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Hilary Rosen Defeated at Oxford Union

yogi writes "Oxford University Students' Union had a debate last Thursday, titled This House believes that 'the free music mentality is a threat to the future of music.'. Ordinarily, not too exciting, but since it is the Oxford Union, they get Hilary Rosen to speak. She lost the debate, and had to have pictures like this taken. Read the writeup at NTK, or a more detailed one here. I especially like the bit where she asked all the file downloaders whether it made them buy more music."

167 of 359 comments (clear)

  1. where can I get one of those T-shirts? by e40 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    subject sez it all.

    1. Re:where can I get one of those T-shirts? by jaaron · · Score: 5, Informative

      http://www.geekstyle.co.uk/ntkmart.cgi#Corrupt
      It's linked from one of the articles

      --
      Who said Freedom was Fair?
    2. Re:where can I get one of those T-shirts? by Frank+of+Earth · · Score: 2

      On the back it sez:

      "I went to Oxford and all I got out of it was the stupid t-shirt"

    3. Re:where can I get one of those T-shirts? by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 2

      http://www.geekstyle.co.uk/ntkmart.cgi#Corrupt [geekstyle.co.uk]

      Looks like they didn't read that PayPal is ++ungood.

  2. Misleading title by tunah · · Score: 5, Funny

    Gee, from the title it looked like it was a military defeat, but I guess this will do ;-)

    --
    Free Java games for your phone: Tontie, Sokoban
    1. Re:Misleading title by dattaway · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I wouldn't throw the party just yet. This was just her round of boot camp training before she goes in front of the lawmakers with her big guns.

    2. Re:Misleading title by sporty · · Score: 5, Funny

      Too bad it wasn't done mortal kombat style.

      "Fatality"

      --

      -
      ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only

    3. Re:Misleading title by sporty · · Score: 3, Funny

      ...training before she goes in front of the lawmakers with her big guns.

      her big guns.. I'm not gonna touch her "big guns" with a 5 foot poll ;)

      --

      -
      ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only

    4. Re:Misleading title by Molt · · Score: 2, Funny

      Soooo.. it's Hilary's big GUN vs. Richard's big GNU?

      --
      404 Not Found: No such file or resource as '.sig'
    5. Re:Misleading title by DJPenguin · · Score: 2, Funny

      That "poll" sure must have a lot of options! But how many of them are CowboyNeal?

  3. Debate is getting old by traskjd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Does anyone else start getting sick of this? The debate is getting so old and the only people saying free music is damaging is some of the artists and the RIAA. I guess it will end up being like open source vs. closed source - and I bet the artists who embrace allowing online downloads will be more sucessful in the end (of course when I make that comparison I also mean that the artist is signed up with a label because they need some form of money - but yet some artists still support downloading their music for free because they have read the research). Hope that all makes sense. What do you think?

    1. Re:Debate is getting old by e40 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I agree. It's getting to the point that EVERYONE has chosen sides and the resulting debate has a decidedly religious flavor (ie, no one will ever switch sides from this point on).

    2. Re:Debate is getting old by cposs · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, I'm sick of the debate, and maybe it is getting a bit old. However, until the naysayers realize that they are wrong, articles like this one will continue to be newsworthy and will continue to aggitate the majority of the audience here at /. The fact that people do things because of a misinformed view will always get people riled up, espeically when the actors are integral parts in an industry.

    3. Re:Debate is getting old by mikedaisey · · Score: 5, Interesting


      Maybe to us, but to normal folks, especially those who are from 40-70 (and who control most of our culture, even if we'd rather not remember that) it is not at all an open and shut case--I've had to explain and discuss these issues numerous times with parents, uncles, coworkers, etc.

      We may know how we feel, but mainstream culture still can be swayed, and the RIAA knows that.

    4. Re:Debate is getting old by Pike65 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      When you say "everyone" you mean the online community. My grandparents wouldn't have a clue what the hell peer-to-peer was, but they still buy and listen to music and that makes their opinion as valid as anyone elses, as far as I'm concerned.

      --
      "If being a geek means being passionate about something, then I pity those who aren't geeks." - Pike65
    5. Re:Debate is getting old by pezpunk · · Score: 3, Interesting

      my band and i firmly believe in free music. when hilary rosen says it threwatens the future of music, she means it threatens the future of the music industry as she and the major labels know it. and i can't imagine anything more worthy of fighting for.

      i wanna kill this antiquated centralized distribution model
      i don't wanna get fucked anymore by this status quo some coddle
      don't let fear keep us bound here.
      look across this threshold before it closes up forever
      see the hate and rage of chaos see the swarming hell hell hell
      fear is natural before the refining fires of change,
      you must be afraid but do it anyway
      i already fell fell fell
      don't let fear keep us bound here.
      own yourself, remember where the message comes from
      think again, once you have it figured out
      ask not, what this world owes you -- it owes you shit.
      what will you make of it?
      status quo's the real foe, this hell we call these tiny lives
      giving up our tiny souls to dead unliving corporations
      zombies defend rights of them to won us make us wear their name tags
      providing the machinery to keep us working intheir gulags
      don't let fear keep us bound here.
      time is split and this short fit of choice will quickly pass pass pass
      now's our only chance ot make a change that will last
      tectonic forces are already moving to intercept you
      if we make no move to fuck them, only we will lose lose lose
      i ask again: if not now, then when?


      -Power Shift by my band The Overprivileged

      --
      i could live a little longer in this prison
    6. Re:Debate is getting old by Jason+Earl · · Score: 5, Informative

      It was somewhat amusing to see that you not only offer your own music for free download, but also music from several other bands. Something tells me, however, that the Dead Milkmen haven't given you permission to do this.

      Now, I can understand wanting to share your own music, but I don't understand why you feel you should be free to share someone else's copyrighted material.

    7. Re:Debate is getting old by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I've had to explain and discuss these issues numerous times with parents, uncles, coworkers, etc.

      I wonder if your experience with this was anything like mine. Everyone I've had to explain it to didn't really see why it was illegal in the first place.

      "It's not like they've stolen the CD out of a record shop."

      Seems that "Intellectual Property" is a vague concept some people seem to have a hard time grasping... ...

      Just to clear things up -- I'm a firm believer in copyrights. I'm also a firm believer in free sharing of information. Somewhere in the middle between one side and the other is a realistic ground where things will sometimes be illegal and sometimes be legal and sometimes be hard to define. I both buy and download music, though... so...

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    8. Re:Debate is getting old by deitel99 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Having gone to the debate myself (being an Oxford union member) I can say that most of the students who went had already made up their minds when they arrived, hence the applauding of the opposition during their speaches (not normal). The write up given on Slashdot is very biased, since the "I have no figures and nor do you" answer from the proposition (anti-free music) was the best answer during the whole debate, leaving the opposition (free music) spokesperson utterly stuck for an reply. It's also worth mentioning that each opposition spokesperson said "I strongly dissagree with pirating music" which is exactly how distributing copyrighted music for *free* works, seriously weakening their arguement.

    9. Re:Debate is getting old by Lendrick · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Ya know, as much as I love to see Hillary Rosen gagging on her own foot, this isn't really news. She went up against an audience of students--people who typically have very little money and are hostile toward big, greedy corporations--and lost a debate by popular vote. Big deal. I'm sure that most of the people who showed up were there because they already felt strongly one way or the other.

      What I find strange is that she accepted this debate in the first place. Surely she must have known what she was getting into?

    10. Re:Debate is getting old by namespan · · Score: 2

      Seems that "Intellectual Property" is a vague concept some people seem to have a hard time grasping...

      People like the patent office? They sure seem awfully confused about it lately.

      Intellectual Property IS a vague concept... and is even farther from a normal factor between times and cultures than the idea of property itself. The idea of ideas being property is sortof odd. It's practically useful in some circumstances, but by no means a given: it's important to remember that property, like money, is a convenient fiction.
      But less convenient to implement and keep in many situations. Especially as the technology to manipulate and share ideas gets better.... since property implies control, it will come into conflict with enabling technologies.

      In short, invoking the term "Intellectual Property" doesn't make anything an open and shut case.

      --
      Libertarianism is rich wolves and poor sheep playing gambler's ruin for dinner.
    11. Re:Debate is getting old by Isldeur · · Score: 2

      Ya know, as much as I love to see Hillary Rosen gagging on her own foot, this isn't really news. She went up against an audience of students--people who typically have very little money and are hostile toward big, greedy corporations

      You know, I was thinking something similar. I go to Trinity College Dublin (a sister school of Trinity Cambridge and Oxford) and we have some pretty ancient debating societies.

      I've been to some of these and know that the debates are a breed unto their own. If you didn't know what you were up for, you'd be eaten alive. You really need some quick wit to do this and the heckling can get serious.

    12. Re:Debate is getting old by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      Something tells me, however, that the Dead Milkmen haven't given you permission to do this.


      Well maybe their next of kin gave permission.

    13. Re:Debate is getting old by treat · · Score: 2
      Seems that "Intellectual Property" is a vague concept some people seem to have a hard time grasping... ...

      Because "intellectual property" is a vague concept that is extremely recent relative to the age of our species. It goes contrary to what had been standard practice for ages.

    14. Re:Debate is getting old by pezpunk · · Score: 2

      you're right. i think about taking those other mp3's down all the time, but then i don't. why? well the arguement to take them down goes something like, "you're taking [potential] money out of the pockets of artists you like". but then i realized, giving them money isn't necessarily doing them a favor. i'd rather they stayed independent, DIY, hungry and desperate. it's pretty selfish i suppose. i won't say otherwise.

      --
      i could live a little longer in this prison
    15. Re:Debate is getting old by pezpunk · · Score: 2

      i have a real job. in fact i own my own computer business. that's sort of the point of the band -- you can be in a touring band and still have time for a 9 to 5. that way you don't have to gouge your fans with ridiculous ticket and merchandise prices. we sell CD's for $5 (they only cost a dollar to make) and t-shirts for $8 (they cost us about $4) and our shows are usually pretty cheap too. not because the product is inferior, but because we are not dependent on the band to make a living.

      --
      i could live a little longer in this prison
    16. Re:Debate is getting old by devonbowen · · Score: 2
      When you say "everyone" you mean the online community. My grandparents wouldn't have a clue what the hell peer-to-peer was

      Funny, I was talking to my grandfather about this the other day. He's 80 and is pretty lost with digital technology but in his day he knew security and analog electronics inside and out. Anyway, I was showing him some stuff with my laptop and when I showed him how to rip a CD he said "the music industry must love that". Then I filled him in on all that they have been trying to do to block the technology. His comment was interesting. He smiled and said "they'll lose - they always do". Reminded me that this is a very old war we are fighting.

      Devon

    17. Re:Debate is getting old by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

      The argument shouldn't have anything to do with the music industry. The music industry is evil, we all know that, but that doesn't have anything to do with violating someone else's copyright.

      Just think how upset you would be if I stole all your songs and said they were mine. Or worse, let's say I stole all the lyrics to your songs, set the to accordian music, and went on a world tour.

      Music, in this sense, is just like software licenses. Just because you share does not give you the right to decide whether someone else wants to share. I might think that commercial closed source software is evil (I don't BTW), but that doesn't mean that I can share ISOs of Microsoft software with everyone I meet.

      If you really want to bring down the established music industry then the best way to do this is to promote bands that work outside the system. Pimping bands that are part of the system doesn't hurt the record labels, it provides free advertisement for their bands. Worse yet, it's not even free as you are presumably paying for the bandwidth.

      Good luck with your band.

