Apple, the RIAA, and Ringtones
pilsner.urquell writes "Apple's interest in defending the rights of the consumer has cost them a lot of grief in the ringtone market. 'John Gruber of the Daring Fireball cites Engadget, which reported that the RIAA wanted to be able to distribute ringtones of its artists without having to pay them big money to do so. It won a decision last year before the Copyright Office saying that ringtones weren't derivative works, meaning they didn't infringe on the copyright of the songwriter.' The piece goes on to explain the tense relationship between Apple content holders regarding ringtones and other pieces of IP, such as in the recent withdrawal of NBC."
You are new to this country I see.
Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
I just googled "ringtones" and it came up with 112 million results. Going by the first 3-4 pages, most of them seem to be either selling or offering "free" ringtones. Some comparisons:
bread: 78 million
oxygen: 91 million
global warming: 80 million
world peace: 2.8 million
liberty: 95 million
But, fortunately:
beer: 128 million
Whew... close
Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
well, if I ever hear 'dancing queen' blaring out of a cell phone on the bus, I'm going to break something...
"If you have an Abba song as ringtone, you are probably breaking the law."
Yes, the laws of GOOD TASTE!
"But this one goes to 11!"