit reload a few times before it comes up (it took me about 10 tries before I got it to come up again). Count on Microsoft (MSN) to have a truncation error.

    --
    /<en
  81. Taste Changes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Britney Spears' latest album has moved 4 million copies--a big number, but less than half what its predecessor did.

    I'd like to present an alternate theory: so called popular music artists can never sustain these fantastic numbers (although 4 million is impressive). Think of the whimsical attitude society takes to music. Remember when the Spice Girls were pushing millions of copies too? Imagine if they 'got together' and released more of their garbage. would the public buy in anywhere near the previous numbers?

    My two cents says they wont. Perhaps we're merely witnessing the demise of another popular icon (thank god, the sooner the better) who has used more than their fair 15 minutes.

    We're migrating to different tastes in music, and the record industry just has to figure out what it is.

  82. Solution to lame commercial music: by maynard · · Score: 5, Interesting
    • Expand your taste to include a wider range of musical forms through exploration.
    • Seek out new local acts by attending live performances at small clubs, bars, and concert halls.
    • Purchase CDs directly from those performers and bands whom you have enjoyed seeing live.
    Not only does buying CDs directly from the artist provide them better compensation, but since you've already heard his/her music you know you'll enjoy much of what's on the CD. And to top it off the music cartels don't get a dime of your money. SCORE!

    This is primarily how I buy music now. I haven't purchased a big label pop disc in well over a year -- because the music sucks. I don't "steal" music across the net; I don't tape or burn CDs to trade with friends; I don't tape off the radio. I go to shows and if I like the act I buy some music. Fuck the RIAA and all their noise about "piracy".

    --Maynard
    1. Re:Solution to lame commercial music: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dont you worry. If this goes on long enough RIAA will call those performers in a club "illegal combatants" or some such and get their congress poodles to pass a new law requiring some form of tax or license from them. Just wait.

    2. Re:Solution to lame commercial music: by McSpew · · Score: 2

      Excellent points. I haven't been out to hear as many local bands lately as I used to for a variety of reasons, but when I did, I routinely bought CDs from the bands I saw.

      Of the music I've been surprised to discover I like, only a tiny percentage was discovered through radio. And that was before all the radio stations in my city became corporatized. These days, even the ones that aren't owned by ClearChannel all sound the same and generally suck.

      Listening to live music in small clubs is a lot more fun than listening to radio or CDs, and I've gotten to see some pretty terrific bands that don't get played on the radio. Some of the bands I've seen in crummy clubs have even gone on to become huge radio stars before their record companies burned them out.

      Record companies suck. They're killing themselves and taking radio with them.

    3. Re:Solution to lame commercial music: by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      And if you never leave the house like many of us, try Epitonic

      Same deal, but you don't have to leave the house, and if the band sucks, rm is cheaper than biting the cover charge.

      There are a few major label acts on there, but most of it is small time stuff. Highly recommend The Legendary Pink Dots, and Danielson Famile.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    4. Re:Solution to lame commercial music: by Greeneland · · Score: 1

      The interesting thing is now more than ever it is possible for a band to get wide exposure for their music through the net and make a name for themselves without ever needing a RIAA etc. Perhaps more musicians should consider their options.

    5. Re:Solution to lame commercial music: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like you, I buy almost all of my music at live shows at local clubs/bars. My only problem is that often with such acts, the live sound that feels so good gets sanitized away on their records...

      I suppose it's a small price to pay.

    6. Re:Solution to lame commercial music: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I've been doing this since before Napster. But then, my favorite band is the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

    7. Re:Solution to lame commercial music: by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 2
      "Not only does buying CDs directly from the artist provide them better compensation, but since you've already heard his/her music you know you'll enjoy much of what's on the CD. And to top it off the music cartels don't get a dime of your money. SCORE!"

      You said it. Now if only more bands would come to my town ...

      I think the statistic is that at their live performances, the artist gets ~$5 per disc sold while with store-bought discs, it's usually a few cents per track.

      At this rate, I would prefer to wait several months for my favourite artists to perform near my location so I can buy their CDs at the concert instead of getting the CD in the store immediately after it's released.

    8. Re:Solution to lame commercial music: by KevinDumpsCore · · Score: 1

      > Seek out new local acts by attending live performances at small clubs, bars, and concert halls.

      Well, I'd attend more local shows if...

      1. They were affordable. I've seen great local bands for $6-12. But once ticket prices are $18+, forget it.
      2. They were exciting. I need to hear more than a local band playing bad copy-cat versions of whatever's popular. I need to see more than a dude and his laptop.
      3. They started earlier. Some shows open their doors at 9 or 10 pm but the band doesn't take the stage until midnight or 1 am! During a week night, this is ridiculous.
      4. I knew what to expect. Put up audio samples on either the band's or club's Web-site.
  83. Who should we to blame? by ccollao · · Score: 1
    It is funny how the big music and recording companies are trying to blame the consumers for using several tactics that makes us to think:


    First, they are using a sales model from the beginning of the last century.

    Second, they are using a technology that is at least 25 years old, and with the fast development of technologies it is becoming easy even for the dumb masses to get something more convenient in their own homes.

    And finally, they always try to sell you what it is cool just what they think it is cool, destroying better sources of music or great band/singers just because they dont see the market.



    It is really a shame how they want to blame us (consumers) for their lack of vision of bussiness and try to block the leaks with the use of manipulative laws, first against musicians, and now against consumers.

  84. Related article at The Reg by Russellkhan · · Score: 1

    The Reg had an article last week about this entitled MP3s are good for music biz - Forrester. Worth a read.

    Russ

    --
    Information doesn't want to be anthropomorphized anymore.
  85. who woulda thunk... by LobsterMagnet · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "Although usually termed teen- pop, the music of 'N Sync and Britney Spears is not unlike disco: Both are intellectually underachieving, cookie-cutter styles that have made stars of performers not known primarily for their skills as singers, songwriters, or musicians."

    And they honestly wonder about why nobody is making money? This is the biggest money maker for the industry, and its total crap. I dont think the american public has enough intelligence to finally understand that the stuff that they are spending their money on is crap, so why are they not buying CD's anymore? My guess is that if they actually liked this "music" they dont really care about music in the first place and they just gave up entirely. I dont think it has anything to do with the "new" trend of swapping music, be it over the internet, recording on tapes, or even just listening to the radio. I think the main problem is that people have been spoon fed the same crap (if nothing has changed in the pop world since disco...) for 30 years and they've just gotten bored.

    The next question that gets brought up is why then are better bands, who actually do offer something intellectually selling records? Maybe because there arent all that many that exist; I'll still fork out my 13 bucks for a new Fugazi record, or my new favorite band Queens of the Stoneage, but most people dont like to think, and therefore, wouldnt like or even give a good new band a chance.

    If the death of pop (please dear god kill it now!!!) is gonna bring the music business down with it, so what, I'll still be strumming away on my guitar, and I know that anyone who had any real interest in music in the first place will too.

    But if anybody has any conflicting viewpoint on this, I'd actually like to hear it, unless you liked N'sync or britney spears...

    --
    I will not be trained.
  86. I'm curious about your reference. by elocutio · · Score: 1

    Occam's razor is the principle of simplification and minimalism taught by a Fransciscan monk named William of Ockham in the 14th century. It basically stated, "The profoundly simple is simply profound." In short, the simpler explanation, the better. Are you arguing for some sort of parsimony in attributing blame to the garbage in the music industry?

    I totally agree with you about the "good taste" argument, but I'm curious about the connection to Occam.

    1. Re:I'm curious about your reference. by r_j_prahad · · Score: 2
      When confronted with two possible explanations, the simplest one is usually the correct one.

      The RIAA blames wholesale digital piracy for a downturn in music sales. Or it could be that the music is so bad nobody is willing to pay for it. The simpler explanation seems to be the answer here. Current music is simply not worth purchasing. Ergo, Occam.

    2. Re:I'm curious about your reference. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Actually both explanations are equally simple.

      1. People don't buy music because they can get it for free
      2. People don't buy music because it sucks ass

      I fail to see how number 2 is "simpler" than number 1. If anything, number one is "simpler".

  87. Reflection of Society by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think the larger whole of the music industry is reflecting the trends in society. As a people we are becoming more and more specialized and focused in those things which we want. Music is no different. The days of the single artist making the whole country swoon are gone. Since the labels are still attempting to do business using that model, their sales are dying off. Easy.

    --
    If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
  88. price doesn't help by a7244270 · · Score: 1

    I was shopping the other day for these CDs (don't flame me for my taste in music please)
    Shakira Unplugged
    any Cirque Du Soleil soundtrack.

    Shakira CD: 14.99
    Shakira DVD: 14.99

    Circue Du Soleil (Quidam) CD: 17.99
    Circue Du Soleil (Quidam) DVD: 19.99

    You can guess which ones I bought.
    I also picked up a Rage Against The Machine DVD for like 18.99. Their live CD was about the same price.
    Until CDs drop in price to about 6 bux or so, I don't see sales going up.

    Consumer spending on almost everything else has fallen (lo recession) far less than CD spending, but for some reason the RIAA can't recognize the fact that they are selling a product at a price higher than the market will bear.

    I wonder if any of those guys every played Lemonade or Dope Wars...

  89. What about availability? by kc7cfk · · Score: 1

    In the list of reasons why people download, let's not discount availability of some material. Yeah, I have downloaded a few current songs, but by far most of what I seek is stuff from my "golden age." OK, by that I mean the 70s. I can just imagine the reaction I would get from the Big 5 if I asked them to sell me a copy of "Heartbreaker" by Nantucket. But it must have taken me all of 10 minutes to acquire it on Napster.

  90. Music Suggestions by krmt · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Not all new music sucks, you just have to look around a bit harder to find it, as it's not all over MTV or the radio.

    If you want a political bend to go along with your new music, a good place to start is with Radiohead. Another one is Mos Def and Blackstar (which is Mos and Talib Kwali) who are this generation's Public Enemy, and they are incredible.

    As far as I know, the punk scene has degenerated politically, but Joe Strummer (of the Clash) is putting out incredible new stuff with his new band The Mescaleros. There's a band I happened to catch live at a music festival called The International Noise Conspiracy, who are a really fun act to see (communist/socialst propaganda from Sweden, how can you not love a song named "Capitalism Stole My Virginity"?)

    Also, if you've looked at the American radioscape lately, a lot of the Nu-Metal junk has faded away. The focus these days is on more standard rock, with bands like Jimmy Eat World, the Strokes, the White Stripes, and the Hives all doing a great job kicking the crap out of Fred Durst and his various imitators. Some of the stuff (particularly The White Stripes) is really outstanding work. There's still a lot of pop out there, but that's never going to change (hence the name). There's a lot of good non-political music out there too, that I didn't mention, that is just off to the side of mainstream, but is actually very good. As for the political/social stuff, I don't think there's a whole lot right now, but who knows? The new Rage Against the Machine album should be out soon.

    --

    "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

    1. Re:Music Suggestions by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      Not only had "Capitalism Stole My Virginity" but the "Big Three Stole My Baby." The nerve of the bastards!

    2. Re:Music Suggestions by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 2
      The new Rage Against the Machine album should be out soon.

      Hmmm... RATM aren't really RATM without Zack and Tom together.

    3. Re:Music Suggestions by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 1
      "Not only had "Capitalism Stole My Virginity" but the "Big Three Stole My Baby." The nerve of the bastards!"

      I can one-up you on that one: "

      CowboyNeal stole my virginity."

    4. Re:Music Suggestions by mother_superius · · Score: 1

      Oh come on, the punk you see on Warped may suck, but there are thousands of good bands kicking out great rock and roll today. In every major city, there are plenty of decent local bands. All the ones you've named are signed to big labels anyways.

      In Minneapolis, we've got A-Bomb Nation, Holding On, Dillinger Four(okay, they're St. Paul, but I can bike there anyways), Onward to Mayhem, home of Havoc Records, The Subversives, The Framed, Red Vendetta, Menstrual Tramps, and a hella lot more. And that's just my city.

      Since you mentioned political, Aus-Rotten were the primier political band for a while. Crust is getting pretty big these days and is typically political.

    5. Re:Music Suggestions by Mr2001 · · Score: 1
      If you want a political bend to go along with your new music, a good place to start is with Radiohead.
      Radiohead's music is overhyped whining. It'd be top-notch if they put out an instrumental album, but the music is ruined by Thom Yorke's piercing castrato.
      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
  91. Why not use existing p2p networks? by zaffir · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why can't the RIAA and kazaa (for example) work together to bring in the cash? Imagine the following.

    Kazaa implements credit card billing features so that whenever you download a song owned by the RIAA, a fee is charged to your account (and for this to succede it'd better be reasonable - around a dollar). Kazaa gets a cut of that dollar, and the rest goes to the RIAA.

    This would not only be unbelievably easy for the consumer (any idiot can download a song), but would use an already well established network that, if done correctly, would use the people on the network for distribution. Of course the RIAA would be wise to put up it's own servers sharing the files, too.

    The only downside i can see is if you get lamers sharing missnamed or incomplete songs that you end up paying for. Any ideas (checksums, etc?) for fixing that?

    --
    "Upon attaching the waterblock to my penis, I began to notice that I know nothing about computers." -- JRockway
    1. Re:Why not use existing p2p networks? by Stonehand · · Score: 1

      Hm, why wouldn't people flee to another p2p network as soon as the fees arrive, just like they left Napster in droves following the assorted policy changes?

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    2. Re:Why not use existing p2p networks? by zaffir · · Score: 1

      There aren't any decent p2p networks that are as easy to use as Fasttrack. It's a pain in the ass to find anything on Gnutella, and even harder to actually download it. EDonkey is too small, as is Direct Connect.

      The only possible alternative would be a newly created p2p network.

      Of course, this is much less an idea for keeping p2p networks alive than a way for the RIAA to take advantage of the internet.

      --
      "Upon attaching the waterblock to my penis, I began to notice that I know nothing about computers." -- JRockway
    3. Re:Why not use existing p2p networks? by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Consumers are selfish. If they can steal elsewhere they will.

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    4. Re:Why not use existing p2p networks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget WinMX. It's just like Napster only BETTER!

    5. Re:Why not use existing p2p networks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      one word... soulseek

  92. Easier? by RatBastard · · Score: 1

    What? Okay, forst you have to find out which P2P system is still in use, because the one you used last week got shut down or everyione moved on. Then you've got to get rid of all the damned spyware and other cruft the stupid thing has planted in your system. Then you've got to find the song you want, and God help you if it's hosted on some twit on the other end of a 28.8 dailup with 200 concurrent downloaders. Then you've got to hope that what you downloaded is what you wanted and not two and a ha;f minutes of a porno movie soundtrack!

    That's easier than going to the store and slapping down some cash for a CD that has what it says it has?

    Um, okay, Beavis.

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
  93. Re:And to think, increased constraints are just... by archen · · Score: 1

    Well you never know. Maybe we'll all end up reverting to the 1900's style of entertainment and play the piano with friends. Well untill the thought police bust down the door and imprison everyone for playing an unauthorized song that they probably heard without permission.

  94. These articles make me sick by tmark · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm sick of reading some study that points to some supposed failings of the music industry and concludes that file-sharing isn't hurting the industry. I'm just as sick of reading stories about how file-sharing has gone up and profits have gone down, stories which conclude that file-sharing IS hurting the industry. I'm sick of the blind chauvinism that surrounds both sides of the issue.

    The assorted and supposed failures of the music industry and the presumed decline in quality of today's music - even if true - can NOT be taken as evidence that file-sharing isn't hurting the industry, just like declining record sales can't necessarily be attributed to the accompanying rise in file-sharing.

    BOTH types of 'evidence' marshalled by both sides are correlational and don't really say anything about what the proponents are arguing about, namely the root of the problem. Maybe file-sharing is going up because today's music sucks, or because people want this method of distribution. Or maybe file-sharing is on the rise because people just like grabbing things they don't have to pay for.
    You've heard it a million times: Correlation is NOT causation. Once we get past the stupid "X is happening, and Y is/isn't happening, therefore X does/doesn't cause Y", we'll be able to really and fairly consider the issue instead of looking through these blinders that seem to get narrower and narrower as time goes on, and hearing the tautologies flogged like yesterday's dead horse - by BOTH sides.

  95. History Repeats by n-baxley · · Score: 2

    Being a lover of history, I am always looking for parrallels from the past with problems of today. This paragraph then, cuaght my attention:

    In 1978, record sales began to fall, and the major labels blamed a larcenous new technology: cassette tapes. The international industry even had an outraged official slogan: "Home taping is killing music." The idea was that music fans--ingrates that they are--would rather pirate songs than pay for them, and that sharing favorite songs was a crime against hard-working musicians (rather than great word-of-mouth advertising).

    This helps me remember that as fast paced as our world may be, we're really just handling the same problems that have been dealt with in the past. The article goes on to say how the emergence of MTV and Rock Videos saved the music industry now, and that if the Music Mavens don't stop blocking every new technology that comes along, they miss their own savior. Bravo for a great article and let's hope the RIAA will study some history as well.

  96. You sound like you know what you're talking about by Tim_F · · Score: 1

    When was the last time you actually bought a cd? Hell, when was the last time you acted as a normal, God fearing citizen of these United States of America?

  97. Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by TheCodeFoundry · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The US music scene sucks, plain and simple. The majority of albums released within the last 5 years have been formulaic, cookie-cutter crap. Remember in the 80's how bands were designed around musicians? Randy Rhoads, Eddie Van Halen, Neil Peart etc ad nauseum....you used to be able to name the members of bands. They actually had talent, wrote their own songs, some were even (God forbid) classically trained.

    With the one hit wonders we have now, you can't even name the vocalist for the bands.