    18. Re:Debate is getting old by pezpunk · · Score: 2

      Just think how upset you would be if I stole all your songs and said they were mine. Or worse, let's say I stole all the lyrics to your songs, set the to accordian music, and went on a world tour.

      actually we'd be thrilled. we don't believe in ownership of sound. or more precisely, we don't believe the idea of intellectual property should extend to art. pretty radical, but hey it's right there in our song lyrics. don't think we're socialists though. IP works fine for software, and yeah capitalism works alright. just when it comes to artistic works, we hold those works above money, and even above those who created them.

      If you really want to bring down the established music industry then the best way to do this is to promote bands that work outside the system.

      we do this constantly.

      Pimping bands that are part of the system doesn't hurt the record labels, it provides free advertisement for their bands.

      so first you're complaining that we're ripping them off, then you're saying we're actually helping them with publicity. first of all, i don't think their MP3's on our dinky website do much to hurt their sales, or if they do, it is offset, as you said, by the free publicity. secondly, those bands are only there because we like them. we don't mind promoting them. but whatever. that's all hazy, and i could go either way on that. i suppose i do feel a bit guilty about not having some of those bands' permission.

      Good luck with your band.

      thanks very much. =)

      --
      i could live a little longer in this prison
    19. Re:Debate is getting old by gorilla · · Score: 2
      Seems that "Intellectual Property" is a vague concept some people seem to have a hard time grasping... ...

      That's because it is just a concept. If it was real, like real property, then people wouldn't have a hard time.

    20. Re:Debate is getting old by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2

      It is not every day that you meet someone who takes your side of this issue and still is completely logical in their reasoning. If you don't believe that art should receive copyright protection, then your stance on filesharing makes much more sense.

      At this point I suppose if you don't have problems with doing something illegal (I suppose you could consider what you are doing civil disobedience), and if you don't have a problem going against the wishes of the other bands then more power to you.

      Personally, I have lived in countries where copyright laws were very weakly enforced (Peru), and this didn't work out very well for anyone but the folks rich enough to own distribution and manufacturing channels. Artists are going to do their thing no matter what happens, but without a means of "owning" your work, then you are even less likely to be able to get paid.

      Which is why I believe that honoring the artists wishes is important, even if I think that the artist is mistaken about filesharing, and even if they are working for the devil (err.. I mean the RIAA).

  4. Jack Valenti by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When is this freak going to suffer similar humiliation and defeat?

    1. Re:Jack Valenti by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Probably never. Valenti is a better politician than Rosen and, if the truth be told, rather more evil. Valenti has the legislation he wants passed through, in the shape of the DMCA. The RIAA, and Hilary Rosen as its figurehead, aren't in that position. They actually have, for them, a hostile law from their point of view (the Home Recordings Act) in place, and will have to get legislation reversed 180 degrees to get the same kind of protection the movie industry currently enjoys.

      For all of these reasons, Valenti isn't going to need to make a case for the movie industry at any time in the near future. Rosen does. Rosen has to sway public opinion if the RIAA is to reduce what it sees as piracy and stolen sales. For the MPAA, there's already legal protections that can be easily invoked against any pirate, and whereas, for example, an author of audio ripping software can point to fair use defenses, DVD "ripping" software authors can, and have been, prosecuted under US criminal law.

      You know, while I think she's misguided on the subject of whether MP3 sales have the negative impact she seems to believe, I can't bring myself to think of her to the same degree of hatred as what appears to be the average Slashdotter's attitude. She, for example, has been a major force for protecting musicians against Congressional attempts at censorship or creating censorship systems, whereas Valenti himself oversees the major censorship body for the movie industry, and generally relies on the individual studios and directors and actors to make the case against mandated restrictions. On a surface level, the argument "Why would you buy something if you already have the MP3?" is a hard one to give a definite answer to - you can only, in the end, argue that the side effects - exposure to more music, a desire for higher quality, etc - are (probably) positive.

      To that extent, Rosen can't be criticised for not being wholly convinced.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    2. Re:Jack Valenti by ewhac · · Score: 3, Interesting

      On a surface level, the argument "Why would you buy something if you already have the MP3?" is a hard one to give a definite answer to [ .. ]

      Only for greedy, shrill children who lack imagination. To wit:

      In the case of music:

      • So I can have the full-resolution "original" at hand on durable, read-only media that can't get accidentally erased by a Windows crash.
      • Having the original also lets me re-compress it when the Next Best CoDec comes out.

      In the case of movies:

      • Same reasons as music, basically.
      • It also gives me someone to bitch at if the disc turns out to have a real, physical defect (as opposed to an artificial defect, like copy protection).

      In the case of software:

      • So I can have the manual. Online help systems still suck rocks in most cases (although forward strides are being made in this area in, curiously enough, free (and Free) software).
      • So I can have original, trusted media from which to reinstall when Windows trashes the disk/trashes the registry/runs the latest virus/etc.
      • So I can have someone to bitch at if the software itself trashes my work.
      • Being a software engineer myself, to show my appreciation for work well done.

      Schwab

    3. Re:Jack Valenti by Akilesh+Rajan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sorry, but I don't think there are currently many good economic reasons for people to buy music/movies/software if they can easily download or copy such items for free.

      "So I can have the full-resolution "original" at hand on durable, read-only media that can't get accidentally erased by a Windows crash."

      People already trade uncompressed music. This will become even more common in the future as bandwidth gets cheaper. You can burn the uncompressed music on a CD-R in 3 minutes on a new recorder on media that costs $0.50 or less.

      "It also gives me someone to bitch at if the disc turns out to have a real, physical defect (as opposed to an artificial defect, like copy protection)."

      No need to bitch if you can simply download another copy.

      "So I can have the manual."

      Instead of spending even $50 for the software, spend $30 for a third-party manual that is likely miles better than the included copy.

      "So I can have original, trusted media from which to reinstall when Windows trashes the disk/trashes the registry/runs the latest virus/etc."

      You could always burn your downloaded copy when you first obtain it and know it's healthy.

      "So I can have someone to bitch at if the software itself trashes my work."

      Possibly the most legitimate reason. But depending on the cost and nature of the software, and how responsive the company is, this often simply isn't worth it.

      "Being a software engineer myself, to show my appreciation for work well done."

      Good for you, but I don't think that this is a strong enough motivation for most people to buy what they could easily obtain otherwise.

      I don't think that the model of buying music and mp3s album-by-album or song-by-song is a viable long-term model. It should be replaced with a service that promises bandwidth, continuity of access, legitimacy, selection, and convenience. The new music services like listen.com are moving in the right direction, but the selection and quality are still lacking, and the price is too high.

    4. Re:Jack Valenti by Arnold_Crenshaw · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There's just no economic incentive to pay the prices the recording companies are asking for.

      Yes, but nobody said that they were reasonable or honest prices to begin with. In most industries, prices will fall or the companies do. In the few which have such... influence, the consumers buy by the Leaders' terms or they'll be legislated into a box where there are no other terms at all.

    5. Re:Jack Valenti by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2

      He did. Went up against Lessig and made an ass of himself. Spent half the debate ingratiating himself with certain members fo the audience. The man honestly thinks that he's been proven correct regarding his 20-year old statement about VCR's being the death of the entertainment industry. Every IP/DMCA/Copyright horror story Lessig brought up was either ignored or dismissed as trivial.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    6. Re:Jack Valenti by jcr · · Score: 2

      She, for example, has been a major force for protecting musicians against Congressional attempts at censorship or creating censorship systems,

      Umm, this may have been before her time, but the RIAA bent right over for Tipper Gore's utterly unconstitutional labeling demands in exchange for the Blank Tape Tax.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  5. Cool T-shirt on the pic by CoolVibe · · Score: 2
    "corrupt compact disc, inferiour audio"

    So where can I get that?! I want it!

    1. Re:Cool T-shirt on the pic by Monoman · · Score: 4, Informative

      I read the article :-)

      http://www.geekstyle.co.uk/ntkmart.cgi#Corrupt

      --
      Keep the Classic Slashdot.
    2. Re:Cool T-shirt on the pic by doomy · · Score: 2, Informative

      You can get one of those t-shirts from here

      --
      ...free your source and the rest would follow...
    3. Re:Cool T-shirt on the pic by zdzichu · · Score: 2

      oh, we have new discovery - slashdot-shopping-effect.
      geekstyle sales will be higher than ever :)

      --
      :wq
  6. what was the "different and confusing" set? by wadetemp · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hilary Rosen asks "Put up your hand if you download and burn music" (most hands go up). She then asks "Keep you hand up if you buy more music because of it" (many stay up). She gets worried and immediately asks some different and confusing set of people to put their hands up, causing everyone to look miffed, and everyone putting their hand down)

    I call BS on this. What was the "different and confusing" set she asked for? I have a feeling it was the interesting part of this exchange... pop culture already tells us we should raise our hands for these first two questions.

    1. Re:what was the "different and confusing" set? by GuyMannDude · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I call BS on this. What was the "different and confusing" set she asked for? I have a feeling it was the interesting part of this exchange...

      Yeah, I agree. I, too, would be very interested in seeing what Rosen's follow-up questions were. Can anyone point us to an unbiased, accurate record of what happened? Maybe even a transcript? It's clear that the articles that were submitted to slashdot aren't trying to evenly present what happened that night.

      GMD

    2. Re:what was the "different and confusing" set? by zaffir · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'd also say that this was a stacked audience. Let's see, you have a bunch of college students that use p2p on a regular basis, many of whom were spreading anti-RIAA propaganda (not that that is bad). And you have the head of the RIAA that is trying to keep them from doing the things they want... come on. The proposition has NO CHANCE when polling an audience like that. I'm actually surprised Rosen asked that question.

      --
      "Upon attaching the waterblock to my penis, I began to notice that I know nothing about computers." -- JRockway
    3. Re:what was the "different and confusing" set? by Danse · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, since these are the people that Rosen and the RIAA are concerned with persuading, it makes sense that these are the people that she would want to be speaking to. Do you think they should have had some soccer moms and middle managers thrown in for good measure or something?

      --
      It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
    4. Re:what was the "different and confusing" set? by darien · · Score: 2

      It's a shame you weren't there to put this into action - you could really have set the cat among the pigeons. I very much doubt the proposition could have recovered from the serious damage this would have done to their argument.

      Still, I like the way you describe how you'd do it: the capital letters really convey a sense of forceful communication, which naturally encourages the reader to agree with you. The "" interjections are a nice touch too; they leave the reader in no doubt that you're a musically sensitive person, ensuring your opinions will be valued and taken seriously.

    5. Re:what was the "different and confusing" set? by wadetemp · · Score: 2

      Why, thank you. I'm not a musically sensitive person, however I do play one on TV.

    6. Re:what was the "different and confusing" set? by whereiswaldo · · Score: 2

      Indeed. I would have looked miffed too, and probably would have sat down, but not before singing "I'M SORRY MAMA <offkey> I DIDNT MEAN TO HURT YOO<offkey>OOOUUUU<offkey>. I DIDNT MEAN TO MAKE YOU CRY BUT TONIGHT, IM CLEANING OUT MY CL<offkey>O<offkey>SET." Then again, that is what I have been programmed to say by my radio.



      And with that the XML committee slapped their foreheads and admitted that they had not forseen such an application.

      ;)

    7. Re:what was the "different and confusing" set? by RestiffBard · · Score: 2

      she doesn't have to convince any children. No one ever has to convince children. Want to know why? Because anyone under the age of 25 or the age of 35 does not matter in the United States.

      Why?

      We don't vote. Who gets to make the laws? The people 25 and 35. why am I specific about the ages?

      req. to be a U.S. House Representative? age 25
      req. to be a U.S. Senator? age 35.

      the 15-25 set doesn't mean a hill of beans. Never will until there's a revolution.

