MP3 Creator On Sharing Music
EpsCylonB writes "The BBC has an article about Karlheinz Brandenburg, who is one of the creators of the MP3 music format. Interestingly he comments that he doesn't like Napster, he thinks that people should have easier access to music but that artists should get paid for what they do."
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Interestingly he comments that he doesn't like Napster, he thinks that people should have easier access to music but that artists should get paid for what they do.
How is that "interesting"? I think anyone with a sense of decency wants the artists to get paid...
evil adrian
if he had said, i'm so glad i created mp3's so that they would topple the music industry (pinky finger) don't you think he'd ahve RIAA lawyer's being airlifted by blackhawk to his house to litigate him and everything he owns into a smoking crater?
somehow i would have called his stance extremely predictable
Interestingly he comments that he doesn't like Napster, he thinks that people should have easier access to music but that artists should get paid for what they do.
iTMS anyone?
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there was a way to download music and pay the artists and not the RIAA.
SIGFAULT
He helped create a format, why would that lead to the conclusion that he'd probably like it used for copyright infringement? I am aware that legal sharing was probably going on on napster, but we all know that the majority of transfers were illegal.
Jeez, you'd think if it was posted to /. it would have more meat to the story. I'd like to see an "Ask Slashdot" with this guy, perhaps a more in-depth interview, but this article was really lackluster.
;)
And he doesn't like Napster. Go figure. I guess he prefers Kazaa, where its easier to get apps and movies too.
I think comments relating to his stance on the RIAA would be more interesting
Cake:
1 cup raisins (dark or golden)
2 cups all-purpose flour
3 eggs
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 cup vegetable oil
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon each ground cloves and ground allspice
2 cups peeled pear chunks (from about 3 pears)
1 cup chopped walnuts
Glaze:
1/2 cup maple syrup
1 1/2 cups confectioners' sugar
Heat the oven to 350 degrees F.
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To make the glaze: Stir the maple syrup and sugar together in a bowl. Glaze the cooled cake by spooning the glaze around the tops of the cakes and letting it drip down the sides.
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Its an expensive licensed codec. Use OGG.
His logic is obvious "I'm getting money, why shouldn't they."
Bah.
How is this news?
he thinks that people should have easier access to music but that artists should get paid for what they do."
Come on, this is such a tired argument. Someone thinks artists should get paid. Holy shit I've never heard that before.
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As I understand it, Fraunhofer IIS-A charged hefty fees for developers to incorporate mp3 compression technology. Hence OGG and an (effectively) reverse engineered open and free implementation.
Come on slash eds, this is not a revelation - read around the topic before posting an article.
Yeah, I believe that the artists should be getting paid for what they do too. This is why I don't bother buying CDs, since they don't get paid for what they do anyway, the RIAA gets paid for what they do...
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I don't think he means he doesn't like the idea of Napster technology, but rather the ethics (or lack thereof) of the people who use filesharing networks.
Shortly after this, he says that record companies should find a way to use technology to better serve both the artists and listeners.
In conclusion, the tone of the article makes it sound like Dr. Brandenburg isn't against filesharing technologies, but rather just people using them as an excuse for partaking in an orgy of piracy. Seems like a pretty moderate viewpoint to me.
pi = 3.141592653589793helpimtrappedinauniversefactory7
From Frauenhofer patent enforcement available here:
To make, sell and/or distribute products using the standard and thus our patents, you need to obtain a license under these patents from us.
In the past, we have licensed several companies under different models for different products, e.g.:
- Software encoder licenses against a per unit royalty starting at $ 25,00 and decreasing for high volumes; and
- Pay-audio licenses against a royalty of $ 0,01 per song or 1 % of the selling price.
And now after interviewing MP3 standard's inventor, there's this revelation that he doesn't like P2P?
Come on slash eds - this aint news!
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Cool.
Really. Please come back.
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Unlike the creators of Ogg, the guy who created MP3 did it for profit, not fun. You have to pay an insanely huge license fee to use it, even if you write your own implimentation.