    Skip across to the pond and see what the 'peans are up to. Let's see, progressive metal bands like Stratovarius, Blind Guardian, Avantasia, Edguy, Theatre of Tragedy, etc are HUGE stars. They play arena concerts, like GNR, VH, Selloutica and others did in the 80's and 90's. Members are usually classically trained musicians and have technical abilities that most US musicians only dream of. Many of the band members collaborate with other bands for entire albums (ex. Demons & Wizards).

    Granted, this music may not be to everyone's tastes, but looks at the techno scene overseas. People like DJ Tiesto, Oakenfold, Van Dyk, etc are huge....yet unless you go to a trance club in the US, you are unlikely to ever hear them.

    The US labels are failing for the same reason the US carmakers failed late last century:
    Lack of innovation.

    1. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by Alsee · · Score: 2

      The US labels are failing for the same reason the US carmakers failed late last century:
      Lack of innovation.


      But producing formulaic, cookie-cutter crap IS a form of innovation. I'd even say it's better than examples of Microsoft's freedom to innovate :)

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    2. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 2

      Sadly, Blind Guardian is signed to an RIAA band. But, they do kick ass.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    3. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by Dirtside · · Score: 2

      What is it with this "Oh everything was so much better back in the day" nostalgia bullshit? The majority of albums EVER released have been formulaic, cookie-cutter crap. Things were just as "bad" (or "good") in the 1980s as they are now. What, do you seriously think there were no nameless one-hit-wonder artists in the 1980s? Or the 1970s? Or EVERY DECADE EVER?

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    4. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 2

      What, do you seriously think there were no nameless one-hit-wonder artists in the 1980s? Or the 1970s? Or EVERY DECADE EVER?

      Every decade has it's one hit wonders that are quickly forgotten. The problem is now, all the artists are one hit wonders.

      In the 80s, bad meant good. In the 90s, alternative meant mainstream. Those wacky record types.

      I can think, off the top of my head, of dozens of artists from the 50s-80s that I still listen to and enjoy. Artists that were big in their time and the quality of their music has allowed them to survive in the record store bins to this day.

      Not true for the 90s. The only big named band that really took off in the 90s that I can think of is Nirvana, which ironically fueled the final nail into the corpritizing of the record industry (for the record, I did not, nor do not like their music, but apparently enough people do to keep them alive in the minds of hearts of countless fans).

      In the Early 90s Nirvana hit the airwaves, and seemingly over-night the rock stations switched from an unnerving blend of techno-pop and glam metal to 'alternative', a term that makes me laugh. Since when is an industry reacting to market trends 'alternative'? Especially when every radio station that plays newly released rock calls themselves 'alternative'?

      Now, of course, the alternative stations sound the same coast to coast. As far as I can tell, in the rock genre, the only thing the format is an alternative to is the 80s rock music station, the 60s-70s 'classic' rock stations, and the 50s-60s 'oldies' station.

      This isn't to say that the 90s didn't put out quite a bit of good music, but none of it was found in the traditional 'hear a song on the radio, like it, buy an album'.

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
    5. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well the 90's were good for hip-hop music and rap; Wu-tang, 2pac, NWA, Biggie, Public Enemey, etc. but even hip-hop/rap have degraded to bling-bling crap. I realize this kind of music may not be to your liking but you described about the 90's was the slow decline of rock music not all music.

    6. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2

      But wow, Blind Guardian has great heavy metal music! :-) Definitely more innovative than Metallica in many ways.

      If you're a J.R.R. Tolkien fan, this band is definitely for you because a lot of their music is based on his works; Nightfall in Middle-Earth is based on The Silmarillion.

    7. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 2

      For the record, Blind Guardian and Metallica are my two favorite groups, and IMHO enough different in style that I don't bother comparing.

      I got Nightfall in Middle Earth because i knew it was based on Tolkien's works, then went out and read the Silmarillion so I'd know WTF the songs were about =p

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    8. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by Zordak · · Score: 1
      They actually had talent, wrote their own songs, some were even (God forbid) classically trained.
      Pretty well offtopic, but...
      My wife dragged me to a Barry Manilow concert about a month ago, and I thought, "You know, this guy is really, really, cheesy, but behind all that chesse, he actually has some real talent." One thing I noticed is that one of his more popular songs starts and ends with some Chopin. So when we got home, I poked around the web looking for information on the guy. I found out
      1. Even though he looks about 30, he's actually closer to 60.
      2. He started out not as a pre-packaged performer, but as a song writer, and still writes a fair amount of his own stuff.
      3. The guy went to Juliard for crying out loud. Say what you will about how sickeningly cheesy Manilow is, you don't get into Juliard without something to show for it.
      It was kind of an interesting moment for me, because I've never liked Barry Manilow, but having been forced to listen to him, I found that I was able to appreciate and respect him as a musician because he has some real, bona fide talent. I'm pretty sure that none of the Backstreet Boys attended Juliard (or probably even high school choir class), so it's a lot easier to not like them and not respect them. The other interesting thing was that in going to this concert I dreaded, I saw a really great opening act by a guy named Curtis Stigers doing some nice jazz. I liked it so much, I went and bought his CD and got it autographed while Barry was prancing around doing his opening act. So, I'm not sure if this has a point, but the end result was, I still don't particularly like Barry Mainlow, but I have a lot more respect for him, and out of being dragged to a dreaded concert, I found a smaller act I really like.
      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
    9. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by mother_superius · · Score: 1

      That is most certainly not true. There are plenty of great musicians and bands here. They are not RIAA members or getting air time, but the music is nonetheless great.

      In Minneapolis, we've got A-Bomb Nation, Holding On, Dillinger Four(okay, they're St. Paul, but I can bike there anyways), Onward to Mayhem, home of Havoc Records, The Subversives, The Framed, Red Vendetta, Menstrual Tramps, and a hella lot more.

      And that's just my city. There are great bands in EVERY major city. (assuming you live in/near a fairly large one.) You can't just turn on the radio and hear this, but you haven't done that to find those European bands. Look around your city. They're there. I can't imagine they'll be harder to find than those European bands were.

      Even if you don't live in/near a big city, imagine all the bands in every US city. That's a hell of a lot. I'm still finding them every day.

    10. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by Dirtside · · Score: 2
      Every decade has it's one hit wonders that are quickly forgotten. The problem is now, all the artists are one hit wonders.
      Linkin Park. Godsmack. Incubus. Coldplay. System of a Down. These are all bands who have become big in the last few years, and have had multiple hit songs.
      The only big named band that really took off in the 90s that I can think of is Nirvana,
      So because *you* can only think of one Real Big Band, there weren't any others? Are you kidding me? Green Day. The Offspring. Foo Fighters. Pearl Jam. Blink-182. Bush. No Doubt. Dave Matthews Band. Oasis. Goo Goo Dolls. 311. Everclear.

      In the Early 90s Nirvana hit the airwaves, and seemingly over-night the rock stations switched from an unnerving blend of techno-pop and glam metal to 'alternative', a term that makes me laugh. Since when is an industry reacting to market trends 'alternative'? Especially when every radio station that plays newly released rock calls themselves 'alternative'?
      Alternative is the name of that genre of music. It existed in the 80s, too, only you apparently are unaware of that fact. When alternative suddenly became a big deal (due to Nirvana's influence), what did you expect them to do? Change its name? That would just have confused people.
      Now, of course, the alternative stations sound the same coast to coast. As far as I can tell, in the rock genre, the only thing the format is an alternative to is the 80s rock music station, the 60s-70s 'classic' rock stations, and the 50s-60s 'oldies' station.
      Well, I haven't listened to stations in that many cities. Apparently you've been to all the major markets across the USA, so I'll take your word for it.
      This isn't to say that the 90s didn't put out quite a bit of good music, but none of it was found in the traditional 'hear a song on the radio, like it, buy an album'.
      That's funny, I recall hearing quite a bit of very good music on the radio in the 90s. And buying numerous albums in response to hearing that music on the radio. *GASP* Maybe we like different kinds of music! And maybe it's okay if other people like music you think is crap, and vice-versa!
      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    11. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 2

      Linkin Park. Godsmack. Incubus. Coldplay. System of a Down. These are all bands who have become big in the last few years, and have had multiple hit songs.

      And they all sound the same, with a mild execption for Pearl Jam for actually bringing some artistry to that sound. And again, with the possible execption for Pearl Jam, will all be forgotten in 10 years. I'm not saying they all suck, I'm just saying there is nothing about them that would make people want to return to them.

      So because *you* can only think of one Real Big Band, there weren't any others? Are you kidding me? Green Day. The Offspring. Foo Fighters. Pearl Jam. Blink-182. Bush. No Doubt. Dave Matthews Band. Oasis. Goo Goo Dolls. 311. Everclear.

      You're kidding me, right? Notice how Greenday mellowed out it's punk rock roots to get airplay? Notice how the Foo Fighters were never able to live up to the're former abilities? Notice how the Offspring ushered in a new generation of metal-rap (a band rivled only by AC/DC for having every single song follow the exact same format). I mean seriously, don't you have a little voice in side your head that says 'hey wait a minute, this is all carefully crafted pop music and I'm being suckered'? Don't get me wrong, there is a lot of that carefully crafted pop music that I like too, but I'm sure as hell not going to buy it, and the best the 90s have to offer in rock will sit right next to 'the Humpty Dance' as 'yeah, that was kinda neat'. Oasis is a funny addition to your list. It got very little airplay here in America, only after acheiving incredible success overseas, and only the toned down songs that passed the homoginzed muster.

      Alternative is the name of that genre of music. It existed in the 80s, too, only you apparently are unaware of that fact. When alternative suddenly became a big deal (due to Nirvana's influence), what did you expect them to do? Change its name? That would just have confused people.

      Alternative was an industry term for the genre. There were several; post modern, new rock, college rock, etc. The industry chose 'Alternitive', and shortly afterwords managed to alienate all of the genres root fanbase. The only thing that confused people was how quickly it started to suck.

      Well, I haven't listened to stations in that many cities. Apparently you've been to all the major markets across the USA, so I'll take your word for it.

      I have been to most of them, but if that doesn't do it for you, take a look at the format play lists of the larger multi-market stations, and you'll notice they are pretty much the same.

      That's funny, I recall hearing quite a bit of very good music on the radio in the 90s. And buying numerous albums in response to hearing that music on the radio. *GASP* Maybe we like different kinds of music! And maybe it's okay if other people like music you think is crap, and vice-versa!

      I remember hearing some not so bad music either. Again, I'm not saying it all sucks, I'm just saying that it's not nearly as good as what the 'industry' put out in previous decades, and what the independant music scene was able to eek out in the 90s.

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
    12. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by Eudaemon69 · · Score: 1

      Wow someone else who listens to Demons & Wizards. cool :) Well since th DOJ wants to start prosecuting P2P users (I'm glad all the terrorists, company execs, and other assorted criminals have been caught its time to move on to college students) I guess we'll see how long these systems stay up. So how long till an anonymous P2P system is up and running, I think I saw one mentioned on /. at one time, and how long till something like that is made illegal.

    13. Re:Musical innovation is across the pond in Europe by Dirtside · · Score: 2
      And they all sound the same, with a mild execption for Pearl Jam for actually bringing some artistry to that sound.
      That's funny, they all sound different to me. In fact, the fact that you lumped Coldplay in with the other bands as "sounding the same" leads me to think that you've probably never heard a Coldplay song -- they don't even sound REMOTELY like SOAD or Godsmack! (No, I don't REALLY think you've never heard Coldplay, but come on, choose your words more carefully when making gross generalizations.)
      And again, with the possible execption for Pearl Jam, will all be forgotten in 10 years.
      Statements like this are worthless. It makes you sound all prophetic, but you know what? You're not special. You are no better at predicting the future than anyone else is. And in 10 years, nobody (not you, not me) will remember this argument -- so claiming things like this will never add anything to the debate.
      I'm not saying they all suck, I'm just saying there is nothing about them that would make people want to return to them.
      Actually, you've made generalizations about entire genres of music (thus including all bands in them) numerous times. And if there's nothing about them that would make "people" want to return to them... then why do people keep returning to them?
      You're kidding me, right? Notice how Greenday mellowed out it's punk rock roots to get airplay? Notice how the Foo Fighters were never able to live up to the're former abilities? [etc.]
      Now, I would have written this as, "Notice how Green Day matured into one of the most creative and talented post-punk bands out there? Notice how the Foo Fighters have beautifully layered music with heartfelt lyrics? [etc]." See, you think that these bands suck, but I think they're great. The difference between us is that you are assuming that everyone agrees with you. I do not. I know very well that there are countless individuals out there who hate Green Day, Foo Fighters, etc. but you know what? I don't go around telling them their music sucks. When you can figure out why, you will be enlightened.
      Alternative was an industry term for the genre. There were several; post modern, new rock, college rock, etc. The industry chose 'Alternitive', and shortly afterwords managed to alienate all of the genres root fanbase. The only thing that confused people was how quickly it started to suck.
      Your main problem is that you keep making these absurd, overreaching generalizations. "...how quickly it started to suck." By "it" there, you mean "all alternative music," or more realistically, "all music I didn't like and heard a lot on the radio and it pissed me off." Are you kidding? You really think that EVERY "alternative" band from the 90s sucked, and EVERYONE thought so? (Excluding your precious Nirvana, who, yes, I like very much.)

      I have been to most of them, but if that doesn't do it for you, take a look at the format play lists of the larger multi-market stations, and you'll notice they are pretty much the same.
      So you're making the point here that there's a homogeneity across many radio markets. Guess what? I completely agree. The degree of homogeneity in radio has increased since 1996. Do you know why? (I'm assuming not.) It's because the Telecommunications Act of 1996 removed restrictions on how many radio stations could be owned by a single entity. So then Clear Channel Communications decided to start buying them all up. They now own something like 35% of all radio stations in the USA, and 60% of stations in major markets.

      And I think this is a bad thing. But there's a distinct difference between claiming that this makes all music suck. You're less likely to hear "good" stuff on the radio (unless you happen to really like what they play on the radio, and much to your chagrin, a lot of people do -- there's a REASON it's called "popular music"), because of CCC (and other companies), but that doesn't mean the music isn't there! There IS plenty of good music made by popular bands who are talented and aren't one-hit wonders -- it's just not being played on the radio.

      I remember hearing some not so bad music either. Again, I'm not saying it all sucks, I'm just saying that it's not nearly as good as what the 'industry' put out in previous decades, and what the independant music scene was able to eek out in the 90s.
      For the love of Bob Dylan, NO! The overall industry music output is NOT DIFFERENT THAN IT WAS IN PREVIOUS DECADES. The SAME proportion of stuff is overproduced, undertalented crap. The SAME (much smaller) proportion of stuff is good, talented, creative, etc. bands. THAT HASN'T CHANGED. It's only your insistence on ignoring reality that makes you think this.

      Do you think that in 1978, people like you said, "Wow, it's so great there's all these great new bands out there these days?" NO! They said the exact same thing you're saying now: "All new music sucks! Where's all the great musicians, like the Beatles, and the Doors, and Elvis?!" People are ALWAYS saying this. The bands who we now consider great products of the 70s were NOT CONSIDERED GREAT IN THE 70S. They were early in their careers, and while they might have been considered promising, nobody with a brain would try to predict whether they'd still be around in 1998. In twenty years, there will still be people (probably you) saying, "All new music sucks! Where's all the great bands of the late 90s and '00s?!"

      Get over it. You keep staring at the world through rose-colored glasses, but the last 5-10 years always have an anti-rose filter over them, no matter what year it is, so they look like crap when compared to the old days. There were huge numbers of worthless, stupid, copycat bands in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s, and every decade -- but it's been so long since they've been around, you've forgotten about them (or, if you weren't around then, you never heard of them). This doesn't mean things have gotten worse -- it means you're using selective memory.

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  98. Re:No... by symbolic · · Score: 1, Flamebait


    What more of a paper tiger than a spineless group of consumers who incessantly whine and moan about the RIAA, steal its music (justified, they say, by the RIAA's practices), and then (if you believe the surveys) go out and buy it anyway? (And what about those steal the content and DON'T buy the CDs? - according to the article, they could account for at least 19% of those surveyed).

  99. EXACTLY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone with Talent and an iMac can completely bypass hollywood.
    You'll get full quality digital masters, especially if you go to a good studio.
    You'll be able to market to an international audience.
    You'll get virtually free manufacturing for mixing your masters to mp3.
    And you'll get virtually free distribution costs by throwing your songs on the internet.
    All of this leaves artists free to make music, and pocket concert $$ and T-shirts and yes, CD sales from their fans.
    Without the bloated costs bands don't have to pander to the RIAA, appeal to the lowest common deniminator or otherwise sell-out just to keep on making music.

    The RIAA is OBSOLETE. That's what this whole "war on piracy" is all about.
    If the RIAA can make producing music without going through them illegal (or better yet, terrorism), then they can presever their obsolete business model.

    It has NOTHING to do with Piracy.

    It just makes me sick that our so called government representatives are more than happy to remove our liberties to help these bastards maintain a defunct business model.

    1. Re:EXACTLY by Angus+McNitt · · Score: 1

      You think they care? Take a comment by a supposed Congressional Staffer a couple months ago. If that doesn't show you the contempt in which they hold their voters I don't know what will. He who can buy the most congressmen/women wins, and if they destroy the rights of the voters, who cares.

      I hope it changes, because I personaly hope that my forefathers gave their lives for more than this, the rampant pursute of money and power.

      I'll get off my soapbox now.

      --
      "To Do Is To Be" - Socrates, "To Be Is To Do" - Sartre, "Do Be Do Be Do" - Sinatra
    2. Re:EXACTLY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't even think it's as much for money, as it is fear of going against the corporations. For some it's cleary money, but the rest aren't only getting paid, but are deathly are afraid of what would happen if the RIAA money worked against them.

