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Gene Simmons Blames College Kids For Music Industry Woes

drcagn writes "Gene Simmons has blasted 'college' kids and claims that they have destroyed the music industry, with the labels also to blame for not properly suing them out of existence when they had the chance. When asked about Radiohead and Trent Reznor's recent support of a different direction in music distribution, he says "that's not a business model that works. I open a store and say 'Come on in and pay whatever you want.' Are you on f---ing crack?" When asked about music being free and making money off of merchandise, he says, "The most important part is the music. Without that, why would you care?" even though earlier in the interview he brags that he believes that KISS's merchandise is more profitable than Elvis's or the Beatles.'"

860 comments

  1. Well, he's over 40. by istartedi · · Score: 5, Funny

    "If you're not a Liberal when you're 18 you have no heart. If you're not a Conservative by the time you're 40, you have no brain." --Winston Churchill (at least according to the first Google hit I found).

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    1. Re:Well, he's over 40. by AuMatar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Note that in Europe, liberal and conservative have different meaning than in the US. There, liberal means anti-government, close to a libertarian. Margaret Thatcher called Ronald Regan the greatest liberal of our time.

      --
      I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    2. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And this is why Gene Simmons ceased being relevant sometime in the mid 70's. Radiohead and Reznor have more creativity in their little fingers than Simmons ever had. "Oh, we'll paint our faces to cover up the fact our music sucks." Radiohead and Reznor have deviated from conventional rock mediocrity and at least been creative. Kiss just upset parents in the 70's and sang the music that now appears on MOR stations everywhere.

      Or, to put it more succinctly, FUCK GENE SIMMONS!

    3. Re:Well, he's over 40. by kaos07 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually considering Winston Churchill is English, and the quote has Liberal and Conservative with capitals, it's more likely he was talking about the British Liberal Party and the British Conservative Party, the Liberal Party (Now called the Liberal Democrats), is in the centre of the spectrum though in some cases lies slightly to the left. They're not to be confused with the Australian Liberal Party which is in fact Australia's conservative party. Great stuff. Also above poster is incorrect. In Europe liberal does not mean anti-government, and it is nowhere near libertarian. Just about everyone outside the US views libertarianism as some sort of extreme anarcho-capitalism being economically far right, and socially conservative (Small government). Liberal's (In Europe) lie to the left on matters of the economy and as a result believe in free healthcare, education, a reserve bank etc. The main reason for these differences in ideology, I believe, is that in the US the matter of the economy is already settling - capitalism is the only force people will tolerate, so the choice between parties lies on social issues. Whereas in Europe it's not so cut and dried. There's Communist Parties, Socialist Parties and Green Parties who all believe in government interference in the market as well as disagree with the conservatives on social issues. Anyway, how's that Gene Simmons doing these days...

    4. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Lunarsight · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Gene Simmons is a dinosaur. And, no - I don't mean that in terms of his age.

      He's like the guy who still owns (exclusively) an eight-track player in a world of people who use iPods and compact discs. They fail to see innovation even when it's staring them right in the face.

      He may criticize Radiohead's selling approach, but you can't argue with the results. How much did Radiohead's album make in revenue? The non-standard selling method itself probably generated them a ton of publicity that they wouldn't otherwise have had.

      I honestly think a band like KISS could get away with giving their music away for free, since they have other avenues available to them to make a crapload of money. (Live shows and merchandising, for starters.) They should be distributing the music as a promotional tool, rather than having it be the revenue-generator itself.

      These artists need to learn to stop shooting their mouths off against the very people who support them. I completely support boycotting all major label artists, but artists like this in particular REALLY, REALLY deserve it. (Sadly, we all know that many people will continue to support artists like this, because they're pathetic fanboy lemmings who cluelessly follow their favorite artists wherever they go.)

    5. Re:Well, he's over 40. by packeteer · · Score: 1

      But world wide there is usually a workers party and a business party. In America the Democrats (liberals) are the workers party and the Republicans (conservative) are the business party. In America both parties aren't very different however.

      --
      unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
    6. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >These artists need to learn to stop shooting their mouths off against the very people who support them.

      Explain how infringing on their copyright is supporting them? I don't understand.

    7. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Infringing copyright? That's not the discussion, at least not in this part of the thread. This is about a rock and roll dinosaur condemning a marketing exercise that netted a band a big chunk of change.

      I am not a fan of Radiohead. They've made precisely THREE songs I like. (For the record those are "Just", "Paranoid Android" and "Everything In Its Right Place"). I will never buy a Radiohead CD. However, with "In Rainbows", I slung them a few bucks to A) support the creativity of the new business model, B) Metaphorically give the RIAA the finger, and C) Maybe discover that Radiohead are actually quite good. (In actuality I'd say "In Rainbows" did nothing to make me a fan. However I did get to support a band directly, and for the $4 or so I threw in their direction, there's a couple of songs I really like.)

      When Reznor gets around to releasing his next work I'll be supporting that as I am a massive fan of NIN and have been for 15 years now.

      Simmons has no credibility anyway. Kiss have licensed their music for toothbrushes for christs sake. I see them advertised on TV. As you clean your teeth, the brush plays music. The advert shows a kid brushing his teeth while a Kiss song plays.

      Bill Hicks put it far better than I could. "Here's the deal, folks. You do a commercial - you're off the artistic roll call, forever. End of story. Okay? You're another whore at the captialist gang bang and if you do a commercial, there's a price on your head. Everything you say is suspect and every word that comes out of your mouth is now like a turd falling into my drink."

    8. Re:Well, he's over 40. by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      And this is why Gene Simmons ceased being relevant sometime in the mid 70's. Radiohead and Reznor have more creativity in their little fingers than Simmons ever had. "Oh, we'll paint our faces to cover up the fact our music sucks." Radiohead and Reznor have deviated from conventional rock mediocrity and at least been creative. You forgot the big tong. And what do you offer in exchange for that? Creativity, deviation from conventional rock mediocrity... Oh boy, I think we have enough of that already.
    9. Re:Well, he's over 40. by CastrTroy · · Score: 2, Informative

      Another album with a similar selling model is the new Saul Williams album. You can download it for free, or choose to pay $5. I downloaded it for free because there was no sample. I'm trying to figure out if I'm going to buy it. I'm not a big fan of hip hop, but I do like the music, and will probably end up sending the $5. Anyway, the album was produced by Trent Reznor. So not only is he doing great things with changing the business model for his own music, he's helping other artists do the same.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    10. Re:Well, he's over 40. by lupis42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      To be fair, the implication is that it's paying 20-40$ to go to a show, and 30$ for a T-Shirt, that's supporting them. I will also say that I have never bought tickets to a show by an artist I didn't discover through piracy. Same goes for most of the albums I've bought since about 1996. I don't watch broadcast TV, and I don't listen to the radio, so I discover music when someone I know 'lends' it to me.

    11. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yeah. I signed up for that. Far worse experience than Radiohead though. I never got the email with the download link. On NIN's website Trent had posted an address to email if you heard nothing, so I wrote... And heard nothing again. So thought "Fuck it", went to Demonoid, downloaded the torrent. Listened to bits of the album, thought "This is crap" and didn't bother keeping it. (Should have known I wouldn't like it. I thought Saul's NIN remixes were crap.)

      So technically I infringed copyright to get something I had legally signed up to receive. Figure the legal ramifications of THAT one out!:)

    12. Re:Well, he's over 40. by CrackedButter · · Score: 1

      Actually, I'd rather fuck the person he's fucking (Shannon Tweed, if you didn't already know :-)).

    13. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Britz · · Score: 1

      He translated liberal correct. Churchill didn't mean the libertarian, but rather the socialist type.

    14. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I guess the equivalent in this case is:

      If you're still making new music, you see plenty of opportunities to take advantage of technology and new distribution models (i.e. Reznor and Radiohead). If you're old and washed up, then of course you want to maximize all the royalties you can from replays of your moldy old tracks using an antiquated business model.

    15. Re:Well, he's over 40. by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      I was going to just go the torrent direction so as not to waste my bandwidth, but because of my slow and highly one way connection (14 KB/s Up, 120 KB/s down) i usually don't get good download rates on torrents, and in this case, it was slow to download, and the only one I could find was the 320 kbps mp3 version. Anyway, I think they changed things, because, at least on the free version I got to download it right away. I was also sent a link where presumably I could download it again, although I haven't tried the link. They probably got too many people not getting the email, and just decided to have it download right away.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    16. Re:Well, he's over 40. by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Correction: I was going to get the torrent so as not to waste *THEIR* bandwidth.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    17. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Carewolf · · Score: 1

      Complete wrong. While it various a bit from country to country, in most places in Europe liberalism means both social liberalism (like US left-wing), AND economical liberalism (like US Libetarians, or Republicans before Reagan). So gay rights, small government, low taxes and seperation of church and state.

    18. Re:Well, he's over 40. by djfake · · Score: 1

      Or, to put it more succinctly, FUCK GENE SIMMONS! well, I think a few thousand girls have...
      --
      www.itjerk.com
    19. Re:Well, he's over 40. by sgant · · Score: 1

      This always bugs me. WTF does "relevant" music mean? Music stands by itself if it was made yesterday or 60 years ago. "Relevant" is a term clueless music critics use now when they have nothing else to say.

      BTW, I was a kid in the 70's and a Kiss fan back then and no, they didn't really upset parents back then at all. Punk upset parents. Kiss was never really out there for the music anyway. It was always a show. A Broadway production. A spectical.

      But having said all that, Gene Simmons is pretty much out of it. Another technology-illiterate person that's scared of new things and ideas. Simmons was a genius...but not really a musical one...but a marketing genius. He had all the angles covered...business wise.

      --

      "Leo Fender was in a 'state of grace' when he designed the Stratocaster." -- Paul Reed Smith
    20. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Fizzl · · Score: 5, Insightful

      KISS was never really about music. It was a huge franchise to capitalize on. Gene Simmons is not a musician. He is a businessman.

    21. Re:Well, he's over 40. by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      You have to be kidding me...Trent Reznor is just as much as a mediocre niche musician as Gene Simmons of KISS. At least KISS is more than a one-hit-wonder to the non-obsessed fans of the world. KISS is iconic and many of their tunes, regardless of their lack of musicality, are classics. Whatever that "f- you like an animal" song is called can be found on early 90s compilation CDs, and that's about it. Granted, Trent has written a lot of good music for OTHER artists, but unless you follow the industry closely, you'd never know it. Is it any wonder that Johnny Cash's version of "Hurt" is about, oh, a million times better than Trent's version? Why is that, you ask? Because 9-inch Nails has an annoying, droning, sameness to every song ever recorded by him(them?) because he(they?) must appeal to the people to his small niche of fans who like the same sounding song for the past 15 years now.

    22. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Eivind · · Score: 1

      USA ain't all capitalist, not even close. Look at the extensions to patents and copyright over the last few years for an example.

      If there's anything anti-capitalist and anti-free-market then it is government-granted monopolies.

      USA is, however, very strongly capitalist in *words*. In the USA *calling* something "socialist" is almost on par with calling it "communist" or "fascist".

    23. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Garrynz · · Score: 1

      "Conservative by the time you're 35" "If you're not a liberal when you're 25, you have no heart. If you're not a conservative by the time you're 35, you have no brain." There is no record of anyone hearing Churchill say this. Paul Addison of Edinburgh University makes this comment: "Surely Churchill can't have used the words attributed to him. He'd been a Conservative at 15 and a Liberal at 35! And would he have talked so disrespectfully of Clemmie, who is generally thought to have been a lifelong Liberal?" http://www.winstonchurchill.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=112

    24. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I always considered the US version of libertarianism (as opposed to what is traditionally meant by anarchism) to be what you describe, economically far right etc. The european version of libertarianism is far left but anti-government. At least in sweden almost all libertarian/anarchists are social libertarians, anarchists or syndicalists meaning that they are more related to socialism than extreme capitalism. So no not everyone outside the US views libertarianism in the way you describe. My prejudices about US libertarians is that they are far right though.

      This is an interresting prejudice about libertarian views in general, that they mean something along the line of everyone vs. everyone and the only law is that of the djungle. Read almost any libertarian scripture for example the dispossessed by Ursula Leguin, and find out that the goal of libertarianism is quite the opposite. A minimum of laws, yes, total chaos, no.

    25. Re:Well, he's over 40. by ilovecheese · · Score: 0

      Well said. And I don't think there was a time Gene Simmons (or KISS in general) was ever relevant. Yes, I'm over 40 too, and thought they, and their music sucked some serious ass.

      What we have, is the music industry aging gracefully like a dinosaur. It's inability to adapt to the change in market desires, will kill it ff as we know it. And the fact that the RIAA is suing everyone they can find that *might* be a P2P user, proves this fact once again.

      Gene, take some more Geritol, and shut the fuck up. I don't mind, and you don't matter. :)

    26. Re:Well, he's over 40. by tacocat · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Rather than blasting Simmons as being an irrelevant wanker, I think there's a more useful observation.

      The business model of music distribution is changing. It's not really a debateable issue anymore. It's just a fact. But changing to what?

      I think Radiohead went overboard. There is not a valid business model when you say, "Pay whatever you want". If you disagree with this conclusion than consider how you will respond when your employer or customers decide they will start paying you whatever they want to and if that's not enough for rent, too bad for you. It's no way to make a living.

      But what is important here is the Radiohead has demonstrated that you can make a lot of money selling CD's for really cheap once you manage to get rid of the pimp-ish middleman known as the record industry. The record industry used to have a stranglehold on all things related to radio play, music sales, concert promotions, and other product sales (shirts and posters). But so far, the internet has demonstrated a means for the bands, with a little effort on their part or someone far less expensive than the RIAA, to provide music sales and product sales via the internet. Now all they need to do is set up a means of doing concert promotions and (most importantly) radio play. Without the radio play, they have a hard time getting anything else going.

      The Recording Industry must realize by now that their original business model is a bust. This is supported by their efforts to sue rather than change or adopt. But they are also losing a lot of the legal battles. You can analogize this to Monopoly busting or even Union busting.

      The future of the Recording Industry may look something like this: A much smaller industry in terms of people employed with a more passive role of providing the framework for bands to connect to concert halls, stores, and radio stations and allow the radio stations, concert halls, and stores to determine their own purchase volumes and schedules. More like the NYSE in that people bid/buy resources based on demand in their geophraphic and demographic areas.

    27. Re:Well, he's over 40. by iainl · · Score: 2, Informative

      Wheras to this non-fan I know KISS did the song for Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey, and that's it. I don't remember 70s music much, as I was born in them. I've been told that they're famous, and wore amusing costumes, but I genuinely couldn't tell you of another tune. Have they even released a bad record in the last decade, let alone a good one? He's squarely filed in the niche called "retro".

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    28. Re:Well, he's over 40. by aplusjimages · · Score: 2, Interesting

      But rock music on toothbrushes are so rock n roll man. It's almost the equivalent to smashing up a hotel room.

      If I ever build a time machine the first thing I will do is bring "rock" artists from the past so they can see themselves in the future and hopefully beat the shit out of their future self. I'll start with KISS and Metallica

      --
      Can I bum a sig?
    29. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Chemicalscum · · Score: 1
      Yes given that Churchill "crossed the floor" (a Member of Parliament changing parties) from the Liberals to the Conservatives (Tories) that interpretation of the quote is likely correct.

      The US is of course an anomaly in the civilized world probably because of it's empire, so socially and politically the prevailing viewpoint it more like that of 19th century England than those prevalent in the modern world. However political terminology has tended to mean different things in different countries at different times. In 19th century England, liberal meant supporting free trade and opposing the "Corn Laws" while conservative meant being against free trade and supporting agricultural protectionism.

      Like most people who regard themselves as socialist or left libertarians I deplore the perversion and highjacking of the term "libertarian" by a group of right wing American loonies as do American socialist libertarians like Chomsky.

    30. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrongo! Libertarians take their name from the term Liberty, not liberalism....

      And for those of you who are over 40 and are still liberals, your comments do little more than prove Churchill's quote.

    31. Re:Well, he's over 40. by aurispector · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is the most accurate comment regarding Simmons. The people with interests vested in the current system naturally don't support change. Frankly, Nancy Pelosi makes me sick by being a media industry puppet with the whole finanical aid thing. Look at big pharma - sure, they're bastards but at least they make something beneficial. Pharma spends billions on research then gets a few years to profit IF it passes FDA approval. Conversely, any idiot can pen a stupid ditty which costs nothing then get approximately forever to profit from it. How much did humanity benefit from, say, the song "Beth" versus Lipitor?

      The whole system is screwed up.

      --
      I have mod points. The reign of terror begins now.
    32. Re:Well, he's over 40. by DigDuality · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First off, NIN has had far more than one hit. Head Like a Hole, Closer, Hurt, Starf*ckers, Only, The Hand that Feeds, My Violent Heart. 2ndly, like Cash's version of NIN's Hurt is only b/c of a touching music video. Cash's voice, nor his guitar even begin to capture the emotion in Trent's version. The Fragile is a musical masterpiece, both from an instrumental perspective and from a production one. Small niche of fans? Doubt it. I'm sorry, when did Kiss come out with a concept album? DownloadSpiral in this regard (a story from beginning to end about drug addiction) was geniusly executed. The single brought Trent his fame, no dobut. But this album is a must have. It's up there with Pink Floyd's the Wall. Year Zero, while no where near as musically complex and focused more on simple drum loops, still was more brilliant than anything KISS has ever done. If you can't tell the difference between a bunch of pretty boys in face paint singing sing-songs, and one man who for the most part plays most of the instruments in the studio, has written not one, but two concept albums, then i pity you. As to Trent sounding the same. Exactly what does anything off Pretty Hate Machine sound like anything on Broken? Where does anything off Year Zero sound like anything off Downward Spiral?

    33. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Goaway · · Score: 2, Informative

      Churchill meant nothing, as he never said that. The original quote is quite different in flavour:

      http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=374518 (Thanks to another poster earlier in the thread.)

    34. Re:Well, he's over 40. by nine-times · · Score: 1

      And what the words were originally supposed to indicate is a willingness to change quickly. Liberals are supposed to be those who push new and progressive ideas while conservatives resist change or insist that change happens slowly.

    35. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      Because 9-inch Nails has an annoying, droning, sameness to every song ever recorded by him(them?)
      Actually I challenge you to listen to any two albums and genuinely find that they sound the same. There's a world of difference between Pretty Hate Machine and Downward Spiral (the first two albums), let alone between With Teeth and Year Zero (the most recent two; for what it's worth I just don't like Year Zero so far). If anything NIN has changed their musical style more than most bands I know.

      As for fame, I couldn't name a single song by KISS, and know nothing about them other than that they're some kind of glam rock/metal band with painted faces and leather costumes. It all depends on what sort of scene you're into, and what generation you're from. Meanwhile NIN/Trent has written music for everything from films (Se7en's opening credits (a remix of Closer, the "fuck you like an animal" song) and Doom for example) and computer games (Quake being the most obvious - hence the Doom film work I guess). To be fair I do seem to remember a KISS computer game back in the 80s; the closest NIN have come to that is the "NIN" on the nail gun ammo boxes in Quake.

      Oh and I do like Cash's version of Hurt, although "a million times better" is an exaggeration. I like his version of Personal Jesus too, but wouldn't try to make that a comment on Depeche Mode.

      Besides which, I really don't think popularity or lack thereof has any bearing on their arguments for or against the current music industry. They're both very successful musicians by any measure, perfectly capable of making a good living from their work and thus entitled to their opinions.
    36. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Goaway · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Perhaps you should have looked just a bit closer.

      http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=374518

      The original quote is a quite a bit older than Churchill, and the flavour of it is also quite different. The one you quoted is quite butchered, and says something else entirely from what the original meant to convey.

      Thanks to an anonymous poster for digging that link out earlier.

    37. Re:Well, he's over 40. by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Conversely, any idiot can pen a stupid ditty which costs nothing then get approximately forever to profit from it. How much did humanity benefit from, say, the song "Beth" versus Lipitor?

      Huh? That's one of the dumbest posts ever on this site. Go ahead, write a song for us and perform it. I have a good feeling it will be awful.

      Humanity isn't only benefiting from science, it benefits from art and culture as well. Believe it or not, KISS contributed to both.

    38. Re:Well, he's over 40. by mqduck · · Score: 1

      This always bugs me. WTF does "relevant" music mean? Music stands by itself if it was made yesterday or 60 years ago. "Relevant" is a term clueless music critics use now when they have nothing else to say. There's always a creative front (or many) in music. "Relevant" music is the music that is today evolving and solidifying genres. "Irrelevant", I suppose, is a disparaging way of saying "not part of or directly influencing" that front.

      I'm not exactly sure what point you're making by "music stands for itself", but understanding and keeping in mind the context of a song - its influences and influence, its motive, what else was going on at the time, the reaction intended and resulting, etc - is the only way to truly enjoy it, IMO.
      --
      Property is theft.
    39. Re:Well, he's over 40. by pdusen · · Score: 0

      It's interesting how you can suggest that NiN has a "sameness" and obviously have no clue what you're talking about.

      Look at me. I don't like Hip Hop, but I am able to discern differences between different hip hop songs.

      I don't like country, but I am able to discern how "Old Country" was pretty cool and new "Pop-Country" pretty much sucks donkey balls.

      This is because I've actually LISTENED to some of these different songs, which you clearly have not. NIN has one of the greatest musical variances of any band in rock, and there is considerable disagreement between fans on what albums are good and what aren't. If you're going to base your opinion of NIN on two songs you barely even know, you don't deserve to criticize anyone.

      Oh, and for the record, Johnny Cash's version of hurt was just louder and not really any better. Not any worse either. Just different. Remember that? Differences?

    40. Re:Well, he's over 40. by mqduck · · Score: 1

      Okay, but look at Devo. With the Honda scooter commercial and Devo 2.0, they turned selling out itself into high art.

      --
      Property is theft.
    41. Re:Well, he's over 40. by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Don't care about kiss, but don't do anything to Metallica until after they're done the black album.

    42. Re:Well, he's over 40. by CastrTroy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How you do combine social liberalism, such as universal health care, a good welfare program, and other socialist ideas with low taxes?

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    43. Re:Well, he's over 40. by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Well, thanks for your opinion, I think. Personally I wouldn't have even known Hurt was a Johnny Cash song if I didn't see your post. It sounds like I'd find your music choices "annoying, droning sameness" though.