I bet he isn't best pleased that hundreds of thousands of people are neglecting to pay him a massive pile of cash, let alone the RIAA.
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1997 - the ambiguity revised.
Underground music and the scenes they have spawned have only served as pacifiers for members of society who have ultimately failed at their own tendencies towards inner fulfillment. A malcontent soul who is no longer satisfied with mainstream culture will eventually find himself involved within one of several sub cultures fueled by a music which has not been fully exploited by the present manifestation of the capitalist economy. History has shown that these malcontent souls have been key players in bringing what they believe to be the sounds of salvation to the attention of paying consumers.
These underground music movements have not managed to mobilize any serious action against the situations which create their necessity, rather they are growth markets which become employment to aggressive minded individuals who capitalize on their knowledge of their own niche. Brought up on economic theories of infinite growth potential, misguided anti-social individuals become petty business minded marketing experts and erode their own scenes into that of full fledged music industries.
The involvement of people who were destined to participate in more serious political struggles is transformed into individuals who feel power in showing the world what managed to make them happy in a world that they originally felt was a pile of shit. Hence, they do not question themselves beyond the need for escapism as a solution for world strife.
As we approach the end of the millenium, we are bound to experience more distress within the social pool of congruity. Because of an unyielding belief among so many individuals that the world will end violently, society will reach extremely high levels of madness, stress, and insanity within the next three years. Apocalyptic false alarms have been recorded several times in human history at the end of each century, and there can be no doubt that the year 2000 will be the worse example of human irrationality to date.
Arguably, it is the intellectuals and the educated individuals of society who will see through this apocalyptic farce because of their knowledge of history. Their rational behavior will not tolerate the improbable view that humanity has only three more years to live. Unfortunately, these people are not a majority and will not be given a choice to see beyond the year 2000 as benchmark for human survival based on their proximity to mass hysteria.
It is my contention that the above scenarios can be juxtaposed for swift revolutionary change to the system. The first step is a saturation of the growth potential of all underground forms of music. This can be accomplished with cutthroat economic policies, which will ultimately hurt and destroy the need for capital distribution chains within the scenes. This is the equivalent of ass backwards downsizing with the prime function of eliminating any profit margin from the involvement of making underground music. This will stump the growth potential of the respective underground genres thereby preventing them into becoming the next major players in the legitimate music business. It will also be a serious contender in replacing the existing economic foundation that music is based upon because of it's unyielding move towards a not for profit driven mandate that capitalism can not adapt unless it undercuts a monetary gross of zero.
Examples of pioneers who have already unwillingly begun the work to establish these conditions are the Temple of Hip Hop who sell their CD's for $5 to a large pre-established consumer base by eliminating all distribution chains other than the mailman and Aphex Twin who is developing a computer that can make create palatable techno music without the need for human intervention.
This will kill an enormous amount of jobs and key positions within the underground at the same time that the underground becomes a more palatable place of salvation for the majority of the population. With a rise in the number of maladjusted individuals based on the
I've just bought an original copy of the "The Darkness" album, fantasic album, sad that I can't listen to it as I want.
Firstly it does work in my PC and doesn't crash it, you may not be so lucky. When I got the CD I was shocked to find the copy protection. I don't have a stereo and I don't have a personal CD player, this means that I might not've been able to use the CD at all, and hence had I have known this in advance I wouldn't have bought the CD at all. Fortunately my PC *does* read the CD, but I can't store the CD on my HD as OGG/MP3, I can't listen to the album on the move in my portable MP3 player, I can't make a genuine backup, and I'm only fortunate that it doesn't crash my PC.
The music industry shouldn't be able to sell you a product that doens't work. How would we all feel if we went to the petrol station to fill up, and after paying for it we found out our car wasn't compatible.
I am now forced to search the internet for illegal copies which I can use in my MP3 player in spite of the fact I have a legitimate copy. I'll reiterate once again I wouldn't buy a CD with copy protection. Hence damaging the industry.