      I'm not naming names, but there are about 5 people who, should they happen to be brutally murdered all on the same day, the world would be a much better place without them.

      I think the rest of the cowardly sellouts would finally be more afraid of the people than they are of the corporations.

      I only wish I had the balls to lead the revolution.

  100. A new music genre is whats needed by happyhippy · · Score: 1

    To get the RIAA out of its 'panic' mode its in now. The only way it can go now is to blame everyone except themselves. They are not going to devalue CDs. The profit hit would kill them and probalby one or two would go bankrupt.

    1. Re:A new music genre is whats needed by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      they are still going to do it. it's just matter of which big band jumps into the cutting price wagon first.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  101. This is an easy question to answer by blonde+rser · · Score: 3, Interesting

    To find out if filesharing has had an effect on music sharing one only needs to look at the success of a different product that shares many characteristics with cds: for example MTV and concert tickets. If cd sales have dropped because consumers have lost interest in the music then we should see a similar decline in concert ticket sales and MTV ratings.

    I have neither these numbers available to me nor the interest to properly evaluate them (properly meaning statisticly... not just scanning them with the naked eye.) But the numbers are there and any interested party could resolve this.

    If concert ticket sales have declined it would be very difficult for the industry to say that this is the fault of filesharing. But at the same time if it is found that Britney Spears concerts are still selling out then it is also very hard for consumers to say there is less interest in listening to her.

    Perhaps by stating their claims so heavily, both sides have too much to lose if they are found to be wrong.

    1. Re:This is an easy question to answer by jpmorgan · · Score: 2

      Perhaps by stating their claims so heavily, both sides have too much to lose if they are found to be wrong.

      Actually, the RIAA has a lot to gain if they're wrong. If the RIAA is wrong, then file sharing isn't harming their sales, and perhaps the claims that it helps record sales are correct. In which case they might be able to actually use filesharing to help them regain their lost profits.

      Of course, the music biz is like every other fat-cat American industry; top-heavy, complacent and unwilling to change to adapt to new conditions or open up new markets. This is the fundamental reason why their profits are dropping.

  102. Re:Audiogalaxy by Khalid · · Score: 2

    I have discovered tons of new music styles which I would have never listened to, thanks to Audiogalaxy. Man I really miss it. It seems that soulseek http://www.slsk.org is taking the torch, but it's not there yet !

  103. Yes... by tacokill · · Score: 1

    Why do I need to buy Linkin' Park (for example) if I can just turn on the radio and hear it EVERY hour -- on the hour. You think I'm kidding? I actually counted one day and you know what? The SAME Linkin Park song played 16 times between 9am and 5pm. And that's with an hour lunch break.

  104. Sony advertisement by cnock · · Score: 1

    Did anyone else notice that the article was concluded by an ironic advertisement by Sony?

  105. They fell behind the technology by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The music industry really was, for a while, doing quite well in improving music reproduction technology.

    First there were '78's made of shellac. Then they came up with vinyl, much easier to handle and able to hold more data, at 33RPM's. Still too pricey for kids, they did 45's.

    Now, America was moving towards an automobile culture, and you just can't run an LP in a car (ignoring the Lexus ad).

    So, they came up with 8-tracks. Great, an LP in your hand, and shock-proof to boot. But they were awfully clumsy, and apparently not all that cheap to manufacture (which ought to translate to consumer prices, but that's another rant).

    So, they came up with cassette tapes. They were small, portable, and dirt cheap. I remember buying albums for $6-7 in the early eighties. But the quality of the cassettes was fairly miserable.
    Tape also has a tendency to stretch and wear out, so it's tough to commit to a music collection on 8-track or cassette.

    So they came up with CD's. Finally, very high quality, random access, and portable (after a few shakey years). With the advent of the CD it finally made sense again to collect music for the long haul, so the music industry saw a boom in replacement purchases, from all the people who had purchased 8-tracks and cassettes.

    But the CD is close to perfect. It doesn't wear out, it has random access, it has really good quality, it's portable, and it's cheap to manufacture. People had their music now, and they didn't need to replace it. This was a new situation for the music industry. They would have to keep producing good new music to keep up the sales or come up with a better format.

    What could be better than a CD? Well, what are the CD's weaknesses? You couldn't record on them (before the past few years). You also had to carry quite a stack of CD's around for just a few good songs. Sony recognized this and made a few stabs at the market with MiniDisc. They got portable, small, random-access, and cheap, eventually, but the quality of the first round of MD's was pretty poor. It used a 3-subband lossy coder, and it just didn't compare to CD's. It was also fairly proprietary.

    It seems that at this point, the industry just gave up. I don't know what really happened behind the scenes, but the entire industry seemed to undergo a cranial/anal inversion. When DAT tried to get near the market, they got scared and had the Digital Home Recording Act [Tax] enacted. This was the start of viewing the customer as the criminal adversary.

    Meanwhile, the personal computer industry was booming. Computers started to get hard disks capable of storing lots of music and good perceptual coders came to market. I remember ripping all my CD's onto my 601-based Mac in '96 (in MP2, at 0.2x, after a separate rip stage, typing all the track names in) and it was just amazing. Soon everybody noticed that you could listen to your music in a form that you wanted. With the advent of CD writers and the iPod, the missing portability element came back. By 2001, the technology provided by the music industry had been totally overtaken by the technology the computer industry provides, and that's when they started sueing everybody in sight.

    So, as I see it the music industry has 3 options:
    1) Come up with a better technology. If I knew what it was, I'd be doing it, but it obviously involves the internet, probably 3G cell. The only thing I can't do with an iPod is get my music I don't have with me. Note: I don't want SACD's or DVD-A's. They don't solve any problems I have.
    2) Put out good music. I doesn't even have to be new, I just bought a box set of remastered Miles Davis on Monday and In a Silent Way is my new favorite CD.
    3) Criminalize everything the customers want to do and sue the begezus out of everybody who tries to help them.

    What's behind Door #1 and Door #2 are sustainable options. Lurking behind Door #3 is a business model that has outlived its usefullness and is trying to get by on the creation of artificial scarcity. Stockholders ought to be very leery of a management that doesn't want any part of a sustainable market.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    1. Re:They fell behind the technology by Alsee · · Score: 2

      1) Come up with a better technology. If I knew what it was, I'd be doing it, but it obviously involves the internet

      How about existing technology? Use a compressed format, MP3, OGG, whatever. Use recordable discs. A CD can hold something like 10 hours of music and a DVD can hold something like 3 days of continuous music. Your entire music collection on one random access disk. Have the players read standard computer format disks for simplicity/compatability. Ignore any file types they don't understand which allows flexibilty and forward compatability for new features and filetypes. Let them read multi-session recordings so you can add music to the disk piecemeal (currently music cd players only read single session disks, you have to burn it all at once). And sell individual downloads cheap. Make it a subscription service, $20 for X downloads, to avoid dealing with micropayments for each song. Not everyone has internet access, so put networked coin operated burners in stores and malls.

      If any company with even a halfway decent catalog of music adopted this plan it would be unstoppable. Every company in the industry would have to immediately follow suit or be wiped out.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    2. Re:They fell behind the technology by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The MP3 CD's already are out there. iTunes supports burning 'em and there are a few in-dash players you can get. The trouble is I don't think most consumers will pay, say, $150 for a single "Springsteen Complete" mp3/DVD, instead of 10 albums. They might spend $50 on a big disc like that, but $150 for a single disc would 'seem' too high, even if it's a better value and more convienient. The RIAA execs think they'll spend $150 on the whole set anyhow, so they won't go for it, I fear.

      The music subscription idea is right on the mark. Funny enough, there was a Canadian company in the late 80's that had a whole system ready to go into Sam Goody stores to make custom CD's like you mentioned. Not quite coin-op, but you filled out a slip, gave it to the clerk, and went to do some shopping. $1.50 a song, IIRC. In an hour your disc would be ready. I was lead to believe the recording labels backed out at the last minute. I forgot about it until you mentioned it, but that might have been the next big thing that they missed out on. It would have likely forstalled the whole Napster thing because it filled a need and made the customers happy. I wish I knew what was going through their minds at the time. Probably the same issue, they think they'll buy all 10 albums if they're not allowed to get a compilation.

      Their fatal flaw is probably plain-old greed.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    3. Re:They fell behind the technology by TFloore · · Score: 2

      The in-store custom CD setup... I vaguely remember such a thing, too, though I thought it was early 90s.

      The reasoning I remember for not letting it go forward was predictable, and familiar. Too many people would grab the 2 good songs from 5 different albums, and pay $15 for a single CD, instead of $15 for 5 different CDs to get those decent songs. The record labels were convinced they'd lose too much money, so they canned it.

      I also heard there were difficulties with how to do royalties for CDs created with multiple artists' work.

      Sort of makes you think they were aware they were shovelling crap on the public, doesn't it?

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is... Oops. Frank, I've got your sig again! Where's mine?
    4. Re:They fell behind the technology by solferino · · Score: 2


      flaw in yr argument is th assumption that 'th music industry' invented these technologies - as i understand it this is mostly wrong - th playback equipment manufacturers invented these technologies and th record companies fought th uptake of most of them

    5. Re:They fell behind the technology by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2

      Sort of makes you think they were aware they were shovelling crap on the public, doesn't it?

      I've seen a line of CD's at the store called, "That's what I call music" (or something like that), which is exactly a CD with multiple artists' work. It's fairly recent music and it's up to Volume 20, or some high number.

      So, yeah, they could've figured it out if they'd wanted to. So, that means they didn't want to.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    6. Re:They fell behind the technology by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2

      You're right, the labels don't have technology R&D groups, the manufacturers do. But the labels have to embrace a format in order for pre-recorded music to come out on it. If they were fighting these formats they could have simply said, e.g. "Columbia will not release on 8-track." There has to be wide agreement among the manufacturers and labels before the manufacturers will start making the players.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  106. Poor choices = poor sales by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps if it was possible to buy or see music that wasn't either kiddie pop or rap, more people might be inclined to buy music. I haven't bought a new CD in a couple of years. Not because I can get music online, but because there just hasn't been anything new released that appealed to me.

  107. BS Fan and Proud to Admit it by dh003i · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Being quite honest, I like Britney Spear and her music. For saying this, I expect to get a whole slew of responses talking about how terrible my taste is, and even moderated down.

    And it has nothing to do with the latest trend or whatever. Eminem's also one of the latest trends, and I hate what he has to offer.

    So, why do I like her? Well, simply put, because her music is fun to listen to. And its fun to watch her videos. I'm not saying its intellectually rich music, but I really don't care. If I want intellectually enriched music, I'll go someplace else (like Ernesto Cortazar, Beethoven, John Williams).

    That said, I can understand why this style of music means a slump for the music industry. Its not something I want to listen to all the time. In fact, there's very few artists I'd like to listen to all the time. The only musician who's music I've been able to listen to repeatedly over and over again is Beethoven.

    So, what's the problem? Well, the problem is the zillion Britney-alikes that pop up (you know what I'm talking about, Pink, etc). And its not even so much them. I like some of Pink's music. I like alot of the stuff by Pink, No Doubt, Shakira, Aquilera, Spears, etc. Its not that the music's that bad. It's that it gets OVER -PLAYED.

    This, my friends, is the fault of the music industry and the radio stations. Hearing the same song 500 times in one day is going to make me sick of it (i.e., anyone remember "I Saw The Sign" -- they played that song to death).

    That's part of the reason I love the 80's stations, because they have a large selection to choose from, and I probably won't hear the same song twice in one day. That's also part of the appeal of P2P -- you get to mix it up.

    So, ultimately, the current slump in the music business is completely the fault of the RIAA and music companies, along with the radio stations. Start mixing it up more, and people will be more interested. But really, who wants to buy that latest Britney Spears album when the songs in it have been played on the radio 500 times a day? If I listened to the radio more, I probably wouldn't buy CD's, but since I don't, I don't get so sick of songs that I want to puke when I hear them, like most people do.

    So, the take home message to the RIAA? Well, lets say it like this. I like ice cream. I really like ice cream. I really really like ice cream. But if I've been eating nothing but ice cream for a week straight, I'm going to puke the next time I see it and I never want to see it again.

    1. Re:BS Fan and Proud to Admit it by Alsee · · Score: 3, Funny

      And its fun to watch her videos.

      You seem to have misspelled cleavage.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    2. Re:BS Fan and Proud to Admit it by deblau · · Score: 2
      Your tastes are your own. I think Spears' music is vapid and dull, but that's just my opinion. You've got yours, and you're entitled to it.

      What is more concerning is the second half of your post, about what the music industry should do to better serve you. Making this kind of statement is like a lab chimp telling its captors, "give me more bananas, and I'll be happier during the anal probes". I believe you are what you do, and that belief makes the recording industry among the most evil people on the planet in my estimation. I won't compare them with terrorists, but collectively they have ruined countless people whose only crime is trying to give the world their music. Now that cheaper alternatives are available, and they don't have a monopoly on production, marketing, and distribution, they resort to persecuting and threatening upcoming artists with lawsuits and (even worse) new laws. I certainly won't tell them anything they can do to stay in business.

      I don't buy their products (haven't since 1994), nor do I use a P2P network to obtain them illegally (haven't since 1996). I just go without. You can too. Instead of 1 CD, buy a few plants to spruce up the place. Instead of 5 CDs, buy some rollerblades. Instead of 10, visit some relatives (yes, plane tickets really are that cheap right now).

      But above all else, remember that happiness can be had for free, so why are you paying for it?

      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    3. Re:BS Fan and Proud to Admit it by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

      Hahaha... that's classic.

      --

      eTrade SUCKS
    4. Re:BS Fan and Proud to Admit it by IxnayOnTheIxnay · · Score: 2, Informative

      Pink, No Doubt, Shakira, Aquilera, Spears Er, I take exception to that. No Doubt is no Britney knockoff. They are a ska band whose first album came out in 1992. What grade was Britney in then?

    5. Re:BS Fan and Proud to Admit it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe you haven't been seeing what Guin is trying to do now. She thinks she's TLC, and looks like Pink.

  108. The Record Industry is looking for a bail out.... by Newer+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The record industry is looking for a government bail out. They look to Congress and the courts to fix ailments that they brought upon themselves. I find it funny that in this day of: "let the marketplace decide", the music industry seems to be seeking (and getting) special treatment. This industry should be left to live (or die) by its own bad decisions. I'm in my fourties, and I find that the 'big five' record companies have completely alienated me. Apparently they don't want me for a customer. All they seem to care about is serving my daughters, who can't afford their exhorbitant prices any more. My attitude is why bail therse clowns out? Let them die and be replaced by better run companies who care about serving their customers. Of course, we all iknow the answer to why this won't happen: $$....the flow of $$ to Congress' pockets that is!

  109. Another better article by MoneyT · · Score: 2

    I personaly think Fast Company said it best nearly a month ago

    http://www.fastcompany.com/online/60/monopolist. ht ml

    --
    T Money
    World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  110. Re:blame artists too! by lugonn · · Score: 1
    Ani does have a music ethic, which is something to respect. Most bands want to "get signed and be famous", instead of "playing music for fans".

    I think we need to blame greedy(fame) "artist" and greedy(money) record execs on this issue though. If "artists" weren't so concerned with getting on the radio and selling albums, there would be a lot better music out there. It's the boot lickin' ass kissers that are fuckin it all up by taking hand outs from record companies.

    Look at pop acts, they suck, but KIDS buy their shit becuase authority figures (record marketing grown-ups) tell them to. It's not like they keep listening to that shite when they grow up and have their own opinions. People like Britney do that job becuase they want to be "Idolized", not becuase they want to share their talent(or lack of).

    It's ego with no talent/vision that is killing music. (i.e. Bowie: ego + talent*vision = good music)

    Ani is cool, but she should be more provocative. Guys like that. She seems to be about her music and little else, except pretentious, but most good musicians are.

  111. ATTN! by FIT_Entry1 · · Score: 1


    Napster is soooo last year. Do we really need another article on it?

  112. alternative distribution works well for punk/metal by stego · · Score: 2

    "and the alternative distribution systemss don't work very well for anything but Britny and dubs of live Grateful Dead"

    Touch&Go, Dischord, Sub Pop, Metal Blade etc are all record labels that each market to their own audience. I would guess that only a very small portion of the music released by these labels ever gets radio play, and can be impossible to find in all but the most open of record stores. Fans of the music find the the ability to order what they are looking for, though. Alternative means of distribution has always been how this muisc gets found.

    Dischord has been artist run since the beginning and has always encouraged the consumer to order directly from them at a nice realistic price. This is a label that does it way more right than most, by being very active as an alternate distribution system.

  113. new music sucks by Jacek+Poplawski · · Score: 2

    "Some older music fans may hate hip-hop, nu-metal, or techno,"

    Older? I am 23.
    There is almost no good music I can buy today in stores. There are Dio and Ozzy albums, but these performers ale little old. There are few good newer bands like Evergrey, but in general - new music sucks. 10 years ago there was some nice tunes on MTV (for example by Dire Straits, GNR, Aerosmith, ZZ-top or even... Roxette), today it's impossible to find there something which isn't crap.

    Probably people who buy todays popular music aren't real fans, they don't love this music, just listen to it. When there will be something new in TV - they will buy something new.

    People who produce music are responsible for this situation. For new group it's very hard to put track on radio or TV. Of course there is possibility to put mp3 on net (hey, that was napster official mission), but it's hard to gain big set of fans this way.

    We just need to wait until music producers realize what is wrong, so maybe they will stop promoting shit in radio/TV and good music will back on scene.