      --
      - /* dead coders leave no comments */
    8. Re:what was the "different and confusing" set? by Andy_R · · Score: 3, Informative

      Which country do you think the Oxford debating society is in?

      It's worth noting that if you wanted to pick a group of people who are most likely to be in politics or influential media positions in Britain 10 years from now, you would be hard pushed to find a better grouping than 'students who are active in the Oxford debating society'

      --
      A pizza of radius z and thickness a has a volume of pi z z a
    9. Re:what was the "different and confusing" set? by RestiffBard · · Score: 2
      Which country do you think the Oxford debating society is in?

      Bhutan :)

      Britain 10 years from now,

      10 years from now is too late. It's much harder to revoke a law than it is to invoke a law.

      --
      - /* dead coders leave no comments */
    10. Re:what was the "different and confusing" set? by nathanm · · Score: 2
      req. to be a U.S. House Representative? age 25
      req. to be a U.S. Senator? age 35
      Close, but not quite. You only need to be 30 to be elected a US Senator. You have to be 35 to be elected president.
    11. Re:what was the "different and confusing" set? by gagravarr · · Score: 2

      Well, if you actually read my article properly...... you'd see that Dave Green from NTK had a recorder with him, and the Union video'd the whole debate. No news on when (if ever) either of those will go online though - waiting on Dave seeing if the quality is good enough, and the Union reaching a decision on putting their debates on the net.

      --
      This post will enter the public domain 70 years after my death, unless Disney buys another extension.
    12. Re:what was the "different and confusing" set? by karnal · · Score: 2

      Who cares, just put it out on WinMX and let us sort it out....

      Oh wait... you're saying the Union might want to control the distribution??? :)

      Laugh... or Cry. I don't care which.

      --
      Karnal
  7. but she looks sad! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Just look at that binder she's holding - full of arguments and facts about why the evil music pirates are devastating the economy, yet she still gets beaten by a couple of punk college kids.

    She deserves a pat on the back, for at least trying to defend the glorious RIAA's noble quest against piracy (also known as "fair use")

  8. A good quote by ekrout · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I really feel that the music industry has, quite simply, realized that they're on the out-and-out, so to speak. With the advent of faster networking technologies over the past few years, and the number of kids attending 4-year colleges (all of whom have broadband connections), the industry truly feels that they lose $0.20 with every *.mp3, *.ogg, and *.wma file that's exchanged via TCP/IP.

    Here's some sage advice (from here originally): "If you really want a change, don't vote for either party -- vote Libertarian if you're on the right, Green Party if you're on the left, and independant otherwise. Both parties are in the pockets of big business, and that's bad both for those who advocate freedom from the government as well as those who despise deregulation.

    The more we have third party, the closer we get to fairer, European-style representation."

    --

    If you celebrate Xmas, befriend me (538
    1. Re:A good quote by Stalyn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The more we have third party, the closer we get to fairer, European-style representation.

      Do we really want that and is it indeed fairer?

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    2. Re:A good quote by chris_sawtell · · Score: 2
      > The more we have third party, the closer we get to fairer, European-style representation.


      Do we really want that and is it indeed fairer?


      "European-style representation" is sometimes a bit like a wolf, a bear and a lamb having a debate about the lunch menu.


      Most days here in NZ the lamb usually gets a chance to at least bleat before Grace is said. We have had European style elections twice now, and yes it does result in a fairer system for making legislation. The trouble is when the third party holds the balance of power and can effectively call the tune.

    3. Re:A good quote by Baki · · Score: 2

      The trouble is when the third party holds the balance of power and can effectively call the tune.

      Which can even happen in a two party system as the U.S. has: If I understood well a single person in one of the houses (senate?) left the republican party and almost often votes democrat now, this with a 50-50 split in the house. So here even a single person holds the balance of power.


      At least in a european style coalistion there are often 2 or 3 parties making up the government, and once a party sacrifices one of this issues to the other(s) and vice versa.

    4. Re:A good quote by Baki · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Yes, it is fairer. Is it fair that (in a district system such as the U.S. has) one person gets to represent all people in his area, even if only 60% voted for him? No, if 60% voted, about 60% of influence should go to him, 40% to other(s). The last presedential election (a few votes making the difference between one person or the other) shows this clearly. In 'european style', like in Germany, Switzerland, Netherlands etc. such things are irrelevant, since no person with much power is directly elected, only the individual members of parliament (chosen in proportion). These members proportially representing the people then see what combination of parties can cooperate and thus form a majority goverment.

      Thus, a representative system is better. The parliament reflects the division of political forces/thoughts in society. Because of this you get less concentration of power at a single or at two parties (b.t.w. the UK does not have a 'european' system either).

      Another practical advantage is that you do never get one party governments, but usually 2-4 parties make up the government (Switzerland, for example, has had the same 4 parties in the government for 50 years). These must find compromises amoungst them, which leads to less 'fast' but to more stable lawmaking and government.

      In 'extreme' systems such as the U.S. chances are that the next government reverses the policies of the former. Instead of gradual evolution you get large changes that nullify what happened before. This is inefficient and shortsighted.

      Note: France and the U.K. don't have a representative/proportional system either, this because of a coarse district system which always shifts balance of power to one party. Also in France, the president is directly elected, and he (like in the U.S.) is a person with real power.

      In contrast, the german president is only a ceremonial figure who is elected by parlaiment. The dutch king/queen is not elected either and also is only ceremonial. In such system, no single person holding very much power exists, and such persons are never directly elected.

    5. Re:A good quote by greenrd · · Score: 2
      Plus you can not reverse laws in the US.

      I'm sorry, but you don't know what the fuck you're talking about.

    6. Re:A good quote by maw · · Score: 2
      Here's some sage advice (from here [slashdot.org] originally): "If you really want a change, don't vote for either party -- vote Libertarian if you're on the right, Green Party if you're on the left, and independant otherwise.

      Whoa! Libertarians are right and Greens are left? WHOA! Since when was politics a 1 dimensional spectrum? Even a two dimensional model doesn't really make sense.

      Unfortunately, this simplistic kind of thinking clouds a lot of issues.

      --
      You're a suburbanite.
    7. Re:A good quote by Baki · · Score: 2
      What if there is one 30% faction and 7 10% factions? Would it be just to give all power to this 30% faction? Your Ross Perot example doesn't fit; in more just systems no single party can ever get all power (except if one party really wins a majority, which is very seldom). Thus the parties must cooperate, make compromises and form a government together. Of course this also conflicts with the concept of a president that concentrates a lot of power in a single person (which is dangrerous IMO).


      W.r.t. reversing laws: I don't know, but I was talking about policies in general. Such as, a more left wing president/government increasing taxes and trying to provide health care for the full population, and the next one decreasing taxes and dismantling health care. This does not necessary have to do with laws, but with how the states daily business is being conducted.


      Such extreme shifts of policy can be induced, in the U.S. system, if only 5% of votes shift from one party to the other. In european coalition systems, this is hardly possible to be induced by minor shifts of votes.

    8. Re:A good quote by Nept · · Score: 2

      Yes, I prefer the european style as well. What about the US electoral college? That gives the electoral votes to the candidate with the majority, even though the difference might be 40.9 to 50.1. of course, there are the odd and rare times when the electoral voter votes against the person he/she is supposed to represet, but that's a whole different ball game :)

      --
      "Teachers leave us kids alone ..." - Roger Waters, Pink Floyd
    9. Re:A good quote by maw · · Score: 2
      That's missing the point. You're right that things need to be quantified, however.

      Still, level of covernment control of what? "citizens' lives" is too vague. What if you can do what you want economically, but you can't stay out at night past 9pm without a permit and you can't do drugs? Or what if you can do whatever you want, but the government heavily regulates industry, which it owns?

      You need two dimensions for that. And I don't think that two dimensions are sufficient, either. What about education? What about welfare? What about foreign and military affairs? What about the environment?

      There are lots of areas in which the government can have a role, and many of them are orthogonal. It can get complicated, but life is complicated.

      --
      You're a suburbanite.
    10. Re:A good quote by Reziac · · Score: 2

      If they are losing 20 cents with every *.music file that's exchanged, why aren't they selling me these same files for 25 cents apiece, thus making a profit??

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  9. Now only if... by sterno · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It'd be nice if we could have this sort of debate and result happen someplace it really matters like Congress :)

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    1. Re:Now only if... by Dr.+Awktagon · · Score: 5, Funny

      Oh yeah, can you imagine how that debate would go? I can.. let's listen in..

      Rosen: (to herself: heh, this one works every time.. well except at Oxford Union.) So, who here downloads and burns music?

      Congress: (silence. they look at each other and shrug.)

      R: (to herself: oh yeah, they don't know the hip lingo like I do) Uh, who here uses their computer to get digital music from the internet and then to put the music on recordable CDs, you know, like homemade CDs?

      C: (silence. one congressman checks his watch.)

      R: (getting frustrated) Okay, does anyone here use a computer?

      C: (shaking of heads. one congressman quietly hides a piece of paper with pending legislation on regulation of the personal computer industry.)

      R: (gets an idea) Hey never mind about that. Here's another one: who here likes money?

      C: (faces light up.. the room becomes animated) ME!! ME!! ME!! ME!!! OVER HERE!! MONEY!!

      R: (to herself: looks like my side won this debate after all)

    2. Re:Now only if... by someonehasmyname · · Score: 2, Insightful

      WTF? How does this get modded insightful?!

      Oh wait, maybe this will be understandable:

      WTF? h0W d0ez THi$ g3T m0dd3d In$IGHtFuL?!

      --
      Common sense is not so common.
    3. Re:Now only if... by Melantha_Bacchae · · Score: 2

      Dr. Awktagon wrote:

      > Rosen: (to herself: heh, this one works every
      > time.. well except at Oxford Union.) So, who here
      > downloads and burns music?
      >
      > Congress: (silence. they look at each other and
      > shrug.)

      This would be more funny if the sergeant of the US senate hadn't had to shut down the Senate's P2P network. Our senators had been engaging in too much illegal (and insecure) file sharing in violation of the copyright laws they themselves wrote!

      During hearings on the Hollings bill, at least two pirated movies were shown. One was a Sony movie pirated by a Disney employee and shown by the president of Disney. The other was pirated by a US Senator.

      Now if the MPAA's, RIAA's, and Microsoft's congresscritters would take but a moment to consider how the Hollings bill would impact their own file sharing habits, they wouldn't pass it. Of course if they were honest and really cared about what was best for our country and its future, they'd never consider such a nightmare in the first place!

      Yes, I know Microsoft is against the Holling's bill. Officially. But when he first proposed it last year, Microsoft took out a patent that makes them the one to benefit the most (100% government enforced monopoly) from it passing.

      "All our tomorrows, Great Sun, by the Light, are very forgotten.
      The Light dies. We pray and it sleeps."
      "Oh Peace Oh Light Return" Japan's national song of mourning from "Gojira", 1954.

  10. Courage or stupidity ? by liberteus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    to go to a university only to face a crowd of filesharing student can either be pictured as stupidity or courage, so let's at least give her that: she was coureagous. She ran into the wolves house!

    About the filesharing issue? Depends on wether you recognize intellectual property as a valid concept or not...

    --
    http://www.pageliberale.org
    1. Re:Courage or stupidity ? by traskjd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would say good on her. Not often the corporates even turn up to things like this even when they say they will. Doesn't mean I like what they are doing but I have a little more respect.

    2. Re:Courage or stupidity ? by Flower · · Score: 4, Funny
      More like, that's what she's paid to do. Wha'? You think the Mouth of Sauron wanted to make a speech to Gandalf? A job is a job.

      Hey, at least Hilary gets health benefits.