    44. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Heir+Of+The+Mess · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah, my Taiwanese wife recently picked up a pink Kiss T-Shirt at a market with a picture of the 4 band members from the 70s. I asked her if she liked their music....Confusion followed...She thought they were an Anime cartoon :-/

      --
      Australian running a company that does C# / C++ / Java / SQL / Python / Mathematica
    45. Re:Well, he's over 40. by AdamWeeden · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Gene Simmons is a dinosaur.
      Worse, he's a GREEDY dinosaur. Has anyone seen his "reality" show? My wife loves it, but I can't stand it because it's all about him trying to sell Kiss' collective souls for as much profit as possible. The guy seems like he cares much more about making money than enjoying life. He comes off as loving money more than his family. I would not look to him for advice on what a good compromise in a new market economy is when it comes to digital distribution. If his show is any indication, that man would make you pay $50 a Kiss record and thank him for the privilege if he thought he'd get away with it.
      --
      I was quoted out of context in my autobiography...
    46. Re:Well, he's over 40. by CastrTroy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think the Radiohead thing is just an interesting experiment to find out what people really do want to pay. People have never had a choice before. The album is released, and the people who buy it only have 2 choices. Buy at the price they are selling it at, or don't buy it. This is like taking a poll and asking people what a downloaded album is really worth. Then there's the Saul Williams album, where he said, pay $5 or $0, it's your choice. $5 is a much more reasonable price to ask for a downloaded album, where there is no physical product, and no distribution chain.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    47. Re:Well, he's over 40. by e1618978 · · Score: 1

      Exactly how are US liberatarians "social conservatives"? They want to end the war on drugs, legalize gay marriage, etc. Either you don't know what a social conservative is, or you don't know what a libertarian is. www.lp.org

    48. Re:Well, he's over 40. by sm62704 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And this is why Gene Simmons ceased being relevant sometime in the mid 70's.

      Gene Simmons was never relevant, and neither are Radiohead and Reznor. They're just songwriters and musicians. None of them ever changed the world, and I doubt many peoples' lives would have been any different if these guys had never been born.

      John Lennon was relevant. Beethooven was relevant. In a hundred years nobody will have ever heard of Resnor, Radiohead, or Kiss.

      -mcgrew

      PS- Kiss made good music. So does Resnor. If it rocks it rocks. "Oh, we'll paint our faces to cover up the fact our music sucks" is an incredibly stupid statment. Had they no talent, no amount of makeup would have covered it up. The fact is that there are always thousands of very talented musicians making very good music who will die in obscurity because there are so many of them. The makeup was a gimmick that made them stand out.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    49. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And he's probably made a lot more money than you'll see in your sad little lifetime, fizzl@fizzl.net.

    50. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Hey, Gene; lick this -> 8======D

      (from someone over 50 ;^)

    51. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Zonk+(troll) · · Score: 1

      Another album with a similar selling model is the new Saul Williams album. You can download it for free, or choose to pay $5. I downloaded it for free because there was no sample. I'm trying to figure out if I'm going to buy it. I'm not a big fan of hip hop, but I do like the music, and will probably end up sending the $5. Anyway, the album was produced by Trent Reznor. So not only is he doing great things with changing the business model for his own music, he's helping other artists do the same. The Saul Williams album (The Inevitable Rise and Liberation of NiggyTardust) has some good stuff on it. It basically sounds like NIN mixed with rap. I don't like rap, but several of the songs are sung and those songs are pretty good. Especially "Sunday Bloody Sunday" (U2 cover). I don't care for the rapped ones though. I bought it without hearing it first simply because of Reznor.

      Also, everyone seems to forget that Harvey Danger (remember "Flagpole Sitta" in the 90s?) did this two years ago. Their website still has the torrents (and a hosted download) and a paypal donation link.
      --
      "The Federal Reserve is a fraudulent system."--Lew Rockwell
      End The FED. -
    52. Re:Well, he's over 40. by cozziewozzie · · Score: 1

      Just about everyone outside the US views libertarianism as some sort of extreme anarcho-capitalism being economically far right, and socially conservative (Small government).

      Actually, this is the US definition of Libertarianism, in line with the Libertarian Party (capital 'L'). Small government, laissez-faire capitalism. In fact, the founder of the US Libertarian Party, Murray Rothbard, was also the person who invented "anarcho-capitalism".

      In Europe, libertarianism has always meant anarchism. It still does. This has traditionally meant opposition to capitalism, and still does. People most likely to call themselves "libertarian" in Europe are, in my experience, punks, environmentalists, political activists, squatters, etc. No anarcho-capitalism. If you find a "libertarian centre" in Spain or Germany, you'll almost certainly find anarcho-syndicalists and anti-globalists in there, and not entrepreneurs and investors.

    53. Re:Well, he's over 40. by CheShACat · · Score: 1

      I think a more valid counter argument would be that the difference between opening up a medicine and opening up a KISS track is huge. If the pharma company can keep the sole rights to a medicine for 25 / 50 / 75 /1,000,000 years then they could feasibly profiteer from human suffering for that long by keeping a monopoly on e.g. an AIDS cure if one were discovered. This is why the legal rights are nowhere near as long as they are for a tune.

    54. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Here in Sweden, "liberal" means you want to bomb Iraq and enact stricter laws against immigration.

    55. Re:Well, he's over 40. by iter8 · · Score: 1

      A liberal is a conservative who's been arrested. A conservative is a liberal who's been mugged. - Wendy Kaminer

    56. Re:Well, he's over 40. by sm62704 · · Score: 4, Informative
      He's like the guy who still owns (exclusively) an eight-track player in a world of people who use iPods and compact discs.

      I had a thing or two to say about 8-tracks a couple of years ago in Good Riddance to Bad Tech.

      This sorry piece of crap is proof positive of American stupidity. The cassette - the (now obsolete) four track, two-spindle, 1/8th inch, 1 /78 IPS shirt pocket sized tape cassette was produced before the 8-track. The four track cassette was originally made as a dictation device, but advances in tape manufacture and head design soon gave them a frequency response that came close to human hearing's limit, signal to noise ratio low enough that you had to turn it up very loud to hear the hiss, and inaudible harmonic distortion which made them ideal for music.

      Nevertheless, the 8-track was born anyway. With its transport speed at twice the 4-track cassette's speed, it should have been audibly superior. However, the "powers that be" decided that 8-tracks were going to be for automobiles, which at the time were not as well insulated from outside sounds and wind as today's cars, and with the auto's horrible acoustics, it was OK for a car's music to sound like effluent.

      But the deliberately bad sound wasn't bad enough. The eight track tape had a single spindle, a very clever design where the tape fed from the center of the spindle, around a capstain roller inside the housing and back to the outside of the roll of tape. This made for an expensive setup, and one that was prone to wow and flutter, as well as having the tape get "eaten" by the tape player. And unlike a cassette, if your 8-track got ate, you might as well throw it in the trash.

      But wait, there's more! This thing was deemed to be for the car, while cassettes were going to be (by about 1970 or so) for the home.

      This made no sense whatever, since the "portable" eight track took up as much space as four cassettes, without being able to play any longer than a cassette. In fact, you could buy a longer playing cassette than 8-track.

      But the one thing more than anything else that made 8-tracks suck like a Hoover was the fact that it had to change tracks four times during an album. This usually necessitated at least one song and usually more being interrupted in the middle!

      Folks finally, after about ten years, started figuring this stuff out for themselves and replaced their 8-track cartriges with 4 track cassettes. Me? I never had an 8-track, although all my friends did. I, the geek, used the far more logical cassettes since about 1966 or 7. Hah! The geek gets the last laugh again!

      I honestly think a band like KISS could get away with giving their music away for free, since they have other avenues available to them to make a crapload of money

      He works for the record company, and has worked for the record company for almost 40 years. You badmouth your employer at your own risk.

      I have always been amused by Lynard Skynard's Working for MCA, especially the verry beginning of the song - it starts out with the buzz of an ungrounded amp, and it's obvious (to me anyway) that they put that there on purpose.

      I never heard the CD version, is the buzz still there? From all the bad remixing for CD I've heard in various RIAA fare, I'd bet it's gone.

      -mcgrew
      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    57. Re:Well, he's over 40. by MrHyd3 · · Score: 0

      Gene Simmons is a dinosaur. And, no - I don't mean that in terms of his age.


      So what? Can't people do what they want?

      He's like the guy who still owns (exclusively) an eight-track player in a world of people who use iPods and compact discs. They fail to see innovation even when it's staring them right in the face.


      So what? Can't people do what they want? Don't you people believe in freedom?

      He may criticize Radiohead's selling approach, but you can't argue with the results. How much did Radiohead's album make in revenue? The non-standard selling method itself probably generated them a ton of publicity that they wouldn't otherwise have had.


      Thats why Radiohead did it, for the publicity, not for the "ahhhh....freedom of expression maaaaaan......"

      If KISS doesn't want to sell like Radiohead, so be it...let them prosper from their decision or die from it!

      --
      -------- Of all the things I've lost, I miss my mind the most. --Ozzy
    58. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Chemicalscum · · Score: 1

      Wrongo! Libertarians take their name from the term Liberty, not liberalism....

      I never said they did RTFP !

    59. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Phreakiture · · Score: 2, Insightful

      KISS was never really about music. It was a huge franchise to capitalize on. Gene Simmons is not a musician. He is a businessman.

      Spot on. If you caught the Henry Rollins show where he was interviewed, it becomes plain to see. Gene Simmons doesn't make music; he makes money. The music is merely a tool to get to the money.

      What he doesn't realise, however, is that sometimes you have to give up a little bit to make more. In business, it's called a loss leader. You give away a little something, or sell it below cost, and then make that money back and then some on the add-ons.

      --
      www.wavefront-av.com
    60. Re:Well, he's over 40. by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      To be fair, the implication is that it's paying 20-40$ to go to a show, and 30$ for a T-Shirt, that's supporting them

      I never saw Kiss live, but when they and I were young, I saw the Doors for five dollars, ten rows from the stage. I never saw The Rolling Stones either, but their concert prices were the same as everybody else's - $3 for the cheap seats, $5 for the good seats. Now the asshats are charging a hundred bucks and up. And you can't even smoke dope at the concerts any more!

      Greed knows no bounds. I stopped going to top name concerts years ago, now I go listen to live bands with just as much or more talent at local bars for a two dollar cover and I can drink beer while watching!

      Stupid geezers...

      -mcgrew

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    61. Re:Well, he's over 40. by The+Queen · · Score: 1

      RIP Bill Hicks, we hardly knew ye.

      Someone gave me that KISS toothbrush for Christmas last year. I have not opened it and have no desire to hear what I consider the most overplayed and monotonous KISS song ever when I'm getting ready for work at 7 a.m. - in my MOUTH. *shudder*

      And then, to add insult to injury, they used that same POS song for Guitar Hero 3. "Strutter" in GH2 was a pleasant surprise; WTF happened?

      --

      The House Between - Original Sci-Fi Series
    62. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Pope · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Peter Criss wrote & sang "Beth," not Gene Simmons.

      Aside from correcting your facts, I'd like to point out that art has an important part in our lives as humans. Music in particular can have profound emotional effects on listeners.

      Go ahead, try to make a living as a musician, I dare you. A handfull make it big, and the rest just get by.

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    63. Re:Well, he's over 40. by ichigo+2.0 · · Score: 1

      These artists need to learn to stop shooting their mouths off against the very people who support them. I completely support boycotting all major label artists, but artists like this in particular REALLY, REALLY deserve it. (Sadly, we all know that many people will continue to support artists like this, because they're pathetic fanboy lemmings who cluelessly follow their favorite artists wherever they go.)
      But in this case, I think it's safe to say that they are not shooting their mouths off against the people that support them. I'd bet that most KISS fans are in the age group that doesn't even know what the internet is, so it's probably safe to say that college kids won't have an effect on their bottom line.
    64. Re:Well, he's over 40. by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      KISS was never really about music. It was a huge franchise to capitalize on.

      That's like saying that Sun isn't about computers, it's a huge franchise to capitalize on.

      Gene Simmons is not a musician. He is a businessman.

      He's not a businessman, he's an employee. He works for the record company. His employers are businessmen.

      -mcgrew

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    65. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There is not a valid business model when you say, "Pay whatever you want".

      Actually a lot of people make their living, in whole or in part, in just that way.

      Priests live off the money in the collection plate. Bartenders and servers live off tips. So do many musicians. Public TV and radio continue to exist. Museums with "suggested donations" stay open.

      If you disagree with this conclusion than consider how you will respond when your employer or customers decide they will start paying you whatever they want to and if that's not enough for rent, too bad for you

      Um, my employer does pay me whatever he wants. He could tell me tomorrow, "from now on, we're only paying you $10 a day." Then I stop working. Too bad for him.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    66. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So whose payroll is crack-head Simmons on?

    67. Re:Well, he's over 40. by my_nickname_was_alre · · Score: 1

      In Europe liberal does not mean anti-government, and it is nowhere near libertarian. Just about everyone outside the US views libertarianism as some sort of extreme anarcho-capitalism being economically far right, and socially conservative (Small government). Liberal's (In Europe) lie to the left on matters of the economy and as a result believe in free healthcare, education, a reserve bank etc. Actually, you are wrong. Here in Germany, "liberal" in a political setting means support for free markets, deregulation and personal freedom in lifestyle choices (for instance, Guido Westerwelle, the leader of the FDP, which is Germany's "liberal" party, is openly homosexual). They are, in fact, the loudest voice for tax cuts, "liberalization" of the economy (i.e. removing laws designed to protect employees), the (at least partial) dismantling of the welfare state, and smaller government in general. Note: what you say may be correct in other parts of Europe; I can't speak for those.
    68. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Ogive17 · · Score: 1

      I was with you until you started bashing people who enjoy different types of music than you do. Who are you to say what is good and what is crap?

      Personally, my favorite types of music are jam band, 90s alternative and classic rock. I'm not a fan of KISS, but any band that has survived a few decades must have done something right.

      I can't stand most country and most rap/r&b but I will never tell someone they have no taste for listening to it..

      --
      "Action without philosophy is a lethal weapon; philosophy without action is worthless."
    69. Re:Well, he's over 40. by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Note that in Europe, liberal and conservative have different meaning than in the US. There, liberal means anti-government, close to a libertarian.

      It means anti-authoritarian / pro-individual freedoms, not necessarily anti-Government (though being anti-Government is a subset of being liberal). It doesn't necessarily mean libertarian either (which means minimal Government intervention in an economic sense too), although a lot of people seem to use "libertarian" to mean "liberal".

      Indeed, liberal is often conflated with being economically left ("lefty liberals").

    70. Re:Well, he's over 40. by residieu · · Score: 1

      You can't argue that Radiohead's selling approach worked for Radiohead on this album. Whether that approach is sustainable long term, or will work for all bands remains to be seen. I applaud them for trying it, but it's too early to say that this is definately the way of the future.

    71. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Joe+the+Lesser · · Score: 1

      This is because society shifts to the left every few decades, people don't change their ideals.

      --
      "I only speak the truth"
      Karma: null(Mostly affected by an unassigned variable)
    72. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      If there's anything anti-capitalist and anti-free-market then it is government-granted monopolies.

      All capitalism relies on government grants. You don't have capitalism without private control of capital, and you don't get private control of capital without government guns backing up the capitalist class.

      Free markets and capitalism are different things. You can have free market socialism (various libertarian socialist theories), or command economy capitalism (such as the U.S. during WWII).

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    73. Re:Well, he's over 40. by geobeck · · Score: 1

      The article omitted the quote from the original interview where he told the college kids, "Now get off my lawn!"

      How would modern kids even know the name KISS if it weren't for file sharing, YouTube, and other modern media distribution channels?

      --
      Find environmentally and socially responsible products on http://buy-right.net
    74. Re:Well, he's over 40. by hansamurai · · Score: 1

      Greatest ending to a movie ever. People say I'm a fool for thinking that but movies that end with a triumphant rock scene are simply awesome. More movies should end with a rock scene, the other one I can think of is Rat Race - even if it was Smash Mouth, it was awesome..

    75. Re:Well, he's over 40. by cowscows · · Score: 1

      Throwing your product out there and saying pay whatever you want has traditionally not been a good business model. But as you may have noticed, the world has changed quite a bit over the past decade or so, and all of a sudden the costs of distributing music has dropped to about zero. Also, Radiohead's plan is a bit more complicated than you make it out to be.

      None of this means that Ford can stop putting prices on their pick-up trucks and just let drivers pay whatever they want, but it does mean that a well-known band can basically give their music away and ask for donations, especially because they can continue to sell physical merchandise in the more traditional manner.

      Sure, this new business model won't work for everyone, or not even every musician. But that doesn't make it a failure. Producing a physical product and selling in at a fixed price has been a failing business strategy for at least as many companies as have had success at it. Radiohead looks like they're going to do just fine with their new business model. Other bands might find different things that work for them. Many will likely stick with the more traditional music label structure, but hopefully the changes we're seeing now will give them more leverage to negotiate better contracts.

      Simmons is a wanker because he's being angry towards the fans(without which he'd have to get a "real job"), he's not really offering any constructive solutions for any new business models, and because he's arguing for a system that almost everyone agrees is unfair to musicians in general. If the most important part really is the music, then how come the labels have historically been able to screw the majority of their artists so hard?

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    76. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 1

      If you like KISS at any age, you have no taste.

    77. Re:Well, he's over 40. by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      There is not a valid business model when you say, "Pay whatever you want". If you disagree with this conclusion than consider how you will respond when your employer or customers decide they will start paying you whatever they want to and if that's not enough for rent, too bad for you. It's no way to make a living. Won't matter. I'll just tell my landlord that I'll pay what I want, which will probably be about $1 or $2 per week :)

      I think though that this move by Radiohead and such netted them more than they'd normally get for simply the "Hey, lets support these guys!" factor, because they're bucking the trend. Whatever the optimal solution, the recording companies certainly haven't found it, and ANYTHING that goes against it is gonna draw some level of support. In the end though, if all bands did this, that token support money would dry up, and you're left with only what people really want to pay.

      I will say though, that some entertainment venues DO go by the "pay what you want" philosophy, especially for something that isn't in limited supply. For instance, I live pretty close to the Dockstreet Theater (one of the oldest standing theaters in the US BTW). Whenever they start a new play, they always have at least one night (generally opening night) that is a "pay what you will" night. Show up, ask for the # of tickets, and they'll ask how much you want to pay. I usually pay $20 per ticket because it's worth that to me (regular ticket prices there are more around $45-50), but I've seen plenty of people pay $5 each. The place isn't going out of business, and does quite well. They're going to be performing no matter how many people are there, so me sitting in doesn't hurt in any way, and having a lot of people on the first night helps to drum up interest and talk to hopefully get more people in to see it on subsequent nights.
      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    78. Re:Well, he's over 40. by imgod2u · · Score: 1

      I think Radiohead went overboard. There is not a valid business model when you say, "Pay whatever you want". If you disagree with this conclusion than consider how you will respond when your employer or customers decide they will start paying you whatever they want to and if that's not enough for rent, too bad for you. It's no way to make a living. That depends. If you look at the vast majority of recording contracts nowadays, the profits for the artist do not come from cd sales (since their contract states that they get a tiny fraction of the money made from them) but rather from merchandise, advertising, live concerts, etc. So their business model (from the artist's point of view) was never reliant on selling cd's. It was reliant on distributing music to enough people such that they'd buy the merchandise and concert tickets.

      Before, the only way to do this was to have a big recording studio advertise for you and in return, allow them to make money from cd sales. With the internet, an alternative method for distribution (one that's virtually free) has come along. What Radiohead is doing is simply cutting out the middle man and distributing music themselves. They're most likely going to make more money than a traditional contract because they not only will have the money made from merchandise/ticket sales that they would've had but also from the money made from people who donate online.
    79. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Love the Bill Hicks reference. :)

      I'll throw a ten spot Reznor's way for the next one. I'd rather he benefit directly instead of the RIAA morons. I didn't participate in RadioHead's album, because I happen to be the one person that just doesn't like them. I applauded them for their effort though.

      KISS, where to begin? KISS was a trumped up stage show, and was outlandish enough with catchy enough riffs no matter how badly played that they became popular. (Let's give them credit, they managed to become mega-stars in an era that barely knew what that was - you had Elvis, the Beatles, ABBA, the Captain and Teneille(sp?), the Osmonds, Beach Boys, and Jacksons, and that was pretty much it across a couple of decades. I don't know that anyone got as in your face marketing wise prior to KISS, although the model was certainly repeated afterwards.

      Actually, thinking about it, KISS may be the reason the RIAA exists today. They truly are Knights in Satan's Service, just not the one all the religious moms were worried about.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    80. Re:Well, he's over 40. by krazytekn0 · · Score: 1

      Does anyone else notice that the Post is about Gene Simmons bashing college students and not about Winston Churchill...

      --
      Not all life is cyber. Extra Income
    81. Re:Well, he's over 40. by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      A lot of churches I've seen give you a really hard time if you don't put something in the donation basket. Remember on the Simpsons when Reverend Lovejoy was reminding them that "it's 10% off the top, that's gross, not net". That's the way a lot of churches are getting. From what I hear from my Hindu friends, the people aren't allowed to pray and speak to the gods. You can get a priest to pray for you, but that costs money. Also, most of the museums are funded through tax dollars, which is where the majority of their money comes from. Donation boxes are just to make people feel good.

      And the difference between you quitting your job, and someone deciding not to pay for an album, is that your boss now loses your services, whereas people will still download the music for free, and won't lose anything.

      I that that whar Radiohead did was a good idea, but I'm just playing devil's advocate. There are some downsides to this model. If people only pay what they have to, then a lot of people will pay nothing. This model only works because the people who pay nothing, impose no cost on the artist. If they were just taking physical products for free, then the artist would lose a lot of money.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    82. Re:Well, he's over 40. by mrchaotica · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You do that by not spending half your tax revenue on the military, like the US does.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    83. Re:Well, he's over 40. by phlinn · · Score: 1

      Universal Health Care, Welfare, and Socialist ideas are not social liberalism. Those would be better described as left wing. Social liberalism as I understand it is more or less just leaving people alone regarding their personal lives. Unfortunately, a large portion of the left wing in the US thinks it's legitimate to interfere with those lives once material wealth is involved. This is generally called economic liberalism in the US, but it's something of a misnomer.