  114. Re:exactly what I have been saying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From a diehard Windows user who is now starting to use Linux, I think that the problem with Windows users out there is that there scared to try or learn something new that involves work or typing commands. Talking about lazy, what about the laziness of 'clicky clicky' in the Windows world?

  115. Grateful Dead = First modern open source band? by t0qer · · Score: 2

    dubs of live Grateful Dead concerts.

    While a lot of people (deadheads) may argue this, I think part of the bands immense popularity was due to their decision to allow this type of taping.

    The tape always had background noise, without the clean room effect of a studio. The thing was, you could hear conversations, people talking, laughing, tripping, cheering having a good time so the bootleg would MAKE you want to be there.

    I tip my glass to Jerry Garcia in heaven. I will always love your tunes you magical bard you!

  116. Stealing ... yes they are by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

    You might want to go to www.webster.com and check the definition which is not nearly as limited as you have mistakenly asserted:

    "No, they are NOT. Stealing means depriving the original owner of the use of that material."

    From Websters:
    "1 : to take the property of another wrongfully and especially as an habitual or regular practice"

    "1 a : to take or appropriate without right or leave and with intent to keep or make use of wrongfully"

    "1 d : to appropriate to oneself or beyond one's proper share"

    which by US law includes unauthorized duplication and distribution of non-tangable intelectual property of obvious value, especially where copyrighted.

    So, in the United States, speaking in english, the description of illegal (already ruled so by the courts) P2P sharing of unauthorized copyrighted works as "stealing" is absolutely correct.

    1. Re:Stealing ... yes they are by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      What the dictionary says and what the law says are two different things. So no, its not stealing. Do you go to jail for 15 years for stealing a cd from the store? No? Why can you for copying music from the internet.

    2. Re:Stealing ... yes they are by Totally_Lost · · Score: 2, Informative

      stealing one cd from the store is a misdemeanor and worth a slap on the hand and maybe a small fine. Do it two or three times and you are likely to go to jail a few days, steal 200 CD's from the store and you just commited a felony theft of about $2,000 that will send you to jail for a long time if you hit the three strikes provisions.

    3. Re:Stealing ... yes they are by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      But 'pirating' one cd online will get you more then a misdemeanor. How do you justify that? Whats the difference between the two (besides the cd store losing out)?

    4. Re:Stealing ... yes they are by Computer! · · Score: 2

      : to take the property of another wrongfully and especially as an habitual or regular practice

      So, by your own definition, you're wrong. Copying is not only not stealing, it's not even taking. Turn off your TV once in a while. When you take something, you deprive the owner of its use.

      This is only copying without permission, a relatively new type of "crime" created by our legislation to protect the business of intellectual property. "Stealing" was defined long before the idea of IP copying.

      --
      If you fall off a building, go real limp, because maybe you'll look like a dummy and people will be like hey, free dummy
  117. I find it interesting.... by Metox · · Score: 1

    I find this little personal observation interesting. In the SF bay area, there are 3 major music, stores which have more than one location (Yes, I am intentionally excluding the SF Virgin Megastore).
    They are Tower, Amoeba, and Rasputin. Most of the time if there is something odd, eclectic, esoteric music I'm looking for, I will occasionaly search in Tower, but most of the time I will find what I'm looking for at either Amoeba, or Rasputin. Amoeba and Rasputin have a HUGE Indie and Used stock and usually a much more helpful staff. Also, if one look at the number of customers in these stores, compared to Tower, they are almost always full. Sure, Tower get's busy on the weekends, but Amoeba and Rasputin seem to be busy all the time. These places are where those who are actually looking for "new" or "Different" music shop. Sure, they also carry the modern, popular stuff, but their real treasure is in the things you wont find at Tower.
    Also, the CD prices are usually less than Tower's.

    Wake up RIAA and MPAA. Embrace change, and don't rely on cookie cutter formulas for music anymore!

    --
    "Chemestry is Physics without thought. Mathematics is Physics without purpose."
    1. Re:I find it interesting.... by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 2

      I've noticed that too, and I don't live anywhere near the bay area.

      About once a year I get up to San Francisco, and make Ameoba one of the stops on my itinerary. Lots of great used stuff, a nifty selection on vinyl, and overall a very pleasent shopping experience (you can easily waste a half day in that place).

      As I read your post it occured to me. On average, I spend more money at a good record store 800 miles away then I do at the tower just a few blocks from my house.

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
  118. if you can buy what you want in town by stego · · Score: 2

    Most of my CD purchases are done online these days. I have afast enough connection that I'd rather download the MP3s than wait the days+ until I can get delivery.

  119. They're Doomed by SQL+Error · · Score: 3, Interesting

    As far as I can see, the music industry as we know and hate it is doomed. We don't need them. Anyone can make music, burn CDs, put up a website and sell them. Distributors will come to the party soon enough.

    All we lose is the saturation media bombing to promote the latest 15-minute megastar. Well, darn.

    The movie industry is in a stronger position - at least for the time being. You can't get some friends together and make The Lord of the Rings, no matter how much creative talent you have. And I still enjoy going to the movies with my friends and munching popcorn and seeing it all on the big screen.

    The MPAA still needs to be clubbed senseless, though. Maybe we can get some out-of-work seal trappers on the case.

  120. In further news... by thing_from_space · · Score: 1

    The RIAA has asked Rep. Berman (D-CA and entertainment industry monkey) to amend their recently proposed bill to include web media outlets including Salon.com . Asked if this decision was brought about by Salon's recent article dismissing the impact Napster had on the recording industry, RIAA spoksperson, M. Stalin, replied "It has everything to do with it. This kind of libel provokes terrorism in the form of music piracy. We intend to defend our country in the only manner we can: shutting down irresponsible media."

  121. The Perfect RIAA world....why music sucks by rhexx · · Score: 1

    In the perfect RIAA world there will be one radio station RIAARADIO and one video station RIAATV which continually play the same single song/video by the RIAATones (the only band in the world) 24/7 and charge $2.99 per minute to watch or listen. Anyone who wants to hear music will listen to The RIAATones. A licence will be required to play music in your own home or sing in the shower (licenses will sell for 14 cents per note per listener direct from authorized RIAA agents of which there will be only one) Concerts will cease to exist.

    The point is that P2P created a very organic decentralized method for being exposed to new music. It leveled the playing field and created a distribution network that effectively cut record companies out of the loop. Suddenly listenership was determined more by the quality of music than the quantity of exposure. This is old news but we're finally starting to see the real impact of an industry that's struggling to promote a single genre of music to a single audience for the sake of maximum control. The result: music that truly sucks.

    The article hits the nail on the head when it points out that the music industry is choking itself by keeping out the "barbarian hoardes" trying to create fresh music and media. In recent years, the industry's trump card (access to powerful means of production, distribution, and promotion) have all fallen into the hands of the artists themselves. It's no longer necessary to get a recording contract in order to make a studio quality recording, have it pressed to some expensive medium, and then distributed around the world on trucks. If your fans are savvy enough [geeky enough] and your music is good enough, then you can record it in your bedroom and drop it on your filesharing program of choice, or a website, or burn it to cd and pass it amongst your friends or whatever, and be heard by thousands of people in a matter of weeks. Like the people who delivered coal to homes until gas-lines were put in, the recording industry is now obsolete thanks to overwhelming adoption of new technology. There is certainly a role for record companies if they're willing to move quickly to find ways to embrace the new technology for their own benefit.....but I think it'll be a cold day in hell when that happens.

    In the mean time, the moral of the story is this: make your own music. Support those who do make their own music. Buy directly from artists (as others have suggested) Share the music that doesn't suck with other fans. Revolutionize the entertainment industry and leave the entertainment industry out of it.

    There are plenty of great musicians around and plenty of phenominal music in the world but there's no way for it to flow through the current constapated system engendered by the RIAA to actually get to anyone's ears. This is the true reason for the sucess of P2P music distribution. Variety, personalization, customization. And this is the true reason that internet radio was killed. It terrified the RIAA to think that people could simply tune into a radio station and hear exactly what they wanted to listen to without buying CDs. Imagine that. Platters of plastic no longer necessary.... but that's another rant.

    Thanks for reading. Go find some music that doesn't suck and tell me about it.

  122. jesus H christ goddamn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    This is the most deadpan debate ever, consisting of three main types of message context:

    1. The notion/belief the "music industry" is simply representation of top 40 artists who come and go, thus a "listener loyalty" has not been/cannot be established.
    Debunked: Yeah, the artists suck and the music industry loses money thanks to technological advances, like they deserve to.

    2. The mention of independent/"indie label" bands who benefit from forms of electronic music distribution.
    Debunked: How relevant/Who gives a shit?

    3. The concrete conclusion that downloading is easier than buying a CD, when money is not had, etc.
    Debunked: So would they have been purchased in the first place?

    To me it really seems kind of a moot issue to discuss without any real values being given.

  123. Re:If songs were a quarter... (Revenue!=Profit) by nelsonal · · Score: 2

    I have not seen any studies that tried to measure the elasticity of demand for music, but since there are not many new companies offering music at this price, I doubt it is 1. It is probably between, 1.5 and 2 over that large a price range. Things that are not neccessities are unlikely to have elasticities below 1 (meaning you spend more of your income on them as prices increase, food staples are a good example of this) and as you move toward the extreems of demand curves constant elasticites do not hold. (Demand curves become more elastic as you lower prices, because you usually don't need an infinite number of anything.)
    Also, music still isn't free to produce, if you release 5 times as much music, its going to cost you five times as much to produce. While production costs are still low, that much of an increase is going to eat into your profits. Keep in mind the only part of the overhead you removed with online distribution was the wholesale and retail parts, while they are costly, they are not 75% of the cost of your music. You would probably have to buy more than 100 songs before profits would be similar.
    I think online distribution is only really an improvment for less known groups that already have low enough overhead that $0.25 per song is enough to provide a reasonable profit.

    --
    Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
  124. Re:And to think, increased constraints are just... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Digital" cable (only cable is digital now) produces a worse image quality then does analog cable. All "digital" means is that they use digital conversion to fit more channels into the same old bandwith. HD or High Definition TV is different. A HDTV signal produces an image with more than twice the resolution of the standard NTSC 480i analog source and without the static, because HD converter simply wont except a corrupted signal. Most people dont know the difference which is why the cable companies are rolling out digital cable and not HD. I have a sony XBR450 TV. This set simply sucks at displaying "digital" cable because of its complicated DRC line doubler. It takes a crappy signal and basically doubles the static before it displays the image. It was so bad I got Directv. However when fed a clean signal from even your cheapest basic interlaced DVD player it does such a good job that it makes it look like the signal came from a $1000 dollar progressive scan player. The 480p image looks like 960i! HDTV is even better, even on the over the air upconverted crap they feed us in New York. The new XBR800's have line doublers that can be disabled/adjusted manually. So this problem no longer exists. If you have a line doubler especially one from sony see what you can do. Also you might want to higher a technician to configure your tv to NTSC standards or do it yourself with an AVIA DVD. This can greatly increase clarity and fix any geometry problems, you might not even know you have. AVIA also reduces the strain on you tube and can add a few years to your tvs life span. Good luck.

  125. Re:alternative distribution works well for punk/me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Metal Blade Records

    They were the first to sign Metallica.

    So, THEY SUCK!!

    Dischord + Minor Threat = Good

  126. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  127. metal blade by stego · · Score: 2, Informative

    Metal Blade distributes the mighty lamb of god and GWAR,so they can't be all bad...

  128. 5. by Pac · · Score: 2

    Sue anyone and anything vaguely threatening to your line of business

  129. silliness by Phantros · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    I'm not sure why Slashdot likes to pretend that music "sharing" doesn't hurt CD sales. Before mp3s, I bought perhaps 15-20 CDs per year, after...0. I know I'm not the only one; of my three closest friends, two no longer buy any CDs, and one buys a few but far less than before. Simple (admittedly anecdotal) evidence.

    Unlike some people I'm not going to make excuses about bands sucking or music companies being too greedy. It's stealing, that's all there is to it.

    Sometimes morals do have a price, and sometimes that price is low.

    --

    4Literature - Read, write, and discuss your favor

    1. Re:silliness by mwolff · · Score: 1

      I really don't listen to music that much. However, I talked to my music junkie friends with their 200 plus cd's. And even now after I installed both a cdrw drive and broadband for them- they still say that they buy more cd's than they download music on the internet, and even if they get the entire album online they still buy it. I asked why and they couldn't tell me.... I wonder if it is like this for the majority of people?

    2. Re:silliness by gimpboy · · Score: 2

      i now buy more music than i used to. i've been exposed to many more artists through mp3's. while i dont really use p2p networks (im a net news fan myself). there are entire genre's that i had never had a chance to listen to and never would have listened to if it hadnt been for p2p networks. i've also introduced many friends to music with my mp3's (i've converted/am converting my entire collection). they too have purchased cd's they never would have. simple (admittedly anecdotal) evidence.

      --
      -- john
    3. Re:silliness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you just want your rights thrown out the window by a corporation that wants to tell you how, when and where to spend your money, that they can hack into your computer anytime without penalty and prsecute you for the assumption that you have opyrighted music on your computer? Come on your rights are under fire and you have to protect them.

    4. Re:silliness by InadequateCamel · · Score: 3, Funny

      There are benefits to owning a properly-mastered CD. No matter what people say, CD-R's aren't as durable. Plus, I really enjoy buying the case for the artwork and music info. A 48 CD case full of black-Sharpie-on-white-Verbatim CD's gets on my nerves after a while.

      Finally, I too have bought CD's from artists I would not have before. But I have also NOT purchased albums from artists because they sucked much harder than I thought they would. And I have 20 or 30 friends in the same boat.

    5. Re:silliness by jcast · · Score: 1

      They probably buy it because they think, sub-consciously, it'll help the artist. Most people are pretty decent that way...

      --
      There are reasons why democracy does not work nearly as well as capitalism.
      -- David D. Friedman
    6. Re:silliness by symbolic · · Score: 2


      It's great that you pay for what you have, but this will do nothing to solve the problem. The RIAA isn't going to change unless it has to, and the only way this will happen is to present the message in a format it can easily understand: no change, no money. Every time someone forks over their hard-earned money, they are providing the means that enable the RIAA to continue its assault on consumers of digital entertainment.

    7. Re:silliness by gimpboy · · Score: 2

      i guess i should provide more information :)

      i agree completely with you. what file shareing has enabled me to do is find bands i would not hear on the more popular mediums: radio/tv. as a result most of the music i listen to comes from independent artists. while there are a few artists i like who are signed under an riaa label, most are not.

      i've recently stopped purchasing music from artists signed under labels who are members of the riaa. at least i wont purchase them new. i have however purchased some used-do you have an opinion on this? i would also like to write some artists explaining my position to them. does anyone know where i can get addresses of different artists?

      --
      -- john
    8. Re:silliness by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      i.e. thank God I was able to listen to Moby's newest albulm (18) before I went to buy it. I bought "Play" & "Ambient" because I was able to listen to them before I purchased them, and we're not talking about over the radio either. I really like the 2 earlier albulms, but the latest one just plain sucks.

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    9. Re:silliness by dogfart · · Score: 1
      Well, there's a difference between owning a cheap $20 reproduction of a Van Gogh, and the original that's heavily guarded in a museum and would sell for many millions.

      There's some value in owning the original tangible object that expresses the artist's intent (sort of) even if an inferior replica is available for free

      --

      "dope will get you through times of no money better than money will get you through times of no dope"

    10. Re:silliness by symbolic · · Score: 2


      Thanks for the clarification. : )

  130. Good quality music ... by innerlimit · · Score: 1

    i got hooked on Waits a long time ago, the only thing i downloaded was his club perfomances, bootlegs can t be found in the store

    want really good music? surf over to

    www.jazzfm.com

    there s a lot of stations out there...

    Belgian radio ;; mms://stream04.pandora.be/stubrubreed
    www.stubru. be

    peace out :-)

    1. Re:Good quality music ... by innerlimit · · Score: 1
      sorry to reply to my own post, but i found the quintessential site for listening to jazz on the net...


      check out

      JazzSteps

      it will pop up the radioconsole so don't freak out!

  131. Food for thought... by Xzisted · · Score: 1

    Not that the RIAA will ever read this (are you reading this Hilary Rosen?) but here is an interesting thing that crossed my mind: I bought the System of a Down CD at Tower Hollywood last week for $17.99. It is an hour long CD that took the guys from the band a reported 13 days in the studio to make.

    Contrast

    I also bought 'The Fellowship of the Ring' DVD at the same store for $19.99. For a measly two dollars more I got a three hour DVD epic and possibly one of the greatest movies ever made not to mention the over two and a half hours of extras that came on the second DVD.

    Thought

    Did it ever cross anybody's mind that it cost over $100 million dollars to produce market and distribute 'The Fellowship of the Ring' yet it probably cost the recording studio that produced, marketed, and distributed the System CD under $20 million dollars to do the same thing, yet, the CD costs $2 less than the movie i purchased. That is totally ridiculous. THAT is why I never buy CD's. THAT is why I have a DVD collection of over 400 DVDs yet I only own maybe 30 CD's. Truth be told...if I want entertainment at home...I'd rather watch a movie anyways. If I'm in the car...I put on KROQ (its free ya know).

    Record companies are greedy conniving bastards who screw over the bands and entertainers they sign by not sharing as much of the profits as they should and then turn around and screw over the people they are trying to entertain by raising the prices so high that nobody will buy the music and when they do...they see absolutely no reason why not to share it with their friends. Just a thought, but maybe when 256 million fans are screaming that music is overpriced and not worth the investment you would realized that your business practices are old, antiquidated, and generally repellant to the public you are pushing them on.

    But thats just my opinion!