I don't want to start a holy war here, but what is the deal with you OGG fanatics? I've been sitting here at my freelance gig in front of a Linux box (a P4 3200 w/1024 Megs of RAM) for about 20 minutes now while it attempts to encode a 3 minute song file ripped from my cdrom drive into ogg. 20 minutes. At home, on my Athlon 900 running Windows XP, which by all standards should be a lot slower than this Linux box, encoding into wma would take about 2 minutes. If that. /dev/audio is straining to keep up as I type this.
In addition, during this encode, XMMS will not work. And everything else has ground to a halt. Even directly sending 4'33.wav to
I won't bore you with the laundry list of other problems that I've encountered while working on various Linux machines, but suffice it to say there have been many, not the least of which is I've never seen a Linux box that has run faster than its Windows counterpart, despite the Linux machine's faster chip architecture. My 486/66 with 8 megs of ram can encode wmavs faster than this 3200 mhz machine at times. From a productivity standpoint, I don't get how people can claim that Linux is a "superior" music encoder soloution.
Ogg addicts, flame me if you'd like, but I'd rather hear some intelligent reasons why anyone would choose to use an Ogg over other faster, cheaper, more stable codecs.
I'm all in favor of paying the artist. But I think technology is at the point where the middleman (record labels) is irrelevant.
"Open the pod by doors, Hal" > "I'm afraid I can't do that, Dave" sudo "Open the pod bay doors, Hal" > alright
It's god damn common sense. I spend way more time and effort composing music than most people do programming. Unlike with you GNU zombies, most people want to get payed for their work, whether they think it's engineering, art, or whatever.
Buy one for me.
I can't believe anybody moderated it "interesting." The RIAA is an organization that ensures artists get their due royalties. When artists get fucked, it's because of their label deals.
1.) RIAA going after p2p users doesn't matter: they don't put out anything worth downloading. The best music right now, especially lately, is coming from indies that aren't part of the RIAA...at least according to the list on boycott-riaa.com. Aside from maybe Radiohead, the White Stripes are easily the current king & queen of rock 'n roll--they've hit the cover of every rock mag this year--and guess what? Their label, V2 is an indie, not part of the RIAA. OK, there are good artists on major labels, but the majority of interesting new music is on indies. 2.) Your giant record collection doesn't count if it's on your own CDRs; your songs aren't real unless they're on vinyl. 3.) So what if the RIAA closes down p2p networks and clear channel gobbles up every radio station in the country and all you can hear on the radio is the latest TRL (is taht still on?) crap. Who cares. It just makes good music that much harder to find and people who have it will be that much cooler. People who aren't willing to go out and hunt for interesting new music (and there's plenty of it out there) will be stuck listening to the crap they deserve to hear.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
'nuff said
You're assuming, of course, that the RIAA is just the Big Five... but if you mosey to the website, you find like 300 labels that are affiliated with the RIAA.
hookers and grits.
Minor nitpick, but his name is Karl-Heinz Brandenburg. It's composed of two names that can also be used separately. You don't usually write it as Karlheinz.
Of course it runs NetBSD. BTC: 1NT7QvbetmANwaMzhpVL6
Even real artists have to eat, and pay bills.
It's official. Most of you are morons.
according to riaa radar...
Artist:White Stripes
Album:White Blood Cells
Label:V2. / Bmg
RESULTS:
Warning!
This album was found to have bene released by a member of the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).
These people look deep into my soul and assign me a number based on the order I joined.
I was expecting some gh3y butt s3x!
96% of general population also believes artists should be paid and that downloadable music should be cheaper. World also continues to rotate on axis, although this is considered less interesting.
Did you know that recipes are not protected intellectual property under US law? One would expect that in this situation, there would be massive "recipe piracy"...and indeed there is. One would expect that most folks who create recipes would be unable to make a living at it...and indeed they are.
Yet, somehow, there still seems to be no shortage of recipes in the US. Every amateur cook I know has books and books of the things clipped from magazines, copied from friends, hacked up to suit their tastes. Nonetheless, more arrive all the time.
I think it is great if some cooks, and some artists, can manage to eat and pay bills by exercising their art. However, there are worse indignities than having a day job.