      --
      "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
    84. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      It is a good thing he didn't try to make his living mainly off of his music.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    85. Re:Well, he's over 40. by polaris20 · · Score: 1


      These artists need to learn to stop shooting their mouths off against the very people who support them.


      Well that would in this case imply that college kids listen to Kiss in the first place, and we all know college kids aren't that stupid.

    86. Re:Well, he's over 40. by lahvak · · Score: 2, Funny

      Who in the hell is Gene Simmons, anyway? Never heard about the guy.

      --
      AccountKiller
    87. Re:Well, he's over 40. by FrankNputer · · Score: 1
      The non-standard selling method itself probably generated them a ton of publicity that they wouldn't otherwise have had.

      Exactly. What Radiohead did wasn't a business model - it was a publicity stunt. It worked out really well for them, too. Got a lot of people to buy their album on principle; even got a lot of people who would have never even gone out of their way to listen to it to "give it a spin" - brilliant strategy.

      But, a model for the future? No.

      One thing people REALLY need to consider: it's easy to talk about this "new business model that's going to emerge" - but you really should think about what that might be. I hear LOTS of people bandying that phrase about, yet virtually none of them seem to have a clue as to an alternative, in concrete terms, that specify how that money is to be made.

      It's easy to talk about T-shirts & playing live shows - but the profit margin on shirts isn't that great (they're really supposed to be a promotional tool), and how many of you have any idea how little most bands get paid to play live these days? Half the time, it's a losing proposition. Once you factor in all the expenses, you make less than a burger-flipper, if you make anything at all.

      Yes, the current model is messed up; yes, the RIAA is acting INCREDIBLY stupid; and yes, the changes in the landscape have real possibilities for things to change for the better - maybe. But please, people - do your homework before you simply jump on the bandwagon for unspecified change.

    88. Re:Well, he's over 40. by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      People already decide what they're going to pay for music. They either buy it, in CD form or digital download from iTunes, or they just download it for free.

      Why not pick up those customers who are somewhere between free and $15? That's the pinnacle of finding exactly what the market will bear. Those that would have bought the $15 CD will still do so, maybe they like having the physical object with the nicely printed cover, etc. There are a lot of people who only like the music $5 worth, isn't in the bands best interest to let them pay that $5 instead of denying that money, and just sending that person who doesn't value it at $15 to download it for free?

    89. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      Who the hell thought that a tape player that couldn't be fast-forwarded or rewound was a good idea? Even LPs let you move the needle around. I actually used my parent's 8-track when I was a kid (get out your calculators) and remember having to hit the track button to go to the previous track and listen for 10 or so minutes to listen to a section again. If mutiple songs were on one track you couldn't skip to the next one. It forced you to treat music as background noise since you had little control over how you listened to it. Then, like the article you quoted said, the tapes eventually would get eaten and were impossible to repair.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    90. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Bill Hicks put it far better than I could. "Here's the deal, folks. You do a commercial - you're off the artistic roll call, forever. End of story. Okay? You're another whore at the captialist gang bang and if you do a commercial, there's a price on your head. Everything you say is suspect and every word that comes out of your mouth is now like a turd falling into my drink."

      "And that goes for everyone... Except Willie Nelson".

      Hehe.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    91. Re:Well, he's over 40. by tuzo · · Score: 1

      Actually, I could see Kiss doing this. Kiss Meets Akira. I pray Simmons doesn't read Slashdot. :/

    92. Re:Well, he's over 40. by jamstar7 · · Score: 1
      I dunno who said it first, but somebody said "Gold might not get you good soldiers, but good soldiers can always get you gold."

      Personally, I never cared much for KISS's music. It was my generation's version of Britney Spears. 'Nuff said.

      --
      Understanding the scope of the problem is the first step on the path to true panic.
    93. Re:Well, he's over 40. by mseidl · · Score: 1

      He's like the guy who still owns (exclusively) an eight-track player in a world

      I bet he has that 8-Track on a lanyard around his neck to look cool with all the other iPod kids.

      Seriously though, I like Kiss' music, but Gene Simmons, you sir, are a tool. I'm going to download your entire collection right now...
    94. Re:Well, he's over 40. by jamstar7 · · Score: 1

      I honestly think a band like KISS could get away with giving their music away for free, since they have other avenues available to them to make a crapload of money.

      Who'd want it?

      Seriously, who'd want to download his music? I've downloaded a ton of stuff over the years, but I never downloaded KISS.

      --
      Understanding the scope of the problem is the first step on the path to true panic.
    95. Re:Well, he's over 40. by infonography · · Score: 1

      An still sticking is tongue out at people, jezz Gene grow up and KISS off. Still with a tongue like that it pays to advertise.

      --
      Sorry about the writing. Robot fingers, you know? Cliff Steele in DOOM PATROL #23
    96. Re:Well, he's over 40. by coastwalker · · Score: 1

      I'm not surprised that the gentleman is finding his audience resistant to buying his 'music'. Technically the product he sells is not music. Its a stage show backed up by a caricature of heavy rock music with a very limited range of variation. The music is entirely a secondary matter in his product so we can hardly be surprised that it is treated as the valueless disposable rubbish that it truly is. I look forward to hearing a proper rock band when the reformed Led Zeppelin perform in London on Dec 10. The whole pop mainstream heavy rock genre is excruciatingly embarrassing these days. The whole thing went off the rails in the UK when the hard working but talentless Motorhead took the genre away from its melodic roots. Bugger, Spouting all this trial rubbish means I must be over 40 too. Drat.

      --
      Facts are history now plebs have politics for religion on social media.
    97. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go ahead, write a song for us and perform it. I have a good feeling it will be awful.

      Nah. If I don't, someone else will.

      For free.

      Suck it, Gene.

    98. Re:Well, he's over 40. by blackjackshellac · · Score: 1

      Go to snopes, I think you'll find that this "quote" has nothing to do with old Winnie.

      On the subject of Gene Simmons, idiot of the day, it's bizarre to think that it has been 30 years since he was in his hayday (should have kept his makeup on too). When I was 17, 30 years ago, the music that was 30 years old then would have seemed positively ancient. Just post-WWII for cripes sake. This guy is an old fart who is totally out of touch with the real world.

      I'm a little pissed off about being 47, but most days it's really not too bad.

      --
      Salut,

      Jacques

    99. Re:Well, he's over 40. by misterooga · · Score: 1

      I wonder if Radiohead will still make as much if they release another album as there will no longer be "oooh, first time for the market" value.

      In that regards, I agree that few will succeed following this method.

    100. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here here,

      Gene Simmons creativity seamed to stem from "Rock all night and party everday". Wow stunned, I mean how did he ever come up with this stuff, and what a poor state music must have been in to allow this to become a standard.

      Gene Simmons is a marketing whore, I give you the KISS Coffin, the Kiss Credit card, and lets not forget those memorable Kiss cartoons.

    101. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had no idea that gold had no practical applications until Gene Simmons explained it all to me! Wow... how informative, and educated. What a great example. Really hits the point home that he doesn't know a damn thing.

    102. Re:Well, he's over 40. by rhakka · · Score: 1

      You're wrong about the validity of the business model.

      For almost 40 years public broadcasting has followed exactly this model, with total anonymity of its listeners and viewers. Sure, they get funding from other sources; and so can musicians (live shows, mercandise, comissions).

      The "pay what you like" method is completely valid as one source of income in a business model that has been demonstrated to be VERY successful so far.

      Squint a different way, and you could say the artists have inspired people to pay for their advertising for their live shows, merchandise, and possible future comission work.

    103. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Squirmy+McPhee · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There is not a valid business model when you say, "Pay whatever you want".

      Nonsense. When you get right down to it, virtually every business transaction follows this model -- it's just that we typically look at it from the seller's point of view rather than the buyer's point of view. Think about it. If you need a widget, do you obiently pay whatever the widget seller demands? No, of course not. You decide what you're willing to pay for the widget, and if the seller won't give it to you for that price or less you look for another seller or simply live without the widget. The bottom line is that you're not going to pay more than you're willing to. The reason we look at it from the seller's point of view is that the supply of widgets is limited, which means the seller doesn't necessarily need to sell to you, only to enough people that he can sell all of his widgets. But when you're talking about a digital product in the modern world, the supply can be unlimited. Once an unlimited supply is available, the seller has no choice but to accept whatever people will pay, even if that's nothing. You don't want to give it to me free? Fine, I'll go to someone who will. The software industry has, to some extent, figured out how to deal with this -- just look at the number of people making a living off free software -- but the entertainment industry is still trying to control the price of what has become essentially an infinite resource. I can't imagine they're going to succeed any more than they would if they tried to put a price on sunlight, but regardless they're in exactly the same position they would have been in 50 years ago if they priced records too high -- if they demand more than people are willing to pay, sales will suffer.

      Of course, with the current legal campaign it's difficult to tell just how much a "free" movie or song will really cost. But then, between DRM, rootkits, and the claims by some in the *AAs that ripping/copying for personal use is not fair use, it's also difficult to tell just how much a CD or DVD will ultimately cost. I, for one, am not willing to take on this cost uncertainty, so I don't download and I have pared my 100 CD/year habit down to almost zero.

    104. Re:Well, he's over 40. by false1 · · Score: 1

      I think Radiohead went overboard. There is not a valid business model when you say, "Pay whatever you want". If you disagree with this conclusion than consider how you will respond when your employer or customers decide they will start paying you whatever they want to and if that's not enough for rent, too bad for you. It's no way to make a living.

      How can you guys get on the internet and post that giving away content is not a valid business model. How much money is Slashdot making by giving away it's services? or Google? How about that teenage millionaire giving away Facebook backgrounds? How much did Mark Andreeson make giving away Netscape. You sound like Steve Ballmer crying about Linix.

      Musicians were crying to the high heavens when music recording was invented. "We make our money playing live music" they said. "Who's going to pay to see us if they can listen to recordings at home?" Years later after they've allowed the recording industry to attach itself to "music" like a giant, bloodsucking parasite they can't contemplate getting along without it. Simmons is like a crack ho who can't put down the pipe. Hasn't everybody bought or downloaded all the KISS songs already? Why the hell is he putting our a box set? Don't all the true fans already have all the material already including the bootlegs? He should be giving away that moldy crap to drive viewers to his web site and TV show. Business man indeed.

      Times are changing. It took some kid in a dorm room to hip the world to the idea of downloaded music. It will probably take another kid in another dorm room to show the suits how to make money at it.

    105. Re:Well, he's over 40. by DeadManCoding · · Score: 1

      You have a number of points that I agree with, such as artists not shooting their mouths off, and boycotting major label artists. However, a point that I disagree with is the "pathetic fanboy lemmings". The simple fact is that I listen to a number of "underground" metal bands, and to see them become major label artists is fantastic. I will continue to buy their music, because in the end, that's what I enjoy. But that won't stop me from ripping said CDs to my computer and listening to them wherever, whenever I damn well please.

      --
      "The only constant in the universe is change." - Unknown author
    106. Re:Well, he's over 40. by skuzzlebutt · · Score: 1

      "While you bitches were arguing about intellectual property on the Internets, I knitted a beautiful KISS yarmulke, which will be available on kissarmy.com." Gene Simmons

      --
      My debut novel AMITY now available: http://jeremydbrooks.c
    107. Re:Well, he's over 40. by bensode · · Score: 1

      If you disagree with this conclusion than consider how you will respond when your employer or customers decide they will start paying you whatever they want to and if that's not enough for rent, too bad for you


      IIRC, a salary was offered to me prior to accepting the job. It's that whole offer letter deal where they tell me what they are willing to pay me and I have the option to accept it, negotiate it or decline it.
      --
      "Keep at least 3-6 full bottles of hard alcohol on hand, a 2 week resignation notice,..." - Poetmatt
    108. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Shotgun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sorry. Everyone claiming that "pay what you want" isn't a valid business model have no sense of history. Listen to a little CCR to get a clue.

      Performers have been dancing a playing on the street corners ever since there were streets and corners. Throw out a hat and start playing.

      You don't need a penny,
      Just to hang around,
      But if you've got a nickel,
      Won't you lay your money down.

      Now we have the internet. The corner just got really big and really busy, and those nickels start adding up really fast.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    109. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wouldnt go so far as to say that as soon as you do a commercial you are a straight up corp whore. There are a lot of sports figures who promote products they would have used anyway.

      Also, I think Reznor should do an Apple commercial. If you've ever heard/read any interview where he talks about what mixing and computer equipment he uses, he'll go on and on about how he loves Apple. I am not an Apple user, and I kind of have a unfavorable opinion of them due to my Ipod dying, but thats beside the point. I love thier commercials, and especially the parodies of thier commercials, but I think Trent could do an awesome Apple commercial.

      A few years ago, I downloaded all of NiN's video's and a couple of interviews, and in one of the interviews Trent was asked how he felt about file sharing/p2p and he stated that he felt it was stealing and wrong. Now, NiN has (used to be) my favorite band since I was 13, then I heard that interview and kind of lost the desire to listen to NiN as much. (I never even bothered to d/l the last album, so I dont know if I even still like the music or not).

      Anyway, the point I am trying to make here is that his change in views kind of annoys me. I want to dislike him for flip flopping on an issue thats so important to the music industry, but at the same time I think he made the right choice. I'm hoping that he just finally learned the cost:value is skewed. At least, thats what I keep telling myself.

    110. Re:Well, he's over 40. by TopShelf · · Score: 1

      It's easy to talk about T-shirts & playing live shows - but the profit margin on shirts isn't that great (they're really supposed to be a promotional tool),

      Huh? A $20-25 t-shirt costs maybe $5 to produce in bulk. Sounds like a healthy margin to me...

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    111. Re:Well, he's over 40. by vimh42 · · Score: 1

      Basically Gene Simmons said that he doesn't want to be creative musically because being creative musically won't make him money. He also stated that you should sue out of house and home all potential future customers. Way to go.

      I've never really liked KISS but basically this puts Gene on the list of people I wouldn't piss on to put a fire out.

    112. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Mex · · Score: 1

      How the fuck was John Lennon relevant? None of his ideas are in use today.

    113. Re:Well, he's over 40. by sgant · · Score: 1

      Well, looking at it from that point of view there hasn't really been any "relevant" music in the past 30 years or so. That is in the Rock & Roll front.

      The innovation and experimentations happened in the 50' and 60's and ended somewhere in the 70's. A quote from a friend of mine: "Any time you have a new artistic format you have a period of creative development a period of creative explosion and then a period of rehashing. Rock is a mature art form. It's all been done before to one degree or another. Nothing wrong with that, but "rock and roll" is yesterdays music and the creative explosions are happening in other areas now."

      NIN and Radiohead are in the very broad genre of "Rock"...and they're very good and I like their music. But honestly, is it THAT radical and new and different than other things? Today it seems everything is a mix of something from the past. There really isn't any way around that as it's matured and no matter what you do, there is only so many ways you can make a song unless you do something that's so far removed from western music that it's almost unrecognizable as "music". Yes, when Rock started it too was a mixture of things in the past...but it quickly grew away from that and went into new and exciting territories. Now it's pretty much stagnant. Good music to be sure...but nothing radical.

      --

      "Leo Fender was in a 'state of grace' when he designed the Stratocaster." -- Paul Reed Smith
    114. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Fizzl · · Score: 1

      Yay, do I have my very own virtual stalker or are you randomly being an ass and posting peoples email addresses for the harvesting bots?

    115. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the difference between you quitting your job, and someone deciding not to pay for an album, is that your boss now loses your services, whereas people will still download the music for free, and won't lose anything. On the contrary. If I offer up the money I am saying "Hey this is good. Here is some cash to go make another one." I am paying for a continuation of the service. If I don't pay, the band quits making songs. Boss doesn't pay, I quit working. I don't pay, band quits working. Lots of parallelism there you have missed.

      The irony of your position is that much of what is purchasable is also locatable for free. So in some form this situation already exists. People are paying for music so the band will make more. Only now some bands are saying, "we want payment in direct proportion to the quality and not the ability of someone to sue you."

    116. Re:Well, he's over 40. by DesScorp · · Score: 0

      "Worse, he's a GREEDY dinosaur. Has anyone seen his "reality" show? My wife loves it, but I can't stand it because it's all about him trying to sell Kiss' collective souls for as much profit as possible. The guy seems like he cares much more about making money than enjoying life."

      How the fsck would you know that? By all indications, Simmons loves what he does. He's rich. He has a business empire. He's shacked up with Shannon Tweed, gets more pussy than Petco, and has two kids he adores. He gets millions of dollars for doing what enjoys most. I'd be willing to be he's enjoying his life a hell of a lot more than someone bitching on Slashdot.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    117. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Fweeky · · Score: 1

      I downloaded it for free because there was no sample. One of the tracks was posted to The Pirate Bay, allegedly by Trent himself, prior to the release.
    118. Re:Well, he's over 40. by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > How the fuck was John Lennon relevant?

      This.

      It sounds like the poster is a big Lennon or Beatles fan and wants people to think he's a deep, insightful person because of it.

    119. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Tolkien · · Score: 1

      I'm half and half depending on the topic, and I'm 25. Where do I fit in? :)

    120. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 1

      Worse, he's a GREEDY dinosaur. Has anyone seen his "reality" show? My wife loves it, but I can't stand it because it's all about him trying to sell Kiss' collective souls for as much profit as possible. The guy seems like he cares much more about making money than enjoying life. He comes off as loving money more than his family. I would not look to him for advice on what a good compromise in a new market economy is when it comes to digital distribution. If his show is any indication, that man would make you pay $50 a Kiss record and thank him for the privilege if he thought he'd get away with it.

      I'm not a fan at all of KISS or Simmons, but of course I know about him and the group. He is a genius when it comes to maximizing money out of the band. Many groups would not go as far as he does, some (ie. the estate of Elvis Presley) go that far or further. Simmons is all about the money. What some of you might not know is that when former original band members Peter Criss and Ace Frehley left the group originally, they lost everything. They have no rights of any kind to KISS - not the makeup designs, nothing. They probably get royalties, but that's it. When the original group reformed late in the 1990s, Frehley and Criss were put on contract. That's right. That means that Simmons and original member Paul Stanley make almost all the money off KISS. Simmons is really old school so it shouldn't come as any surprise that he thinks the old school methods will work. Among the over-60 group, not a lot of them really understand technology. Mick Jagger and David Bowie do. Offhand I can't really think of anybody else from that generation to whom the internet is more than "just another way to sell records to the kids".

    121. Re:Well, he's over 40. by L0rdJedi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Go ahead, try to make a living as a musician, I dare you. A handfull make it big, and the rest just get by.

      Maybe that's because, like actors, the damn industry is saturated. It's not about what you know, but who you know or who happens to see you playing at a club. Maybe if a few hundred people weren't "trying to make it big" we'd have some better music that we don't have to search for.

      I could care less either way.

    122. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Grendel70 · · Score: 1

      Gene Simmons is not a musician. He is a businessman. Gene Simmons is a money whore.
      --
      Perhaps you mean a different thing than I do when you say "science."
    123. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am sorry but you are a tool if you believe what is on the reality shows.

      You do know a lot of that is scripted and setup, also this guy has fucked more woman than you could ever think of and has probably given him a lot of confidence.

      'The Hills' on MTV represents what Laguna Beach is like also right?
      Unwashed masses will always believe what is on T.V. and be very bitter/jealous over that.

      He seems like he is very happy in life and his son doesn't seem to be all pilled up like Ozzy Osbournes son/daughter. Additionally if you saw any of the show than you would notice that he doesn't exactly have a normal relation with his wife but instead they decided to take care of the kids together and allow Gene to date other woman at the same time.

      Gene Simmons has a lot of credibility and understand what good music is, he was there making it and judging by the huge audiences they seemed to enjoy it also. I doubt some Slashdot user has better credibility or suggestions to improve the quality of music coming out or the way it is distributed; all the people around here are just bitter/jealous of anybody who has money and automatically try to turn your business model into a utopian open source socialist experiment.
      Radiohead was a clear example of how the business model failed no matter how many people try to alter the statistics on it around here to make it sound successful.

    124. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Never thought the guy had any sense or any talent. He made a lot of money shouting and sticking his tongue out. Spare me his opinions.

    125. Re:Well, he's over 40. by darkhitman · · Score: 1

      The soon-to-be-released(?) manga Detroit Metal City features characters who paint their faces much like KISS... that could be the source of the confusion.

      --
      Tell me something...it's still "We, the people"... right?
    126. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly it's going to happen. And you're the reason, you bastard, why they decided to sell out when they saw all the money their future selves would make. Why don't you do something useful instead like encouraging W Bush to fly his fighter plane while coked up and see how close he can come to crashing?

    127. Re:Well, he's over 40. by MikeFM · · Score: 1

      I've never been either so I guess I just suck. I've always been in my own alternate universe.

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    128. Re:Well, he's over 40. by jagdish · · Score: 1

      He is Gene Hackman's brother.


      Oh Wait...

    129. Re:Well, he's over 40. by uradu · · Score: 1

      Well, I would attribute a certain "droning sameness" to Radiohead more than NIN, and I do like Radiohead. KISS of course is much more style over substance, but perhaps that's just me.

    130. Re:Well, he's over 40. by hurfy · · Score: 1

      FYI

      8-tracks can have a fast-forward but most players didn't bother as there was usually less than 15min of music per 'side'. My player has FF and pause buttons. And like most everything else they were hard to repair cause the manufacturer made them that way not cause of the tech ;(

      If anyone could embrace the free music and sell the merchandise/tour model it should be KISS. Always thought they were a little over-merchandised even back in the day. Don't quite see how that is not viable at least for some. I bet even my mom has KISS dolls in her doll collection.

    131. Re:Well, he's over 40. by bogjobber · · Score: 1

      It's not anywhere near half, but your point still stands.

    132. Re:Well, he's over 40. by dannannan · · Score: 1

      There is not a valid business model when you say, "Pay whatever you want".

      Yes there is, and it's called advertising. You get people's attention, on the chance that people are more likely to pay for things they are aware of.