    --

    Honesty may be the best policy, but apparently by elimination, dishonesty is the second best policy.
  132. Re:Their price model is BAD too.. $15 a CD?! NUTSO by sjgman9 · · Score: 1

    It wont happen. Theyre too firmly entrenched with too much money and too much to lose.

    Candle Makers didnt complain when Thomas Edison made the light bulb.

    Railroad industries didnt complain when the airplane was made.

    Neither of my two examples resorted to thuggery to protect them selves. Change or Die. Simple darwinism

  133. You miss the point. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the problem was music sharing for free, I might discuss the matter with you.

    This is not the question.

    I myself don't dowload *any* commercial mp3 -- just non-paid, not commercial ones, made public all over the net.

    Nor do I buy CDs (well maybe 1 or 2 per _year_ to give to friends in their birthdays). Nowadays, the main reasons I don't buy CDs is:

    a) some relatives sent me recordings from the other side of the world (their local folk music and similar) and my CD player stopped working -- hence I suspect player damaged by non-circumventing schemes;

    b) the very idea of this "protection" schemes make me mad, because they *want* to avoid personal copies, they *want* their CDs copied by pirates (so that it gets widely known) and they pretend they're worried about losses, when sales actually were growing (even when Napster was at its peak).

    And, finally, I'm not an idiot and I don't like to be laughed at by these tycoons. They mock the musicians and they mock me by selling me songs I don't to buy or selling me again songs I already bought (the "greatest hits" albums).

    Finally, I'm losing valuable opportunities. There are a lot of countries in this world and many have fine music... Why should I favour "professionally marketed" music?

    They must lose sales until they relearn a simple truth: the client is king, they are serving the buyer needs -- and not vice-versa.

  134. An insider's theory on falling CD sales by bookguy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I heard a new twist on the "because they put out crappy CDs" theory, a theory that, interestingly enough, came from a friend who is lawyer for one of the big five record labels. She said the reason CD sales are being hurt by file-sharing (a premise I dispute, but, anyway) is that the labels are putting out CDs with one or two "hit" tunes and eight fillers. Naturally, most listeners would rather just have the hits, and they don't want to pay for the schlock. So, they go to Kazaa/Napster/Gnutella etc., get the one or two songs and don't have any interest in hearing the other tunes. Just passing along the theory of someone in the biz.

    1. Re:An insider's theory on falling CD sales by interstellar_donkey · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Something to ask your lawyer friend; why don't they bring back the single?

      When I was younger (back in the days before CDs up until the point where albums still outnumbered CDs in the record stores), you could buy '45s of your favorate song.

      Later, while in high school, the 45s dissapeared, but you could still buy cassette singles in record stores.

      Today, I don't see anyone using this. Occasionally I'll find an extended singles 'remix' CD with 4-5 different mixes of the same song, but typically at a price point I'm not willing to spend at.

      So why don't the record companies, in earnest, try to revive the singles? (I do vaguely recall a few attempts at CD singles, but nothing that ever took off).

      There are very few big name modern music songs I'd like to buy, but even when I do hear a catchy tune on the radio that I'd like to listen to more, I'm not going to run out and buy the record. I've been burned too many times with those seven tracks of 'filler'.

      I duspute the theory your friend has too, but I can't help to think that the record companies could squeeze a few bucks more out of their artists if they sold the popular singles for $1.99 a CD.

      --
      The Internet is generally stupid
    2. Re:An insider's theory on falling CD sales by decefett · · Score: 2

      Another reason for not rushing out to buy a catchy song you heard on the radio is because the radio stations will play it so many times your head will pound.

      --
      Australian? Join EFA
  135. Discipline Global Mobile by Pseudonym · · Score: 2

    King Crimson did the same with their label, Discipline Global Mobile. (They're not just King Crimson any more, either. I believe that John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin has signed up with them, too.)

    A look at their business aims is quite instructive as it sums up what they think is wrong with the rest of the industry.

    --
    sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    1. Re:Discipline Global Mobile by jzitt · · Score: 1

      King Crimson did the same with their label, Discipline Global Mobile. (They're not just King Crimson any more, either. I believe that John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin has signed up with them, too.)

      Uhh, yeah, but DGM has effectively tanked. Not sure how they'd define themselves now, but they aren't much like a label anymore. They don't carry any acts outside of the closely-Crim-connected.

      There are successful small labels out there, but DGM is not quite the success story, as it stands now, that many of us wished that it would be.

      A look at their business aims is quite instructive as it sums up what they think is wrong with the rest of the industry.

      Laudable, yes. And I hope the aims are able to be implemented in a viable company.

  136. joshjs's Take: by joshjs · · Score: 2

    There are two big factors causing a decline in album sales:

    1. The fact that radio playlists are shortening to something like thirty songs on typical pop, rock or even alternative stations.
    2. The availability of all these songs for quick download.


    The article states that over-40s are practically ignored by the media behemoths responsible for putting out most new music, but that that same age group is responsible for over forty percent of total cd sales. Why? Because the young people, the people who know how to get what few songs they hear on the radio for free, have virtually no reason to go buy the albums that are being put out.



    Just one lowly geek's opinion.

    1. Re:joshjs's Take: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm, I'm almost one of the over 40 crowd, hitting 37 this year and I must admit that I have downloaded music from napster et al.

      My wife and I have a combined collection of over 1200 CD's most of which pre-date the 90's.

      While napster was available and easy to use our CD buying habits shot up over 10x our normal buying habits (Normal buying habits being new Paul McCartney for the wife and new BNL for myself). Durning this time span we bought over 40 new CD's from bands we hadn't heard about or didn't know to much about besides radio airplay (We both work from home, she a home maker and myself a Network Admin so there isn't really much radio/car radio we hear).

      We heard more new music from napster and bought those CD's than we had in the last 5 years combined. Perhaps the problem is people not listening to the radio and not hearing the new bands (Foo Fighters, EverClear etc etc).

      When the RIAA can come up with an easy way for me to hear the new bands at a decent quailty I'll start buying their albums again.

      It's entertainment, it's not something I HAVE to buy, so unless they start showing me they can entertain me I'm not going to be buying it.

      I don't really care aout the current fads and who likes what but if I like it I'll buy it and there are very very few of you out there how aren't like that, no matter what the trolls say about never buying something from the evil corporations. If you want it, you'll buy it and who you get it from be damned.

      If the RIAA or MPAA supplies what I want at what I'm willing to pay, I'll buy it no questions asked.

      If you are offended by this, please check your buying habits over the last 5 years and tell me I'm not right.

      Regards

      Rick
      Anonymous Coward by choice.

    2. Re:joshjs's Take: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Foo Fighter and Everclear are not so new, man.

      I agree with what you're saying, but the original post is right, too. Younger people are more likely than older people to be tech-savvy and hence more likely to be downloading music. The fact that such a high percentage of CD buyers are older shows that the younger people that the music is apparently being marketed to are not buying it. It's a little bit of a jump to assume they're downloading it, but it IS popular with them -- that seems pretty obvious from TRL and whatnot. So it's not that big of a jump.

  137. music co's increasing sales by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    --these companies would sell a lot more with "burn your own" kiosks set up. You stand in front of a screen, select your individual songs up to the limit the cd-r holds, hit "enter", the cd gets burned, pops out of the slot with a ticket for how much it costs. The blank starts at a quarter, maybe a dime a song? Something like that anyway. That's what people want, pick their own tunes, not pay for ten tunes on a 700 meg cd.

    Hope someone does this. would be even cooler if this was an original idea, I have no idea, but never heard of any commercial product like this. when I was a kid, like 7-8-9, there was an amusement park near where I lived. They had all the old timey classics, the two penny crank machine you peered into and turned the crank that lit a light bulb and showed real soft cheesecake hot babes in bathing suits, .22 rifles shooting gallery, hall of mirrors, grab these two handles and see how much electricity you could "take"-no lie, they had that-and a buncha other stuff. Anyway, in the same penny arcade you could kareoke into a machine that cut a vinyl record real time, then take it home with you.

    Anyway, something like that but MP3's onto a cd-r would work.

    Please send money if anyone does this kiosk-CD idea, I'm broke.... heheheheh

    zogmeister

  138. Speaketh the Seers, Forrester Research by dogfart · · Score: 2, Informative
    Much of this is based on a study conducted by Forrester Research, "Downloads Save The Music Business. Forrester has high credibility with corporate types. A good article to send your congress-critters, keep in your file, etc.

    Quoting the introduction:
    "Labels are in trouble, and it's not from file sharing. To tap into $2 billion in new revenues, they must let people find, copy, and pay for music on their own terms."

    Free as in speech, but not as in beer. Not that beer is ever really free...

    --

    "dope will get you through times of no money better than money will get you through times of no dope"

    1. Re:Speaketh the Seers, Forrester Research by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 2
      Free as in speech, but not as in beer. Not that beer is ever really free...
      Not only isn't beer free, you actually buy beer either. Every 20-year old knows that you only rent it. ;)
      --
      Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  139. Dig This -- Free Linux Developer Tool. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dig this --> http://www.tryappx.com/linuxpromo

  140. preaching the sermon of theft and justification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I agree that the RIAA and others like it are foolishly digging their own graves with stunts like they pull now. However, lets not say things like "slashdot preaching this or that." That would be generalizing unless you refer to the majority of comments, to which it is clear that /. is engaging in one of the oldest tricks children play... justification using selective reasons. Instead of analyzing the entire situation in order to come to a logical conclusion and acting on it AFTER that point, what happens here is that a kid first develops an emotional WANT, then begins to build up a tower of arguments that he/she hopes will only show their side of it. By stealthily avoiding certain key issues that are not in that persons favor, they hope to manipulate their parents into buying them that toy. I have seen entirely too many 3-5 mod'd comments that consist of "I am not stealing, but am in fact acting as a hero of our society and freedoms" No, you are stealing. Just admit it. There are those who do, but they are never mod'd up. I wonder why? If you have to justify then you probably are fighting some internal battle no one gives a crap about much less wants to hear you try to convince yourself you are not a thief.

    Please just steal your music and get on with it, but don't try to justify it as it only makes you a slave to your id.

  141. Re:It was a bad idea to begin with... by NamShubCMX · · Score: 1
    Well I think discovering new bands is, overall, good for the "industry". I don't believe p2p services harm the music entertainment "industry", only the business (read money) part of it. The more music, the better. Don't tell me there won't be no music anymore if no money is to be made from it... Only the crap will go away.

    I could make a software analogy: if the software industry was to do no more profit, I'm sure you could still find programs hacked by people who really have a passion for what they do.

    If RIAA dies, does it really matter? I have a (small I know) collection of maybe 100 CDs, last time I checked none of the music labels were part of the RIAA (maybe for 2 CDs, where the band got bigger...) Most of those bands can't live only with their music. Not because of so-called piracy. But they still get together often enough to play a lot of shows every month, because they love what they do. They don't have the million of dollars of RIAA puppets, but they do what they love, and it shows through their music.
    Thank you very much :P

    --
    We've always been at war with Eurasia.
  142. dictionary definitions cut both ways: by famillionaire · · Score: 1

    'Appropriate' does, however, in fact mean to take possession of something in an exclusive fashion (exclusive property being the privileged form of property in current thought), so if you take 'steal' to be in either of the two senses above in which it is defined in terms of appropriation, then you could certainly argue that the poster to whom you responded was justified in holding that (unauthorized) duplication of a copyrighted work does not constitute stealing in that it does not involve appropriation (taking of exlusive ownership) but rather the opposite of appropriation.

    [http://www.dictionary.com/search?q=appropriate& db =%2A]

    1. Re:dictionary definitions cut both ways: by Totally_Lost · · Score: 1

      using your same source, then lookup

      [http://www.dictionary.com/search?q=steal]

      which says absolutely nothing about taking physical possession of something in an exclusive fashion, and says everything about:

      "To take (the property of another) without right or permission."

      The issue here, legal and moral, is that the music belongs to the artist or copyright holder, and to take a copy without permission is stealing.

    2. Re:dictionary definitions cut both ways: by Captain+Pedantic · · Score: 1

      Which definition of take are you referring to?

      Also, the dictionary says "To take the property" not "to take a copy", like you did. Big difference.

      --

      None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.
  143. Purchase = membership? by sahala · · Score: 1
    (note: I have an iPod and rip all my music to mp3, but I do own quite a large collection of CDs)

    I had an interesting experience the other day when I was reorganizing CDs on my shelves. I accidentaly dropped the recent Daft Punk album. Nothing broke, but a credit-card looking thing previously affixed to the CD case popped out. It had a serial number on it and the URL www.daftclub.com. I thought...cool, didn't see this when I bought it...and I browsed over to DaftClub where using the card + serial number I got access to special remixes, live recordings, and other media. I can't say all the media available was great, but it was a neat little experience to have access to mp3s and get to know the musicians a little better.

    Now nothing technically prevents me from copying those tracks over on a P2P network. There's also very little to stop me from sharing my DaftClub # with anyone else.

    But the point is that the music industry needs to be a bit more creative like this and give customers more than a plastic disc. A band is a lot more than the album/CD they put out, and some go through great lengths to express themselves through CD liners, posters, stickers, membership clubs (like DaftClub) and other things.

    Sasha's new album also has the same thing. You can't get into the special members only area of his website without having purchased his album which comes with a serial code.

    I wish more artists would follow suit.

  144. All the mp3's that I steal... by SporkKnight · · Score: 1

    Are from CDs that I wouldnt buy otherwise. So the RIAA is getting free exposure in my room for artists that normally wouldnt be featured here. I still buy about a cd a month. I would buy more if current music didnt suck so much.

  145. Open Media is the answer by locarecords.com · · Score: 1

    We are currently experimenting with an OpenMedia policy in our record label to try to break more musicians and also to let the music be free. No idea how it will go but would really appreciate support and comment from Slashdotters...

    locarecords.com

    --
    ---- The Open Source Record Label : : LOCARECORDS.COM
  146. U R DUM. IF I COULD COPY MUNNY, I'D BE... RICH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  147. The end of the celebrity star system? by gad_zuki! · · Score: 2

    One of the more interesting things going on right now is how free access to information makes the entertainment monopolies a bit obsolete.

    What might be going on here is the death of the celebrity star system. The RIAA is having trouble making people believe they need the latest and greatest from Britney Spears, et al. Is this just a sign of her ending 15 minutes of fame or perhaps something more? Non-mainstream music is very accessible today, especially compared to when I was in High School living in the suburbs ten years ago. Is it any surprise that music fans are dropping mainstream interests for something better and cheaper? Hello 10 dollar albums and 8 dollar concerts.

    I'm seeing small signs pointing in this direction everywhere in the media. Failed advertising campaigns which probably would have worked 15 years ago. Shrewd consumers telling Madison Avenue to fuck off, just check out the reaction to Maxim's hair dye for men. Socially conscious people voting with their dollars.

    As publishing and information becomes cheaper and freerer the old figureheard/celebrity system will become obsolete. Its going to be hard to care about a Gwenyth Paltrow interview on TV when people begin to see her as just an actor and not a cultural figure.

  148. YOU'RE JUST TRYING TO JUSTIFY YOUR THEFT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  149. "may of" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ROFL!! Why don't you check those "grammer" skills while you're at it?

  150. A Rising Tide Lifts All Boats by cburley · · Score: 1
    Okay, the RIAA/MPAA copyright cartels have been annoying me for years with their heavy-handed tactics, and I'm not particularly impressed with the "in-your-face" attitude of folks who willfully traffic in illegally copied music (or software for that matter).

    But something just occurred to me that is probably blindingly obvious to everyone else.

    Technologies such as the printing press, radio, television, and the Internet have substantially increased the "connectivity" of people and organizations over the last buncha centuries.

    Over that entire period, there has never really been a society that has been able to completely "stamp out" casual, unauthorized sharing of information between friends and neighbors. (Sure, some have tried: totalitarian regimes, communist regimes, and so on.)

    That's because it's a hard problem -- asymptotically hard to stop sharing of information as you approach the "solidarity" of components of the communications matrix, i.e. neighbors physically close to each other (they can hear each other play music), friends and family who enjoy and trust each other enough to visit each other, and so on.

    Put these two things together and, so far, all you have is what everyone else has been saying for awhile: "it's the new communications technologies that have enabled more and easier sharing of information of various shades -- white [legal], black [illegal & dangerous], and gray [illegal as a matter of law in that it infringes someone else's intellectual privilege]".

    What just hit me is that the copyright cartels -- in fact, everyone who has any interest in holding copyright, patent, or trademark privilege (a term I use in lieu of "rights", which connotes something with which I'm uncomfortable) -- also enjoy the same kinds of improvements in ease, frequency, and amount of intercommunication as a result of these technological improvements.

    For example, sure, FTP, email, chat, P2P, and so on make it much easier for 15-year-olds to have a vastly wider collection of "friends" with whom to share illegally copied music, but the same underlying technologies correspondingly enable the RIAA, MPAA, and all its members (artists, studios, movie houses, whatever) to communicate rapidly and effectively among its members, to increase its audience of members, and so on.

    Given that fact, I'm now even less sympathetic to the argument that government should be in the business of assisting copyright holders in creating artificial scarcity in technology and its uses, by mandating digital-rights-management systems, by shutting down technologies like Napster, and so on, since there seems to be no corresponding limitations placed on copyright holders to not use these same technologies as effectively.

    In essence, I'm coming more around to the view I've seen others propose, a sort of survival-of-the-fittest-user-of-new-technology view, that the government should leave the various players free to employ and exploit the technologies, and let market forces and the rule of law (a simpler, more practical law by far than we have, and especially than the RIAA/MPAA/software-producers are urging, in the area of intellectual privilege) iron things out.

    Over time, those seeking to protect copies of information will find ways to employ technological improvements to hunt down and bring prominent, profiteering infringers to justice, a resolution for which copyright law has long provided.