      --
      I don't want knowledge. I want certainty. - Law, David Bowie
    3. Re:Courage or stupidity ? by Yarn · · Score: 2

      I think the mouth of sauron must have had 'benefits', he was >400 years old (Don't have my LoTR books here to find the exact date in the appendix)

      Got a company horse too.

      --
      -Yarn - Rio Karma: Excellent
    4. Re:Courage or stupidity ? by maw · · Score: 3, Informative
      Depends on wether you recognize intellectual property as a valid concept or not...

      Balderdash! "Intellectual property" is a very vague term designed to conflate lots mostly unrelated ideas. It can refer to trademarks, patents, copyright, trade secrets, etc. All of them are valid, although all of them can be and often are taken to unnecessary or harmful extremes.

      "Intellectual property" is a propaganda term designed to confuse thinking. Not entirelly dissimilar to the "either you're with us or you're with the terrorists" bifurcation we've been treated to.

      --
      You're a suburbanite.
  11. I still don't get it... by MacAndrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...why the debate is framed as free music v. the music industry. We can decide to dislike both sides, and still get free music -- by encouraging musicians to self-publish either samples or entire albums as freeware or shareware. For those without internet connections and CD burners, music stores could offer a write-your-own-CD services (and I think I've seen this in prototype?).

    Up to now the recording studios have been like the cartoon syndicates -- a necessary evil because they control the production, distribution, and promotion of music, with staggering overhead. Why does a 25 CD cost $18, anyway, about what it cost when invented 20 years ago? How many non-geek consumers know about this profit margin, and how loudly would they complain if they did?

    1. Re:I still don't get it... by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "...why the debate is framed as free music v. the music industry."

      I never really thought it was about music being 'free' anyway. My MP3 searches were about finding new music, not about getting it for free. I saw it as a way of finding stuff I thought I'd like. Paying for it is not an issue. I mean think about it: Buy a CD, open it, and it's yours. You can't take it back if it's not satisfactory.

      So yeah, I'm gonna download songs from the album first before I buy the CD because I'm not paying $15 for 1 (one) song I liked from the radio. How many of you have been burned by that?

    2. Re:I still don't get it... by Enry · · Score: 2

      Whine whine whine...

      This "it still costs $18 20 years later" is getting pretty old. You're missing two important parts.

      First off is this little thing called inflation. All the kickbacks the record studios charge costs a lot of money. If records are sold anything like books, they get sold by RIAA members for 50% (so if a CD sells in the store for $18, the RIAA member sells it for $9). Things cost money. When they first started, CDs were barely more than a copy of the record with the liner notes. Now you have interactive CDs with video or flash animation, more liner notes, etc. To be honest, I'm suprised they haven't gone UP in cost over the past 20 years.

      The other thing is....well...CDs don't really sell for $18 anymore. I bought a stack of new releases and none was over $17. Most were $16 (well, $15.99, but you know..). That little thing of the RIAA forcing record stores to sell for the same minimum cost seems to taken care of that item.

      Don't get me wrong. The "why pay $16 if I only like one song?" still works, as does "if it only costs $.25 to make, why are artists being shafted?". But this argument just isn't as valid as you think.

    3. Re:I still don't get it... by clifyt · · Score: 2

      "Why does a 25 CD cost $18, anyway, about what it cost when invented 20 years ago? How many non-geek consumers know about this profit margin, and how loudly would they complain if they did?"

      Uhh huh. Yeah. A CD costs $0.25 doesn't it. The pure physical media costs $0.25 therefore thats all we should charge for it.

      I'm going to pretend you are just a troll instead of a fucking moron.

      You know why a CD costs $18? And thats $18 only if you buy crappy music in over priced stores...most of the times its anywhere between $13 - $15 for new releases.

      CDs cost this much because folks expect a certain amount of production work on these things. I've worked with friends that have had studios give them easily hundreds of thousands to record an album (most of the time, the cost to record these things is far more than the artists will ever see in their own pockets).

      At one point people could walk into a studio and come out with a finished product a few days later. It doesn't work this way anymore unless you are a true punk band or doing bluegrass or something else that relies on honesty and simplicity. If you talk about the popular forms of even these arts, I've seen 'punk' bands that spend a few weeks on a single song just to make it sound authentic. "Dude, lets get some takes of feedback...you can sample this and make it sound appropriate can't ya?"

      As a geek, how much do you expect to get paid a year? Lets say you've been doing this job for a while and you are good at it. Here in the Midwest, I'd be happy with $50k a year. On the coast...I think I'd have to at least double that (if my friends salaries are any indication). So, you have an audio engineer who is good at what he does and can earn enough to eat, own a nice car and raise a family. What should he be expecting to take home? Well, depending on his skill level, this is on par with geek work. So just for the engineer, you're paying $100k a year. If he is the house engineer, he needs to be getting paid even if no one is in the studio.

      You have the little whipping boys that do gophering and arranging the mics or rough edits on audio. Lets say there will be 2 or 3 of these guys on the session in various capacities. Lets say $20k each (they get just enough to survive and hope they make it to the positions of everyone else...I've done this in the past, but luckily I've done it in addition to my standard salary and it was more for fun). There is another $70k on average.

      You have studio rentals which I'm not even going to try to guess at (never asked, don't want to know...my home studio is big enough for me and is expensive enough). You have the costs of the ancellary folks in this. Your manager gets paid, even if he's getting points on what you aren't ever going to see.

      You have your producers, which a good one is going to ask for both points on the album AND quite a bit of upfront money. These days, labels don't like to put albums out that don't make money and thus hire folks that are pretty much hit factories. They are known for their sound. Half the time I buy CDs these days, I check out the producer first as they will have more influence on the sound than the artist -- at least for the poppier crap.

      You have to pay for the labels A&R and the secretaries and the CEO and everyone else there. You have to pay for commercials and promotion.

      In the end, an $18 CD will probably have cost several hundred thousand. Actually, an $18 CD will probably have cost at least a million...the $13 CDs will have cost a few hundred thousand.

      What can artists do? They can skip the bullshit and record their own music. Do you buy from the artists or do you buy from BestBuy / Tower / Whatever? If you are buying from some place like that then we know what kind of music you listen to and the scenarios above are what got you there to buy it from. Personally, I prefer to buy from artists I know. A lot of times their albums are in stores, but I'd rather buy their earlier stuff that didn't have everyone elses fingerprints all over them.

      Do you buy CDs from guys you watched on the MTV? Again, corporate music and you deserve to pay $18.

      Do you buy bands heard on any radio station that has a 'Morning Zoo' or anything like that? Well shit, I guess we can probably expect you to be paying the $20 these artists will be charging you later for.

      Honestly, an $18 CD is worth $18 because it A) Cost a lot to make and the folks that make the music that is a sure hit for the studios charge a lot because they know they will have a sure hit and B) because the fact that you listen to this artist and enjoy the mastery that went into the process of building this music from the secretaries in the front lobby to the producers getting paid millions to smoke weeks while listening to some dumb ass play the same riff over and over until he gets it right 6 weeks later.

      You want to complain about $18 CDs, then don't buy them. Unlike overpriced OSs that you might be forced to buy because of business needs, no one is forcing you to listen to this style of music or buy their cds. There a lot of artists that have taken the whole home recording to levels that some of the studios can't at a small percentages of the costs that would have happened otherwise -- check out the URL in my header (err..not right now, because the hard drive crapped out and I'm waiting on the HD and the latest backups to be overnighted so I can get the site back online). Support artists when they tour and buy their music there as they generally get a larger percentage of the money that way (most also have albums not available in stores that are a lot less corporate in nature...a friend just sent me her new demos and outtakes cd that I thought had better packaging and the sounds were actually more pleasing than the overly compressed and blandly presented studio cuts). Remember also, not all artists tour and can make money from doing so -- some GPL freaks think the only way artists should make money is by public performance...

      Support the artists that you think are doing the right thing and shut the fuck up about $18 CDs.

      Ok, that was my /. rant for the month...back to recording as I only have two days a week I can do this unlike my friends that do this stuff full time.

      clif
      sonikmatter.com

    4. Re:I still don't get it... by clifyt · · Score: 2

      A geek actually getting some, I've heard everything now :)

      No, you were obviously talking about the cost of music because you were talking about $18 CDs. No one sells $18 Blank Media.

      I take back my remark about you being a troll...

  12. Re:she even voted against her self by Wonko42 · · Score: 2

    She almost voted against herself by walking out the wrong door. Pay attention.

  13. Oxford Union != Oxford University Student Union by hsenag · · Score: 3, Informative

    It should be pointed out that the Oxford Union
    (which is where the debate was) isn't the same thing as the Oxford University Student Union. Probably only really of importance to people in Oxford, who know this anyway, though :-)

    1. Re:Oxford Union != Oxford University Student Union by Zeinfeld · · Score: 4, Informative
      It should be pointed out that the Oxford Union [oxford-union.org] (which is where the debate was) isn't the same thing as the Oxford University Student Union [ousu.org]. Probably only really of importance to people in Oxford, who know this anyway, though :-)

      Err why, most Oxford students have zero contact with OUSU. There is not much point to a student union with no facilities to administer.

      Hitler credited the Oxford Union with starting World War II.

      Incidentally, King and Country has only been passed once since the original debate. Anyone care to guess what the subject matter was?

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
  14. Finally the great question is answered... by slipgun · · Score: 4, Funny

    Hilary Rosen is a woman.

    --
    SpamNet - a spam blocker that really works
    1. Re:Finally the great question is answered... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny
    2. Re:Finally the great question is answered... by seen2much · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You so sure about that?

      The real question about the recording industry is do they have calculators?

      A tape or lp at the time of the cd switch was far cheaper than an CD. But now that CD production is more efficient the cost should have come down some. But it hasn't. Cds are still in the 16-20 dollar range where as tapes at the same time were in 10-12.you think that cd's would have dropped?

      Why don't we buy CDs? Because the price is prohibitive. On top of that the RIAA has made no friends with fans with the crackdowns and wacky copyright protection schemes.

      Now the MPAA is doing the same thing with DVDs. And you know that the DVD won't drop either.

      --


      "Beware the squirrels"
    3. Re:Finally the great question is answered... by Joey7F · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I am not sure if it is quite the same with the MPAA. It seems that the RIAA price CDs equally. DVDs have different prices, frequently depending on the studio that releases them, which I think the end will be more beneficial to the consumer.

      It is too bad that the artists that already have made a fair amount of money (and that are fairly famous) don't start there own label that sells music online by the song (yes I know about rhapsody, but they require a monthly fee) or that sell the discs for $12 bucks instead of 20.

      In fact, wouldn't it be COOL if you could listen to the songs online at a low bitrate, then buy the cd, and while it is shipping to you, it lets you download the album in your format of choice.

      --Joey

    4. Re:Finally the great question is answered... by seen2much · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Look at the price of a videotape versus DVD. I can understand that right now DVD do cost more to produce but in 5-10 years the opposite will be true. But do you think DVDs will drop in price to the same level as videotape. I seriously doubt that. And the extra features added do not add that much to a DVD experience, much as I like them. I forsee the greed of the MPAA by keeping the price as high as it is.

      --


      "Beware the squirrels"
    5. Re:Finally the great question is answered... by sparkz · · Score: 2

      So by your argument, tape sales are higher than CD sales?

      --
      Author, Shell Scripting : Expert Re
    6. Re:Finally the great question is answered... by drinkypoo · · Score: 2
      In fact, wouldn't it be COOL if you could listen to the songs online at a low bitrate, then buy the cd, and while it is shipping to you, it lets you download the album in your format of choice.

      Personally, I would let people listen at ~24kbps, let them download after purchase at 96kbps, and mail them a CD of CDDA or whatever the CD format of the month is in the future.