Emusic is the kind of online music service I think most of us want. You pay a monthly fee to download high quality MP3s. No DRM, no embedded advertising. If they had all the music you might want, there would be nothing more to wish for.
And that's the main thing, of course. They don't generally have the name bands, so your satisfaction with the service depends on you being open to discovering lesser known music.
If that's what you're looking for, you'll find plenty. Go check it out. Also, there are some things there that you may already want, and you could maybe get a good deal by signing up for the minimum term and downloading, say, just the Pixies and a truckload of comedy albums.
It's probably too much to hope for, but if they continue to grow, they may expand their catalog to the point where most music is available from them, free of restrictions.
Unfortunately, it's not all wine and roses, but close enough for me. Here are some things that may turn you off:
-
They recently angered their Linux-using customers by making their closed source download manager mandatory. The Linux version sucks rather badly. Some customers can't download at all.
-
Use the service excessively (in their view) and they cut you off. There's a 2000 track/month limit.
-
The download manager only allows you to queue up 45 tracks. Limiting this is probably the reason they made the DLM mandatory. Why they don't do this on the server side, I can't imagine.
-
Some albums are only available to US subscribers.
-
You have to commit for 3 or 12 months.
-
If you have extreme audio quality demands, the VBR MP3s (about 192kbps average) may not be enough. I've heard warbling in a couple of files. I listen with Sennheiser HD600's.
Now, I don't want to hear any more whining about the RIAA being evil and not producing anything worth listening to anyway. Whine about either one seperately if you want, but if you were about to whine about both, go to emusic instead.Fuck the system? Nah, you might catch something.
Creator of format that facilitates music piracy doesn't want to be sued into bankruptcy, treads lightly. Film at 11.
My bad: V2 is in the RIAA. Missed that one when I was checking the list (and i really was) earlier.
here's me namechecking labels that aren't members of the RIAA (according to their own list:
warp (aphex twin, autechre, etc.)matador (interpol, cat power, new pornographers, etc.)
sub pop (postal service, hot hot heat, nirvana's "bleach")
one little indian (bjork)
tigerbeat6 (kid606)
asphodel (dj spooky, x-ecutioners, mixmaster mike)
kill rock stars (sleater-kinney)
bloodshot (neko case)
def jux (el-p, rjd2)
ipecac (mike patton's label)
...mego, mille plateaux, schematic, thrill jockey, k, atavistic, mr. lady, anticon, smells like records/SYR, ecstatic peace, thud rumble, orthlorng musork, tresor, klangbad,....
point is, there's (probably literally) a million indies out there. There's good shit on major labels too--missy, radiohead, nin, sonic youth, white stripes (sorry), eminem--hell there's even good stuff that they play on clear channel stations. But that figure about the RIAA controlling 85% of all recorded music or whatever is irrelevant when the majority of worthwhile music comes from outside the RIAA.
and i still maintain that if your record collection isn't actually records (or in special cases, limited edition CDs, which can be very nicely packaged) it doesn't count!
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
(Ok. I'm kidding. If you have lots of MP3s, it takes hard work--or at least time--to pick those up--assuming they're hard to find in the first place. But then they're still probably not as hard to track down as the actual LPs they're from, huh?
I can't believe you can say that with a straight face. The RIAA ensures that the labels get revenue. They represent the labels, not the artists.
I read a similar article when the whole Napster deal was taking place. Everyone back then was saying the mp3 format was created for the sole purpose of p2p transfer. Finally, it appears he's getting to tell his half of the story.
mp3 is a great format. There's no doubt about it. There might be better formats now. But mp3 still has it's place. And has.
Unless everyone is willing to work for free, recording artists shouldn't have to either. I code for cash, I'm sure many others here have day jobs as well. Open source is a wonderful thing. But it doesn't put food on plates.
If your willing to work your entire life, and not accept any payment of any form. Download away.
If you have a job. Or want one. Your a hypocrite.
A time when I cared less about an article.
"Some guy who had something to do with something important shares a typical opinion"
Karma to burn.
You done been trolled, 'foo!
I thought I recognized the poster's nick. I check my Freaks list, and there's ole' Squiggy. And now I read his post, and completely agree.