    Meanwhile, "ordinary folk" who now "illegally" share their favorite music with hundreds or thousands of friends, thanks to technology, instead of 10 or 20 as they would have a century ago, will continue to be able to engage in this sort of under-the-radar, relatively unimportant (compared to what other things governments must deal with these days), sharing. As long as individuals aren't taking the kinds of steps needed to make such sharing profitable, they'd be extremely unlikely to be targeted for prosecution -- and their use of technology to make friends and share with them all sorts of things, including illegally copied stuff, wouldn't be artificially crippled by government serving as a massively-funded militia for the RIAA/MPAA.

    While there will be short-term instances of one side "winning" over the other, just as is the case in any reasonably free market, the government would never be able to move rapidly enough to legislate the solution before the "balance of power" is restored due to what would be an ongoing, nonviolent arms race anyway, so why even go further down this path, and why not roll back what "we" have done already (get rid of the DAT tax, any legal mandates for stuff like SCMS)?

    In my opinion, it is much more important for our civilization (worldwide) that we let people freely use technology to make and keep new friends, using the wide variety of common interests that have worked for millenia, rather than seek to shut down certain types of interactions that by no stretch of the imagination pose a direct threat to civilization.

    So if the RIAA, MPAA, and other copyright holders seeking to short-circuit technological progress and availability to the public, to protect their own "turf", want to have their way, we should insist that our government restrain them correspondingly by crippling their use of technology -- as a simple example, say "fine, if you don't let ordinary people buy computers that can freely copy information because it might contain music, then you can no longer use computers in your business at all".

    (In general, I think if government legislators were empowered to impose greater restrictions on those seeking its power to restrict others without blindingly obvious cause, and expected to use that power, we'd see much less abuse of government, especially in ways that translate directly into abuse, or removal, of our own freedoms.)

    But that's not going to happen -- it's just a "mind experiment" I find useful to play with myself when considering how I might want to limit someone else's freedoms to serve my own interests. (Which is why I've pretty much ended up in the libertarian camp; there's not much, in the form of behaviors in which people engage, that I'm willing to sacrifice my own property or life to prevent people engaging in. But that's just because I, personally, would rather live in a world with, say, more marijuana users than risk dying trying to win a war on drugs; others would certainly make different choices using the same "razor" to consider them. Imposing one's will on others is so much easier, and therefore so thoughtlessly engaged in, when one doesn't expect to ever face the hard task of the imposition itself, given one's access to government and other forms of policing.)

    In summary, the rising tide of technology lifts all boats, so government interference in the form of trying to deny billions of "little boats", representing ordinary people sharing music and software with friends, their opportunity to rise with the tide, ultimately amounts to trying to selectively block a rising tide -- a futile attempt to block its benefits for the many while allowing it for just a few of the big boats (the RIAA, MPAA, SPA, and their members). The damage such a misguided effort, in an actual ocean, with nearly unlimited funds would likely do to the little boats and the harbor itself (imagine what sorts of approaches today's $Trillion governments and the means to acquire more funding by force would likely be encouraged to try), parallels what the government is likely to do to billions of innocent people and the civilization that cradles those governments if it follows the path it's been on for 10+ years now and heeds the recommendations of the copyright cartels.

    (I realize this idea boils down to "let the free market rather than government intervention decide", which is a very old idea. Sorry about that; sometimes very old ideas are the best ones we have. And, in practice, it's going to happen anyway; I'm arguing mainly for limiting the scope, timeframe, and amount of the damage done by fruitlessly trying to legislate and prosecute the kind of sharing of information that is not directly harmful to copyright holders and the public.)

    I think it's reasonable to conclude that if government had the integrity to "Just Say No" to restricting the public's use of technology when organizations like the RIAA and MPAA came to them, hat (and $$) in hand, those organizations would long ago have figured out how to employ advancing technology to better serve their interests.

    (For one thing, instead of being run by lawyers, maybe they'd be run by people who actually understand and cherish technology as well as the forms of art they try to protect.)

    In that scenario, maybe, just maybe, their members would be having more fun producing great art and appreciating the profits they do earn, and spending less time resenting the general public for using technology to do the exact sorts of things their predecessors have done for generations, just with lots more speed, frequency, and bandwidth.

    --
    Practice random senselessness and act kind of beautiful.
  151. whatever happened too.... by Capt.+Beyond · · Score: 1

    whatever happened too....
    Metallica?!?
    uh..?

    --
    -- "Perceptions create reality. By changing your perceptions you change your reality."
  152. Black Star == Public Enemy? by dave-fu · · Score: 2

    No, not hardly. Mos Def and Talib Kweli did put out a (very) good album together, but it's conscious rap (think Common or Blackalicious here), nothing mind-bogglingly evolutionary and aware like Public Enemy was and is.
    Maybe you meant to say El-P is this generation's Public Enemy? Again, not quite apt lyrics-wise (no one these days can touch Chuck D at his prime in terms of politically intelligent rap) but production-wise, he's the obvious heir to the Bomb Squad's legacy of boundary-pushing.
    And why listen to the White Stripes when you can listen to Bill Kirchen instead? He puts out ridiculously good blues-informed honky-tonk/rock 'n roll. Trust me.

    --
    Easy does it!
    This comment has been submitted already, 276865 hours , 59 minutes ago. No need to try again.
  153. Guess What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The geeks won!

  154. And thats what CD companies pay for? by fireboy1919 · · Score: 2

    Actually, thats sort of the cheap price. If you check, you'll notice that freeware CDs do sell for about $2 (i.e. recordings of famous symphonies where the artists made the album to gain exposure and nothing else).

    But CD makers do have other costs. The price of marketing, the music videos, the failed artists (that would be the number one cost), and the high price of artists. While I'm sure they make money, I'm not quite sure that they would at the $2 price. Perhaps its time for music to become less marketed, and music stars to be paid less.

    To me, it seems justified. In a society where modern recording equipment can be purchased (which works nearly as well as a studio) for about $500, and CDs can be made and distributed for cheap, and a large portion of society (at least 1%) is capable of some form of musical ability of their own, demand for paid musicians shouldn't be that high (based upon law of supply and demand).

    Somehow...I am not even sure that it is. I've met a lot more talented musicians than I've seen or heard from the "outlets" (and as a lifelong sound tech and singer, I'm somewhat qualified to identify talent; at least vocal talent), barring a handful of exceptions. But I don't think any of those were nearly as attractive as todays singers. Perhaps the music industry could cut prices by distributing good music for cheap, and showing Pr0n stars in the videos rather than the singers.

    --
    Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
  155. Quality of Illicit Data by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 5, Insightful


    This is a totally BS argument - people don't rip and P2P share a million copies of shit. It's pure theft, with an everybody is doing it excuse.


    If you think the fact that someone trades data is proof that the data has some aspect of quality, then you simply do not understand the draw of illicit data. It doesn't mater if the data is warez, credit card listings, music, or bomb recipes. The draw is that the data in question is illicit... forbidden knowledge... prohibited... or otherwise illegal to own.

    Think Eminem is an untalented idiot and his music is audio tripe? That's not the point. The point is that YOU got a copy of his recent album before it was even RELEASED. There's a brand new game that you'll constantly rant bout sucking... but you've got a copy of it in your collection. And whether you know how to use AutoCAD, much less have a desire to ever install it, isn't as important that you HAVE a copy of it.... cracked and dongle-less.

    When I was a kid, I used to collect bomb instructions. I was convinced a large portion of it was created by people with just enough knowledge to be dangerous - to the unfortunate who followed the instructions. I never had any interest in actually creating any of the devices and substances described. But it was forbidden data - and I had a lot of it. And that idea alone appealed to me.

    Sure. Some people who collect bomb instructions want to make bombs. Some people who download music see value in that music. But I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of file trading is simply a combination of packrat behavior and the thrill of handling illicit data.
    1. Re:Quality of Illicit Data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just so you know, what you are describing is not normal behavior.

    2. Re:Quality of Illicit Data by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
      Yay, forbidden fruit. It's not a new thing. Also compare to underage drinking, drugs and getting pornos while a minor. All great fun.

      The more you try to stop someone doing something, the more you are actually tempting them. Mostly.

    3. Re:Quality of Illicit Data by Rader · · Score: 2

      heheheh. I might have to agree with that.

      But I think it's called "Collecting"

      I don't listen to my 700GB of music, but I collect it nevertheless

    4. Re:Quality of Illicit Data by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2


      Just so you know, what you are describing is not normal behavior.


      I'm curious what you base "normal behavior" on. Collections themselves are common enough over a wide range of subject matter - from pogs, to pins, to stuffed toys, to automobiles, to military vehicles. It seems to be a fairly common aspect of human nature. The only variation is the subject matter of the collection.

      And collections of illicit data are certainly common enough. I got all these bomb instruction files due to a widespread enough interest in them to support arhives on a number of BBS' - as odd as my hobby was, it was also shared by numerous others. Likewise, for as long as I've been involved with computers (to this day), I constantly meet new people who have repositories of other forms of illicit data.

      This behavior may not meet your definition of "normal", but it is fairly common.
    5. Re:Quality of Illicit Data by luisdlc · · Score: 1

      Therefore, at least in this case, this wouldn't represent lost revenue, if anyone has a copy of AutoCAD just because the 'thrill' then there is NO WAY they would have BOUGHT it...

      So yes, I agree with you about it is illicit, forbidden, etc. BUT your argument is another addition to the argument that most piracy is not really causing loses in revenues.

  156. To blame? by piecewise · · Score: 2

    Certainly not to blame -- but still blatantly illegal.

    --
    The next comment I write will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and see it early!
  157. um... by X_Caffeine · · Score: 1
    I really don't mean to be a troll here, but maybe the problem is the washed-up artists you're listening to? "dogshit that passes for Aerosmith as of late," as if they ever didn't suck?


    Good, new music is out there. You like a social/political bent? Go grab Sleater-Kinney's new One Beat, it's phenomenal. Or Wilco's Yankee Foxtrot Hotel, which should be on every geek's playlist simply due to its strange release history (streamed for free for months before it was released, then debuted at #2!).

    --
    // I will show you fear in a handful of jellybeans.
  158. prices are way to high by Hohlraum · · Score: 1

    When I can get any cd I want for 10 bucks + shipping/tax I'll start buying again. The whole mp3 thing turned me into a CD buying freak! And then the industry started jacking up the prices I stopped buying dead in my tracks. I hope the entire record industry takes a huge dump and they have to start over from scratch.

  159. Little Heros by DrRobert · · Score: 1

    Norman Spinrad predicted this in his incredible novel Little Heros in which the music industry was able to generate artificial personalities to become music performers. They found that they could (based on market research) create a program that would sell to a large number of consumers every time, but... they found that while they had many large sellers they were never any super-mega popular bands... everything became generic.

  160. My reasons by Smokinn · · Score: 1

    I support the bands I like by going to shows and buying clothes and stuff from them.

    I don't buy cds much at all. More often than not when I do actually end up deciding to trek out to a store to buy a piece of plastic they either don't (and won't) have what I want or are sold out. I don't burn cds either. Only place I listen to music is at my computer so mp3s are natural, first thing I do with a new cd is rip it.

    What we really need is a sort of system I was discussing with a friend where there are a few central databases with all songs in very high quality format. Ogg Vorbis, very high bitrate mp3, whatever. All cd stores have a satellite connection (fast dl crappy uploadwhich you don't use anyway) to the closest database mirror and burn the music themselves. No more "we don't have that sorry" and no more "we're all out we're getting more next week". You could just walk in and ask for the lastest cd by whoever or come in with a list of every song you want. Billing should be easy because all the info would come from the database with the song.

    Anyway that was just my rant on a utopian music system. Will probably ever happen. =(

    --
    "We must all be alike. Not everyone born free and equal, as the Constitution says, but everyone made equal."
  161. 80s stations by TFloore · · Score: 2

    I don't really have a problem with you liking BS, or the other pop music groups/people. Your tastes are your own, enjoy them.

    However, I have to disagree with your comment about the 80s music stations. Or, rather, "classic rock" stations. More specifically, the Clear Channel classic rock stations.

    They are very nearly as limited in their playlists as the Top 40s and pop music stations are. I used to like Pink Floyd. I spent too much time listening to the local classic rock station. I can't stand hearing Dark Side of the Moon any more. They didn't play it every day (I think)... but I heard it 20 times a month, at a minimum. I can only take that so long.

    I've stopped listening to music on the radio, mostly. I've switched over to NPR, and a local college station that plays mostly classical stuff.

    How do I hear new music now? I mostly don't, unless a friend sends me an mp3. My CD buying has gone down a lot. If I'm going to listen to the same stuff recycled over and over again... I'll listen to my own CDs, and not have to put up with radio ads.

    --
    This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is... Oops. Frank, I've got your sig again! Where's mine?
    1. Re:80s stations by dh003i · · Score: 2

      Well, 20 times a month is better than 20 times a day.

      On the 80's station I listen to in Rochester, NY (98.9) I usually don't hear the same songs over again.

      Guess it depends on the station.

      There's certainly enough good classic music from the past to not have to ever hear the same songs in a year. Between the greats of the 60s, 70s, 80s, and early 90s, one never hear the same song twice in a year. Your talking about ranging from Wilson Pickett to Morris Day to Bob Segar to Diana Ross. Alot of "breathing room" there.

  162. The classical music market supports the assertion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The classical market where there is not much really new music, and its mostly public domain as well, is also saturating and the big houses don't make any money there. Partly this is becase anyone can perform the music and musicains in eastern europe are often as good as american musicians. In addtion with a limited set of material how many different performances of Bethovens Fifth symphony does one need? Recently the big labels play the same name game about performers as in pop music, but often one can't really tell the difference between the big stars and the unknowns. The unknown cd will cost a lot less, and now that church choirs and school orchestras can put out a cd, it squeezes the professional orchestras and the big record labels.

    I also suspect that we may have an aging population factor here, that in the US, Western Europe and Japan the population is aging and the older one gets the fewer cd's one buys.

  163. No No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This just means all the draconian laws and schemes pushed on us to date, haven't been enough.

    But, fear not. There's so much more we can do.

    We have the Canadian CD-R tax. That's a nice plan.

    We can make up for RIAA's "losses" using taxes paid though the Endowment for the Arts.

    We can mandate higher prices for radio and TV play, making up for poor RIAA's "losses" by pushing the cost onto advertizing, then by extension, consumers of damn'ed near every product made.

    Heck, we are the USA in the new millenium. We can just mandate every American buy 24 CD's per year. Well, not mandate, exactly, we'll just give you a tax credit if you send in your proof's of purchase. Of course, we'll raise taxes to match, and more, to cover the Fed's expenses for the program.

    Heck, soon we'll have RIAA deals with 3G wireless, or sat radio, providers. You'll only be able to use a "secured for your protection radio" that is 100% pay per play and produces watermarked audio. Death, of course, for any audio recording found with your watermark.

    Poor boy, We haven't even started with draconian.

  164. Bandwidth costs... by TFloore · · Score: 2

    Try that with a real business connection. Say a T3.

    A T3 is 45mbit/sec, and costs about $20,000 per month.

    Assuming you actually have it running at 50% utilization 24 hours a day... (Couldn't tell you what a reasonable utilization is, but for this I'd hope it would be closer to 80%...)

    22.5mbit/sec * 60 seconds/minute * 60minutes/hour * 24hours/day * 30days/month

    That's 58,320,000 megabits in a month. Divide by 8 to get megabytes... 7,290,000 megabytes/month.

    I'd like some decent quality songs... 256kbps MP3s. If I'm going to pay for them, I want them good.

    Side Note: Personally, I'd rather get them at 3 quality levels, for the same price. 128kbps for my mp3 player in the gym, where the background noise makes that bitrate acceptable. 256kpbs for my crappy PC speakers in an otherwise quiet environment, and 320kbps for burning to an audio cd for listening to in the car.

    But I'll leave it at 256kpbs MP3s. That's about 8MB per song. 7,290,000 megabytes/month divided by 8MB/song

    That's 911,250 songs per month, for $20,000 in bandwidth costs.

    Or about 2.2 cents per song in bandwidth costs.

    If you do my 3 versions for the same price... that increases to about 6 cents per song in bandwidth costs.

    Is that reasonable, when selling a song for 25 cents? I dunno, you tell me.

    I assume someone will tell me if I made a silly math error.

    --
    This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is... Oops. Frank, I've got your sig again! Where's mine?
    1. Re:Bandwidth costs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Something must be wrong somewhere if the bandwidth cost for a consumer is so much lower than for the producer. Using the 'normal' economy of scale rules, you would expect the cost to the producer of sending on his high bandwidth connection to be less than for the consumer to receive it on a lower bandwidth connection.

    2. Re:Bandwidth costs... by TFloore · · Score: 2
      Blockquoteth the poster:
      Something must be wrong somewhere if the bandwidth cost for a consumer is so much lower than for the producer.

      Kind of. The consumer bandwidth cost for a cablemodem is priced on the assumption that you will mostly be using it for faster web browsing. It isn't really priced with the expectation you will use it 24 hours a day at anything approaching full utilization.

      This is part of why some cablemodem ISPs are starting to move to a bit more honesty in their contracts... "The first 10GB is included in your $40/month cost, after that you pay more, or we cut you off." That's about 1% utilization of your cablemodem (downstream capacity).

      Cablemodems were never really meant to be unlimited use, they were just not advertised honestly.
      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is... Oops. Frank, I've got your sig again! Where's mine?
    3. Re:Bandwidth costs... by Alsee · · Score: 2

      It's hard to find quotes on T class connections. I googled a lot of pages and I think we can figure $6,000 per month for T3. T lines also *seem* to be full duplex which gives you 45mbit/sec up AND down, effecively doubling the speed / halving the cost.