      D

    133. Re:Well, he's over 40. by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      I just Googled for something like "US military spending percentage" and found this as one of the first few hits. I have no idea if it is accurate itself or not, but at least I didn't pull the figure out of my butt.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    134. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Rary · · Score: 1

      "Gene Simmons is a dinosaur."

      By that, do you mean that he sucks?

      --

      "You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war." -- Albert Einstein

    135. Re:Well, he's over 40. by zerocool^ · · Score: 1


      I think Radiohead went overboard. There is not a valid business model when you say, "Pay whatever you want". If you disagree with this conclusion than consider how you will respond when your employer or customers decide they will start paying you whatever they want to and if that's not enough for rent, too bad for you. It's no way to make a living.

      You're absolutely wrong. Could not be more wronger.

      Radiohead did not say "Pay whatever you want". They said "Pay whatever it's worth to you, in addition we will charge you a small service fee".

      Ever seen an infomercial? IT'S ALL FREE, YOU JUST PAY SHIPPING AND HANDLING. Bullshit, the cost of the item is in the S&H. Same thing with the Radiohead album. So, in effect, what Radiohead is saying is "Our album is worth this much to us, and we're going to charge you that much, and if you feel that you want to pay more, go for it".

      It's not the same thing as rent, or employment, for which both parties are under contract, not to mention, they are both SERVICES, not GOODS. It's the same thing as buying any other disposable good: If I sold T-Shirts at $4.36 each, which is my actual cost for them, and then offered you the opportunity to "pay whatever you think it's worth", that would be ok. Same thing if I sold automobiles, or pickles, or toenail clippings. All they are doing is putting the power in the hands of the consumer, not the corporation. It's the difference between "This is what you have to pay to get it" versus "How much is it worth to you?".

      Consumer power, folks. Not stupid. Revolutionary.

      ~Wx

      --
      sig?
    136. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Darby · · Score: 1


      How you do combine social liberalism, such as universal health care, a good welfare program, and other socialist ideas with low taxes?


      Because he's talking about Liberalism, not about what people in the US called Liberals believe in. They're two completely different things.

      Socialism is a left philosophy. Liberalism is the center. It's what you're left or right of. Liberalism believes in individual liberty. The left agrees and wants to force equality at gunpoint. The right despises the idea and wants to enforce inequality at gunpoint.

    137. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Devv · · Score: 1

      Liberalism in Europe means the same thing as everywhere else. The meaning of the word doesn't change because it is misused to represent something that it isn't.

      When liberalism was created people wanted freedom but they also realized that anarchism would be a war of all. Because of this liberals accept a smaller government so that people can live together. One of the more extreme forms of liberalism is Manchester-liberalism which represents a very free market. If you can compete and feed yourself you die. Pretty much.

      It is true that liberals in Europe have realized that they have to give up some free market value in favor for social security and health care to prevent a cynical society but that doesn't change the meaning of the word Liberal in Europe. The kind of liberals you describe sound more like social liberalism. Look at Swedeb for an example. The big parties are all social liberal but with diffrent opinion on how much market freedom should be dropped for a bit of socialism.

      "There's Communist Parties, Socialist Parties and Green Parties who all believe in government interference in the market as well as disagree with the conservatives on social issues."

      Conservatism as an ideology doesn't define how free the market should be or what political freedom there should be. Conservatism focuses on slow developement so that bad decisions can easily be reverted. The ideology was created because of disgust over the french revoloution that had overthrown the government. Consevatism focuses on the point that the government is the work of generations and that it represents the culture and history of the country and if changes are made too fast bad changes will be made because so few people, only one generation, will make the decisions.

      This means conservatists can have diffrent opinions about socialism/liberalism and what changes to make but they agree that the changes should be made slowly.

      I am aware that conservatism has been used by rich, greedy people who are actually pretty happy with no changes what so ever or even reactionary because they liked the system where they would actually still be very rich. Again this doesn't change the meaning of the word, making conservatism an ideology that always opposes socialism. Revoloutinary socialism as described by Carl Marx as "communism" on the other hand...

      --
      +1 Agree -1 Disagree
    138. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 1

      Might have been a bad example. I don't know if 'anyone' knows what the hell sun is about at this point.

      --
      Everything will be taken away from you.
    139. Re:Well, he's over 40. by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      He invented matresses: http://www.simmons.com/

    140. Re:Well, he's over 40. by kinabrew · · Score: 1

      Actually, Churchill never said this.

      It's kind of disturbing that no one else here seems to have looked it up.

    141. Re:Well, he's over 40. by tacocat · · Score: 1

      This is the difference from pan-handling or begging and a business model.

      A business model has to show a process by which you can assure your investors that you have a plan for making money. And you can't do the music business without some level of investment -- even if it's a music studio for the CD's

    142. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Darby · · Score: 1

      "Oh, we'll paint our faces to cover up the fact our music sucks."

      No comment on the quality of their music, but I think the paint was to cover up how fucking ugly they all are. At least that was the speculation when they took off the makeup for the first time.

      I mean they, back then, made Keith Richards and Stephen Tyler look good *today*.

    143. Re:Well, he's over 40. by tacocat · · Score: 1

      And in my town they spend almost as much time telling you who sponsored the show as they might if they were doing commercials. Then they spend a week at a time telling you how much money you have to give them. It's not free. It's not even close. It's a variation on commercial radio with an ever increasing amount of time spent identifying the sponsors.

    144. Re:Well, he's over 40. by tacocat · · Score: 1

      I think it's very interesting to see the type of responses that have been posted here. The general thread is that there are lots of business models based on a "Pay what you want" scale. And these are generally fringe elements of business with minor budgets compared to the more normal business models. I almost said classic business models, but even the newest and most progressive companies are not a "Pay what you want" business model and they are still making many more digits than PBS, community theaters, and other things that fall under "The Arts".

      The Arts are always the first to take a hit when things get difficult financially. Michigan has effectively closed the door on anything related to Art and Culture for the forseeable future because the state has no money to sponsor. Anything that gets done here will have to be by other means.

      Once you step away from the relatively small industry of Art and Culture and look at other business models you will quickly find that there really is not viable example of "Pay what you want". And it should be noted that the music industry is not a small business and as such will be more likely to follow the more common business models in a more formal and rational sense of the word.

      Once you discard these fringe exceptions you arrive back at the original point. "Pay what you want" is not a business model. But the new business model is one where the middle-man goes from a 50-90% cost center to a 5-10% cost center because that is exactly what the internet has allowed to happen.

    145. Re:Well, he's over 40. by rhakka · · Score: 1

      That's funny. I listen all the time and I haven't paid a dime yet. Weird, your definition of "free" and mine must be really different.

      Commercial television is free too, you know. I didn't say commercial free, after all.

      Regardless of your oversensitivity to a very small amount of broadcast time being related to keeping the broadcasts alive, the business model is valid, and thriving. No, they are not relying ONLY on voluntary, unsolicited donations. I'm sorry, we don't live in utopia. But occasionally solicited donations do, in fact, represent a very significant revenue stream. Combined with a few other ways of garnering some cash, as I have already mentioned, it allows things to work quite acceptably for most of us.

    146. Re:Well, he's over 40. by amokk · · Score: 1

      I have a story...

      Once I went to the local fast food joint to get myself some tacos. The tacos normally sucked but when they are 3 for 99 cents people tend to be willing to put up with worse. Anyways, these tacos made me sick. They made me sick in a way that gave me a new appreciation for my asshole. During a particularly violent burst of shitting, I realized that sitting on the toilet shitting my guts while moaning in pain was oddly musical. Upon thinking about it further, the shitting cacophony had an odd sense of rhythm and the little droplets of shit hitting the surface of the water could be thought of as a sort of beat.

      Long story short, that day I took my musical shit made me as relevant as John Lennon. So please shut the fuck up about things which you really have no idea about. None at all. Go back to misspelling the names of classical composers and pretending that you know if or why they are important.

      Wanker.

      --
      I think, therefore I am an Atheist.
    147. Re:Well, he's over 40. by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      Then you'd have to call the Stones retro too, since they don't release albums but keep touring (just like KISS). You can't relegate them to a 70s band either, since a lot of their good tunes were in the 80s and 90s.

    148. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Darby · · Score: 1

      More movies should end with a rock scene, the other one I can think of is Rat Race - even if it was Smash Mouth, it was awesome..

      Rock and Roll High School. Ramones rocking out while the high school *explodes*.
      Can't get much more of a rock scene than that ;-)

    149. Re:Well, he's over 40. by yusing · · Score: 1

      That's a stupid quote, often abused by people excusing their cynicism. Who cares about the appeal to the authority of Winnie?

      If you're not a conservative by the time you're 40, congratulations. You whipped the pressure to become a greedy bitch in your slovenly old age, triumphed over the typical decline into selfish cynicism, and recognized that the future of humanity lies in universal compassion and justice.

      Fuck Churchill. And his fat stinking cigar.

      --

      "You must try to forget all you have learned. You must begin to dream." -- Sherwood Anderson

    150. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Lunarsight · · Score: 1

      >I was with you until you started bashing people who enjoy different types of music than you do. Who are you to say what >is good and what is crap? Was this directed at me? It seemed to be a direct reply to my original comment. I never said any genres were better than any others. I merely said there are a lot of spineless lemmings out there who will cluelessly follow their favorite artists wherever they go. That isn't limited to any one genre.

    151. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Lunarsight · · Score: 1

      You can't argue that Radiohead's selling approach worked for Radiohead on this album. Whether that approach is sustainable long term, or will work for all bands remains to be seen. I applaud them for trying it, but it's too early to say that this is definately the way of the future. You're right - it may not work for all bands, but it proves that there are definitely alternatives out there that are very profitable, for those willing to experiment.

    152. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Lunarsight · · Score: 1
      Drat. Formatting all messed up the first time.. Let's try again.

      I was with you until you started bashing people who enjoy different types of music than you do. Who are you to say what is good and what is crap? Was this directed at me? It seemed to be a direct reply to my original comment. I never said any genres were better than any others. I merely said there are a lot of spineless lemmings out there who will cluelessly follow their favorite artists wherever they go. That isn't limited to any one genre.

    153. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Wes+Janson · · Score: 1

      Thank you for explaining the economics of the situation much more clearly than anyone else I've heard so far. That was an outstanding post.

    154. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Lunarsight · · Score: 1

      You have a number of points that I agree with, such as artists not shooting their mouths off, and boycotting major label artists. However, a point that I disagree with is the "pathetic fanboy lemmings". The simple fact is that I listen to a number of "underground" metal bands, and to see them become major label artists is fantastic. I will continue to buy their music, because in the end, that's what I enjoy. But that won't stop me from ripping said CDs to my computer and listening to them wherever, whenever I damn well please. That's the problem - if you continue to support the bands that are on the big labels, the middlemen gets their piece of the pie. They use that funding to pay their lawyers to sue everybody with a pulse on their behalf. You effectively add to their warchest.

      Conversely, if you do not purchase the albums, but instead pirate them, then you open yourself up to the record label lawsuits. They either extort the money out of you (for those who want to avoid the legal process), or they take you to court, where you potentially can lose more. End result? They still end up getting money.

      In my humble opinion, the ONLY way to effectively combat large record labels is to completely starve them of ANY means of making money. Boycott them outright. You're kidding yourself if you think anything less will work.

      NOW is the IDEAL time to boycott them, since those companies that own BOTH record labels and television stations are going to be REALLY hurting economically as the writer's strike progresses. If they're already wounded, let's kick them while they're down, and add some salt to the proverbial wound. If you don't want to boycott them permanently, that's fine - but why not do it until the writer's strike is over, at least?
    155. Re:Well, he's over 40. by DarkFall · · Score: 1

      "I think Radiohead went overboard. There is not a valid business model when you say, "Pay whatever you want". A lot of people are making this argument, and I think it's missing the point. Radiohead didn't do what they did with "In Rainbows" in order to test the validity of a "business model". They did what they did in order to the test the validity of one method (among many) of distribution and compensation for said distribution method for one product in their "product line". Radiohead's business isn't to sell you "In Rainbows". Radiohead's business (and most other music or entertainment enterprises) is to successfully live off their art exhibition in order to create more art and have a decent standard of living. If this means giving away some part of their product, in order to motivate other sales (their box set, the CD that comes out in actual hard media form in January, or attending their concerts) then so be it. What they did with the "In Rainbows" online release is called "promotional material". And the real kicker, the really brilliant thing, is that they made a fair amount of money out of "promotional material".

      In essence..."pay whatever you want" wasn't, nor will it be a business model. It's a very successful marketing promotion that, incredibly, makes everyone win (except the RIAA).
    156. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Maestro485 · · Score: 1

      Everyone claiming that "pay what you want" isn't a valid business model have no sense of history. Listen to a little CCR to get a clue.

      Wasn't the band they were singing about called "Willie and the Poor Boys"?
    157. Re:Well, he's over 40. by GreyWolf3000 · · Score: 1

      But GOD gave rock and roll to us....through Kiss! The music is as timeless as the Man Upstairs.

      --
      Slashdot: Where people pretend to be twice as smart as they really are by behaving like children.
    158. Re:Well, he's over 40. by janeil · · Score: 1
      Not just a reply to the parent, but more to this whole thread.

      Whatever Churchill said or didn't say, it's comical to see all the posts as to the meaning of the word liberal. Who cares, and how sad that labels matter so much to us. But interesting to see the meaningful discussion that comes from a simple quote from some historical guy.

      As for Gene Simmons, he is consistent and logical in his points. I never liked his music either, but only a moron would try to argue that he wasn't a phenomenal success due to his own talents and hard work. For whatever reason, plenty of people really liked the music. Who in the hell are slashdotters to claim some superior sense of aesthetics? Music is just sounds in your ears, and we're all just "some guy" or gal, so you like what you like and others do the same. Try to come up with a rational argument against why Kiss made a gazillion dollars. Music is "popular" culture, and you just come off sounding like an envious fool.

      It's also ironic to have discussions about greed and taxes, etc., in conjunction with a guy who has been completely successful in all these avenues. Seems like a lot of the posters are in complete agreement with Gene!

      As for making a living as a musician, yes, it's saturated, but overall I think if you really deserve to make it big, you do. Making really good music just happens to be a pretty common talent, there's plenty of great songs to play and plenty of people who can play well. Making music is, after all, something all humans were born to do. Really good music isn't that hard to find. Being unique, being original, having the drive and the ego to break out of the crowd, that will always "make it big." But making it big just means making big $$ and appealing to some lowest common denominator or matching some demographic, it doesn't mean it's the "best" music in some purist's mind.

      I could care less what Gene says, too, though he amuses me much like Ted Nugent. I think, good for them, I'm glad they made a bunch of money and are nutcases! I'm not interested in accumulating wealth so don't consider his point of view important. But those of you talking about too high taxes, blah blah blah, probably should check him out, he's one of you.

      I was done, but just have to speak to the posts about how hard you've worked all your life, with two jobs or whatever. You're just incredibly lucky, and have done NOTHING to earn your easy life, but just the dumb luck to have been a human born in the US. There's a guy smarter than you, and has worked harder every day of his life, given more to his fellow man, but just happened to have been born in Darfur or some other place where he never had a chance. We (in the US and other places) live like kings, to pretend that our labor has earned us the lifestyle we enjoy is to look at the world through the wrong end of a telescope. It's small, selfish, petty, and greedy.

    159. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I've seen Simmons interviews where he talked about making money, and it was pretty clear he's one seriously hard-nosed businessman and knows exactly what he's doing (the kind of guy you'd want managing your retirement fund!)

      Didn't know that about the internal band contracts (I'm not a fan and don't follow 'em) but doesn't surprise me at all. Bet it surprised Frehley and Criss, tho!!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    160. Re:Well, he's over 40. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Gene Simmons was always crass, even when he was 18. He was just
      better at hiding it then. People like him are where the term
      "corporate rock" came from. Gene has always been about making
      money. I'm surprised it took him or Paul so long to chime in
      like this.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    161. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 1

      I still don't know what happened to my emails. They just never showed on my Gmail account for some reason. Very strange. Clearly whatever system they had this set up on will need tweaking for next time. (Assuming Trent doesn't do something entirely different.)

    162. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 1

      Reznor pimping Apple... Now see, that wouldn't bother me too much, if for no other reason than the fact he's used Apple computers for a long time to make his music. It'd be like... Oh I don't know, Joe Satriani pimping Fender guitars (now I await some geek to tell me he plays a Les Paul or something). It's the tool with which the music is created. That I have no real issue with. Same with athletes selling shoes, if they genuinely use them. That's fine. But when you whore yourself to sell Coke, Pepsi... That's the line.

      As for NIN, I've been a fan for 15 years. The Fragile was a bit overblown and I kinda tuned out. The viral marketing for Year Zero did it's trick on me and I became fascinated enough to pay attention, and bought the album. The first RIAA release I had bought in seven years. Downloaded it as well, as ripping it didn't produce a version that didn't distort like hell on my MP3 player.

      As for stealing... Now Trent and I disagree on that. Downloading has been ruled LEGAL here in Canada. We pay levies on media and on MP3 players. The CRIA (basically the Canadian division of the RIAA) have tried to get this knocked down, but common sense has prevailed. Their being compensated, so downloading is legal right now. That's just the way it is here. So if I download here, it's not stealing, because it's been ruled legal. However if I cross the border, it IS stealing. Now with other crimes, murder etc... That's illegal in all the civilized world. Just like breaking and entering etc... So while Trent is fully entitled to his opinion, and in his home country it is the correct one, outside the US there are those, like us here in Canada, who can legally download his work without opening ourselves up to criminal charges. Of course the sad thing is, these levies we pay... I guarantee Trent never saw one dime, because from what I gather it's all filtered to Canadian artists. Which means if I rocked out to a downloaded copy of "Survivalism" on my MP3 player, somewhere, Celine Dion's bank account registers a deposit.

      THAT is the real crime.

    163. Re:Well, he's over 40. by schon · · Score: 1

      The general thread is that there are lots of business models based on a "Pay what you want" scale. Uhh, no.

      The general thread is the every business model is based on "pay what you want".

      And your handwaving has done nothing to refute it.
    164. Re:Well, he's over 40. by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      Peter Criss wrote & sang "Beth"

      Correct. OMFG, I just realized that I LIKE some Kiss songs! I must be a dinosaur or unsophisticated or lame!

    165. Re:Well, he's over 40. by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      I had a thing or two to say about 8-tracks a couple of years ago in Good Riddance to Bad Tech

      Is there some sort of hack/module/whatever that could port only the good kuro5hin posts over to Slashdot? Surely you wizards could cook up something like this. TIA, and regards.

    166. Re:Well, he's over 40. by dangitman · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but Willie was freakin' loaded.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    167. Re:Well, he's over 40. by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      How you do combine social liberalism, such as universal health care, a good welfare program, and other socialist ideas with low taxes? Those things aren't social liberalism, those things are (as you said) socialism, which is economic "liberalism" (if you use "liberal" to mean "leftist" and not its literal sense of "free", which today would be considered economic conservatism). Social liberalism is the idea that people should be left alone if they're not hurting anyone; it's against the war on drugs, censorship, and other such moralistic legislation, in favor of privacy and civil liberties, gay rights, civil rights (e.g. for non-whites and women), and all the generally "libertarian" notions that go along with things like that. The economic side of "liberalism" (I'm using quotes because I dislike the corruption of the term to mean what we're taking it to mean here) is that it is a good thing for the government to take people's money to fund "social" programs like health care, welfare, etc.

      So to answer your question, you combine social liberalism and low taxes by leaving people alone in their private lives, AND leaving them alone in their economic lives, i.e. not taxing them. Which is what libertarians advocate. Of course, doing so involves doing away with state-owned socialist programs like those you describe...
      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    168. Re:Well, he's over 40. by aurispector · · Score: 1

      All well said! The real reason I like to contrast pharma vs music is this: Both patents and copyrights were conceived to, on one hand, encourage people to innovate by allowing them to profit and, on the other hand, to benefit society as a whole WHEN THEY EXPIRE. Although I think both systems have been amazingly successful at harnessing greed for the benefit of all, both systems are also being abused. As you say, good for Simmons. I say: good for Glaxo, too. And good for us when both of their products go to the public domain. NOBODY benefits if the system gets abused.

      I wouldn't blame a college kid for downloading "Beth", neither do I blame people for getting cheaper grey market drugs if they need them. I wouldn't blame a hungry guy for stealing a loaf of bread, either. Prosecuting any of the above places the blame on the wrong part of the system.

      --
      I have mod points. The reign of terror begins now.
    169. Re:Well, he's over 40. by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1

      "Strutter" in GH2 was a pleasant surprise; WTF happened?

      Activision, RedOctane, and Neversoft happened. Harmonix is run by a few music-crazy MIT grads who know what they're doing. The other companies are in it just for the money. In other words, we all witnessed the milking of a cash cow.

    170. Re:Well, he's over 40. by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      He and his bandmates changed music, probably forever. How is he NOT relevant? The man's been dead for a quarter of a century yet everyone knows who he was. Reznor's still alive and yet still fairly obscure.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    171. Re:Well, he's over 40. by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      That was the worst attempt at trolling I've ever seen. You need practice, son. Try again.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    172. Re:Well, he's over 40. by npsimons · · Score: 1

      If you disagree with this conclusion than consider how you will respond when your employer or customers decide they will start paying you whatever they want to and if that's not enough for rent, too bad for you. It's no way to make a living.

      No, no, no! You're looking at this the wrong way! I hate haggling just as much as the next guy, but this is *exactly* how the market used to work before regulation and those with power fucked it up. You don't just say "oh well, I can't pay the rent". You find someone else who will pay you enough. No one willing to pay you enough to make the rent? Change what you are selling. Get a different skillset, go to university, choose a new profession, and voila! You compete in another market where the demand is high.


      People like stability, though, so compromises were made. "Pay me and give me benefits, and I promise to stick around for a while instead of moving to the highest bidder." People traded freedom and mobility for safety and security. Only two problems: people become less flexible and able to adapt when in the same job for a long time, and those with power (employers, etc) have taken more than the employed agreed to. How do we fix this? Save more money, become financially independent, become more flexible and adaptable and be willing to tell your current employer to take a hike when they try to screw you over. Be honest: time is a very limited resource; get the highest price possible.

    173. Re:Well, he's over 40. by mqduck · · Score: 1

      Well, looking at it from that point of view there hasn't really been any "relevant" music in the past 30 years or so. That is in the Rock & Roll front.