Will wonders never cease...
Gotta wonder what it was that got me on his shit list in the first place...sounds like we agree on some things.
Life is hard, and the world is cruel
Ah.. I see then you feel the amount of time it takes to create a decent recipe is comparable to the amount of time it takes to create a decent piece of art or music.
Similarly, I expect you feel the time it takes to come up with a new scientific theory is about the same amount of time that it takes to find out a basic fact about the universe. Yet somehow, even though nobody claims ownership of these facts, we're still discovering new ones, so why should we bother paying researchers to actively hunt them down?
Damn, you're right.. it'd be great if some researchers, and some scientists, can manage to eat and pay bills by exercising their craft. However there are worse indignities than having a day job.
Get a clue. Putting to work as a car manufacturer might be beneficial to society in a small way, but by taking away time they'd otherwise use for creativity, we're harming to society in a much larger way.
Your arguement suggests that giving talented artists the free-time to create what they do is actually just a waste of their potential to be building fences or some such. Most people who think about it realize that it's actually the other way around.
That Jesus Christ guy is getting some terrible lag... it took him 3 days to respawn! -NJ CoolBreeze
Musicians get paid to perform, not from record sales. Despite the record companies waving the flag of artist protection, all the downloads in the world don't take a cent away from musicians. Record companies have been ripping off musicians for a century by writing recording contracts such that the musician rarely sees a penny. What musicians get out of record deals is fame, which enables them to charge more from performances.
Musicians are starting to learn how to promote themselves by distributing their songs on the Internet for free, making the record companies redundant and perhaps obsoleting the very notion of selling recorded music. We could do nothing and let this process happen, or we could invent all kinds of technology and pass all kinds of restrictive laws to preserve the record industry's business model so musicians can use it themselves. I vote for option one.
"The primary goal of an artist should be to create art works by all means necessary...To worry about if an artist gets paid or not is pure reactionary bullshit. If the individual had no intention of paying in the first place, who cares? The art exists and is accessible, an artist is happy. "
Perhaps, but that's only one flavor of artist. Some use their creative skills in order to make a living. Art is not simply a manifestation of self-expression, it is also used for entertainment, something people pay quite a bit for. There is demand for entertainment out there, and people like musicians fill it because it is something they are talented at.
You do have a point, but it's only limited to a segment of the artist population. If they set out to entertain, and they accomplish that, there's nothing wrong with them expecting to be paid in return.
It's a pity that the RIAA doesn't compensate the artists like they should.
"Derp de derp."
"Interestingly he comments that he doesn't like Napster, he thinks that people should have easier access to music but that artists should get paid for what they do."
That's exactly why I want the RIAA and recording companies struck down. They don't allow easy access to the music, and the artists aren't fairly compensated. Instead you have a group of crusty old middlemen who market singers to the majority based on trends, not unlike movie-licence games (Minory Report, The Hulk, Enter The Matrix) which also suck.
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Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
who said this world was governed by logic?
I work as a publicist and producer in the pop music industry. And was the first person to implement the Ogg Vorbis format at a commercial record company.
OK, so what? So, I've read the same, tired posts, over and over, about P2P on Slashdot. Three things has become abundantly clear:
1) No one here seems to have a fucking clue about the music industry.
2) Nearly everyone here has a hyper-inflated sense of entitlement.
3) People seem to equate feeling strongly about something with being knowledgeable about it.
The music business is very complex. Record companies are not always "middlemen." Artists depend on them for many things. You don't -- that doesn't mean they're not important. And just because they sometimes rip off artists does not provide justification for you to do so. Blah blah blah.
Bill Evans
Why can't just one somewhat popular act put out a song (not with lossy compression), and ask for tips on that song? Copyright it, and stipulate in the copyright that some notice of where to send tips must always travel with the song.
-Libertarian secular transhumanist
What this article does is, it states clearly and distinctly WHO is responsible and WHEN/WHERE it happened that MP3s came into existence... .
We better hope the RIAA doesn't send something back in time and Terminate him before he creates the standard!!!