      12 months of T3 = $72,000. For a T3 I get 177500000 meg per year. Assume 50% utilization, and further assume half of that is web pages. That gives 44375000 meg of songs per year. Assume 8 meg per song, 5.5 million songs per year. $72,000 / 5.5 million songs = 1.3 cents per song.

      Assuming you average 5 songs per year per person in the US (should be easy at a quarter per song) you'd need 300 T3's. At that level you should be able to get a further discount on bandwidth. 24 hour staffing and location costs become vanishing when divided by the volume. Add in a few cents for the artists. Everything's fine long as they don't start spending hundreds of millions on advertizing, chuckle. Heck, at a quarter per song they ought to be able to get all the free advertizing they could need.

      $0.25 per song seems to leave plenty of margin for expenses and profit. If they keep other costs down they might even do fine with $20 / 100 songs subscription. Offer gift certificate version as well, it's a perfect gift. who the heck is gonna muck around with P2P when $20 gets them 80 or 100 high quality and speedy downloads?

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  165. "Let the marketplace decide"??? Huh? by TFloore · · Score: 2

    When did this become the day of "let the marketplace decide"???

    The software industry wants UCITA.

    The power companies want to be allowed to ignore the Clean Air Act.

    The Big 3 Detroit auto makers are trying to ignore fuel economy requirements in cars.

    Major airlines have how many billions in government-guaranteed loans? (Of course, this industry has been losing money since it started 70 years ago.)

    When was the last time you saw a major highway building contract awarded without bribes and kickbacks?

    At least the media companies aren't alone in *not* wanting to let the marketplace decide. *Everyone* gets special treatment. That's the whole point in buying congressmen. Well, okay, renting them for a little while.

    --
    This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is... Oops. Frank, I've got your sig again! Where's mine?
  166. exposure isn't the problem, talent is by WilyKit · · Score: 1

    The problem is that most of these bands put out one good or great album, for which they receive enormous exposure, but follow-up albums are substantially less impressive (Alanis Morissette). This is particularly common with bands that have a particular sound or style that works, but then don't vary that sound or style at all. Then there are bands that could have been great, but broke up because they couldn't agree on what their sound should be (GNR). If a band can constistently put out good music, it doesn't matter how much exposure they get; people will still want to buy their records (U2).

  167. From my perspective... by tRoll+with+Butter · · Score: 1

    I'm 23 years old - exactly the demographic the RIAA is trying to sell to, and I have a confession to make. I actually ENJOY top-40 music. Yes, hear Nelly and Kelly sing Dilemma and I crank up the bass and enjoy it.

    I'm not looking for a zen-like experience or heartfelt emotional lyrics, I just want a good beat and a good sound. It's entertainment just entertainment, people - different strokes for different folks. I don't buy into the whole story that the "Clear Channel monopoly" is the cause of "new" acts or sounds being overlooked. Have you ever heard of Daniel Beddingfield before "Gotta get through this" hit the charts? What about the "A little less conversation" Eminem vs Elvis remix done by a DJ at a Clear Channel station? These are just examples, but I've been exposed to plenty of new acts and music by both the radio as well as the Internet.

    I'm not saying pop radio is the end-all-be-all of music, I'm just saying that some people actually enjoy it as much as you enjoy your indie music (or maybe you're a pop fan as well!).

    So I enjoy the music, why am I not buying albums? I'll be quite honest, I'm mostly just interested in singles. I know it's been said like a broken record on here (pun intended) but if I could pay $.50 or so per download for a high-quality professionally made MP3, I'd be more than happy to. Throw copy protected formats into the mix and that sweet deal becomes sour... Leave the music in an open format.

    Have I purchased any albums lately? Yes, I bought Linkin Park's Hybrid Theory album a few months ago. When I discover I like more than just the promotional airplay singles, *then* I consider purchasing the entire album. In this effect, without p2p file sharing, I'd have no way of knowing if an album was all filler and would actually purchase *less* albums as a result.

    If you compare Billboard's top-40 to Kazaa search results, it's easy to see why music trading is so popular. Many people (including myself) do not believe that downloading an MP3 of a current promotional single that is played constantly on the radio constitutes ANY kind of theft. How many people are there with enough disposable income to purchase an entire $18.99 album just to listen to maybe 2 popular tracks and take a gamble on the rest? If the RIAA's current sales figures are honest about anything, it's that the rest of the population who AREN'T using P2P filesharing AREN'T willing to take that gamble.

    --

    ---
    Siggy, siggy, siggy, can't you see? Sometimes your puns just irritate me.
  168. Re:Their price model is BAD too.. $15 a CD?! NUTSO by lsdino · · Score: 1

    I could buy a DVD for that much! Full digital 5.1 audio that is over 2 hrs long! Whats a $15 Audio CD provide? 60 mins of stereo music... Joy.. Their business model has DIED, they need to start selling Audio CDs for $5 to sell them.

    I find the value of a CD is a lot greater than the value of a DVD. I spend more hours / day listening to music then I do watching DVDs. Infact, I probably listen to music *every* day, but I don't watch a DVD everyday, not even close.

    So, you pay $15 and you listen to your CD hundreds of times. You pay $15 and you watch your DVD 5 times? 10 times? 20 times? It's an order of magnitude difference.

    On the other hand, DVDs are a significant improvement in value over VHS. So in the case of the motion picture industry, they can still turn out crappy movies all they want, because they're making hella cash off the people converting to their new splendid format.

  169. Not just cheaper... by Mulletproof · · Score: 2

    You're right for the most part. I think a lot of people would do the right thing, but you have to make it super easy and super benefical to them in doing so. "Free" is a tough bargain to beat, however, especially when the consumer already thinks they're being reipped off.. How do you combat it? You have to provide something the pirates (speaking as one) can't.

    Unregulated P2P Benefits
    1) Free music
    2) No restrictions on media use
    3) Massive archive (user supported)

    Nothing "the Man" is willing to field right now can stand against any of that, because their systems are the total anti-thesis of what people want. The music costs, there are normally assnine restrictions place on it's use and the archive is limited to whatever the specific label supports. It's like they're not even trying to compete. If they want to win this, they need to play off the weaknesses of the current unregulated P2P models...

    1) Pop-ups, spyware and banners.
    2) Marginal connections to service and downloads (slow, need more sources, etc)
    3) Questionable quality (partial songs, poor quality, skipping, etc)

    Like you, I still think people would do the right thing... If you showed them you were willing to work with them and not lighten their pocketbooks at every opportunity. I'd pay for a stable, reliable high speed connection whose songs were guaranteed to be what they say they are and were of a consistent quality. Nobody tracking my surfing, using my PC cycles, blasting me with banners, clogging my connection with other P2P connections. Pay my subscription, turn it on, download what I want and (most importantly) do whatever I want with it. No proprietary music formats here. If I quit my subscription, I still want to be able to read the magazines I bought. Of course, the labels would have to cooperate to get the most coverage of songs, even if they were on different systems... Maybe a slight increase for "importing" another labels songs.

    I know, naive, wild-eyed visions of grandure...

    --
    You need a FREE iPod Nano
  170. RIAA slapped by "invisible hand" by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2

    You are completely correct in your assessments.

    The big problem is simple: The RIAA is acting as a cartel and engaging in what amounts to price fixing of audio Compact Discs.

    Anyone who's taken a beginning course in microeconomics in college knows that the cartel model is exactly how the RIAA is running nowadays. Problem is, they priced CD's so high (like US$18 per album-length disc!) that there is just too much economic incentive to subvert the cartel, namely through music piracy. It's small wonder why audio CD sales are down: the RIAA has priced CD's out of the reach of the majority of consumers out there.

    If the RIAA had just priced CD's at a more reasonable US$11 per album-length disc the incentive to pirate music would drop drastically.

  171. More musicians like Dave Grohl Needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    quote from www.dotmusic.com

    Grohl commented (about napster): "I think it's a good idea because it's people trading music. It has nothing to with industry or finance, it's just people that want music and there's nothing wrong with that."

    The singer continued: "It's the same as someone turning on the f****** radio, it's the same as someone putting a cassette in a cassette deck when the BBC plays a special radio session. I don't think it's a crime, it's been going on for years. It's the same as people making tapes for each other.

    "The industry is more threatened by it because it's the worldwide web and it's a broader scope of trading, but I don't think it's such a f******* horrible thing. The first thing we should do is get all the f****** millionaires to shut their mouths, stop bitching about the 25 cents a time they're losing."

  172. well... by di0s · · Score: 1

    This article may be the single best thing to come from Microsoft. It hasn't crashed yet, but I'm sure it's vulnerable to attack (by the RIAA).

  173. Whether or not it hurts the industry is irrelevant by LadyLucky · · Score: 1

    What is relevant is whether or not file copying is legal. If it isn't, no amount of moral pontificating makes it OK. It's illegal, end of story. This seems to have been missed.

    --
    dominionrd.blogspot.com - Restaurants on
  174. ani rules! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    np

  175. Re:Read Ross Anderson's work by Chexsum · · Score: 0

    I think the real dillema the media industry faces is ; more people play games these days than listen to music and watch television.

    Would you rather buy a music cd or a audio/visual dvd that gives you less entertainment than a game cd?

    I think Rob Hubbarb said something about how the gaming industry makes a lot more money than old fashioned media entertainment.

    Its out with the old and in with the new. Blizzard 'own' Roadshow in my eyes! I cant wait for the next The Sims release which was mentioned yesterday on Slashdot. :P

    *sigh* It feels so good to grow up loving computing - its a fast-growing industry and I witnessed and was part of its birth. *hugs the monitor and kicks the tv*

    --
    Pixels keep you awake!
  176. Napster Was pleague with so many quirks how could by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Napster Was pleague with so many quirks how could you blame this service. There are many 2nd generations P2P Programs out there with more features, and better network managerment. why even brother with napster.r

  177. The music industry summed up ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    The media, especially in America, has been complaining of late about the decrease in music sales, and has been attributing this to the increase in use of file-sharing systems over the Internet. It cannot be denied that people are using these networks to obtain copyrighted files.

    However, I maintain that this has little to do with the downturn in sales. Some defendants of the peer-to-peer filesharing networks claim that the general downturn in the market is sufficient explanation. I, however, maintain that this, too, is incorrect.

    There was once a time when, if you heard a song on the radio, it meant that you could buy it in the shops. No longer is this the case. Tracks are released to radio stations months before they are released to the general public. It is admittedly possible to obtain promotional copies of tracks in some record shops before general release, but I do not call this making the track accessible to the public.

    This is the problem: when a track is first heard on the radio, people think "I want that track". So they download it off the internet, because this is the only way they can obtain it that day. In the fierce competition between record labels to get their artists to obtain the most consecutive number ones, they do not realise that they have created a totally artificial structure; it worked for a while, it doesn't any more. People have, consciously or otherwise, realised that the media is over-hyping, over-playing and selling out every new and old artist on the block, and they're just not buying it any more.

    To the record companies, I say this: Cry me a river, I still won't listen. You created this mess for yourselves, now find your own way out.

    Some artists are true artists; they support anything which gives their music a wider audience. Some artists, like Janis Ian (www.janisian.com) have spoken out on this front. It is nice to see some genuine thought go into what the artists are saying: too many of them are saying "They're stealing our money". Given that "the most significant cost of a CD today is the marketing and promotion of that music" (www.riaa.org) but "the most important component of a CD is the artist's effort in developing that music" (www.riaa.org), I would dispute that. The artists are being heavily exploited by the recording industry.

    It's time to stop that. It's time to move away from big-time capitalism controlled by a few big bosses. It's time to move towards a system where artists have more freedom - where an artist gains listenership through true brilliance, not through promotion; it's time to move to a system dominated by 'listening post' sites like mp3.com, where you can download mp3 tracks for free, then buy the rest of the album if you like what you hear. The artists will gain, because they will get more as a proportion of the total cost to the consumer of the CD. Smaller artists will get a greater chance to be heard, because radio stations will be able to take their pick of what they can play, and be unrestricted by royalty payments.

    I live in the real world, so I know this will never happen. It's what the world needs, in order to greater appreciate music, and the wealth of talent that exists out there but is obscured by boy and girl bands.

    Another issue that has been brought up lately is that of DVDs being copied. I'm not going to pretend that I know about how to copy a DVD. I do know that devices are being made available which make it easier to copy DVDs, albeit to inferior formats. The MPAA claims that this is reducing sales of DVDs. Yet, somehow, DVD sales are higher than ever before.

    Once again, the finger can be squarely and solely pointed at the industry. DVDs are region-coded, which limits the playback of DVDs to players bought in the corresponding region. Some region-free players are available, however I believe these have been outlawed in America. Availability varies from country to country, and availability of import DVDs varies too. This is a feeble attempt by the MPAA to control the release of films, releasing films in the USA first, then across Europe. I know of several people who download films over the internet, because they are not yet available in the UK.

    So, if the films were available in the UK at the same time as in the USA, this would cut down on the number of pirate downloads that would be going on. Everyone wants to be the first to see a film, and there is a lot of satisfaction to be gained by watching a film before it is released at the cinema. But this is the problem: if the only way to do this were in the cinema, you would have more people going to the cinemas. Not that too few people going to the cinemas is causing difficulties: record numbers of people went to the cinema in the UK in the last year.

    What does this tell you? That the media are complaining about nothing, really. Rather than complaining, they need to reinvent the industry if they are having problems. I don't see, even if the number of downloads were to steadily increase year on year, that the record and film companies would be going out of business any time soon. It's the small companies, like FilmFour, not the big ones, like Warner Bros, Bertelsmann etc, who are having problems.

  178. Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article said it : If they keep releasing unimaginative groups lacking individual styles, nobody's gonna listen to those punks outside the dancing floor. Besides, all music they release sounds practically the same. It's just BORING. Unlike my all-time favs Jean Michel Jarre, Sting, The Cranberries, Vangelis, all those little trance bands (who *don't* sound like eachother)... Big Biz's music (i.e. hip-hop, spears, etc) is good for parties, not good for home use. And everybody's doing parties with a computer loaded with mp3's :)

  179. Re:Their price model is BAD too.. $15 a CD?! NUTSO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try about $22+ for new CDs in Denmark, $15 would be considered a cheap CD here! Try to guess how many CDs I buy ... correct almost none. And do not get me started on DVDs they are way more expensive (easily $30+)! An the worst thing is that the music companies just do not get it, they are just making it worse for them selves by using copy-protected CDs higher prices and so on.

  180. Re:Their price model is BAD too.. $15 a CD?! NUTSO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think you're missing the point. CD prices haven't changed since the late eighties! "So in the case of the motion picture industry, they can still turn out crappy movies all they want, because they're making hella cash off the people converting to their new splendid format." I checked around Best Buy: Eminem is best CD seller Lord or the Rings is best DVD seller CDNow: Bruce Springsteen is best CD seller SpiderMan is best DVD seller Amazon: Dixie Chicks is best CD seller Sopranos Third Season is best DVD seller I notice James Taylor and Elvis Presley are on their way to the top and they are both deceased.

  181. Who's Razor? by Alari · · Score: 1

    ... Or maybe people are just buying less music because they're poor now? =) You know, the whole tech industry crash thing...

    Alari

    --
    I use Windows... like a two dollar wh.. why don't I just go ahead and not finish that sentence.
  182. Same old refrain by scottme · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    The article's main thesis reads like the refrain from Bruce Lessig's OSCON pitch that was a story here on /. recently:
    1. Creativity and innovation always builds on the past.
    2. The past always tries to control the creativity that builds on it.
    3. Free societies enable the future by limiting the past.
    4. Ours is less and less a free society.
  183. Re:Whether or not it hurts the industry is irrelev by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you're saying the law is faultless? Come off it!

  184. slate msn by oliverthered · · Score: 2

    Well in English that's equivalent to saying
    'tell everyone that MSN is shit'

    --
    thank God the internet isn't a human right.
  185. here's a thought... by utexaspunk · · Score: 1

    Perhaps the record industry could improve their sales by making the CD's themselves worth having. At the moment, CD packaging is usually so lame and uninteresting that nobody cares if they don't have it. If artists would elevate their albums to complete packages with interesting materials and designs, people might feel the need to own the real deal. See the Rolling Stones' "Sticky Fingers" or Led Zeppelin III...

  186. Re:And to think, increased constraints are just... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Also you might want to higher a technician to configure your tv to NTSC standards or do it yourself with an AVIA DVD. This can greatly increase clarity and fix any geometry problems, you might not even know you have. AVIA also reduces the strain on you tube and can add a few years to your tvs life span.

    If people are fucking around with their TVs this much perhaps it's time it did just die and go away so we can all break out of our trance and return to the Big Blue Room once in awhile. How many times have you sat on your ass on your big leather chair watching your expensive TV like a drooling couch potato when it was a beautiful sunny day out?

  187. What should happen by i0wnzj005uck4 · · Score: 1

    Obviously the "you listen to what we want you to listen" phase of America isn't completely out -- look at the runaway success of American Idol. *shudders* Did nobody see Josie and the Pussycats? (Read: yes, I'm joking.) The reason people aren't buying new CD's from old artists is a complete lack of metamorphosis. Look at Michael Jackson's Invincible. It's okay, but it's basically redone themes from Dangerous and Bad. People were expecting something revolutionary from him, and yet he's still singing with lyrics from the 80's. Here's a hint Michael, from a long time fan: people don't want to hear that you can't get girls any more, or that you're crying for children somewhere. NOBODY CARES. Your drum beats in tracks one and two are amazing, however. I think that the RIAA should stop shooting itself in the foot. What services like the late Napster and my current favorite LimeWire provide is FREE MARKET RESEARCH. Has the RIAA thought about paying these services for logs of music swapped by artist, year, genre, etc? It would be a gold mine. Instead of six bands that sound like 3 Doors Down/Nickelback (still can't tell the differnece between those two), we might get some heavy Goth Industrial, or an american release of a foreign album. Also, you could go further and see who swaps music in what region, send less copies of CD's to places where they wouldn't get bought, and adjust advertising accordingly. So with that kind of power coming from 10 different filesharing sources, I wonder why the RIAA is sueing instead of subsidizing. Nobody's going to use an RIAA-developed sharing service, but the RIAA can certainly use publically-available ones. That's just good capitalism.