      The innovation and experimentations happened in the 50' and 60's and ended somewhere in the 70's. This argument is about as good as one claiming that the Urban Folk Revival was nothing new, since "folk music" had been done a long time ago. Heck, it's no more convincing than saying Mozart was nothing new, since he was really just rehashing the style of music created by people like Bach. Really, to believe that rock music hasn't continued to evolve to this day can only be explained by willful ignorance.

      Personally, I think a person who loves music spends most of her or his mental energy loving good music, not rejecting unworthy music. The stereotypical big music fan is a big paradox to me.
      --
      Property is theft.
    174. Re:Well, he's over 40. by mink · · Score: 1

      I know this is an old thread to respond to but AFAIK the link you provide says that is is in fact over 60% when you add it all up. Specifically keep in mind the "one time only" emergency spending bills (usually in the tens of billions of dollars) that are often coming up in congress, they are not part of the official budget and make the books lok better then they are. From the bottom of the article:

      "The total requested military budget for 2007 was $699 billion.

      U.S. Military Budget[3] - DoD Base Spending: The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) has the single largest budget of any government agency in the discretionary budget. This department is responsible for four (4) separate branches of the United States Military - the Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps. This includes the cost of base administration, pay for military members, and the costs of repairing and procuring equipment. Last year (FY 2006), Defense Department base budget expenditures were $411 billion, nearly half of net discretionary spending. This year (FY 2007), it has increased to $430 billion, still about half. Next year (FY 2008), it is projected to grow to $481 billion, or 52%. This budget is the basic level needed to keep the DoD in readiness.

      U.S. Military Budget - War on Terror Base Spending : The War on Terror (WoT) incurs additional costs by other departments. When added to the DoD base spending, the amount comes to: $474 billion in FY 2006, which is 56% of net discretionary spending, $505 billion in FY 2007, and $554 billion in FY 2008, nearly 60% of discretionary spending.

      FY 2006 Supplemental Funding : The Defense Department base budget also does not include "one time only" costs attributable to the War on Terror, which are submitted as Supplemental Funding. In FY 2006, an additional $153 billion in Supplemental Funding was added to the base budget - the War on Terror received $120 billion, while $33 billion went primarily for Hurricane Katrina. As a result, 60% of last year's discretionary spending went to DoD/WoT.

      FY 2007 Supplemental Funding : For FY 2007, $70 billion has already been approved, while the President's FY 2008 Budget requests an additional $102 billion. If approved by Congress, total FY 2007 spending for DoD/WoT would be $673 billion, or 64% of the net discretionary budget. FY 2008 Budget Proposal : For FY 2008, the President has requested the following: The Defense Department Base Budget - $481 billion. WoT(non-DoD) Base Budget - $73 billion. Supplemental Funding for WoT - $145 billion. Total requested Dod/WoT spending is $699 billion, or 65% of total net Discretionary spending."

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    175. Re:Well, he's over 40. by mink · · Score: 1

      Cash did a cover of NIN with Hurt.

      I wouldnt want you to live a life like mine thinking "A horse with no name" was a Neil Young song. Thats why I hate America ;-).

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    176. Re:Well, he's over 40. by mink · · Score: 1

      Originally it was given to Argent to give to us.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  2. Are you on f---ing crack? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Because Gene Simmons certainly is.

    1. Re:Are you on f---ing crack? by phillips321 · · Score: 1

      Why anyone would want to have any association with KISS is beyond me!
      http://www.forumpix.co.uk/uploads/1195202879.jpg

    2. Re:Are you on f---ing crack? by stonedcat · · Score: 0

      I always suspected Gene Simmons to be a complete douche bag. However I lacked this recent revelation to make it stick completely.

      Thank you Gene for proving yourself as a failure of a human being. Please eat a KISS brand shotgun.

      --
      You can't take the sky from me.
    3. Re:Are you on f---ing crack? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      OK, the one at lower left is clearly a badger. But WTF are the rest supposed to be?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  3. amusing by mgabrys_sf · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Someone who was always about the merch and not the music would complain. Unless of course he's missing his weekly coke-money that came in from his risiduals which have all but dried up. Or perhaps the band just sucked and the kids have moved on 30 plus years later. I love the fact that industry that made most of it's money on the backs of the youth market has all but watched that market not only walk away but become outright hostile when sued (imagine that).

    In other news of the worthy for Gene and his ilk - water is wet amazingly enough.

    1. Re:amusing by ravenspear · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Indeed, I find it fascinating when labels or musicians insist on trashing college (and high school) kids on their music purchasing preferences, suing them, or otherwise treating them like crap when most of their revenue comes from this same audience. That sort of policy will certainly encourage them to give you more of their money. :rollseyes:

      The industry's only hope of recovering is to realize that their model needs to change to reflect current trends. I am in college and while I have downloaded music for free occasionally, I know a lot of people that do not. What I have also noticed is that regardless of whether people I know download or not, very few buy new music on CDs anymore. Some just listen to old (70s, 80s) music, and others I would assume can't afford to buy it. But whatever the reason, the younger generation seems to be saying to the industry "hey industry, we are no longer interested in the product you are offering and/or the way that you are offering it".

      So, instead of attempting to find out why this has taken place and shift their focus to offering a product that the market does want and will pay for, they have instead attempted to force continuation of the antiquated distribution mechanisms through litigation. This is a strategy that will ultimately end in failure, for obvious reasons which are too numerous to list. The real question is whether the industry will realize this and adapt before they go totally bankrupt. I suspect they will not and it will thus take the dissolution of the current structure before any permanent future strategy can be designed. It may have already been realized to some extent with the current increase in non-DRM digital outlets, although I am not sure if any of the current ones represent the final form of what the market is demanding.

      Of course, there is another more insidious element of the industry's "kicking and screaming" approach and that is the efforts they have taken to buy off the legislature. If they can succeed in getting their non-economically viable business models made mandatory by forcing them upon us as the law of the land, then it will take significantly longer for the questions of future distribution models to be worked out.

    2. Re:amusing by samplehead · · Score: 1

      Gene and drugs? Oh boy, you have no idea.

    3. Re:amusing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Indeed, I find it fascinating when labels or musicians insist on trashing college (and high school) kids on their music purchasing preferences

      Actually, I think he was trashing their preference to not purchase the music they listen to.

    4. Re:amusing by Nautical+Insanity · · Score: 1
      Amen brother. Being a college student as well (music major at that) I can confirm what you relate in your post. I don't know any of my friends who have purchased a physical music CD anytime recently.

      What I've found more interesting is the absence of any music from the industry's cash cows. I don't see in my friend's music libraries 50 cent, Jay-Z, or Britney spears. Instead, I've discovered that students are investing more and more into oldies, Indie groups, and local bands. It seems that the RIAA's problems stem more from the issue that the big-name acts that they've invested so much in are no longer selling records by the droves as their customers realize that the fringe groups are just as good and more unique. If that's true, blaming piracy is convenient. The only other explanation is that their flagship product is failing. Blaming criminals is much easier than blaming yourself.

      Granted, take my word with a hunk of salt. Music students tend to be omnivorous in their listening tastes and also spend most of their time collecting historic recordings of Stravinsky conducting the Rite of Spring. Have any other college students noticed a trend away from the flagship acts?

    5. Re:amusing by RedWizzard · · Score: 1

      Someone who was always about the merch and not the music would complain. If the music is just there to drive sales of merchandise then it makes sense to give the music away (or sell it very cheaply). The more people exposed to the music the better as it increases the market for the merchandise.
  4. just read this guy's wikipedia by Paktu · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is not the first stupid thing Mr. Simmons has said or done.

    In a later Fresh Air interview, satirist Al Franken related to Terry Gross his own encounter with Gene Simmons. According to Franken, he was awaiting a racquetball partner at a club when Simmons, whom Franken had not recognized, challenged him to a match, stating "I'll kick your ass" only to suffer an embarrassing loss to Franken. Simmons responds by calling for another match and when Franken indicates that since his racquetball partner has arrived, he can't play Simmons again, Simmons responds by making loud "bock, bock, bock" chicken sounds. Franken then offers to play Simmons with $500 at stake, at which Simmons walks away.[3][4]Franken tells Terry not to blame herself for her experience with Simmons, and that Simmons behavior at the racquetball made him "the most awful person I've ever met."

    1. Re:just read this guy's wikipedia by DrLang21 · · Score: 1

      This is nothing new. Simmon's is well known as an asshole (flamebait me if you desire). If people like his music that's fine, but I don't think too many people are being fooled by his character.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    2. Re:just read this guy's wikipedia by ocbwilg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's funny. It's a fairly well-established fact that Gene Simmons has an amazing aversion to gambling. His rationale is that when it comes to business and money, he always wants to be on the winning team. With gambling, there's a chance you'll lose. Even "his" well-publicized $100,000 bet at the Kentucky Derby wasn't placed by him, it was allegedly done behind his back by his wife. But it's also entirely possible that it was done as a publicity stunt to stir up interest in him and his various projects (Family Jewels, the IRL, etc).

      At any rate, it's fairly obvious that he doesn't know what he's talking about. And it is odd that someone who has made the overwhelming majority of his "music-industry" money from things other than album sales would take such a vehement stance against the newly emerging models for the music industry. But it's clear from the example he gave that he doesn't understand the market. He equates what Radiohead did with "Opening a store and saying 'Come on in and pay whatever you want,'" but his example is comparing brick and mortar stores (expensive to open and mainatain) with a web-based distribution service (much cheaper, much less overhead). The two business models (the one he expressed and the one that Radiohead tried) are completely different.

      What might be more interesting would be his response upon finding out that Radiohead made at least as much money from their With Rainbows experiment than they have from traditional album releases, and that there's still a "special edition" CD to be released and sold yet. My guess (based on Gene's past behavior) is that he wouldn't care. He's very focused on making money at every opportunity, and I suspect that the notion of an unpaid download offends his sensibilities, even if the system is still generating more revenue for him than the traditional model.

      Don't even get me started about his stupid comments like "Every little college kid, every freshly-scrubbed little kid's face should have been sued off the face of the earth." Nothing like trying to sue your customers out of existance. After all, it worked for SCO.

    3. Re:just read this guy's wikipedia by someone1234 · · Score: 1

      But this was no gambling. The win or lose scenario was based purely on skill, not luck.

      --
      Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
    4. Re:just read this guy's wikipedia by brianwgray · · Score: 1

      "Come on in and pay whatever you want" I saw it more like: "Come on in and take a cheap party favor. If you like any merchandise you see; we have a box set for $82.81."

      --
      -BrianWGray
    5. Re:just read this guy's wikipedia by phantomlord · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What might be more interesting would be his response upon finding out that Radiohead made at least as much money from their With Rainbows experiment than they have from traditional album releases, and that there's still a "special edition" CD to be released and sold yet. The Radiohead thing is only one data point... I don't think it necessarily shows that mass internet distribution would be profitable.

      I know people who bought all of Loki's games, even if they didn't like some of them, because they wanted to support a new company that was catering to something they wanted. How many people threw a few dollars at Radiohead, even if they don't like Radiohead's music, just because they're one of the first big bands to do this ? When every band does it, you'll lose that factor because it's not something special anymore.

      Radiohead also already benefited from the existing recording establishment... They were backed by a music distributor who made sure they got on the radio and MTV, that the right professionals were managing their tours, etc. Would people care about Radiohead's new album (in such a large quantity) if they weren't already established as a AAA band? I don't see people dumping millions on the quality bands I see locally who offer their stuff online.

      My regional grocery store chain is cutting back the number of brands they offer for any given particular product because "people get confused when they have too many options." If you go from having 100 choices for music to having 100,000, you probably won't even know where to start looking for what you want to hear. Yeah, it'll be cheaper than the current model, but assuming 95% of it is crap, you're filtering out 5 albums out of 100 versus 5,000 out of 100,000.

      In short, I don't think the business model has proven itself on an industry wide scale based on Radiohead's experience (which is the optimal experience, rather than the median experience).I think the traditional companies can still provide a benefit in the internet age, but they're going to have to adapt (they could theoretically separate the wheat from the chaff and narrow down that huge selection to the 5,000 good ones for you) and they aren't going to have the margins they used to take anymore (so they'd better make sure they're getting you the wheat).
      --
      Don't leave your mind so open that your brain falls out. Don't close it so much that you cut off the blood.
    6. Re:just read this guy's wikipedia by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Not to mention in his warped example actual physical goods are being given away. Downloads are not physical, obviously, so the example is retarded at best.

    7. Re:just read this guy's wikipedia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even "his" well-publicized $100,000 bet at the Kentucky Derby wasn't placed by him, it was allegedly done behind his back by his wife um, Simmons doesn't have a wife - while he's been with Shannon Tweed for many many years - they refer to themselves ans happily unmarried
    8. Re:just read this guy's wikipedia by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      I know people who bought all of Loki's games, even if they didn't like some of them, because they wanted to support a new company that was catering to something they wanted. How many people threw a few dollars at Radiohead, even if they don't like Radiohead's music, just because they're one of the first big bands to do this ? When every band does it, you'll lose that factor because it's not something special anymore.

      True, but Radiohead made a crapton of money. Even if you think half of what they made was from people paying them solely for the novelty of it, that's still a good story.

      In short, I don't think the business model has proven itself on an industry wide scale based on Radiohead's experience (which is the optimal experience, rather than the median experience).

      The median experience doesn't have to be near Radiohead's optimal experience in order for it to prove itself.

      However, it is very true that it hasn't proven itself on an industry-wide scale. It's only one data point.

      But here's the key point: Prior to this, there were no data points, and it was people saying it was possible vs people saying it was impossible. Well we now have a data point, showing that at least one band did it and made a boatload of cash. Obviously more data is needed before you can say exactly where and when it can be successful, and more importantly will it work for your band, but the whole idea of "people will never pay for something they can get for free" has been proven false.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    9. Re:just read this guy's wikipedia by phantomlord · · Score: 1

      True, but Radiohead made a crapton of money. Even if you think half of what they made was from people paying them solely for the novelty of it, that's still a good story. From the stories I've read, Loki's failure was a combination of financial mismanagement and what they had to pay for those AAA titles they ported. The money was going out faster than it was coming in. Extravagancies of big name bands aside, bands generally don't have that problem, especially bands who are writing their own material.

      But here's the key point: Prior to this, there were no data points, and it was people saying it was possible vs people saying it was impossible. Well we now have a data point, showing that at least one band did it and made a boatload of cash. Obviously more data is needed before you can say exactly where and when it can be successful, and more importantly will it work for your band, but the whole idea of "people will never pay for something they can get for free" has been proven false. I'm not judging the data or denying that this isn't a data point, simply forewarning that a single data point doesn't prove a wider business model. As for whether or not people will pay for something they can get for free, a lot of people still didn't pay despite the profits and it remains unclear how many paid just to show that it could work (and whether or not that is to get future artists to do the same so they don't have to pay)/out of novelty/because they really liked the album or band/etc. There needs to be a lot more data before we can draw conclusions from it.
      --
      Don't leave your mind so open that your brain falls out. Don't close it so much that you cut off the blood.
    10. Re:just read this guy's wikipedia by ocbwilg · · Score: 1

      Radiohead also already benefited from the existing recording establishment... They were backed by a music distributor who made sure they got on the radio and MTV, that the right professionals were managing their tours, etc. Would people care about Radiohead's new album (in such a large quantity) if they weren't already established as a AAA band? I don't see people dumping millions on the quality bands I see locally who offer their stuff online.

      True. But there are a number of other artists who got their first exposure solely from being available online. Gnarls Barkley is one that immediately springs to mind. And while it's true that your quality local band isn't making millions off of their music being available online, they also aren't making millions from the recording industry either. So there's a sense of appropriateness missing from that comparison. The biggest and best-known bands will make millions. The unknown bands may or may not make money, hopefully based on the quality of their music. If they make appealing music that becomes popular then the Internet has the potential to be a very low-cost distribution method that can get them national recognition without having to sell their souls to a record label.

      I think the traditional companies can still provide a benefit in the internet age, but they're going to have to adapt (they could theoretically separate the wheat from the chaff and narrow down that huge selection to the 5,000 good ones for you) and they aren't going to have the margins they used to take anymore (so they'd better make sure they're getting you the wheat).

      Wait...are you claiming that the recording industry is able to separate the good artists from the crap for us? Have you seen the crap that they release and call music? What the music industry releases and puts money behind promoting isn't the best music, it's the music that has been focus grouped, marketing-friendly and demographic tested to the point where they know that they can count on X amount of sales. If you want more Britney Spears and boy-band-a-likes then let the recording industry pick your artists for you. But I sure don't...

    11. Re:just read this guy's wikipedia by phantomlord · · Score: 1

      Wait...are you claiming that the recording industry is able to separate the good artists from the crap for us? Have you seen the crap that they release and call music? No... I'm saying if the RIAA wants to stay in business in an internet age, they're going to have to find a way to make themselves relevant again. I suggested the option that they find the good bands for us as a way of being relevant, I didn't say they currently do a good job of it.
      --
      Don't leave your mind so open that your brain falls out. Don't close it so much that you cut off the blood.
  5. Live bands shouldn't have any problems by DrXym · · Score: 1
    Kiss must be one of the most profitable touring bands in existence and that's where the majority of the money lies. Assuming Gene is all about the music, why not do what Prince or other artists are doing and use his back catalogue to promote his tours?

    I can see how record studio artists might shit a brick at the prospect of giving away music etc. but definitely not live bands.

  6. Krispy Kreme and ol' Gene by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's clear what Gene Simmons' priorities are.
    Oh, besides being a greedy bastard.

    Disclaimer: I do not read EW -- I just remembered that quote from a guitar magazine awhile back ;)

    1. Re:Krispy Kreme and ol' Gene by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Maybe he's too dumb to be convinced when smart people tell him to give away his stuff for free ;-)

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    2. Re:Krispy Kreme and ol' Gene by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      He doesn't have a "problem" in the way you seem to define it. He just recognizes that making music for a living is dead in the water, and that we've gone from a sort of golden age where we have more music available than we know what to do with, to a period where aspiring artists will settle back and never really take the steps necessary to produce the culture we all love to hate to pay for. Gene is already covered in this regard. He's more or less expressing his frustration at the coming world without a good rock band in it.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    3. Re:Krispy Kreme and ol' Gene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Without greed you would have no need for a "fantastic" standard of living.

    4. Re:Krispy Kreme and ol' Gene by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      "It's clear what Gene Simmons' priorities are.
      Oh, besides being a greedy bastard.
      "

      I keep seeing these dumb comments about "greed" and "he was in it to get rich".

      Well, fscking duh. Of course he was in it to get rich. Rock bands are started with two dreams in mind...get rich, and get laid. Anyone here who's ever been in a band and claims they want neither is a goddam liar.

      And please, no lectures about artistic integrity or changing the world being the most important things. No one would give a shit about Bob Dylan or John Lennon if they hadn't sold millions of records. For you people that think Lennon and McCartney did it all for artistic purity, I'd suggest you listen to what McCartney himself says about that....when they were songwriting, Lennon used to tell him "We have the house, now lets write a pool. Later, we can write a jaguar and then maybe a nice vacation". I'd argue that no one in music has guarded their copyrights more jealously than Apple Corps, the Beatle's holding company.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    5. Re:Krispy Kreme and ol' Gene by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      Slavery is good. It is what gave the Roman world its fantastic standard of living.

      No, it was trade that did that.

  7. Music's dead? by Entropius · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The headline says it all.

    "Music *industry* woes".

    Music, itself -- the part that involves people getting up on stage and singing/playing/whatever, and maybe selling recordings if they're good enough -- is doing just fine.

    People still write songs and play them, and will keep on doing so independent of the success or failure of any particular method by which others profit off of them.

    1. Re:Music's dead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      Fuck music! Money is what we want!

    2. Re:Music's dead? by stormguard2099 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A great analogy in my opinion would be if every professional sports team suddenly disbanded. We wouldn't call this "the end of sports!!!!1!111" because there would still be people who go and play after school, on the weekends. Not because they are contractually obligated to or they are intent on some sort of monetary gain but because they enjoy it.

      In the same sense, people are still going to make music even if every label closed tomorrow and no one ever sold another cd. Obviously this is an exageration but the point remains the same. If every single comercial avenue of music closed down there would still be people making music.

      --
      http://greenobyl.com/ please.... think of the children!!
    3. Re:Music's dead? by rolfwind · · Score: 5, Interesting
      What is interesting is that Simmons puts the greatest argument against records in that article himself:

      There is nothing in me that wants to go in there and do new music. How are you going to deliver it? How are you going to get paid for it if people can just get it for free? I will be putting out a Gene Simmons box set called "Monster" -- a collection of 150 unreleased songs. KISS will have another box set of unreleased music in the next year.
      2 boxed sets of unreleased music - at best second rate crap that was not good enough to put out the first time - coming. All to just make money as he admitted in the first sentence was his main motivation since making music for it's own sake or attracting new fans isn't enough by itself.

      I don't know what motivates musicians, but knowing enough young visual artists, when they start out, most of them are ambitious, just want to make an impact on the world, and make their living doing what they love which doesn't necessarily mean making a fortune. Making an impact seems to be especially important to them -- although I don't know if that's just intended as a road to money.
    4. Re:Music's dead? by easyTree · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's a good analogy. To my mind, neither of these pursuits (sport, music) would be any the worse from having the business people removed from their operations.

      Today is a new world. Certainly within music, noone needs the _industry_. Producer and consumer are able to communicate directly via the internet. The industry's contribution is to insert themselves in the process for the purpose of taxation, which serves only them. Without them, the tightness of the feedback loop (consumer is able to give their feedback immediately after downloading the album and the musician is able to take those comments on board and may choose to alter their approach (or not), moments after reading it) is surely going to lead to everyone being a whole lot happier.

      Radiohead and Reznor are demonstrating this; surely that obvious, even to someone who paints their face?

      Anyhow.. it's painful to watch the industry-formerly-profiting-from-music die (and it's putting up a great fight), but die it will. If we stop feeding it, that will help.

      Say hello to tomorrow :D

    5. Re:Music's dead? by DavidShor · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Sure, there will always be some music played. However, the equilibrium music production reached when the only incentive to produce is one's own joy is less than the amount that produces a social optimum.