BBC World's ClickOnline program (a load of crap IMO), also has the interview with him, but in video form.
There are one hell of a lot of trade secret recipies. Even things as ubiquetous as Coca-Cola have recipies protected by Trade Secret policies.
You won't find published recipies at many of the best Bar-B-Q houses. You will find them selling their 'secret sauce' in bottled form.
"(...) artists should get paid for what they do".
Now show me one system where artists actually get paid something for what they do. The only one I know is direct sale (I always buy CDs from emerging bands at their shows).
The Internet allows direct sale on a larger scale and I hope artists start using this new media (not in the style of Napster or Kazaa, though) and kick the middle men off the equation.
All of the anti-p2p pundits cite the fact that the artists deserve to get paid for their work. Since when have artists ever gotten paid for their work? Since the beginning of commerce, artists have gotten paid a pittance of the value of their work compared to what the resellers, pimps, agents, distributors, etc. make off of the work. Let's call a donkey a donkey here. This debate is really desk jockeys with lawyers versus teenagers with 20s. We're all rooting for the teenagers, but we all know they don't stand a chance.
How many times should I have to pay for the right to use a particular piece of music? In the 70's I bought vinyl. Then tapes came out and I bought tapes of a lot of the same albums. Then along come CDs and suddenly I'm paying for the same music AGAIN!
At what point do I, the consumer, have to stop paying? If the RIAA had their way, NEVER! And attitudes like this guy's don't help! I've paid for several albums multiple times, so if I see an MP3 for a song I have on tape or vinyl, I don't feel so awful downloading it, because I've already paid for it, sometimes MORE THAN ONCE!
Can somebody tell me what rights the consumer is SUPPOSED to have? Or do we just have to keep taking it up the ass in perpetuity?
I'd imagine a label would be pretty confused when asked to put out a cd at-cost and put in notices of where to send money (donations). But I suppose an artist could just drop the artist share and the label might agree. But why hasn't this been tried? Maybe tips just work better when there is a personal connection, like a server at a restaurant.
-Libertarian secular transhumanist
"but that artists should get paid for what they do."
Again and again it must be said: Artists are not getting paid for their music -- not the vast, vast majority.
The music corporations are eating all of the money. And the artists cannot, by law, force their publishers to open the books to check the accounting -- a singular exception to normal business law.
The latest in such gall is the news that the music companies are now demanding a part of the concert income -- up to now, the only way a musician can really make any money. Why? Music piracy, of course! They demand to make up income "stolen" from them by pirates by grabbing a percentage of the concert take!
Even BusinessWeek is babbling about the music industry's loss of cash from piracy -- without giving a thought to the ideas that 1) we're in an economic meltdown, and 2) the recording industry cut production in the last two years, so of bloody course they have lower sales!
Artists are the very last people to be paid. Paying for a CD rarely pays an artist -- you're just feeding his jailor. If you want to support an artist, go to a concert.
Downloading MP3's isn't hurting the artists one damned bit. It's hurting the thieves that are robbing them of all their labor. Simply put, downloading doesn't hurt anyone important.
That is SO right. Thank you for being one of the few people who "get it", and putting it into words for everyone else to understand.
It makes me so mad that not one major media publication seems willing to say what you just said, the truth.
Interestingly enough, he prefers big boobs. "People should have easier access to boobs, but the ladies need to get paid for their work, too!" A smart, smart man. I guess they didn't make him the creator of GIF for nothing.
It's interesting to note how the interview almost completely ignores the technical side to mp3. The reseachers were very concerned with sound quality, but we never get a chance to learn how satisfied they were with the results.
I wouldn't mind knowing what they think of competing compression formats and other mp3 encoders/decoders - since the generic Fraunhofer codec isn't used much, if I understand correctly.
Isn't all this talk about music sharing really just the tip of the iceberg?
With the boiling down of information into simply ones and zeros and the birth of the 'Net, intellectual property is going to be a debate of the next twenty years.
How do you properly compensate the creators of anything that can be boiled down to just a unique series of ones and zeros that can be easily copied to millions of people with the push of a button?