    --
    - Cloud
  188. The time has come by Frightened_Turtle · · Score: 1

    Perhaps it's now time to file an anti-trust lawsuit against the recording industry. They're trying to cram pap that no one wants down our throats, and they are stifling innovation in the music industry by not letting us hear new and fresh sounds.

    This is why internet streaming MP3 stations are so popular, because we can go out and look for what we want to hear, and try out new sounds that we haven't heard about.

    --


    Whew! This water sure is cold!
  189. Re:The Record Industry is looking for a bail out.. by phreaklegion · · Score: 1


    You realize, though, that if the $30 billion music industry folded, then cocaine dealers would be lobbying Congress for a bailout, citing their $30 billion in lost revenue.

  190. A Half-Blind Article by jpsst34 · · Score: 0

    I really liked the article, but it is certainly half-blind. It speaks of how major labels only look at the "Next Big Thing." (A song by citizen fish with that name says all the same stuff, as does "Shelf Life" by David J.)

    However, it says that new musicians cannot get started because they are overlooked. This just isn't true. The indy labels are stronger than ever, and some major artists, such as Jewel, are making great waves in getting exposure to lesser-known artists. I mean, her opening acts were bands from Soul City Cafe - that was a great thing to do. And the internet can create a great buzz about a band through HTML alone, regardless of P2P networks. Brett Gurewitz started a new label called Anti to host non-punk acts, such as Tom Waits. The major labels are killing themselves, but the industry is due for a renaissance of true artists, and the indies are already in place to handle it.

    --
    How are you going to keep them down on the farm once they've seen Karl Hungus?
  191. Re:The classical music market supports the asserti by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, you only need one performance of Beethoven's Fifth, but really you can never have too many recordings of his Ninth.

  192. Excellent venues by maynard · · Score: 1

    Agreed. I regularly attend the BSO and performances at Jordan Hall. Excellent music and a good value. --M

  193. it is because... by fea · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I am 47, my son is 18. Both of has have a favorite band: Led Zeppelin. Where is the LZ of this generation ? That is why...

  194. Maybe Napster Shares some blame by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think that the Napster issue shares in blame for the lesser music sales. I say the napster issue, because it was not the file sharing that was the problem, but the way that the RIAA handled the situation. Before the Napster lawsuits, I as well as I am sure alot of people, had never even heard of the RIAA. Now they are the target of nearly daily attacks from this site alone, as well as many others. Along with this, nearly every "Behind the Music" episode has something to do with how an artist got screwed by their label. How could anyone hope to do good in any industry when they keep shooting themselves in the foot with bad publicity.

  195. Just wait.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oooh boy just you wait. All we need is another few years, her stardom a fading memory, dropped by her label.. And BAM! She'll brab that last million or so from Playboy before dropping off the planet. (hey, one can only hope.)

    (But if you just can't wait, I have a few "retouched" JPG's for ya ;-)

  196. Re:Whether or not it hurts the industry is irrelev by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I suggest that you go to your local library, pick up your state(if US) or nations statute book, and see how many stupid laws are on the books. Some even contradict each other. So get off high horse of legallity, and come back to the real world

  197. The Larger Picture... by macthulhu · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's important to remember that an "artist's" CD is not the only product that we are paying for. Add to that cost the price of concert tickets, t-shirts, refrigerator magnets, whatever... We are gouged at every turn, given Cheez-Whiz in return, and we can't get enough. All of this is what makes it possible for low rent trash like P.Diddy or Celine Dion to spend insane amounts of money on platinum jewelry, ridiculous homes, and cars that cost twice what my 4 bedroom house is worth. Let's face it, these greedy cocksuckers are also to blame. How many CDs (at $20) do you have to sell to make back the $20 million you spent on studio time to make some asswipes like Creed sound like musicians? When calculating that, remember that after you cover that cost, you might like to make some money on the whole mess yourself... When all is said and done, these bloated, overpaid sacks of pus have run the costs up so high that there is little choice but to bend us over at the register. Read the performer contract riders over at http://www.thesmokinggun.com , it is truly sickening where the money goes when you pony up your dough to see a performance. On the whole, "pop" music is a sick, sad mess. I am all for people making a good living, but is it right that some boy band dipshit can afford a trip into space? Aren't monkeys cheaper/smarter/more fun? I'm getting off the track here... The RIAA is trying to protect their profits so they can pay off their greedy little stars, greedy little managers, lawyers, personal trainers, plastic surgeons... When Brittany Spears wants a talking pony, guess who has to pay for it... Guess where they get the money... Here's how to stop the madness: Don't buy Top 40 crap. Shop in independent/non-megachain stores. Support original bands playing small venues. Tell local radio stations that their payolalist sucks. Don't buy clothing that J Lo wears. Make these pricks less marketable by not following every stupid thing they do. Throw dogshit at them when they arrive at awards shows. Maybe I'm going too far. While we're at it, the same should apply to the other overpaid parasites that we can't go five minutes without hearing about... professional athletes. $700 million to play a game? All of these greedy parasites needs to go. The question for everyone should be "how much is enough?". I will stop now, before I start telling people to go all "Fight Club".

    --

    Someday a real rain is gonna come...

  198. Re:Their price model is BAD too.. $15 a CD?! NUTSO by martyn+s · · Score: 1

    You know, in britain, after cars were invented, they passed a law that said that any vehicle going over 10 miles an hour (or some speed I don't remember exactly), need to be preceded by a man waving a flag in order to warn people. This legislation was created just to help the companies who made carriages stay in business. Simple darwinism. Even the law can't stop it.

  199. Here is what the RIAA should do by gosand · · Score: 2
    DAMMIT! Why won't they embrace the technology and offer us, the FANS and their customers, the music?!

    Why not something like this:
    Anything a year old or less, they don't offer digitally. (or they offer digitally, but you have to buy the whole album) Anything older than one year, you can get on MP3 per song. If it is 1-5 years old, it will cost you $0.50 per song. If it is 5 years old or older, it only costs $0.25 per song.

    Set up a friggin website where you can buy the MP3s and download them. Go into the large music chains, like Virgin et al, and set up a "burning studio" where you can pick out however many songs you want, and they will burn them to CD for you, with a small overhead charge for the media and the burn. While you are waiting for your burn, you can browse the CDs of the new stuff that are for sale.

    Bottom line, if people could easily get the music they want, they will pay a reasonable price for it. What good is all of the old Ratt, Trixster, and Cinderella stuff that is sitting there collecting dust? I'd like to hear that stuff again, but I am not going to pay $18 for their CDs.

    I know there are technical issues with this plan, but technical issues can be overcome. Make the entire catalog searchable. Have preset categories, like "all the top10 songs for each month during 1985". The interest in music would skyrocket. Make getting music "legally" worthwhile, and people will pay for it.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  200. Subscription services are king... by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 2

    MS wants to move to subscription services.

    EverQuest is a subscription service that rakes in $5 million/month with very little effort beyond initial development.

    I know a few business-type people that wish they could get into subscription services because that's where the $$$$$ is at.

    Screw CDs. Screw copy protection.

    Simply start up a service - $5-10/month for all the music you can listen to.

    The average consumer probably buys only a few CDs/year. Spread out over 12 months, it comes out to $5-10/month.

    A handful of consumers buy a lot more.

    But I have a feeling that there are far more consumers who buy CDs rarely (like myself - Once every year or two I find something worth the $$$$) who would willingly pay $10-15 for unlimited listening.

    I would only pay $5 or so if I couldn't save it though - If it doesn't play in my car, it's not worth much to me.

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  201. Re:Their price model is BAD too.. $15 a CD?! NUTSO by AdamD1 · · Score: 1

    I notice James Taylor and Elvis Presley are on their way to the top and they are both deceased.

    Uhhh.... dude?

    James Taylor is alive and well. His new cd really is a new cd. :) I don't like James Taylor, but he is not dead.

    --
    Because I can! [Brainrub.com]
  202. Re:Their price model is BAD too.. $15 a CD?! NUTSO by AdamD1 · · Score: 1

    So, you pay $15 and you listen to your CD hundreds of times. You pay $15 and you watch your DVD 5 times? 10 times? 20 times?

    Sure. Some DVD's I actually re-watch for things like the director's commentary (can even put that on in the background while I work) or the numerous other extras which exist. This is in fact something which makes me *WANT* to re-watch a dvd. The cheap price just makes it that much more attractive to me. And here's another example: Nine Inch Nails released an amazing live DVD which I bought for $26.99. This is a two hour plus live show with a much higher quality of audio output than any CD, mixed in 5.1 surround specifically for the DVD release. Oh yeah: and it has video. :)

    It blows away any cd recording possible because both the bit rate and the sampling frequency were much higher than was possible with CD's. The CD price? Same day I bought it? $28.99.

    You tell me: does that make sense?

    --
    Because I can! [Brainrub.com]
  203. pirate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, if you were using real money you would not be a pirate. Turns out you are just a thief ;-)

    Try ODK instead.

    Thank you

  204. Blah by ScannerBoy · · Score: 1

    To be honest I found the article rather bland and boreing. Same shit different day, still no proof of anything.

    But at the bottom of the page I noticed HP is selling a Jornada Personal Digital Ass!!

    I wonder if you can choose between several Digital Asses?

    --
    --Should work--
  205. Re:Their price model is BAD too.. $15 a CD?! NUTSO by pmz · · Score: 2

    Their business model has DIED, they need to start selling Audio CDs for $5 to sell them.

    I agree. However, one thing I just realized is that I would be willing to pay more if they listed that an explicit percentage of the CD's price went straight to the artist/group/orchestra.

    If the CD were $15, and they listed clearly that 1/3 of that ($5) went to an obscure orchestra that needs CD sales to stay afloat, I wouldn't mind this "best of both worlds" sort of pricing (I get a CD, label gets some money, retailer gets some money, and artists don't get swindled).

  206. here is a NEW thought by mozkill · · Score: 1

    the article was great, but it is just a summary of everything everyone has been saying. i suppose its important to have a summary, but you missed one important idea.

    what the music industry is ACTUALLY afraid of is the file-swappers immunity to advertising and marketing. the music industry lost its power over what people listen to. now, file swappers listen to what THEY want to and the whole music industry marketing scheme gets ignored. the music industry can't push artists onto people who choose for themselves what they listen to.

    --

    -- Betting on the survival of the media industry is a serious risk. I advise investing elsewhere.
  207. Packrat behavior by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 2

    I have a few Britney Spears tracks on my HD.

    Why did I download them? They were on a dormmate's shared drive back at college and I had plenty of HD space.

    Do I listen to them? Hmm... Maybe once a year. As opposed to other stuff I have that gets played around once a week or more. And since it's not a CD I can conveniently have it in my playlist for a little variety without having a sickening 45 minute Spears-A-Thon.

    Honestly, her music isn't TOO bad to listen to once in a while, it's catchy. But it is grossly overplayed, and doesn't deserve more than the occasional sneak into a playlist for variety. And definately multiple Spears tracks should NOT be played in sequence for the sake of your mental health.

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  208. Quality vs. Quantity by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 2

    Yes, almost surely she'd be selling more records with a big music company pushing her.

    Here's the issue of quality vs. quantity. For her, CDs sold by her own outfit have a higher "quality" (measured in profit she sees) per item as opposed to CDs sold by [Insert Big Music Company Here].

    Overall, she could probably sell 5-6x more records via the biggies and still be making *LESS MONEY* than she currently is, just because she is almost surely making *FAR* more money with her own label, etc. than if she went through Major Label X.

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  209. Out of curiosity... by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 2

    Where is the origin of this "joke"

    I've seen it numerous times on /., I have no idea what it's a reference to...

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  210. Harder to find - YES. by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 2

    Yes, these bands will be harder to find than those European bands. Well, not for a US resident, but the original poster was (I believe) *European*, i.e. the bands he talks about are major mainstream bands for him.

    Note that he mentions "arena" performances. i.e. megaconcerts that only the largest bands enjoy.

    Theatre of Tragedy rocks! I've heard some of their music on reccomendation by some friends in Europe. Great stuff.

    It's not just European culture - It's European business practices. Radio stations operate differently there, etc. Europeans have some sort of digital subcarrier encoding standard that actually tells you *what other stations are in the area or in other cities* - For a US broadcaster, the possibility of you driving to another area is EXTREMELY undesirable to them.

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    1. Re:Harder to find - YES. by mother_superius · · Score: 1

      I don't know. It sounded like an American perspective, ie "Across the pond", "those Europeans", etc.

  211. south park by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm posting this anon b/c I can't afford the karma drop from these nazi moderators. Basically, there was an episode of South Park with some characters called the underwear gnomes. They spent all their time stealing people's underpants. Upon entering their secret, underground lair the boys found their business plan:

    1) Steal underpants
    2) ???
    3) Profit!

    You should watch the episode if you like South Park at all. I believe it was the first episode with Tweek--that little SOB cracks me up.

    This joke WAS funny the first couple of times it was posted on /.

    Now? Well, not so much . . .

  212. Don't Need Napster - I use Free Music Channels by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't need Napster. I use the free to air
    music channels on satellite (E.g. MAGIC tv, Onyx, etc) in Europe and I record them on my PC. It's better than CD quality.

    Then I create an mp3 and an XvID video file. How's
    that for fun. True, not all the newest acts are great stuff, but this is a matter of taste.

  213. OT sorta, the ROI on current CD's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My wife and I were listening to the Alice in Chains title: Dirt and we remarked once again how THIS is the way to make a release. There is not only a lack of sucky songs on that album but there are no mediocre ones either. Granted, this is all my opinion... and I am one who likes many things but cannot stand pop crap. (bum-tse-bum-tse-bum-tse-bum-bum-bum-tse-bum-tse-b um-tse) That is _EVERY_ single pop song... that shit is pathetic. Anyway, if albums were released like the Chains one there, I doubt there would be any lull in the music industry regardless of how much theft happens.

  214. Agreed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I couldn't agree with you more. :) --M

  215. Re:from the rabid-knee-jerk-reactions dept. by uncoveror · · Score: 2

    People who have 200 plus cds need to collect tangible things, and a download is too intangible. I used to collect LPs I have hundreds. You got so much more with a $7.99 LP than you do with a $20.00 CD. The artwork was suitable for framing in many cases, especially if you had a foldout or a double album. Miniaturization killed cover art. Also, when CDs were new, they cost two times as much as LP or cassette. They claimed that they cost more to manufacture, and price would come down soon. It never did, and it is well known by now that it costs them next to nothing to press a disc. CDs would sell like hotcakes if they were eight dollars instead of 20, even without extras like the cool cover art LPs used to have. If the RIAA and affiliated labels can shut down file trading, we will all just buy the bootlegs and pirates at flea markets and on street corners. The RIAA doesn't even see them as competition.

    --
    The Uncoveror: It's the real news.
  216. ya know by funkmastermike · · Score: 1

    What I always think to myself about file sharing and burning cds to listen to in my car (assuming I want the WHOLE cd in this case) is that lets say it takes me an hour to find all the songs.. download them.. burn them with my 4x burner (20 mins).. hell it typically already took an hour to do all that.. and an hours worth of work can BUY the cd.
    Theres something special about owning the CD with the artwork.. like the "new" TOOL album. Need more original album covers and inserts!! thank you

  217. Re:Their price model is BAD too.. $15 a CD?! NUTSO by WWWWolf · · Score: 1
    So, you pay $15 and you listen to your CD hundreds of times. You pay $15 and you watch your DVD 5 times? 10 times? 20 times? It's an order of magnitude difference.

    Personally, I may pay 20 (or whatever) of CD and end listen to one or two songs zillions of times over years. No wonder I was in heaven after finding vgmix.com, remix.overclocked.org and remix.kwed.org =) =)

    But DVDs are a different matter. Back in "VHS times", I may have got a movie for about the same price as CD and watched it a couple of times, bleah. But DVDs are different: Previously, I didn't have any joy in owning a crappy-quality video copy of a movie, but DVDs are genuinely joy to buy and add to collections - in case of VHS, I didn't want to pay a full price for letterboxed, low-quality picture with really bad sound! DVDs are nicer to watch, good picture and sound. Over and over. And over. And then again with some weird subtitles. =)

    (I've heard some people have seen The Matrix for 20, 40, 60 times... sick! That's sick! I'm perfectly healthy mentally, I've only seen it 15 times. Or something. Haven't counted. Speaking of which, I haven't seen it for a while...)

  218. recordable media = piracy by luisdlc · · Score: 1

    It is interesting how this has become to happen.

    Here in Santiago de Chile, a short time ago, the conapi (in English, something like anti-piracy-national-confederacy) collected huge quantities of video cassettes, tapes, and CD-R; made a pile of it and burned it.

    I started to figure out how the inquisition felt.

    The INTERESTING thing, was, that among the tapes, where home made tapes, recorded TV shows (I am sure that if you went to a jeopardy like show you have a tape of it) and non commercial songs. (In fact, a news paper had an anti-conapi article for these facts)

    This people aren't discriminating, your baby-first-steps video, as it seems, is already an illegal copy of something, just because it is in a video tape and not in a DVD.

    I thought only the USA had problems because this RIAA clowns, but incredibly, here things are worst...