      When someone plays music, it benefits people who listen to the music as well as the producers. In an ideal world, people who listen to the music would prefer to pay the musician for extra music then have no extra music at all. So in order to achieve socially optimal music production, artists need to be compensated for the utility they bring listeners.

      To some extent, this is done by the prestige and fame system, but this seems to create rather curious incentive structures and marginal effects.

      Not that this justifies the RIAA stance, there is quite a bit of evidence that our copyright system actually discourages production by allowing artists to live off the earnings of previous songs. Even if it is against the immediate interests of listeners and artists, we need to create an incentive structure that is best for society.

      Personally, I think that we should reduce copyright times to 4 years, as research has shown that period maximizes the incentive to produce music. Marketing can be expensive, so sometimes musicians will release their music free, but that is their choice. At the same time, fines for downloading copyrighted materials should be decreased drastically, to about two times the purchase price, so that the dispute can be handled in small claims court, minimizing transaction costs.

    6. Re:Music's dead? by stormguard2099 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      noone needs the_industry I wouldn't say that no one needs them. Surely musicians can't tour as extensivly without financial backing or have the same promotion without a label. While radiohead and reznor can self promote and distribute themselves, how many other bands can boast the same? Don't take this to mean that I am whole-heartedly supporting label but I do think they serve a purpose.
      Labels form and they search for talented, undiscovered acts to sign that while they may already be popular in their own sense, get much more exposure due to association/touring with a larger band. Also, most small acts couldn't afford the distribution costs on their own. It's my understanding that this is why labels are formed.
      Back in the day I think this was really the only way to make it in the biz but now the internet makes promotion AND distribution much easier so that these labels aren't the sole means. They are still have a value but with the advent of the internet it's not as crucial as in the past.
      The point i am trying to make is that they are do serve a purpose but that they no longer have the monopoly that they once had.
      --
      http://greenobyl.com/ please.... think of the children!!
    7. Re:Music's dead? by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      When someone plays music, it benefits people who listen to the music as well as the producers. In an ideal world, people who listen to the music would prefer to pay the musician for extra music then have no extra music at all. So in order to achieve socially optimal music production, artists need to be compensated for the utility they bring listeners.
      I don't understand that argument. Surely, artists need to be compensated for the work that they produce? Now the utility of listeners overall is mainly increased by improved distribution (to reach more people) and replication potential (to replay the same music several times). However, in the modern world, neither of these is really the artist's work per se. So why should the artist compensation be linked to utility?
    8. Re:Music's dead? by hoopshank · · Score: 3, Funny
      "2 boxed sets of unreleased music - at best second rate crap that was not good enough to put out the first time"


      No, the stuff Kiss and Simmons put out first time was 'second rate crap that was not good enough to put out the first time'. These box sets are surely third rate crap that it would have been criminal to put out the first time.

    9. Re:Music's dead? by Walles · · Score: 1

      A great analogy in my opinion would be if every professional sports team suddenly disbanded. We wouldn't call this "the end of sports!!!!

      Considering most people's definition of "sports" is "watching others do stuff on TV", I think that event would actually be considered the end of sports by a large part of the population.

      --
      Installed the Bubblemon yet?
    10. Re:Music's dead? by OgreChow · · Score: 1

      Socially optimum? If something is worth something to someone, they will acquire it at the lowest rate they possibly can. That is the social optimum. If this causes a dip in supply in this case due to prices suddenly dropping (due to a shift in the curve because of new technology), demand WILL NOT be decreased. There will always be a demand for music. When there is a demand, entrepreneurs find a way to fill it. Supply will grow, but maybe not in the same way that it grew before. Sit back and enjoy the ride -- you'll see. People will think of ways to deliver music that neither you nor I have imagined. Always bet on innovation, and always bet that you will find ways to happily spend your money in a free market.

      The alternative? Shut down half the Internet, put strict controls on everything at the ISP level, criminalize people who download music, and force everyone to pay $15 for CDs. Give the music industry has no reason to innovate. Watch the free market fail.

    11. Re:Music's dead? by redtux1 · · Score: 1

      Labels form and they search for talented, undiscovered acts to sign that while they may already be popular in their own sense

      No they dont - they search for "musicians" that they can use as a marketable commodity that they can control to make money

    12. Re:Music's dead? by untaken_name · · Score: 1

      we need to create an incentive structure that is best for society.

      Honestly curious here: Why? What on Earth dictates this?

    13. Re:Music's dead? by DavidShor · · Score: 1

      I don't really care at all about the artists well-being. But unless his compensation is linked to utility, he will under-produce music.

    14. Re:Music's dead? by mini+me · · Score: 1

      Also, most small acts couldn't afford the distribution costs on their own.

      This is a problem faced by a lot of small businesses (and a small touring band is a small business). As such, record labels aren't the only way to raise capital. But what the record labels do provide is the business expertise, allowing the artists to focus on their art.
    15. Re:Music's dead? by DavidShor · · Score: 1
      "Socially optimum? If something is worth something to someone, they will acquire it at the lowest rate they possibly can. That is the social optimum."

      Do you know what the social optimum is? It is the added aggregate utility of everyone in the economy as a function of music produced. This function is bounded, and possesses a maximum, this maximum is the social optimum. The social optimum is not a price, but an amount.

      The marginal cost of producing music is still high, though decreasing, and as long as artists are not compensated for the utility they create, they will under produce music.

      "The alternative? Shut down half the Internet, put strict controls on everything at the ISP level, criminalize people who download music, and force everyone to pay $15 for CDs. Give the music industry has no reason to innovate. Watch the free market fail."

      I don't see why this is so. If RIAA lawsuits were handled in small claims court for a much smaller sum, and were levied against more people, I have a feeling that downloading would go down. Not only that, but if we shorted copyright times, the amount of sharing that would be illegal would drastically decrease.

    16. Re:Music's dead? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      So why should the artist compensation be linked to utility?

      Because at least in the US, the constitution explicitly states that the reason for copyrights is utility: the collective advancement science and useful arts. It notably has nothing to say about simply rewarding people for doing work.

    17. Re:Music's dead? by DaFallus · · Score: 1

      Read Dan Haggerty's reply to Gene Simmons in the form of an open letter

      --
      No one cares what your captcha was

      Houston TX, USA
    18. Re:Music's dead? by runningman24 · · Score: 1

      Not that this justifies the RIAA stance, there is quite a bit of evidence that our copyright system actually discourages production by allowing artists to live off the earnings of previous songs. Even if it is against the immediate interests of listeners and artists, we need to create an incentive structure that is best for society.
      Done. This is where the record labels come in. Their role is to sign artists to such one-sided deals that they must tour continuously and have several successful albums before they even begin to generate a profit.
    19. Re:Music's dead? by Logic+and+Reason · · Score: 1

      You claim that there is a "socially optimal" level of music production. I challenge you to show how we are to determine that level, or even to prove that such a level exists in the first place.

      More than that, this kind of utilitarian argument bugs the hell out of me. When did we begin to see the coercive force of government as a tool to "improve" society? (Never mind the question of whose definition of "improve" we're to use!)

    20. Re:Music's dead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2 boxed sets of unreleased music - at best second rate crap that was not good enough to put out the first time - coming. All to just make money as he admitted in the first sentence was his main motivation since making music for it's own sake or attracting new fans isn't enough by itself. Calling the unreleased stuff second-rate assumes that the released stuff is first-rate, and that's a hell of a stretch for KISS.
    21. Re:Music's dead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the fans are paying nothing for the music, you make the same amount whether it's good music or not.

    22. Re:Music's dead? by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Say hello to tomorrow :D

      "Today is only yesterday's tomorrow" - King Crimson

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    23. Re:Music's dead? by DavidShor · · Score: 1

      Proving that an optimum exists is trivial, the aggregate utility as a function of music production is a bounded function, and all bounded functions have absolute maxima. By the general welfare theorem and Coases theorem, a properly designed IP law would reach this social maximum.

      As for your anti-utilitarian rant, are you against pollution control and the Do-Not-Call list? Its the same logic.

    24. Re:Music's dead? by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      Guess what, I didn't start my career as a Director of IT either, I started as a junior programmer. Just as anybody starting out in any job has to start at the bottom and work their way up, so too do musicians. They do local shows and promote their music directly. If they're good, they start playing shows further from their home town. Eventually they're touring around the country.

      Why do musicians some how assume that because they're "artists" that they don't have to follow the same rules of life as everyone else?

    25. Re:Music's dead? by Logic+and+Reason · · Score: 1

      Proving that an optimum exists is trivial, the aggregate utility as a function of music production is a bounded function...
      And how do you define "aggregate utility"?

      As for your anti-utilitarian rant, are you against pollution control and the Do-Not-Call list?
      Yes.
    26. Re:Music's dead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2 boxed sets of unreleased music - at best second rate crap that was not good enough to put out the first time..

      I've never liked KISS much, but assuming their unreleased music will be worse could be wrong - maybe it just wasn't catchy and bouncy enough and therefore too risky to put on an album. Wouldn't it be ironic if what they didn't release was actually decent? ["Uh, the real art we produced was just too risky - from a business perspective"]lol
    27. Re:Music's dead? by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      There is nothing in me that wants to go in there and do new music. How are you going to deliver it? How are you going to get paid for it if people can just get it for free? I will be putting out a Gene Simmons box set called "Monster" -- a collection of 150 unreleased songs.KISS will have another box set of unreleased music in the next year.
      2 boxed sets of unreleased music - at best second rate crap that was not good enough to put out the first time - coming. All to just make money as he admitted in the first sentence was his main motivation since making music for it's own sake or attracting new fans isn't enough by itself.
      This may be the case with some, but not all. Led Zeppelin's Coda record (they dodn't have CDs back then)* was stuff that wasn't released until Bohnam died from drinking but every track was killer.

      Of course, we are talking about the best band to ever make a record here...

      But the point is, back when Kiss (and the incomparably better Zeppelin) were making records, you could only fit 45 minutes of music at most on an LP. Invariably there was a song or two that they couldn't fit, and had to decide what to leave out.

      They don't really have that problem with today's 72 minute CD. Many new CDs don't have any more than 40 minutes of music on them. These ar ethe guys whose CDs you don't want to buy, because if they can only come up with 40 minutes worth, there are going to be some loser tracks.

      There were even ones like that when I was a teenager. After getting burned by bands who had a song I liked on the radio, buying the LP, and finding that it all sucked except the one song from the radio, I started buying ONLY "Best Of", "Greatest Hits", and live albums.

      I missed a lot of good music this way. The only song that sucked on Aerosmith's first album was "Dream On" (emo in 1970?) the one they played on the radio. I only bought it after hearing a friend's copy.

      The music industry has always been full of fucktards.

      -mcgrew

      * Why did they stop calling them "records" when they became digital? It's still a record of a performance or performances. And why do they still call the tracks "tracks" since, unlike vinyl, thare are no discrete tracks? Why not call the tracks "files"?
      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    28. Re:Music's dead? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      While radiohead and reznor can self promote and distribute themselves, how many other bands can boast the same?

      I dunno, let me log into MySpace and see how long it takes me to count to a million.

      Even for the few bands capable of reaching the cusp of The Big Time, record companies still do not provide an irreplacable service. The musicians can always hire a manager to handle the promotion, financies, scheduling, embezzlement, etc.

    29. Re:Music's dead? by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

      2 boxed sets of unreleased music - at best second rate crap that was not good enough to put out the first time - coming. All to just make money as he admitted in the first sentence was his main motivation since making music for it's own sake or attracting new fans isn't enough by itself. When you're talking about a starving artist who hasn't had a break, yeah, money is important, art meets commerce and commerce has to have a say. But he's in the ideal position as an artist. He doesn't need money anymore and can do whatever the hell he wants, regardless of how big of a commercial success it would be.

      Of course, one can also say that art comes from pain and adversity. It's hard to create something searing and from the soul when sitting in the lap of luxury without a care in the world. Of course, it's also hard to concentrate when your bellybutton is pressing against your spine and you're mad from hunger.

      Let's just compromise and agree that Gene Simmons is a twat. Richard Simmons rocks harder than that.
      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    30. Re:Music's dead? by DorkRawk · · Score: 1

      You're right nobody would stop playing sports or music if the professional framework were gone, but would it be at the same level it is today? If artists (or athletes) can't live off their work, they are dividing their time between staying alive and working on their art. Yea, lots of bands make great albums while holding day jobs, but if your art is supporting you, then you can devote 100% of your time to making it.

      Think about all the after work/after school/in your free time projects you do. Imagine how much more you could do with them if you didn't have to rely on an external source of income.

    31. Re:Music's dead? by Wildclaw · · Score: 1

      Why you want "optimal social production" of entertainment products? It would most likely just result in too much funneling of money into the entertainment industry that could be better spent elsewhere.

      When it comes to entertainment (and most areas of products actually), I am more inclined to believe that aiming for "optimal social consumption" is more aligned with the good of society. Piracy has increased social consumption and is therefore a huge sucess for society in general. (Being an area of consumption that doesn't waste scarce resources is also a huge bonus.)

      There is of course a limit, where piracy becomes so big that the funneling away of money from the creating of new IP, decreases the quality and quantity of new IP, which leads to decreasing consumption. However, that doesn't seem to have happened so far.

    32. Re:Music's dead? by proxima · · Score: 1

      Honestly curious here: Why? What on Earth dictates this?

      Improving the "incentive structure" can be pareto improving, which is just a fancy way of saying that everyone is at least as well off as before, and some people are better off.

      The problem inherent with such statements is that we know what makes people better off. Economists try to make these assumptions as reasonable as possible (e.g. as an individual, having more of a good is weakly better for me). So a pareto improvement would be a change that allows everyone to have the option of their old behavior/consumption while choosing a different behavior/consumption. Because they chose to do something different based on the change (in incentives), they must have made themselves better off (or at worst, simply be indifferent between the choices).

      --
      "The universe seems neither benign nor hostile, merely indifferent." --Carl Sagan
    33. Re:Music's dead? by proxima · · Score: 1

      Socially optimum?

      The grandparent responded with an explanation, but let me try to explain it a bit differently.

      What is the social optimum? In as simple of terms as I can think of, it's the outcome that would happen if an omniscient "social planner" controlled all aspects of the economy. This social planner knew everyone's preferences and abilities, and maximized "social welfare" (admittedly a difficult concept to agree on, but keep reading).

      This issue boils down to externalities. If I produce pollution, I feel the direct impact of that pollution on myself, but I do not take into account the impact of that pollution on the people around me. They would be willing to pay me to stop producing pollution. But without some sort of system, that market doesn't exist. Suppose I run a firm whose pollution affects thousands of people just a little bit; the damage in dollar terms to each person might be low, so the market to "pay" this firm to stop polluting won't exist. Yet the combined effects on thousands of people amount to the firm choosing to pollute "too much" for the "social optimum".

      To understand why the firm produces too much pollution to be the social optimum doesn't require extensive assumptions about what makes up social welfare. The mere existence of people willing to pay the firm a small amount to pollute less which isn't being considered by the firm is enough. To exactly quantify how much above the social optimum the firm is polluting would require more assumptions about people's preferences (i.e. utility), etc.

      So pollution is a negative externality, and the grandparent is claiming that music creation is a positive externality. Musicians are (almost always) willing to produce some music for their own enjoyment. If it were impossible for musicians to get any reward for their music, there is a likely externality here. People would be willing to pay the musician to create more music than the musician is willing to produce only for his or her enjoyment.

      Copyrights allow musicians to have a (supposedly temporary) monopoly of the distribution of their work, allowing them to profit from it. This effectively creates the market in which there would otherwise be an externality, and is one case of the government stepping it (copyrights only exist as legal mechanisms) to potentially improve the free-market outcome that would happen otherwise. If copyrights don't exist, the entire method of distributing music in recorded form would be limited in its ability to collect revenue for the musician. This is, of course, assuming that the revenue from the copyrighted recordings form a significant portion of a musician's income, which is likely not the case for some (or many).

      Going on that point, some artists have decided that trying to make money off of recordings is a losing battle (since copyrights are hard to enforce, for one), and giving away their recorded music to raise their popularity. Concerts and merchandise are significant sources of income, so the recordings themselves can simply act as advertising. That's the artist's choice, and some are clearly still choosing a system of charging for recorded works.

      The choice of the people (and their government) is how long this monopoly should last. The grandparent argued that the current length is too long. How can it be too long, since the longer the copyright simply means the more incentive for musicians to produce music? The answer is of course that people derive benefit from enlarging the public domain: creating derivative works, enjoying creative content that they would not be willing to pay much for (they are on the portion of the demand curve below the copyrighted price). Content producers will almost always have the incentive to raise the copyright length; the interesting thing, of course, is that companies like Disney which push so hard for copyright extension have benefitted hugely from public domain stories which they turn into movies.

      In the end, figuri

      --
      "The universe seems neither benign nor hostile, merely indifferent." --Carl Sagan
    34. Re:Music's dead? by martin-boundary · · Score: 1

      That seems to be a non-sequitur.

    35. Re:Music's dead? by djp928 · · Score: 1

      2 boxed sets of unreleased music - at best second rate crap that was not good enough to put out the first time - coming. All to just make money as he admitted in the first sentence was his main motivation since making music for it's own sake or attracting new fans isn't enough by itself.

      Why should it be? Would you still do *your* job if nobody paid you to do it, just for the love of doing it? I sure wouldn't. If nobody paid me to do what I do, it wouldn't get done.

      I don't get why artists are held to a different standard? Why do they have to just do it for the love of doing it then give it away? Why shouldn't they get paid too?

      Yeah, fine, they shouldn't be able to live forever on the proceeds of one popular song they produced. But fuck me if I can see why they're supposed to just give shit away.

    36. Re:Music's dead? by Lord+Flipper · · Score: 1

      Why do musicians some how assume that because they're "artists" that they don't have to follow the same rules of life as everyone else?

      Who says they assume anything of the sort? What the fuck? You're confusing the range of comments here in this thread with some 'amorphous' opinion or belief, that in your little fragmented mind is held by "musicians" (that's 'noise' in your empty head, pal).

      I worked as a musician, and with many others for decades, and the rules of the game were start small (solo, for the most part), work hard, get bigger (maybe, hardly likely, zero guarantee)... Does that sound like an attitude or work ethic of 'entitlement' to you, asshole?

      If sitting on your ass, spending mom & dad's cash in a two-bit school, to get a piece of paper, entitling you to now sit in a redundant job in a building somewhere, isn't your cup 'a' tea, then perhaps you should have taken piano lessons, after all. Too bad for you, but don't assume you know shit about being a musician, because as soon as you started typing you proved you know nothing.

    37. Re:Music's dead? by dangitman · · Score: 1

      Why should it be? Would you still do *your* job if nobody paid you to do it, just for the love of doing it? I sure wouldn't.

      It depends on what you do.

      I don't get why artists are held to a different standard? Why do they have to just do it for the love of doing it then give it away? Why shouldn't they get paid too?

      I don't recall anybody saying that they shouldn't get paid. Just that it's clear that Simmons is doing this ONLY for the money. When it comes to art and music, then the money shouldn't be everything. Sure, you need to get paid so you can keep creating - but it should never be about the money alone. That's just how it is in creative fields. But there's no reason for Gene Simmons to make any more money than he already has.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    38. Re:Music's dead? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone finally hit the nail on the head! To put it another way though, Records are just merchandise. MUSIC is what comes out of the speakers at a LIVE performance. The only music Kiss made was absorbed by the THC soaked eardrums of the listeners at their concerts. The round black disks their label marketed - and now remarkets as shiny silver disks (much like the shirts and other trinkets) are just merchandising driven by the music. I whole heartedly agree with Simmons, the music is what matters, therefore he should forgo the profits made from merchandising the music (perhaps donate to a schoalarship of some sort?). Furthermore, we should absolutly reposess the homes owned by every college student who has downloaded recordings of his guitar playing - that should net roughly 0 homes!

      In 5th grade, I remember being presented with an assignment to choose from a (rather short) list of professions that I would want with me in order to survive on a deserted island (Doctor, Mechanic, ect). I'm sure many of you were presented the same or similar assignment. I am curious how many of you chose to include a guitarist? I know I didn't. But he is FAR FAR richer than I will ever be as a Mechanical Engineer, is this the true value - to society - of a guitarist? Really? I think its more reflective of his value to a marketer of merchandise, than to society.

      As a parting shot, I am probably very much towards the low end of the age range of people who listened to Kiss' music, and I am 42. At this age not only would I not pay a dime to "own" a Kiss song (Hell I wouldn't pay a dime to own EVERY kiss song ever recorded), I cant even be bothered to download them for free.

    39. Re:Music's dead? by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      To my mind, neither of these pursuits (sport, music) would be any the worse from having the business people removed from their operations.

      It is becoming easier and easier to cut out the middleman for many business endeavours due to computers. This is inevitable and a good thing, but think about the resulting unemployment! What follow-on, 1/10th the pay job could these executives be suited (oops, sorry, my post preview made me notice the pun but I'll leave it there) to? Might they assemble and stage a Million Moron March on Washington threatening with raised Crackberries, waving printouts of PowerPoint presentations and pretending to call "their people"?

      I am afraid for the future, we are all doomed.

    40. Re:Music's dead? by farmer11 · · Score: 1

      the equilibrium music production reached when the only incentive to produce is one's own joy is less than the amount that produces a social optimum I guess it depends on how you define "social optimum".

      we need to create an incentive structure that is best for society Why do we? What is the dark alternative that we face?

      I think music is the incentive of music. I suspect that listeners and musicians would continue to enjoy music just fine even if every last artificial incentive for the production of music disappeared.

      I don't like the state of the music industry, but what you describe sounds like more of the same type of problem.
    41. Re:Music's dead? by DavidShor · · Score: 1
      "And how do you define "aggregate utility"?"

      The sum of every individual's utility across the entire population. Proxima described the concept pretty well, http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=362541&cid=21384245 .

      As for your opposition to pollution control and the Do-Not-Call list, at least you are consistent. What about property rights over land?

    42. Re:Music's dead? by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      Who's being the presumptuous asshole now? I didn't go to college, and sitting in an office is my cup of tea, which I discovered after several careers in varying fields. I've earned everything I have through hard work and experience.

      Don't be mad at me because your band sucked.