      I would NEVER send people a high-quality digital file as that just makes it TOO easy to send an officially sanctioned release to the public.

      What would really be dope would be to send out custom CDs with a different watermark on every CD so that you could identify the individual who uploaded your music to the world. Want to punish the actual offender? This is the way to do it. Offer your music both with and without the watermark, and offer it cheaper with it of course. Using this method, you could even do digital distribution at full quality. (It becomes much more reasonable to do this when you are distributing this music digitally, of course.)

      If you do not tell me that you are doing this, I will find a way to sue you under some privacy law, so don't get too big for your britches.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    7. Re:Finally the great question is answered... by Joey7F · · Score: 2

      People can still make their own rips. If you tiptoe around too much the consumers will just say okay go f yourselves I am downloading this off [insert favorite P2P here].

      The RIAA in trying to smoke out copyright infringers is suffocating their revenue stream.

      I think what you are seeing is more frustration than anything else. Imo, it is misplaced frustration, because last time I checked people still bought cds.

      --Joey

    8. Re:Finally the great question is answered... by loraksus · · Score: 2

      A fucking ugly one. Perhaps she is taking the hormones.

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
  15. Re:she even voted against her self by mattbland · · Score: 2

    i'm sorry, my mistake.
    would have been funny.
    i must stop speed reading ;-)

    --
    /usr/bin/awake/too/long
  16. Absence of hard, verified data by GuyMannDude · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I agree. It's getting to the point that EVERYONE has chosen sides and the resulting debate has a decidedly religious flavor (ie, no one will ever switch sides from this point on).

    Interesting analogy. I have to agree with you: there is so much conflicting data that everyone seems to have made up their minds on the basis of their gut feeling. I imagine there isn't any way of resolving this.

    However, I would think that we (the pro-filesharing crowd) could use this ambiguity to our advantage. The **AA wants to limit a powerful technology and impose some dubious laws. And they don't have any iron-clad statistics to back them up. It seems that the burden of proof should be on the **AA to show that filesharing definitely hurts sales. If they cannot show this -- and I don't think they can -- then all their technology-limiting plans should be rejected by the lawmakers. I'm not so naive that I believe this is going to happen, I'm just stating that in a perfect world this non-provable postulate that filesharing hurts sales should be a victory to us. There will always be people who have a "gut feeling" that this is responsible for the financial woes of the music and movie industries, but that shouldn't be enough to enact laws!

    GMD

    1. Re:Absence of hard, verified data by jedidiah · · Score: 2

      Every year that the CD format is out is another year that everyone has had to either move over their legacy music to CD or to just forget about those old albums altogether.

      Desipite what you say: much of the population doens't even use PC's, much of the population doesn't have a PC with a CD Burner and much of the population can't even use the burner that comes with XP.

      5-7% of the CD media market is far too large to attribute to the Napster crowd.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  17. Should read Rosen defeated in popularity contest by tyrann98 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Reassuringly, the motion that "This House believes that the free music mentality is a threat to the future of music" was resoundingly defeated by a hefty 256 "Noes" to 72 "Ayes"

    This is more of a popularity contest than a true debate. The RIAA's position is never going to be popular with an illegal file-swapping crowd filled with university students.

    Regardless, The RIAA has every right to pursue its goals (i.e., profit) using legitimate business practices.

    The RIAA is perfectly allowed to sell music using any method they want. It does not matter if downloaders purchase more CDs due to free advertising. If you believe that start a new record company with free music from your site. Nobody has a right to force a new distribution method on someone else. I prefer the BSD license, but I don't go out and illegally change GPL software to BSD. People have the right to use any license they choose. Similiarly, artists have the right to release free music if they want. They are not forced to sign a contract with anyone. Plus, the distribution method of choice - the Internet - is perfected suited for free music.

  18. there are defeats and defeats by daniel2000 · · Score: 3

    If you go into a competition and everyone expects you to loose, but you don't loose as badly as expected then people will notice that and take more notice of you the next time.

    Hilary may well have thought that they wouldn't out and out win a debate in such an environment but thought that it was still worth the effort. A strategic defeat perhaps.

    Or...

  19. Off topic but... by BigBir3d · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This all reminds me of my old boss; 70+ yr old Jewish man from NYC who used Napster to download old speeches (Winston Churchill was his favorite) and such other things that were hard to find anywhere locally (library etc). He never once used it for music.

  20. Perhaps a calculated move by GuyMannDude · · Score: 5, Insightful

    to go to a university only to face a crowd of filesharing student can either be pictured as stupidity or courage, so let's at least give her that: she was coureagous. She ran into the wolves house!

    Disclaimer: because of the poor write-ups posted, I don't have a good idea of what actually happened at this debate and how fair it was. With that in mind, consider the following theory: Hillary figures she can 'win' no matter how the debate turns out. She has a chance to talk to the crowd that are the biggest filesharers. This is her chance to hopefully convince them that what they're doing is wrong. With a little luck, she'll be able to convince someone in the audience who happens to be in a position of power regarding the computer facilities of the school. She figures if the debate is 'fair' that she's got a reasonable chance to getting her message across. She won't be able to convince those whose minds are already made up, but perhaps she can bring a few students back from the Dark Side.

    Now consider the case of an 'unfair' debate. If the debate is 'not fair', perhaps some students will realize that and sympathize with her. But even if she isn't able to convince anyone in the crowd that her position is right and the whole debate ends up being a crazy show, she can then take a videotape or transcript of the 'unfair' debate with her to other people (like politicians) and use that to convince swing-voters that the pro-filesharing crowd is just a bunch of hooligans. She willingly goes into the lions' den to gain sympathy from others when she shows them her 'scars'. "I tried to explain my position and look how they treated me? They're animals!"

    This is just a theory. But to characterize her action as either courage or stupidity leaves out another very real possibility: calculating.

    GMD

    1. Re:Perhaps a calculated move by drinkypoo · · Score: 2
      This is just a theory. But to characterize her action as either courage or stupidity leaves out another very real possibility: calculating.

      Given that she was willing to ask how many people download music off the 'net, and then follow up by asking how many of them buy music afterward, when we've been telling them for years now that we DO buy music... Well, I think we can drop the 'calculating' option.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  21. Who voted to determine the outcome? by geekee · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Asking whether she won or lost is like sending a republican to debate at a democratic convention and having the democrats vote on who won. Give me a break. Although she's bringing up the practical aspects of what p2p does to their business, this isn't even the issue. The issue is whether it is legal for people to share copyrighted without the permission of the copyright holder. The answer is no. It's very simple. Even Janis Ian agrees that you need the permission of the copyright holder. The RIAA has the right to do business anyway they choose. Your only right is to refuse to do business with them if you don't like what they offer. You do NOT have the right to violate copyright just because you don't like the way they do business. It's as unethical as stealing cable, photocopying books, etc.

    --
    Vote for Pedro
  22. Oxford Union Debates (I "officiated" once) by Elias+Israel · · Score: 5, Informative

    This summer, I had the opportunity to help officate at a debate held at the Oxford University Student Union. This was for an XML course that was developed by a consulting firm that was presented at the University. During the summer, Oxford hosts a significant number of for-profit and non-profit organizations holding conferences, seminars, and the like.

    The city of Oxford and the University are stunning. If you've never seen them, you're missing out.

    The debating hall is laid out similarly to the House of Commons, which us 'mericans sometimes get a glimpse of on TV.

    At the head of the room is the debate chairman, who presides over the debate and makes sure that the rules are followed. To his left and right are the Union treasurer and librarian. Since this wasn't an "official" Oxford Union debate, all three of those roles were held by participants in the XML summer course. I sat to the left of the chairman, and helped decide matters of debate procedure and scope. (Don't laugh; there actually was one matter to review. :)

    On the main floor of the debate chamber is the Secretary's desk. The Secretary likewise assures debate procedure is followed and assists the chairman in doing so.

    On either side of the Secretary's table are the proposer of the motion, and the opposer. Each of them leads a particular side of the debate.

    Around all of them are the seats for the participants, arranged on both the main floor and a balcony surrounding everything.

    Perhaps the most interesting feature of the debate hall are the doors. On the way in, they look like simple double doors. Only when you are inside can you see that over the right door reads a sign saying "Yeses", and over the left door "Noes." At the end of the debate all participants file out through those doors, their numbers counted by the Secretary as they pass. Then everyone files back in to hear the results read.

    The Oxford Union is one of the oldest free speech organizations in the world, and certainly deserving of respect on that basis. The debating hall is a monument to civil society and free speech. The Union is also a completely private institution: a true union of, by, and for Oxford students.

    Now, having said all of that, the fact remains that a debate at the Oxford Union is just a debate. It's not a UN Security Council resolution or a Supreme Court judgment. It's just the opinion of a bunch of people who happened to be in the hall at the time as to whether the proposer or the opposer made a better case for their side.

    It's all good fun, and much needed at that. But let's not get all worked up about it.

    1. Re:Oxford Union Debates (I "officiated" once) by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 3, Informative

      Here's some lovely pictures of the above mentioned room,

      Debating Chamber

  23. commercialism by g4dget · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This House believes that 'the free music mentality is a threat to the future of music

    Well, "this house" believes that it is rampant commercialism that is actually a threat to the future of music.

    1. Re:commercialism by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      The music industry controls the signal:noise ratio of the music scene. Due to the MTV/VH1/Clearchannel/RIAA's grip on the collective ears and eyes of the nation, they control what music we are most readily and frequently exposed to when we turn on the radio, walk into a mall or any public establishment, turn on our television to watch a show, et cetera.

      While it is true that there is good non-RIAA music out there, you hear much more about a bunch of crappy plastic bands that they want you to hear about because of their stranglehold on media. This does hamper the ability of indie artists to get attention.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:commercialism by g4dget · · Score: 2

      The music industry controls the signal:noise ratio of the music scene.

      And why do we need companies with multi-million dollar profits to do that?

      If on-line broadcasting and downloading become ubiquitous, then word of mouth, mailing lists, newspaper reviews, and on-line reviews are sufficient to let people make their own choices. We don't need Hilary or Mickey Mouse to decide for us what is "signal" and what is "noise".

    3. Re:commercialism by tadas · · Score: 2
      You said: The music industry controls the signal:noise ratio of the music scene

      Yeah, they filter out the signal, leaving the noise...

      --
      This page accidentally left blank
  24. of course she lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    She was in a room full of people who buy and listen to music.

    This is definitely NOT the place for an RIAA exec to be. They should be with other executives and the occasional politician. That way they can avoid the whole issue of customers and business models, and focus on what's really important: new legislation.

  25. The bigger question by KFury · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Considering how online-centric we are now, how valid is it to ask about dirtworld CD sales without finding out what kind of behavior consumers would have, if it were easy to buy the music they like online, for digital download, with price-parity with CDs, adjusted for savings in fabrication and delivery costs.

    They're asking us to pay for a distribution system we don't need, and that's what offends me as I'm struggling to tear off the stupid sticker holding my new CD's jewelcase together before I put the disc into the reader to be encoded to the only format I use anyhow.

    1. Re:The bigger question by dirk · · Score: 2

      We already know what happens when you can buy MP3s online at a comparable price, people still trade music and don't buy them. A quick Google search came up with this page with links to a few place you can buy legal MP3s. MP3s are available to be legally purchased, but people still are not doing it. That is because for most people, P2P is about getting stuff for free.

      --

      "Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"
    2. Re:The bigger question by mlong · · Score: 2
      We already know what happens when you can buy MP3s online at a comparable price, people still trade music and don't buy them. A quick Google search came up with this page [about.com] with links to a few place you can buy legal MP3s. MP3s are available to be legally purchased, but people still are not doing it. That is because for most people, P2P is about getting stuff for free.