It seems to me that all these guys like the RIAA, the MPAA, and others should be concentrating on coming up with a brand new paradigm that fits this problem rather than focusing on their little corner of the world. One quick look at the big picture shows that everyone dealing in information is in the same boat. We really haven't seen the start of the MPAA entering the controversy because movie sharing hasn't quite gotten to be a real major threat, but it will be with more computers in your entertainment center. And don't forget about books - once decent digital books with removable media in the binder become common place you'll see people trading novels, college texts, whatever, over the same P2P networks.
The real solution is a complete paradigm shift towards something that benefits everyone. In fact, someone should come up with that new business process and patent it and... uh... wait, forget everything I just said.
it doesn't matter if you stop the RIAA this time! they'll be back!
Oh sure, you'll get a few people who say thy want it all for free and don't want to pay anyone. But they're unreasonable and illogical idiots. Personally, I buy all the music I want even if I think the prices are overinflated. Since I tend to like obscure stuff a lot of what I own is on minor labels and mostly import. THEN I rip them to MP3s or Ogg Vorbis for my own personal pleasure. For me, the MP3 and Vorbis files have replaced cassettes. At present, this is the way most logical and reasonable people approach electronically packaged music. They package it themselves.
The only reason to call someone a "stooge of the RIAA" is if you take some kind of pro-business stance. I don't . I think that the RIAA and most of the music business needs to evolve or die. What people (good, honest people) really want is the convenience of music stored in a LONG PLAYING, portable and flexible format. Only the frat boy idiots and wiggers want stuff "fo free".
Un-news
The primary goal of an artist should be to create art works by all means necessary.
Um, says you. Who are you to decree what motivation an artist, or any person, should have, so long as it isn't criminal?
Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
The MPAA does not have a major problem right now with movie sharing (save movies being released 2 weeks before they hit theaters) for a few reasons:
1) Movies are large and generally a hassle to download. A decent quality rip of say Terminator 3 runs from 700 MB to 1.5 GB. That's a decent quality rip - made even worse by the fact that it is recorded with a camcorder. It's just not worth the effort for most people.
2) There is a difference between watching a new release movie in a theater as oppossed to watching a downloaded version on a computer/tv. You get much better quality in the theater - with mp3s it is almost identical to the actual cd.
3) Most of the time theaters are reasonably priced. They are a bit on the high end, but not as overpriced as music is. I can pay $6.50 to see a two hour movie. You'd be hard pressed to find a cheaper activity (besides those that are free).
4) DVD's are reasonably priced for the most part (as long as you don't buy from the mall). Episode II was $9 when it came out on DVD. Most new DVD releases are out for $15 at Best Buy when they are released. That is an acceptable price to pay IMO for a movie.
Ah.. I see then you feel the amount of time it takes to create a decent recipe is comparable to the amount of time it takes to create a decent piece of art or music.
And you think that creating a recipe is somehow less an accomplishment than a 'work of art'? A good recipe is a work of art. Good recipes don't just fall out of someone's rear end. They take work, testing new things, trying new ingredients, and many of the recipes tested will taste like crap (as, indeed, many 'works of art' that are produced turn out to be crap).
I must assume you consider yourself a musical artist, and thus feel that your form of art is somehow more valid than any other. Grow up.
Trade secret!=copyright.
They're SECRET, which means that nobody except authorized persons have access to those recipes. If they were out in the open, they would be unprotected (and unprotectable).
Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
Personally, I don't have a problem with going back to the days where musicians had to sing for their supper.
The greatest classical composers of all times were nothing more than "kept men". Some member of some royal family would sponsor one of them... provide them with a place to live and some spending money in exchange for creating some music. They all died as underappreciated paupers, but they made music because they loved it... not to get rich.
Honestly, in a world where people like firemen and school teachers are financially treated like second rate citizens... the fact that J-Lo or Eminem is going to make 1 million instead of 50 doesn't bother me one bit.
Sure, everyone should be fairly compensated for the work they do... but does anyone honestly think that the amount of money tossed around in the music industry is only FAIR???
-K.