    43. Re:Music's dead? by Logic+and+Reason · · Score: 1

      The sum of every individual's utility across the entire population.
      You're assuming that we can somehow assign numbers to people's preferences, and that we can get a meaningful quantity by adding them together. The second assumption in particular is problematic, since it requires some sort of consistent, external unit in which to express individual preferences. This, in turn, necessarily constitutes a value judgment about the relative worth of different individuals' preferences, which is one of the reasons many economists have abandoned the concept of cardinal utility altogether.

      What about property rights over land?
      I support property rights over land, like property rights over other physical goods. What I do not support is using the coercive force of government to secure those rights, nor indeed for any purpose whatsoever. I recognize that most people are not likely to accept an anarcho-capitalist system any time soon, however, so I often settle for arguing that governments should at most secure physical property rights-- the classical "minarchist" position.
    44. Re:Music's dead? by djp928 · · Score: 1

      When it comes to art and music, then the money shouldn't be everything.

      Why not? I guess this is the part I don't understand. People do a lot of things for a lot of different reasons, and money is certainly one of the biggest reasons of all to do many things. What's so horrible about someone creating art strictly because it makes them money?

      But there's no reason for Gene Simmons to make any more money than he already has.

      Well, it's not up to you or anybody else to decide when Gene Simmons "has enough money", thankfully. I rather enjoy the freedoms of capitalism that way. But honestly, why is it that if you say your main reason for doing something is "making money", that somehow cheapens it? If Gene makes music strictly because it makes him rich, and now he doesn't want to make any more music because he feels he can't make money off it anymore, why is that bad? Regardless of what your opinion is about Gene's music, I don't see why money as a motivation is so repugnant to some people, especially people in creative fields. Sure, it's not the easiest way to make lots of cash for most people. But it worked for Gene, and I don't see why that's a bad thing.

    45. Re:Music's dead? by untaken_name · · Score: 1

      Well, I suppose my problem with it is that, as I think you meant, we don't know what makes people better off. How will we be able to tell, in the absence of historical data, that the new 'incentive structure' really benefits society? It's pretty clear that the current system of giant record companies at one time DID benefit quite a lot of people, by providing access to recording equipment that few individuals could afford, by providing promotional resources that were not available to most, etc. However, did that really benefit society? It's hard to tell, because we have no idea what society would look like in its absence. I agree with your aims, but I am hard-pressed to determine exactly how we'd go about setting up an incentive structure that benefits society as a whole. Of course, there are a lot of people out there who are smarter than I am, so I'm not saying it's impossible.

    46. Re:Music's dead? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      in the US, the constitution explicitly states that the reason for copyrights is utility: the collective advancement science and useful arts. It notably has nothing to say about simply rewarding people for doing work.
      Unless you read the following sentence, which says: "... by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries." Or perhaps you can explain why giving me the legally supported right to demand a fee from anyone who uses my stuff isn't a reward for creating it.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    47. Re:Music's dead? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      The wording makes it clear that the exclusive rights are the means, not the end.

    48. Re:Music's dead? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      And your point is what? If they hadn't agreed with the ends, it's unlikely they would have sanctioned the means. They may have worn funny wigs and wrote with bits of dead birds but those guys weren't dumb.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    49. Re:Music's dead? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      Of course they agreed with the ends. That's why they put that section in there. But they made clear to point out what the ends were (public utility), so that people wouldn't forget and get it mixed up with the means (government sanctioned monopolies), like you seem to want to do.

    50. Re:Music's dead? by dangitman · · Score: 1

      But honestly, why is it that if you say your main reason for doing something is "making money", that somehow cheapens it?

      Because it does. Art isn't really art if it's just for the money. It's supposed to mean something.

      I don't see why money as a motivation is so repugnant to some people, especially people in creative fields.

      Well, then you have a long way to go in developing empathy and understanding of your fellow human beings. You may as well be a robot if you don't understand this.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    51. Re:Music's dead? by djp928 · · Score: 1

      I think you need to think more critically about what you believe. "Just because" isn't an answer. It's just an assertion based on nothing more than your gut telling you something isn't right. Think with your head, give me a rational reason why art is cheapened by money. "It's supposed to mean something" isn't an answer either. It can still mean something and still be motivated mostly by money.

      If you're going to call me out for a lack of understanding of my "fellow human beings", at least act like a human being and give me a rational argument as to why I'm wrong. Animals act on instinct and gut reactions--humans are supposed to be able to trancend that.

  8. From the department of redundancy department by AcidPenguin9873 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Seriously. There is a story about this on Slashdot at least every other day with no actual new legal/economic/industry developments, resulting in the exact same comments and arguments rehashed. Yes, I know I can just ignore it. Yes, I must be new here. But what's wrong with some constructive criticism of Slashdot?

    FWIW I think the only way we'll see the stories disappear is if we stop reading and commenting on them (which means /. loses ad revenue and will stop posting them).

    1. Re:From the department of redundancy department by Silver+Sloth · · Score: 5, Funny

      This one is slightly different

      Standard /. story goes Senior record company exec doesn't understand how the world is changing

      This story is Burnt out, over the hill musician doesn't understand how the world is changing

      --
      init 11 - for when you need that edge.
    2. Re:From the department of redundancy department by whogben · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'll support you in your campaign not to post on this topic - here I am matching your commitment, comrade!

    3. Re:From the department of redundancy department by FoolsGold · · Score: 1

      Oh please. You know how many times the "Bill Gates borg" icon has been brought up with regards to any Microsoft-related topic?

      Slashdot aren't interested constructive criticism, even if it will help make them look more professiona.

    4. Re:From the department of redundancy department by darthflo · · Score: 1

      which means /. loses ad revenue and will stop posting them
      Negative. Posting a single story doesn't cost them jack. If you actually wanted your message to stand out, you'd have to get lots of people to stop reading slashdot alltogether. Which they want because parts of the content are interesting. Your idea may work for print-style media where every square millimeter of (actual redactional) content is lost advertising money, but in this case it simply won't work.
    5. Re:From the department of redundancy department by moderatorrater · · Score: 1

      the only way we'll see the stories disappear is if we stop reading and commenting on them (which means /. loses ad revenue and will stop posting them). It costs /. almost nothing to post a story that doesn't get read as long as people still read the other ones. These stories, like music, can be reproduced for an extremely low cost; it's only the initial creation that costs money. Like the music industry, slashdot doesn't actually create content, it just makes money by finding the good content and publishing it to the world.
    6. Re:From the department of redundancy department by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This story is burnt out, over the hill performer and egotist doesn't understand how the world is changing or, indeed, much of anything.

      All fixed now.

    7. Re:From the department of redundancy department by PMBjornerud · · Score: 1

      Seriously. There is a story about this on Slashdot at least every other day with no actual new legal/economic/industry developments, resulting in the exact same comments and arguments rehashed. Yes, I know I can just ignore it. Yes, I must be new here. But what's wrong with some constructive criticism of Slashdot?

      FWIW I think the only way we'll see the stories disappear is if we stop reading and commenting on them (which means /. loses ad revenue and will stop posting them). You're funny, but I don't think you intended to.

      Make the stories disappear? What is the alternative? That we lock down one instance, call it the "ultimate music distribution discussion FAQ" and just force everyone to read that one instead of expressing their own thoughts about things?

      Discussing is learning. Life is repetition. You follow the arguments, read, post, reply. Good points get repeated more often. Battle of the memes and all that; the slashdot crowd is defined.
      --
      I lost my sig.
    8. Re:From the department of redundancy department by AcidPenguin9873 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, yeah. Well played. I knew someone was going to say that as soon as I posted.

  9. Pity he's not writing any new music by ElMiguel · · Score: 5, Funny

    I would have enjoyed a few KISS songs on how The Man is being let down by "college kids". "Obey the law or be sued" would make for a catchy refrain.

    1. Re:Pity he's not writing any new music by Siener · · Score: 1

      I would have enjoyed a few KISS songs on how The Man is being let down by "college kids". "Obey the law or be sued" would make for a catchy refrain.


      *golf clap*

      Your comment sums up the situation perfectly. Oh if only I had mod points...
    2. Re:Pity he's not writing any new music by RobBebop · · Score: 1

      "Obey the law or be sued" would make for a catchy refrain.

      I want to rock and roll all night, and obey the law everyday,
      I want to rock and roll all night, but not get sued for stealing it today

      I might be wrong, but I doubt KISS would have sold as many albums with those lyrics.

      --
      Support the 30 Hour Work Week!!!
    3. Re:Pity he's not writing any new music by CaptainCaustic · · Score: 1
      Gene Simmons is still alive??? I thought for a longest time that both he and his ideas of how the world "should" work had died off with the rest of the music industry dinosaurs.


      Never liked his music and I know I never will!

    4. Re:Pity he's not writing any new music by sharkey · · Score: 1

      Beth, who can I sue?
      Oh Beth, who can I sue?

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    5. Re:Pity he's not writing any new music by Sciryl+Llort · · Score: 1

      There I was smug and happy, working 9 to 5
      Got a nice house in the suburbs, good to be alive!

      Go out to a restaurant, have a lovely meal.
      Just a sigle glass of wine - I'm sober at the wheel.

      Obeying the law, obeying the law!
      Obeying the law, obeying the law!
      I can't shake off the feeling that Judas Priest's original version had a bit more edge to it.
  10. What do you expect? by telbij · · Score: 1

    What do you expect from a guy who got rich decades ago off an antiquated system? He's one of the few winners from the traditional music industry structure. It'd be nice if he had the perspective to realize that music is voluntary purchase, and without the good graces of college kids he would have nothing, but he's a musician, not an economist.

  11. Nothing new here by retro128 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Everyone in the old guard says that digital distribution won't work. They watch CD sales slip away and think it's because of piracy, when it's actually the old business model falling apart. Sue college kids...Yeah, that'll get sales up. People are done buying 13 tracks of crap for the one song they like. The future is a la carte. Guys like Gene Simmons can either sink or swim, though granted I doubt he could sell his music to anyone under 40 anyway.

    --
    -R
    1. Re:Nothing new here by Acid-Duck · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up, I totally agree with this. When I was younger, I purchased my first CD writter (2x) and back then I decided to acquire a cd writter for the exact reason the parent post explained, I was tired of paying upwards 20$ for a CD with 1 or 2 good tracks out of the 10-15 tracks it had.

    2. Re:Nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like you're just upset because you found out your "rock n roll" idol is an anachronistic dick.

    3. Re:Nothing new here by endemoniada · · Score: 1

      I don't know if it's just me... but I'm not going to listen to a band that only has a few good songs per album. That doesn't sound like a very good band at all, so why support them?

      I don't mean to flame anyones taste in music, but it's just an observation I made. To me, "a la carte" music is worthless, because I'l probably but the entire album, or not buy anything at all.

      --
      Blog -
    4. Re:Nothing new here by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      I know. It amazes me how common this complaint is. I have very few albums in a collection of over 1200 where only a few tracks are good, and usually those are albums I bought completely cold, without knowing anything about just because it looked interesting (although I had a pretty good track record of picking out good stuff that way... not that that matters any more since Tower records is gone and there are no music stores worth going to any more).

      It's a pretty sad commentary on the music business, which used to be more of a meritocracy than it is now.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    5. Re:Nothing new here by One+Childish+N00b · · Score: 1

      Yes, only those catchphrase-spouting tuneless wonders like Radiohead and Trent Reznor want musicians to embrace new technologies or give away their material for free.

      Oh wait.

      --
      Dealing with lawyers would be a lot less tedious if they all looked like Casey Novak.
    6. Re:Nothing new here by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to listen to a band that only has a few good songs per album.
      With KISS, that would be their greatest hits. Sad but true.
      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    7. Re:Nothing new here by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

      I think those that celebrate the demise of the "Album" are short-sighted nincumpoops. :)

      A-la-carte means that every song must have the characterstics of a hit single: catchy, short, etc. Albums have those songs, but have other songs that don't have those charateristics, but are as good or better. Hell, the Beatles' Abbey Road is one of the best albums ever made, and while it does have three great singles, the best part of the album is the second half which is entirely made up songs that would never be released as singles, and indeed, don't even work as singles, as they flow together as one complete piece. I'd hate for stuff like that to go away for good. And the White Album has plenty of great songs, almost none of which would work as singles. None of those songs would have been released under an al-a-carte model, as nobody would have bought them as singles. But taken as a whole work, they're better than almost any "Greatest Hits" album, which is the only kind of "album" we'd be left with under your model, as all songs would have to be "hit"-like songs.

      And I keep seeing people talk about buying a CD filled with crap to get one song. That's almost NEVER happened to me. I generally like nearly every song on albums, even if I don't like them at first, they grow on me and I end up liking them more than the "hit" single. But that's just me, I guess. :)

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    8. Re:Nothing new here by porcupine8 · · Score: 1
      So if you like one song, discovering that you don't like the artist's other songs will make you not like that song anymore?

      Besides, a decade ago, you pretty much had to take the plunge on the album before you found out whether you liked it or not (unless you happened to have a friends who owned it to borrow from). There are reviews, sure, but who's to say you have the same taste as the reviewer? At least now you can listen to clips first, and often entire streaming songs.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    9. Re:Nothing new here by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

      To be fair, I think the reason so many slashdotters are of the "information wants to be free", "copyrights suck" mindset is not necessarily that they've never created anything of worth themselves but that RMS has convinced them that all software should be "free" and slashdotters go on to extend that to anything that can be stores as bytes.

      Many slashdotters seem to not understand that just because they write programs and give them away for free, that authors, music makers, movie makers, etc don't feel the same way (and are not wrong or evil or greedy for that).

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    10. Re:Nothing new here by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I like the album approach. In fact, I hesitate to say a band is really good, even if I like a lot of their songs, unless they've got a whole album that I like, in its entirety and with the tracks in order.

      Most of my favorite music doesn't work nearly as well (and sometimes not at all) as single tracks. Some of The Who and Zeppelin, pretty much anything by Pink Floyd, most of The Decemberists' stuff, Ludo's Broken Bride... single-track models threaten to kill the art of making a good album, rather than just a bunch of good songs, and my beloved rock operas and concept albums especially may be seeing their last days.

    11. Re:Nothing new here by yusing · · Score: 1

      I'm way over 40, and Gene Simmons had nothing to say way back when he *was* selling.

      Slagger sounds like Ted Nugent innnit?

      --

      "You must try to forget all you have learned. You must begin to dream." -- Sherwood Anderson

    12. Re:Nothing new here by grub · · Score: 1


      The future is a la carte.

      Oddly enough, that was also the past. I'm nearly 42 and remember very well music stores with racks full of 45 RPM records with just one song per side.

      It was only when the music industry realized they could milk more money out of the consumers' wallet by forcing them to buy full LPs of 90% filler that the "buy an album for one good song" system came about. It killed the 45.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    13. Re:Nothing new here by grub · · Score: 1

      Ha. thanks for the good laugh :)

      --
      Trolling is a art,
  12. Jumping on the bandwagon of arrogance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gene Simmons may have jumped the shark years ago...but this doesn't make him any more relevant to todays music scene. Go away! shoo! shoo!

    ---
    Todays CAPTCHA:
    thirties

  13. the song goes... by vegardh · · Score: 1

    "I don't usually do things like this to kids your age, but when I saw you coming out of college that day, I knew, I knew, I've got to have you, I've got to have you"

    1. Re:the song goes... by nick+graham · · Score: 1

      Why oh why did I use all my mod points yesterday? A "Christine Sixteen" reference on /. - priceless.

  14. Just listen and you'll understand by greg1104 · · Score: 0

    Have you heard the music most college kids are listening to nowadays? I wouldn't pay for that crap either.

    1. Re:Just listen and you'll understand by Divine10 · · Score: 1

      If listening to "Your Body is A Wonderland," on repeat is wrong, I don't wanna be right.

    2. Re:Just listen and you'll understand by pat+mcguire · · Score: 0

      don't worry, you're not

  15. What a Fucktard! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Like this shithead ever created any art for the sake of being creative. What ruins the industry is simple minded musicians mass producing garbage for the masses. what a fucktard!

  16. Oh come on.... by Half-pint+HAL · · Score: 1

    The majority of posts seem to focus on the fact that Kiss make loads of money from merchandising and loads of money from touring and say "so Simmons is wrong". Look, the guy is the exception to the rule. Most musicians are bland and uninteresting and all the better for it. Kiss, like many of their contemporaries, made themselves into entertainers, not just musicians. Many rappers and high-camp pop acts follow this model, with extravagant stage "experiences", but it just wouldnt work for, say, Damien Rice.

    --
    Got them moderator blues I blieve I walk out the do', With these mod-points I been gettin', I 'most never post no mo'
    1. Re:Oh come on.... by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      I for one would pay more money for the "uninteresting" Damien Rice show than some extravagant display of musical whoredom. I would also gladly pay for Damien Rice "Eskimo" PJs, but I may be in the minority on that one :)

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    2. Re:Oh come on.... by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      I think this is a song about Gene Simmons

      I'm tired of self respect
      I can't afford a car
      I wanna be a tool
      Don't need no soul
      Wanna make big money
      Playing rock and roll

      I'll make my music boring
      I'll play my music slow
      I ain't no artist, I'm a businessman
      No ideas of my own

      I won't offend
      Or rock the boat
      Just sex and drugs
      And rock and roll

      Drool, Drool, Drool, Drool, Drool, Drool...My Payola!
      Drool, Drool, Drool, Drool, Drool, Drool...My Payola!

      You'll pay ten bucks to see me
      On a fifteen foot high stage
      Fatass bouncers kick the shit
      Out of kids who try to dance

      If my friends say
      I've lost my guts
      I'll laugh and say
      That's rock and roll

      But There's just one problem.....

      Is my cock big enough
      Is my brain small enough
      For you to make me a star

      Give me a toot
      And I'll sell you my soul
      Pull my strings and I'll go far

      And when I'm rich
      And meet Bob Hope
      We'll shoot some fool
      And shoot some dope

      Is my cock big enough
      Is my brain small enough
      For you to make me a star

  17. You hear that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The sound of an old man wheezing at the top of his lungs,

    "GET OFF MY LAWN YOU KIDS!"

  18. Cooper was better anyway by opencity · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is they guy who will sue your ass off if you try and make a documentary about Kiss cover bands.
    Luckily I don't know enough Kiss to fit 'sue' into a song title. Slow news night, I guess.

    --
    Physics is like sex: sure, it may give some practical results, but that's not why we do it.
    1. Re:Cooper was better anyway by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

      Luckily I don't know enough Kiss to fit 'sue' into a song title. Slow news night, I guess. I wanna merchandize all night, and sue college kids every day! Detroit Lawsuit City? Ok, those are the only two songs I know.
      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    2. Re:Cooper was better anyway by opencity · · Score: 1

      > I wanna merchandize all night,

      Good call! It's stuck in my head now.

      --
      Physics is like sex: sure, it may give some practical results, but that's not why we do it.
  19. Cause College Kids Have Lots Of Money by QuantumG · · Score: 1

    Although when you actually look at the pitiful amount of money the music industry actually pulls in, I wouldn't be surprised if it was funded predominately by college kids.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  20. Cutting back on expenses by Joebert · · Score: 1

    Hey I wanna rock n roll all night & party every day too pal, but in order for me to afford it I have to cut back on some expenses.

    I think deciding to download songs my dad already payed for half a dozen times because some drunk chick sat on his record is a good place to start !

    --
    Wanna fight ? Bend over, stick your head up your ass, and fight for air.
  21. The richer they are by rolfwind · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the greedier they get.

    I don't know much about Kiss, but I imagine he's getting to that age where he wants to tour less (and thus make less merchandise sales) and thus would like to live off royalties.

    1. Re:The richer they are by ThirdPrize · · Score: 1

      He needs the extra money to keep him in high class hookers and coke while Thom York doesn't. Not that Radioheads music couldn't do with a bit of the latter to liven it up. ;)

      --
      I have excellent Karma and I am not afraid to Troll it.
    2. Re:The richer they are by mzs · · Score: 1

      If you get the chance don't. My wife and I went sometime 2000-2004. They were late. When they got there instead of going to perform they walked around and it when they got to my wife it was clear they were not trying to rouse the crowd but simply get women backstage for after. When they went-up they greeted San Antonio even though the concert was in San Jose. One of them (the bassist I believe) was so drunk or high he could barely perform and even crashed so hard into the mic stand at one point I think I saw him lose a tooth, something definitely flew out of his mouth.

      We left early, there were more stalls selling t-shirts than beer. I just decided to think of it as a Ted Nugent concert and forget about the headliners at all. We were not the only ones that left early.

  22. He's right though by clarkkent09 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Ok, bye, bye karma but I never understood this idea, so popular on slashdot, that downloading stuff that you didn't pay for is somehow not stealing. The only argument I hear is that the recording industry is a bunch of assholes so its ok to take from them as much as you can. But every industry is like that, the only difference is that music and movies are easier to steal than say cars or clothes or insurance policies.

    Can anybody fill me in as to why downloading music without paying for it is ok?

    --
    Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    1. Re:He's right though by W2k · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As for myself: Because I disagree with the idea that someone who has created some content has the exclusive right to control distribution of that content. In short, I believe copyright as it works today does not benefit society, and should be radically changed. I believe there is no such thing as "intellectual property", because anything anyone will ever create ultimately builds on stuff that person has picked up from the environment and people around him/her. This does not mean there is nothing called originality, individual creativity and skill certainly counts for something. However, copyright removes, for an unjustifiably long timespan, content is withheld from the public domain where it would otherwise be used as a foundation for new and better content.

      Of course, there are certain pieces of content that cost huge sums of money to create and where the creator will likely not go through the trouble unless he/she has some hope of return on investment. Certain types of software certainly fall into this category. Thus some sort of compromise is in order: I would propose that current copyright law is reduced to 5 years and that copying for noncommercial purposes is legalized. This would make selling pirated software, music etc illegal but permit filesharing.

      --
      Quality, performance, value; you get only two, and you don't always get to pick.
    2. Re:He's right though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't know what "stealing" means, do you?

      Here's a hint: Pirates did not make COPIES of treasure to appreciate privately.