      Could that be because:
      1. Of the sites mentioned, not all of them use MP3 and of the ones that do, you have no control over what bitrate or encoder is used
      2. The prices are comparable...which is exactly the problem. With a CD you have the booklet, the case, and most importantly the CD which you can rip to MP3, ogg, etc. Now which of these do you get with the downloads? What if you want to do a different bitrate, what if you want to switch to ogg, etc.? With a CD you can, with their overpriced download, you can't.
      3. The selection is very limited or non-existent (see emusic, musicnet, liquidaudio, etc, etc.)
      4. They don't bother to show you what songs they actually have unless you sign up (I'm just using emusic and musicnet as an example)

      --
      //m
    3. Re:The bigger question by richieb · · Score: 2
      3. The selection is very limited or non-existent (see emusic, musicnet, liquidaudio, etc, etc.)
      4. They don't bother to show you what songs they actually have unless you sign up (I'm just using emusic and musicnet as an example)

      I use www.emusic.com. Emusic lets you sign up for free and download 50 files. You can then search and see what they have.

      For me Emusic has been a treasure trove of great jazz recordings. I've downloaded several hundered files by now of classic jazz guitar and bunch of other great jazz stuff.

      So, for me at least the selection is great. I don't want the crap that RIAA is trying to sell.

      --
      ...richie - It is a good day to code.
    4. Re:The bigger question by Gendou · · Score: 2

      Bank robbers can't use the arguement that walking in to a Bank of America with guns...

      They'd better watch out for the sentient ATM.

  26. Re:Should read Rosen defeated in popularity contes by Methuseus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have one problem with your comments. It sounds like you are saying that we don't have the right to try to convince the RIAA that they are harming the industry rather than helping it. And saying "illegal file-swapping crowd filled with university students" is wrong because pretty much everyone that was there said they buy more music because of the file sharing. Talk to some RIAA execs for a bit about the subject. Not one of the ones that has been coached; a real one that is deeply entrenched in the Association and shares their values. You'll get the impression that they don't care about the artists unless they make mega-billions. And even then they only care about the money from the artist. I've gone a bit long on this. I'm not sure exactly what you meant by your comments, but implying that someone can't tell a draconic, corrupt corporation to kiss their ass will really piss lots of people off.

    --
    Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity, though I'm not yet sure about the universe. - A Einstein
  27. 1 company, 2 camps by painehope · · Score: 3, Interesting

    does anyone other than me find it interesting that the chief exec of chrysalis is on one side ( Chris Wright ) and the co-founder ( Doug D'Arcy ) is on the other? I can just see the post-debate conversation :

    Chris : Doug, you know, the board has been thinking about your future here with the company...
    Doug : Yes, really?
    Chris : Well, with the beliefs that you have espoused, and your stance on some matters, we've been thinking that it might be time for you to move on to other projects...
    Doug : Remember those pictures of Hilary, you, and an inflatable sheep? Well, I still have the negatives...
    Chris : ...

    on a side note, is anyone really surprised by their defeat? they are wrong on most of these issues, and really have very little evidence other than FUD to back anything they say. no big surprise there.

    --
    PC moderators can suck my White pierced, tattooed dick. If you think pride == hate, s/dick/Aryan meat mallet/g.
  28. Why don't they start arresting people? by lizzybarham · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I told the FBI about someone that is linked to credit card identity theft and presented the evidence. This person also told me he downloads mp3's of popular music, burns cd's, and sells them to friends, which I related to the FBI as well. Why has there not been an investigation?

    Popular music is a joke and its thieves are even more of one. If it is such a horrible crime, why doesn't the FBI and RIAA start making some arrests?

    1. Re:Why don't they start arresting people? by Treeluvinhippy · · Score: 2

      why doesn't the FBI and RIAA start making some arrests?

      Because the FBI has better things to do then chase down some kid with an ipod and the RIAA is not a law enforcement agency. I don't mean to be a cruel but that is a very stupid question you just asked.

      I told the FBI about someone that is linked to credit card identity theft and presented the evidence. This person also told me he downloads mp3's of popular music, burns cd's, and sells them to friends, which I related to the FBI as well. Why has there not been an investigation? Popular music is a joke and its thieves are even more of one.

      Well maybe it might have to do with the fact that the FBI thinks you're a joke?

      If you have evidence that someone is commiting identity theft by all means shine a light on it. However a phone call to the local FBI branch that So-n-So is stealing credit card numbers and swapping music with just your word to back up your claim isn't going to get you anywhere..

      --
      >
    2. Re:Why don't they start arresting people? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      your case is a good example of how filesharing is a "gateway crime". they start out with filesharing, but then they turn to identity theft, shoplifting, and eventually murder and terrorism.

    3. Re:Why don't they start arresting people? by adb · · Score: 2

      Why? I'd be really amused if the feds tried to arrest every "pirate": there isn't enough room in the jails for half the population, and with most of the wage earners gone, the courts and prisons would run out of money tout de suite.

      (Yeah, yeah, in practice they'd pare down their load by focusing on outspoken people with the wrong political views, so I really don't want this. But it's nice to dream.)

  29. Inflation makes $18 cheaper than it used to be by yerricde · · Score: 2

    Why does a 25 CD cost $18, anyway, about what it cost when invented 20 years ago?

    Actually, $18 in AD2002 dollars is much cheaper than $18 in AD1983 dollars. Though the cost of mechanically replicating the product has gone down over the years, the cost of production (writing the songs, performing them, mixing, mastering, designing the cover, writing the manual, storing them in warehouses, shipping them to retailers, and selling them to the end user) is largely bound to the cost of labor, which (when measured in current dollars) has gone up with inflation.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  30. Then pay per download by yerricde · · Score: 3, Informative

    So yeah, I'm gonna download songs from the album first before I buy the CD because I'm not paying $15 for 1 (one) song I liked from the radio.

    Provided you know which track you want to keep, then download the song on Rhapsody ($1/track) or eMusic ($15/mo), which are legitimate sites that have licensed labels' catalogs.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Then pay per download by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 2

      "Provided you know which track you want to keep, then download the song on Rhapsody ($1/track) or eMusic ($15/mo), which are legitimate sites that have licensed labels' catalogs."

      Are these sites RIAA supported? Im not asking so I can shout "No way, I'm boycotting!", but rather because so far the RIAA has done nothing but badmouth music in non-album-form. I'm concerned that if it's not endorsed by the RIAA, that one day that service will disappear.

      I dunno... what do you think? I'm just being cautious. I don't want the RIAA taking a list of customers and saying "these people are all thieves". Yeah, I'm a little paranoid.

    2. Re:Then pay per download by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 2

      "Yes. As I stated, eMusic and Rhapsody have licensed the catalogs of major American record labels."

      I'm sorry, I didn't phrase my question very well. I meant 'RIAA endorsed' as in they like it, vs. "We're reluctantly licensing it just to prove we're not evil bastards."

      I'd feel a lot more comfortable if the RIAA saw it as a genuine business opportunity. Know what I mean?

    3. Re:Then pay per download by Kintanon · · Score: 2

      What happens if I have a nasty HD crash, or some similar disaster, can I re-download the song I already paid for or not? Are there copying or format restrictions on the tracks? Quality options? How does this stack up to being able to drop into an IRC chan and get any song you want at varying bitrates from 96 up to 256?

      Kintanon

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
  31. Adjust for inflation by spun · · Score: 2

    and the figures look fairly equal, which makes sense when you consider that the cost of the media represents a small fraction of the total cost of getting an album to market.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  32. Arrow-based fatalism is B.S. by robla · · Score: 2
    Of course, you can argue that giving people more choices results in a better government, but is also results in unfair elections

    Arrow's Theorem doesn't draw any such conclusion. Sure, there's no perfect system (by Arrow's set of criteria), but there are systems that are much better than what we've got. Moreover, all that Arrow did was define a set of criteria, and proved that the criteria couldn't be met. He didn't prove that his criteria were correct, because that's a subjective decision that can't be proven.

    For more on this, read this rebuttal of Arrow's theorem-based fatalism.

  33. Sounds like her fault by sielwolf · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You can always spot a poor debater when they ask a question they do not know the answer to. That is always the key: reduce the argument to only the points where you are unequivocally right and your opponent is not. Of course your opponent is trying to do the same thing.

    And the big "raise your hand" thing doesn't prove anything. It is like "proving" someone has no business talking about African economics if they have never been there. It is all opinion and subjective, like those CNN polls.

    In the end I just see this as broadening the rift. She now can be assured that most students out there are "pirating" music and thus beyond communication. Likewise everyone else here is treating this like it means anything. The RIAA will probably just go and get more federal signatures while we sit around feeling all good about this "victory". And its that sort of thinking that will probably mean we will never get the compromise we ask for.

    Demanding total victory is asking for total defeat.

    --
    What is music when you despise all sound?
    1. Re:Sounds like her fault by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 2

      Who is this "we" that are asking for a compromise? I think we've compromised one time too many as it is! The DMCA and their subsequent (ab)use of it prove they have no intrest in anything less than total control of how media is produced, distributed, copied, viewed and heard.

      --
      0 1 - just my two bits
  34. Haw. by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 2

    Hillary Rosen's womanhood was never seriously in question.

    I do have serious doubts about Janet Reno, though...

  35. Re:Should read Rosen defeated in popularity contes by FauxPasIII · · Score: 5, Insightful

    >> Regardless, The RIAA has every right to pursue its goals (i.e., profit) using legitimate business practices

    Bribing Congressmen to pass a rampantly unpopular law that criminalizes fair use copying rights does not fall under the heading of "legitimate business practices". Neither does deploying technological measures to make it impossible to exercise said rights.

    I'm disgusted by how many so-called libertarians are so quick to jump to the defense of the RIAA when it's obvious they have no interest whatsoever in playing by the rules of the fair market. The market has sent a pretty unequivocal message that they want the middle man out of the loop, so the middle man tries alternately to make it either illegal or impossible not to play by their rules. Bleh.

    --
    25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
  36. Greed by nr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why wont prices on CDs and DVDs go down?

    Well the answer to that question is spelled greed, for record industry its never enough, they always want more. The same goes for some of the artists, why earn only $1 milion for a album then you can earn $10 milions. So theres no reson to cut CD prices from $20 to $5 even if they easily could do. They will continue to rip off the consumers as the only thing they do care about is the money flow and increasing profits. At a certain point the consumer will stop and say ENOUGH!. Greed will kill RIAA and the big record companies, P2P and CD burning is the sword that will cut the head of the beast.

  37. You heard it here first.... by dubiousmike · · Score: 3, Funny

    Hilary Rosen was a woman.

  38. Re:Married? by rob-fu · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Not that I am personally interested, she isn't my type. ;)

    Even if she was your type, I don't think she'd be interested in you. Look here. The person that she is married to, if she is in fact married, is missing something that most of us Slashdot readers have. (I won't go any further than that. I'm assuming most here are males and have not had some kind of freakish accidents).

  39. Re:Married? by Russ+Steffen · · Score: 2
    Not that I am personally interested, she isn't my type.

    You mean you're not into the authoritarian-psycho-nutcase type? I'm shocked.

  40. Re:The official one is at cafepress, here by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 2

    Impressive! A new and inventive twist on the goatse.cx link!

    --
    0 1 - just my two bits
  41. Irrelevancy by quantax · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is good that these types of debates go on, but at this point how does this even matter? We all know Rosen is not going to be like, "Oh, I was wrong after all, music should be free for all." And nor is the opposite party going to say, "Damn, we are horrible people for stealing those poor people's livelyhoods from them."

    No one is going to change their position. On top of that, this nice little debate is more or less useless. None of those students are congress people, and Berman is has shown his resolve. Nothing has changed in that exchange; we are still hurtling towards an unknown conclusion which this debate does nothing to address or even pretends to address. In the end, the students went and drank some beers and the 'big-wigs' went back home to their legal documents. This is an intellectual excersize and shows zero results other than some transcriptions and a couple webpages. We would be better off sending mailings to our representatives than listening to some nice, feel-good debate that made Rosen look foolish for a couple minutes.

    --
    "What can a thoughtful man hope for mankind on Earth, given the experience of the past million years? Nothing." -Bokonon
    1. Re:Irrelevancy by nagora · · Score: 2
      None of those students are congress people

      The Oxford Union contains more than its fair share of future congresspeople, members of Parliament and even presidents and prime ministers. That's why these debates can attract significent players in their topics and why Rosen looks so unhappy - she knows that in the audience (and the debating teams) there were future policy makers and that they'll remember her argument as the failed one.

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  42. Re:Should read Rosen defeated in popularity contes by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Similiarly, artists have the right to release free music if they want. They are not forced to sign a contract with anyone.

    We all know that this is literally true. No one is forcing these people to sign contracts. I wish some of them would have been forced not to sign contracts, in fact. I'd have held the gun on Don Henley. If I'd have been alive then.

    I'd have held two guns on Rod Stewart.

    But on the other hand, if you want to be a music superstar, you have to sign a contract with a major label. Otherwise you don't get put on MTV/VH1, you don't get put on Clearchannel, you don't get put in the major record chains across the country who are penalized (by withholding of ad material and certain albums, or pushed-back release dates) for stocking music which doesn't come from a member of the RIAA.

    So sure, no one is forced to, but you cannot "win" the game (assuming you are measuring success monetarily... at least it's a numeric metric) without signing with a major label.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  43. Re:Should read Rosen defeated in popularity contes by King_TJ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As another Libertarian, I agree wholeheartedly with you.

    In fact, I often find myself at odds with other Libertarian-leaning individuals on the whole copyright/piracy debate.

    Certainly, Thomas Jefferson himself was not a fan of the ideas of patenting ideas or extending terms of copyright out to great lengths of time.

    "It has been pretended by some, (and in England especially,) that inventors have a natural and exclusive right to their inventions, and not merely for their own lives, but inheritable to their heirs. But while it is a moot question whether the origin of any kind of property is derived from nature at all, it would be singular to admit a natural and even an hereditary right to inventors." - Jefferson

    "He who receives an idea from me, receives instructions himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me." - Jefferson on Copyright

  44. Excuse me sir. by jimlintott · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'm an RIAA detective and my partner and I noticed that you were singing. May I please scan your universal id card. Enter your secret password, please and I remind you that refusing to supply your passcode is an offence.

    It says that you are not licensed for singing. You haven't submitted the proper fees. Your cable bill is also overdue. I suggest that you take this summons and pay the fine and get these matters in order.

    (There was music before the music industry and there will be music after.)

  45. Breaking the law by Sunnan · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "You do NOT have the right to violate copyright"

    I'm sorry, but I simply don't just see the law as right and prohibitions that I should take for granted. I have a mind of my own. If I want a law overturned the easiest way will be to show people how much better the world is without that law, i.e. breaking it.

    Especially if the law was passed over my head, against my will and the will of my peers. If the law contradict our ethics and morals. How can we be espected to abide by it?

    The geeks created the beauty of the p2p nets, decentralized infrastructures of information and art (and hot grits, but that's beside the point). Was it illegal? Possibly (the law is vague). Was it a Good Thing? Yes. It's beautiful. It's functional. It's practical.

    We've seen no decline in production of free software and of free, alternative music, free books and free documentation.

    Interesting times and I'm almost holding my breath with anticipation.

  46. Re:that's fucking flamebait/troll not insightful by stubear · · Score: 2

    Truth hurts doesn't it Pezpunk?

  47. Absence of hard, verified purpose by sheldon · · Score: 2

    I think you need to ask yourself... What is it that you really want?

    The Bolshevik's had a purpose behind their revolution. They knew what they were trying to accomplish when they set out. What I hear being argued here is that you want to hurt the music industry, and your going to do so by stealing the music that they market to you.

    You've already lost this argument as long as you keep consuming the music that has been marketed towards you. You don't effect change in a capitalist society through theft. You effect change by spending your money on alternative products.

    Money is the motivator. Nobody is going to change their business model unless they see a profit opportunity. You can't explain to them that there is a profit opportunity through words, either... You have to show it.

    Start buying all your music from mp3.com, then you'll have a point to make.

    1. Re:Absence of hard, verified purpose by sheldon · · Score: 2

      Great. Now how are you going to prove this point?

      You certainly can't through theft of their property, for in so doing you succumb to their rules.

      Like I said, the only way to fight this issue is to spend your money on the alternatives. Then the industry will look at it and say "Well if we could attract these guys back we could make $X billion".

  48. Lessig v. Valenti debate at EFF by aelvin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For more interesting debates like this, check out Radio EFF. The Lessig (Standford Law, EFF) v. Valenti (MPAA) debate mp3 is here.

  49. Hey, cool. by Gendou · · Score: 2

    Because anyone under the age of 25 or the age of 35 does not matter in the United States. req. to be a U.S. House Representative? age 25 req. to be a U.S. Senator? age 35.

    Oxford is in the United States now?

    1. Re:Hey, cool. by RestiffBard · · Score: 2

      no, but the brunt of the battle is being fought in the United States.

      --
      - /* dead coders leave no comments */
  50. Where do you buy your CDs? by sheldon · · Score: 2

    I heard a song the other day by someone named Norah Jones which I very much liked. I decided to stop by Best Buy and buy it. The CD cost me $11.99.

    Then I was looking at the list of upcoming releases, and thought I'd stop back next week and buy the new Tori Amos album. It too is only $11.99.

    Then I thought of a couple of other albums I didn't yet have I wanted. For instance "Heart Shaped World" by Chris Isaak, I checked and it is $9.99. Also "Warning:" by Green Day, I checked and it is $15.99.(Wow that's the first one I've seen close to your price range)

    Then I thought... You know, I really need to broaden my horizons and stop listening to off beat music and pick up some top-40. So I looked up the latest album from Eminem. I found it for $12.99. Then I decided to find Pink, her album is $13.99.

    I've been buying music since 1987 when I purchased my first CD player. Back then the first CD I bought was the Top Gun Soundtrack, and I paid $16.99 for it. Now if you go look at the historical value of the dollar, you'd find that $16.99 in 1987 is worth $26.48 today. But I'm not paying $26 for my music, I'm paying an average $12-14 for it, or about half the price. You should also note that in 1987 I could buy a Cassette for about $6-7, today they are $10.

    Basically it seems like you have two problems.

    First, you don't understand what the value of money really means. In 1987 I was working as a student and receiving $4/hour. Want to take a guess as to how much students receive now for working on campus?(Try $8-10/hour) It's called inflation, go look it up.

    Second, if you are paying $16-20 for your CDs, then you are a really really stupid consumer and PT Barnum was correct. There are many places to buy music cheaper than that.

    And as far as DVDs go... You know what, just quit yer whining and go back to playing Nintendo. (BTW, want to take a guess as to what I paid for Atari 2600 video cartridges?)

  51. Re:Should read Rosen defeated in popularity contes by tyrann98 · · Score: 2

    I'm against unreasonable lengths for copyright and patent protection. The patent granting process is way to easy and the length of patents provides more than enough incentive to innovate. But come on, even Britney Spears deserves a couple of years of copyright protection.

  52. Why is it so hard to understand? by scoove · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Keep you hand up if you buy more music because of it"

    Hmmm... heard Funker Vogt on shoutcast a few weeks ago.

    Enjoyed it. Downloaded a few tracks via gnutella. Yup, this definitely is a group I like.

    Went to Best Buy. WTF? No Funker Vogt. Went to CD Warehouse. Nope. Never even heard of them, let alone my fav Apoptygma Bezerk, VNV Nation, Front Line Assembly, etc. "Sure we have industrial..." as the salescritter points at the rap section (ugh... where do they hire these people from?).

    So Ms. Rosen, how am I supposed to be a complying RIAA citizen when you won't even sell me the music?

    As usual, it was off to cdnow.com, buy one of everything Funker Vogt, and wait for the UPS guy.

    Conclusion:

    1. I'm waiving money in your face but you won't sell product to me.
    2. You can't seem to figure out how to distribute music worth a damn.
    3. You keep signing a few worthless artists and pumping their music (while we still don't buy it), rather than understanding the market changed on you.
    4. You and the radio broadcasters sign deals trying to limit airplay to the same crap you signed, but now the radio broadcasters can't find listeners and had to destroy Internet broadcasting before it destroyed them.

    So, maybe there's another problem that explains why your sales numbers suck?

    *scoove*

  53. This is good... by di0s · · Score: 2, Insightful

    But still nobody representing the artists themselves...

  54. Interesting tidbit on piracy... by gasgesgos · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I've got a video clip of a guy trying to TURN HIMSELF IN to all levels of government, he starts with local police, they refer him to the mayors office. the mayors office refers him to the attorny general, and they refer him to the maker of the program he claimed to have been pirating (microsoft)... well, in the end, no one would send a police officer down the street to arrest this guy on software piracy charges, or even file some kind of report! the worst thing they told him was to either delete or buy it, but not once did they offer to arrest or prosecute him. he was even begging to be arrested, and they declined. i know piracy is illegal, but if you dont make profits on it, there's a VERY low chance of anyone getting in trouble from police... almost every cd that i've purchased i've discovered/previewed with mp3 downloading. i attempt to be one of the semi-honest music downloaders... downloading/listening to lots of stuff, but buying the good cd's. the RIAA is just scared that people wont buy CD's for 1 song anymore.. i sure as hell wont, i'll listen to almost 1/2 of an album before i'll buy it. same thing with many people that I know. I dont think I've met many people who have 400 CD-R collections of full pirated albums. also, couldn't mp3 recordings be considered "time-shifting"? time-shifting is the same principle that keeps Tivo's legal. you can either listen to crappy radio (or crappy tv/commercials) and wait for the good stuff, or you can just (record it with tivo) download it and listen to it repeatedly, or at your leisure. effectivly, both with tv and music, the conecpt is to record/obtain a recording of a show/song and view/listen to it anytime? just a few thoughts...

  55. Re: copyright protection by King_TJ · · Score: 2

    Well, I wouldn't necessarily disagree that "even Britney Spears deserves a couple of years of copyright protection" -- but that's far from the situation we have today.

    The very definition of what users can and can't do with a work covered by "copyright" in America has been twisted by the industry lobbyists. (Consider this: Every time Britney Spears puts out some new music on the DVD audio format, you're breaking federal law to even play the thing back on a machine running Linux!)

    Furthermore, instead of works being covered "for a couple years", we have people lobbying to extend it to well past the artist's own lifetime. (Heck, it already extends out decades and decades as it is.)

    You can point much of the blame for this on organizations like the RIAA. Every time they "win" an extension of copyright, it gives them something to wave in front of the artists signed up with them, to say "Look what we did for YOU!" Meanwhile, everyone else is losing out.

    As modern music becomes ever more dependent on samplers and "re-mixes", the current copyright gets in the way and impedes creation of new music more and more. (Though some might not choose to respect it, the ability to copy/paste portions of existing musical works into a "collage" of something new counts as a valid form of artistic creation, in my way of thinking.) Right now, doing this generates a massive pile of paperwork for an artist. You have to request permission for every single lousy section of a work you sample, pay royalties out to everyone involved, and some might even say "No, sorry. I don't like your type of music, so I'm going to disallow your use of that sample from my album."

    IMO, artists disallowing use of small clips from their songs are usually just trying to be vengeful against the other artist. What harm can it possibly do? Even if you hate the style of music being created - it doesn't change anything about your original work. If anything, it might turn more people on to it.

  56. Take Hilary to lunch by primenerd · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This may sound a little odd, but I feel sorry for Miss Rosen. She is, after all, merely trying to do her job of defending the recording industry and its business model. I think it would be fascinating to sit down with her over lunch and listen to her side of the debate without so much of the hype that seems to accompany this topic. I do not think she would convince me to see the world her way, but it would be an interesting way to spend my lunch hour. Who knows, she might just be a very nice person outside of the Internet music nastiness we are all familiar with.

    --
    AUGAUUUGCGCACAUAUCUCAGCGAAUGAAAGGGAUUAA
  57. Not anything like lawmakers by zenyu · · Score: 2, Insightful
    If Rosen had given $100,000 to those student union members voting for her, and $2,000,000 to those vocally supporting her position then it would be something like a congressional debate. Without bribery you might as well get rid of the so called "representatives" and have a democracy.

    I know there are going to be those that rally for proportional representation, but you still have bribery targets in that type of system. It would be easy to switch to democracy now that we have technology like television, radio and telephone. And it would be bribery immune, or at least require that the funding for the bribes would be not be off the backs of at least half of the 30%* of the population that votes in Senate elections. 15% is a lot better than the 4.8% support you need in the USA to elect a majority Senate now. The house seats are effectively unelected in all but a dozen cases, no point in even thinking that's an elected body. But while you could elect representatives with proportional representation, all would still accept bribes, 40 million people are much harder to bribe effectively than 51 Senators (or less if you actually have anyone agreeing with you before they see the check.)
    * 30% guestimated, all other figures calculated from 30% times known figures.

    The hemp the constitution is written on is wasted. Keep the bill of rights, strengthen it, and then start over on the rest. We don't need a Senate to preserve slavery anymore, and the House is an outdated concept, elect some people to debate each side in an issue before bills are proposed, but god forbid don't let those scoundrels vote!

    The DMCA would not have passed the Senate 99-0 in a democracy, hell none of it would have passed except the safe harbor for ISPs.

    The guy who didn't vote, Gregg, is trying to pass a law making encryption illegal unless you give the secret key to everyone first. I can't believe such an idiotic walking turd wouldn't have voted against free thought if he were there that day. The internet cencorship bill(CDA) passed 84-16, a little better you think? But then that one was blatantly unconstitutional, in any fair system passing such laws should not only be illegal but punished with jail terms or fines. 99-0 on the DMCA! An issue where the informed public is somewhere much much nearer to 0-99. Passed without debates or amendments allowed...

    Without considering the bribery, err donations and gifts, you'd think a cat at a keyboard passes the Turing test better. But these are not severely mentally challenged men but simply career criminals that just happen to run our government.

  58. What the Music Industry Needs... by GospelHead821 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They need to understand that modern consumers, many of whom are now college students, are less and less frequently buying music by artist or genre. It is becoming far more common for consumers to acquire merely the songs that they like. Since the music industry refuses to accept this mentality, filesharing is the most effective way for consumers to acquire only the music they want. Until the music industry realizes that there is a lot of profit to be had in giving consumers exactly what they want, they're going to continue to suffer whatever losses they suffer now. Music distributors must have the authority and means to give consumers exactly the songs they want. If consumers can cheaply rip-mix-burn, there is nothing preventing music producers from doing so even more cheaply. If they do not make these changes now, when the university students become adult consumers, the music industry is really going to feel the pain they've been complaining about all this time. There's no reason why they should not take steps to prevent such discomfort, especially since doing so would probably increase their profit margin, since it would draw in people who currently avoid commercial music, for the inability to avoid the 6 bad songs that come with the 3 you like.

    --
    Virtue finds and chooses the mean.
    Aristotle, Ethica Nichomachea
  59. Try going to a real music store by autechre · · Score: 2


    And I don't mean Record and Tape Traders (although they are a bit better than most chains and mega marts). Here in Baltimore, MD we have Soundgarden (not related to the band); I would guess that most cities of moderate size have a store which mainly caters to less mainstream music. If you can't find one in your area, you'll have to order online, but try checking around; if you've got a local college radio station, ask them where they buy their music.

    --
    WMBC freeform/independent online radio.
  60. Why did she go? / Background info. by Aguazul · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'd also say that this was a stacked audience. Let's see, you have a bunch of college students that use p2p on a regular basis, many of whom were spreading anti-RIAA propaganda

    I followed the discussions and preparations in the CDR, although I didn't go myself. I have to say that we were not at all sure that the debate could be won. Oxford is a very strange place, and Oxford Union is stranger -- a private members-only debating society which perhaps could be described as a little bit elitist.

    As to why Hilary Rosen chose to go to an debate with students -- it is because of the prestige of debating in one of the oldest debating societies in the world. You have to dress up (black tie for men), you go to a special dinner with weird and ancient customs (if you've never been to an Oxford college, you have no idea!), and so on and so on. Take a look around the Oxford Union site.

    Also, with a place like Oxford Union, this isn't some shallow debate. Rather it prides itself on getting to the bottom of the issue, with lots of intelligent minds on the job. If the RIAA's case stood on logical grounds, she would likely have won the debate. That is why this is a significant result! The truth of the matter is that even with all the conservatism of Oxford, Hilary and friends couldn't make their arguments stick.

  61. Order from Europe by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 2
    Part of rge problem with the current system is that it is difficult to get hold of music from artists who aren't known or aren't popular in your country. It is also sometime because the record company simply has no distribution mechenasim for country x. This applies to any country. Thanks to the internet you can often find an online shop in the country where the group is located and order it from there. As mentioned by other people, there do exist small record stores who will sometimes do the leg work for you. Unfortunately most of us tend to visit 'this is what is cool' style record stores. Here are some good sources:
    • HMV Canada - their selection of music beats Amazon.com hands down. Doing a search reveals that they sell "Funker Vogt"
    • Amazon Germany - great source for music tailored to the german market. The only catch is that you need to understand German (quite normal really ;)
    • Amazon UK - great source for music tailored to the german market.
    • HMV UK
    • HMV Germany
    • FNAC - online version of the French media store
    There are others, but these are the ones that I know of. BTW The Funker Vogt web site is here: Funker Vogt website.

    BTW If you want to know what is hot in th UK, then BBC1 Radio 1 is a good site, and IMO is info-marketing ratio is 9:1, which is nice to see.

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  62. Re:that's fucking flamebait/troll not insightful by pezpunk · · Score: 2

    obviously it's not for everyone. it's punk rock. but we're a good band and we put on a hell of a show. your reaction doesn't bother me.

    --
    i could live a little longer in this prison
  63. Re:The problems with European-stype representation by Baki · · Score: 3, Informative
    You seem to be badly informed.
    Any government must get support of >50% of parliament, that is of the votes (since parliament is elected almost proportionally to the votes). So 2 or more parties must cooperate in a coalition; in practice it is seldom that one party gets a majority, so you get always coalitions.


    This creates centrist policies, because the government partners must give and take, so you get more consensus based government style. In the U.S., while as single parties the republicans and the democrats may be closer than some parties you find in Europe (including the so called populists), any party has to give in so in the end the goverment is more moderate, and less susceptible to sudden changes after new elections.

  64. Actually, I think our legacy will be... by shatfield · · Score: 2

    .. that we were the beginning of the forces that liberated the musicians from the iron claws and leather whips of the recording industry.

    Once we get to the point of being able to disseminate music to the masses in a cost effective manner (read: recording studios in a garage in Omaha that are better than the super high priced ones in LA), and can get the information into well known online music stores with preview, then the era of the 15 billion dollars that goes to 5 companies is OVER.

    --
    "To make a mistake is only human; to persist in a mistake is idiotic." Cicero
  65. This is a late post, but by lingqi · · Score: 2

    GOD is she (Hillary Rosen) Ugly!

    (This is the first time I saw her picture - even the "try-to-be-flattering" ones, and I am still trying to overcome the shock)

    It's (I guess that's supposed to be "she's," eh?) like a cross between that octopus woman (from Disney's Little Mermaid (Ursula or something?) and a mutated Phillsbury Doe-boy.

    yuck. *shudders*. If I ever wanted to delay ejaculation during intercourse - I'm prepared. In fact, I think I might be mentally scarred.

    --

    My life in the land of the rising sun.

  66. Re:The problems with European-stype representation by chris_sawtell · · Score: 2

    Look if crazy right-wing facists can get 30% of the vote then get a proportional amount of seats, something is wrong.

    Crazy perhaps, but absolutely nothing wrong with that, it's democracy in action. Don't forget Democracy means rule by the people for the people. People living in democracies get the governments they want and deserve.

    Remember that while the Lunatic Party with 30% of the vote might be the largest party they cannot govern because they do not have the majority of seats in the House. It is quite possible for there to be a situation where the largest party is in fact the Opposition, because the other 70% of the House has formed a Grand Coalition with a very substantial majority.
    Before you throw stones in the glass-house don't forget that much of the world is firmly of the opinion that the current incumbent of the White House is in actual fact a "crazy right-wing facist" who got there without a proper mandate.

  67. Re:The problems with European-stype representation by Baki · · Score: 2
    Is english your native language? Or is my writing so bad you missed my entire point? Look if crazy right-wing facists can get 30% of the vote then get a proportional amount of seats, something is wrong.
    No english is not my native language, thanks for the compliment :). Apart from that I think our views and understanding of how proportional democratic systems such as found in Europe work are so much apart that we have another misunderstanding here.

    It has happened more than once that some lunatic party wins most of the votes (mostly on a lower level such as communal however). But since they are so extreme, none of the other parties want to cooperate with them, so the other 70% will rather form a great coalition excluding the 30% lunatic party from power.

    Being the largest party does not automatically mean that you get power, except if you get more than 50%. The only thing that matters is that a coalition of parties that is able to cooperate together (and a common enemy eases such cooperation if necessary) gets more than 50% together.

    A recent case in Holland, a right wing somewhat populist party got 15% of the vote out of nothing. Two other middle and right wing parties felt obliged to give them a chance, so they formed a coalition with the three of them (holding 55% of vote in total). The populist party of course had to give up a lot of there more extreme views, the other two had to give in some to the populist party, everyone was kind of happy with the 'government contract'. Now after less than 100 days the government has broken over internal struggles in the populist party, and their voter support (according to polls) has decimated from 15% to 2%. New elections shall follow and everything returns to normal. Well not entirely, because the other parties have understood the message of the voters, and have incorporated some of the issues of the populist party, though in the more moderate and reasonable form.

  68. Format-shifting is rio case by yerricde · · Score: 2

    What happens if I have a nasty HD crash, or some similar disaster, can I re-download the song I already paid for or not?

    Windows Media Player lets you back up your license file. Rhapsody should let you do the same thing; ask the support team.

    Are there copying or format restrictions on the tracks?

    Once you've downloaded a legitimate "keeper" recording at $1/track (rhapsody) or no-marginal-cost (eMusic), you have all the rights that copyright law gives you. In the United States, assuming that you have a record in vinyl, 1/8" cassette, CD Digital Audio, Ogg, MP3, or some other format that carries no "effective access control measures" (17 USC 1201), these rights include the right to time-shift (Betamax case), format-shift (Diamond Rio case), and make private temporary derivatives of (Nintendo v. Galoob) the work.

    How does this stack up to being able to drop into an IRC chan and get any song you want at varying bitrates from 96 up to 256?

    The download queues on the official services are likely to be shorter.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?