      EXCUSE ME WHAT MADE YOU THINK YOU COULD COPY-PASTE THIS SENTENCE, EVEN FOR THE PURPOSES OF RESPONDING TO IT, WITHOUT PAYING MY ARBITRARY FEE? MY SECRET CALCULATIONS INDICATE THAT IF YOU COULDN'T HIT CTRL-C AND CTRL-V YOU WOULD HAVE PAID ME 5 BAJILLION EUROQUIDOLLARS FOR THE CONTINUED USE OF THE PREVIOUS SENTENCE SO I THINK ITS FAIR YOU FORK IT OVER NOW. I mean, would you want to live in a world where you couldn't retire on one internet post? Why, no one would ever post their thoughts or express themselves if they couldn't make a hot trillion on a pwn job! Also give me money seriously. Don't read this more than once or its stealing.

    3. Re:He's right though by DingerX · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Well, Gene Simmons is right, sorta, when he points out the core issue:

      The only reason why gold is expensive is because we all agree that it is. There's no real use for it, except we all agree and abide by the idea that gold costs a certain amount per ounce. As soon as you give people the choice to deviate from it, you have chaos and anarchy.
      Property is, at heart, an agreement between people about things. My computer has nothing intrinsic in it that makes it mine and not yours: we just agree that that is the case.

      There's something very basic in humans that less us understand the concept of "mine" and "yours", and apply it to physical objects. But what about ideas? Intellectual property is much more difficult for most people to wrap their minds around. For example, you don't understand it either. "Downloading stuff that you didn't pay for" is not stealing. Stealing is a criminal act where you deprive someone of the use or enjoyment of property. Making a copy of a work is not criminal, nor does it deprive the copyright owner of anything. It can be against the wishes of the copyright owner, and the copyright owner can assert that you inflicted damages, but it is not stealing, just as hijacking an aircraft is not committing insurance fraud.

      So, we've got property rights that are agreed upon by a society, or so we think, and some of those, few people really seem to understand, and yet affect everybody. Worse, these are relative young "rights". Copyrights came in with mass printing and were built to combat mass printing. With the cost of duplication practically nil, and the means of communication readily available, Copyright law, as it is now, is just impractical: it's designed for mass infringement cases, not as a means of generating revenue.

      On the one hand, human behavior in these matters has not changed since the beginning of written communication: people copy what interests them, and don't immediately grasp the notion of paying for an instantion of an idea (they do, however, immediately grasp the importance of paying someone to produce ideas). On the other hand, we have a handful of companies with a business model based on the high cost of mass production and distribution confronted with a change to an environment of cheap distribution and individualized production. And there's no worse citizen than a fading elite. The music industry in particular made this worse by focusing on saturating the market with a few insipid "hits", and overexposing the listeners: to the average person, that song that they're hearing several times a day isn't worth anything in itself.

      So to answer your question: nobody's saying downloading music without paying for it is ok. I say that, yes, downloading music without paying for is ok, when the copyright holders make it available for free.
    4. Re:He's right though by FireFury03 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I never understood this idea, so popular on slashdot, that downloading stuff that you didn't pay for is somehow not stealing.

      It is wrong, and illegal, but it isn't stealing.

      • Stealing is where you take something and the owner no longer has it. This is a criminal offense.
      • Copyright infringement is where you copy something. The owner still has it, but the owner doesn't get paid for the copy (note: this is not the same as the owner "losing money" since the infringer may not necessarilly have bought it anyway). This is a civil offense.


      Stealing and copyright infringement are covered by different laws and they have different effects on the victims of the crimes and society in general, they are not the same thing.

      That doesn't make copyright infringement right. However, there needs to be some flexibility here.

      For example, I generally download an album before I buy it. If I like what I hear I go out and buy the CD, if not, I delete what I downloaded. If I can't hear something before buying it I probably won't buy it because I've bought too many CDs I thought were going to be good and turned out to be complete crap. And what's wrong with this? Consider it promotion for the bands - if their music is good then it makes them more money because I'm more likely to spend my money on CDs I _know_ are good rather than taking a gamble.

      Can anybody fill me in as to why downloading music without paying for it is ok?

      It isn't. But can you fill me in as to why the following behaviour is ok:
      • Suing thousands of people who can't afford to defend themselves despite having only circumstantial evidence that they have committed any crime (and thus forcing potentially innocent people to settle at great expense)
      • Preventing customers from accessing content which they have legitimately purchased, by means of various (potentially illegal) DRM systems (which often the customer is not informed about prior to purchase).
      • Criminalising people who who want to listen to their legally purchased CDs on their MP3 players.


      At the moment, the quality of the official product is frequently substandard compared to the blackmarket product. People generally like paying and staying within the law, but when it starts to become impossible to use the legally purchased product, is it any surprise that people stop buying it?
    5. Re:He's right though by uglyduckling · · Score: 1
      It's not stealing because stealing (i.e. theft) is the crime of permenantly depriving someone of their property; e.g. in English law "...a person is guilty of theft if: he dishonestly appropriates property belonging to another with the intention of permanently depriving the other of it...". When a track is downloaded from the internet, no property has been appropriated, no-one has been deprived of anything. I'm not say it's not illegal, but it's not stealing. Punching someone in the face would be criminal in most circumstances, but it wouldn't be 'theft of their good looks' or some other convolution to make it sound like stealing.


      As has been amply explained by others, copyright laws are a (relatively) modern contrivance intended to enable a minory of talented artists to generate sufficient revenue from their arts that they need not 'keep the day job', because as a society we (presumably) feel that their arts enrich society as a whole and we would not benefit from them so readily if they had to hold down another job. A multi-billion dollar industry has grown up around these artists, such that the industry is far richer and more powerful than most of the artists themselves, and they are desparately trying to protect their revenue stream. One of their strategies is to try to redefine copyright infringement as 'theft' which they have been largely successful in doing, even though it's utter nonsense.

      The notion of 'intellectual property' has also been invented in order to confuse the issue. Sadly this is still all about companies trying to extract the maximum revenue from an idea or invention - often something that the company themselves neither thought of nor developed. There is a place for some sort of 'ownership of ideas' so that plagiarism is avoided, but this unfortunately has little to do with copyright.

    6. Re:He's right though by muftak · · Score: 1

      I just downloaded a copy of your comment without paying for it! I'm a thief!

    7. Re:He's right though by Martian_Kyo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The fact that it's so easy to replicate/steal, makes you wonder should it really cost that much?

      If there was a machine that can replicate a 500,000 dollar car for 100 dollars....wouldn't you be asking yourself....should I really pay 499,900 dollars just for design?...should cars cost so much?

    8. Re:He's right though by dave420 · · Score: 3, Informative

      "Stealing" is depriving someone of property, not gaining something for free. Downloading is copyright infringement, not stealing, as no-one is losing anything. The only way you can say someone's losing something is saying that maybe each and every person who downloads the music will no longer buy the album in a store - but if they're not going to buy it anyway, no-one's losing out. The music industry is different from nearly every other industry out there, as it exists only to further itself, and not that which it claims to promote - the artists. Artists get hardly anything from record sales, due to the labels using out-dated payment schemes based on low-yield vinyl production, which means artists get most of their income from live performances and merchandise. If you take the record labels out of the picture, the bands get just as much money as they did before, the bands get even more exposure (as everyone's downloading their music, thinking "wow this is great!" and going to their shows, netting the artists a cool $20 or more (compared to the cents an album sale gets), or the people listening don't like their music, and instead spend that $20 on a band they do like. You end up with artists getting paid a decent amount for their work, and music fans finding music they absolutely love, and getting to see these bands/artists live for the money they save on buying overpriced albums that only serve to fund the cartels controlling the sale of this promotional material (as that's what albums are - advertising for live gigs).

    9. Re:He's right though by p!ngu · · Score: 1

      Well, from a technical perspective, it's not stealing because it's literally not stealing. I steal your car? You don't have it anymore. I "steal" (or rather, infringe on your copyright) your music...well, you've still got it, hey?

      Infringing copyright is NOT okay, and I don't think anyone can rationalise this point of view (but hey, I could be wrong). It's just that the law's idea of what copyright infringement is, and what Slashdot's idea of it are completely different.

      Stealing = Criminal court.
      Copyright infringement (don't call it piracy, that's a different crime...) = Civil court.

      There's a difference.

    10. Re:He's right though by Kjella · · Score: 1

      "Downloading stuff that you didn't pay for" is not stealing. Stealing is a criminal act where you deprive someone of the use or enjoyment of property. Making a copy of a work is not criminal, nor does it deprive the copyright owner of anything. Making a copy of a work can have criminal penalties, better check our the criminal statues though they apply mostly to for-profit or unreleased works. As for "does not deprive the owner of anything", try seeing how far you'd get with your money if everyone was printing their own bills. Both are artifically created monopolies with next to no value except for their scarcity. Sure technically you have the same pieces of paper, they're just not worth anything. Just like the copyright holder still has their cd master, it's just not worth anything. But we've given them value by law, and you're taking it away by breaking that law. Copyright law is still a law, even though most of it doesn't have criminal penalties. There's a law against speeding too, even though when I speed I only get a fine and not a criminal conviction that goes on my criminal record. Would you really want every petty violation of the law to go on your permanent record? Would you really like the police to spend time tracking down every petty violation? I think they got better things to do, but as long as it isn't fair use it's still against the law.
      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    11. Re:He's right though by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      I never understood this idea, so popular on slashdot, that downloading stuff that you didn't pay for is somehow not stealing.

      Because stealing requires that the "victim" incur an actual loss, not merely a theoretical one.

      Can anybody fill me in as to why downloading music without paying for it is ok?

      That's a separate issue. It's not "OK", but it's not stealing either. To illustrate the point that I'm making, take the following example. If someone seduces and has sex with someone else's spouse, they have done something that I think most of us would consider wrong but was it rape?

      The recording industry has tried to pretend that copyright infringement is the same as someone putting a gun to your head and taking your wallet. It's not.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    12. Re:He's right though by infinity314159 · · Score: 1

      "At the moment, the quality of the official product is frequently substandard compared to the blackmarket product." This is the most important thing that the industry fat cats don't want to recognize. They have to understand that, whether they like it or not, they are competing with free mp3 downloads. They need to make it just as convenient, if not more so, to download and listen to the music legally if they ever want to take market share back from "freeloading college kids."

    13. Re:He's right though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's all good and well, but a friend of mine downloaded linux the other day and now he has anal warts. Should he install a patch or something?

    14. Re:He's right though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >but if they're not going to buy it anyway, no-one's losing out

      So, you're saying that the copyright holder isn't losing out when you have obtained the benefit of their works without paying for them, contrary to their wishes? How does that work, exactly?

    15. Re:He's right though by protobion · · Score: 1

      No, downloading music is not like stealing cars. Because the commodity being sold in the case of music is , by its fundamental nature - information. Information is a fluid, constantly in flux. Provided that suitable social, electronic (etc.) systems exist, information will flow, morph, reproduce, give rise to new information. This is why the only way to ensure that your information is private is to keep it OFF such systems.
      Now, when you buy a car, it is a physical object, and is not going to give rise to a new car on its own. Neither can your neighbour have access to that car and make an identical one in any case without buying parts on his own and with substantial investment.
      In the age we have today, the cost of duplicating information of any kind is virtually nil. An analogy is in the use of language. Like MP3s, the cost of learning words other people have used is nil, and does not affect the information of the word as held by the original speaker. You don't see the Oxford dictionary or anyone for that matter trying to sell you words, or saying that if you use a certain word that they invented you must pay for it. (Trademarking is different because the fears there are not so much a semantic issue, but an issue of identity).
      The same argument can be extended to IP Laws and such, and this is why the only real way to protect a patent is to keep some crucial bit of information or expertise out of the public domain (a.k.a proprietary).
      Now music, is viral information that is intended to be used by the masses, and therefore releasing it is necessary for its existence. This requirement inherently implies that it will be duplicated. What the music industry is fighting, is a contradiction between what they want, and the nature of their product. Guess who's going to win?

      --
      Essentia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem.
    16. Re:He's right though by scharkalvin · · Score: 1

      Actually it IS theft in a way. "Theft of service". That's where you make use of something without
      paying for it and without removing it. Like sneaking onto the subway without dropping your token
      into the turnstile. You didn't steal the subway. You can be charged with theft of service and go to
      jail.

    17. Re:He's right though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Making a copy of a work is not criminal, nor does it deprive the copyright owner of anything."

      Well, it deprives them of their right to determine how/where/when and under what terms a work is distributed ... they very core of copyright.

      (Sorry for the AC post, but I already modded this story and don't want to blow the points...)

    18. Re:He's right though by richieb · · Score: 1
      At the moment, the quality of the official product is frequently substandard compared to the blackmarket product. People generally like paying and staying within the law, but when it starts to become impossible to use the legally purchased product, is it any surprise that people stop buying it?

      People also do not want to pay several times for the same thing.

      For example, I have cable TV and watch South Park when I can. But if I miss an episode, is it OK for me to download it it and watch it? I already paid my TV bill...

      Or I have few hundred vinyl albums in my basement. I could record songs from those to my computer and then encode to MP3. Instead I download them. Is this OK?

      Or am I "stealing".

      --
      ...richie - It is a good day to code.
    19. Re:He's right though by untaken_name · · Score: 1

      It is literally not possible for you to have noticed that the idea is popular without seeing other arguments for the practice. Therefore you are either an oblivious idiot or a troll. I know which one I'm betting on, but just in case you're an oblivious idiot: real property cannot be perfectly copied. When real property is stolen, the original owner no longer has it. When people say music is 'stolen', they actually mean 'copied'. If you could generate a perfect copy of a piece of property that a friend owns, such as a car, and then drive away in the copy while your friend drives away in the original, would it be wrong to do so? Sure, it might put the auto industry out of business, but there's nothing that says any particular industry is guaranteed to exist and grow forever. How many steam ship companies exist today? How many farriers? How many blacksmiths? How many outhouse salesmen? Some of all of the above, I would imagine, but nothing like the numbers in which they once existed (potentially excluding outhouse salesmen; I'm not sure how many of those there ever were). There, now you've heard at least one other argument.

    20. Re:He's right though by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      Actually it IS theft in a way. "Theft of service". That's where you make use of something without
      paying for it and without removing it. Like sneaking onto the subway without dropping your token
      into the turnstile. You didn't steal the subway. You can be charged with theft of service and go to
      jail.


      That might be the case if music was a service, which it isn't. This is already covered by copyright laws - I don't understand why people seem to feel the need to twist other laws into applying too. Copying music is copyright infringement, it is not theft, burglary, piracy or genocide, no matter what the RIAA may like to claim.

    21. Re:He's right though by untaken_name · · Score: 2, Funny

      Well, Gene Simmons is right, sorta, when he points out the core issue:

              The only reason why gold is expensive is because we all agree that it is. There's no real use for it, except we all agree and abide by the idea that gold costs a certain amount per ounce. As soon as you give people the choice to deviate from it, you have chaos and anarchy.


      No, he isn't. Gold has utility beyond holding arbitrary worth. It's responsible for jacking up the price of certain cables by 1000% for its presence on connectors. It's also GREAT for plating things with. Plus, it's really dense so it's good for throwing at stuff, too. Plus it's really useful for making idols out of. AND you can look really cool when you get a gold coin and you bite it to make sure it's real. So I have to take exception to Mr. Simmons' words here and to your endorsement of them. Since I can't disagree with Mr. Simmons to his face, I'll take it out on you.

    22. Re:He's right though by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      Or I have few hundred vinyl albums in my basement. I could record songs from those to my computer and then encode to MP3. Instead I download them. Is this OK?

      Ethically I can't see a problem with this.

      In the UK it is illegal to copy music for your own purposes iff you change the format (e.g. ripping CDs into Vorbis format so you can play them on your Vorbis player). In fact, Sony have been banging on recently about this, saying that it's illegal for people to load up their iPods with stuff ripped from their (legally purchased) CDs and that everyone must rebuy their whole music collection in MP3 format (presumably even the stuff that isn't available anymore?). Of course, everyone is ignoring them and the interesting thing is that Sony themselves have made plenty of products that are more or less useless unless people do these illegal conversions - e.g. Minidisc, etc.

      The more the content industry bangs on about copyright infringement, the more they look like complete idiots... and greedy idiots at that. Whilst people like sticking within the law, the fact that the content industry seems only to be interested in treating its own customers like crap I think more and more people will find reasons to avoid paying for stuff.

    23. Re:He's right though by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      The only reason why gold is expensive is because we all agree that it is. There's no real use for it, except we all agree and abide by the idea that gold costs a certain amount per ounce. As soon as you give people the choice to deviate from it, you have chaos and anarchy.
      I've got to disagree here, there is no 'agreement' on the price of gold. People have the choice to disagree on the value (and price) of gold, it happens all the time, without anarchy ensuing.

      The reason gold is expensive is because it looks pretty (and humans, like crows, are fond of teh shiny), is stable (and thus does not intrinsically lose value over time through degradation), and is limited in supply.

      Digital files are shiny (in the sense that people want them), are stable (relatively), but they are not limited in supply.

      Simmons screws up when he uses gold as the basis for his argument. He should have instead used a good (or service) for which supply is relatively limitless -- and here we have few examples to work from.

      The music industry dinosaurs, Simmons included, fail to realize that a fundamental aspect of their market has changed. It's not that their business model no longer works -- it's that their economic model no longer works. The business model depends on the economic model, but the problem runs far deeper.
      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    24. Re:He's right though by swillden · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Like sneaking onto the subway without dropping your token into the turnstile. You didn't steal the subway. You can be charged with theft of service and go to jail.

      Are you sure about that? I've never heard of "theft of service" and can't find it anywhere in my states' laws. It seems like in the case you mention there's a much simpler and less contorted charge that would also land you in jail -- trespassing.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    25. Re:He's right though by dave420 · · Score: 1

      How does it work? I'm saying the record company's claim to the copyright is bankrupt and shouldn't be honoured. The bands don't get much, money from record sales, with most of that taken by the record company for "marketing" the band and for anachronisms like breakages, etc. Why should record companies strong-arm performers into creating music for the record companies to whore out to the world for excessively large amount of money? I know two wrongs don't make a right, but when one's directly targetting the other, as in this case, then surely it's a step in the right direction. Sharing music online doesn't hurt bands, as bands don't give a shit about record sales, just publicity and public performances (which get them the majority of their income).

      So, in short, if you like music, it's your duty to share. Even bands are realising this now.

    26. Re:He's right though by idunno2112 · · Score: 1

      So true. Why is it that the "try before you buy" only works in the car industry? I can take a car out for a test drive before I buy it to know if I like the feel. Mind you, this doesn't give me any indication to the car's reliability or dependability, but at least I got to feel what it's like. I may never buy or afford a BWM, but at least I can go to the dealer and get an idea of what all the hype is about. Some people may argue that buying a car is a huge investment and it is the consumer's right to take it for a spin. Well, a house is a much bigger investment yet I don't think I could convince a realtor or home owner to let me live in the house for a few days before I decide to purchase it. The RIAA at one time was relevant: it controlled a HUGE distribution channel. Today, anybody can have that distribution channel if they use the Internet properly. Here's what you need to get yourself started in music today: 1) Talent 2) A place with good acoustics to record 3) Good digital recording equipment 4) Marketing: Google, Digg, Slashdot, Facebook, etc. 5) Distribution: P2P, HTTP, etc... Bands make more money off shirts than they do from album sales: give away the music, and sell your fans a shirt to further promote yourself. If you RTFA, Gene shits on the music industry too "The record industry is in such a mess.", "The record industry doesn't have a f---ing clue how to make money.": he's right. They are relying on an old business model and not taking any risk: they build acts like NKOTB, BSB, and Britney to market the crap out of, but they consider other bands with actual musical talent and/or genius too niche to make any real money. Also, consider the music biz isn't that simple either: there are two types of music creators well, 3 really, but I'll keep "shitty" out for now). These two types are "fad" and "long term". Consider fad as Milli Vanilli, Britney, the Mini-Pops, BSB. Consider "long term" Madonna, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix, etc. Cripes, some of these people aren't even alive yet their albums still sell! The market will decide the future of the music biz.

    27. Re:He's right though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      except that in your subway example, you increase the weight of the train, thus increasing the running costs. Or, if there's a conductor who makes sure that only as many people as there are seats for get on the train, then, assuming that the train is busy, you're depriving the subway company of the ability to provide their service to someone who actually paid. Both are small, but quantifiable.

      If I buy a CD from you and then make 100 copies it costs you NOTHING. I take NOTHING away from you by doing it. Infact, since I still bought the one copy, far from being disadvantaged, you actually come out on top (assuming that I only bought the CD because I knew that I could make the copies from it).

      Theft of service implies that you've performed some labour for me which I've not paid you for, because you mistakenly believe that I have paid. If you produce a CD and sell it to me and I subsequently make copies, you're not performing ANY further labour at all, thus no service rendered, thus no theft of service.

      QED IANAL, etc.,.

    28. Re:He's right though by dbcad7 · · Score: 1
      In the UK it is illegal to copy music for your own purposes iff you change the format

      Using this law, wouldn't it be illegal to make a mixed tape from your CD collection ?.. after all you would be changing the format.

      --
      waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
    29. Re:He's right though by scharkalvin · · Score: 1

      Music can be a service. Some FM stations carry a sub-carrier to broadcast commercial free
      music ("musak") to stores, doctors offices, etc. A fee must be paid for this. Homebrew illegal
      adapters used to "steal" this channel in a commercial setting would be a theft of the music "service".
      Granted copyright law is often applied here, but it is still theft of an intangible item.
      Check NYC case law on the subway theft of service bit. Yeah they could slap on a trespassing charge
      too, but since the subway itself is public access (for a fee) they usually don't. Now if you got into
      the train yard to spray paint the off duty trains they WOULD charge you with trespassing as well as
      destruction of property.

    30. Re:He's right though by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      Using this law, wouldn't it be illegal to make a mixed tape from your CD collection ?.. after all you would be changing the format.

      Correct - it is indeed illegal.

    31. Re:He's right though by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Also, consider the music biz isn't that simple either: there are two types of music creators well, 3 really, but I'll keep "shitty" out for now). These two types are "fad" and "long term". Consider fad as Milli Vanilli, Britney, the Mini-Pops, BSB. Consider "long term" Madonna, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix, etc. Cripes, some of these people aren't even alive yet their albums still sell! The market will decide the future of the music biz.

      I don't understand. What's the difference between Britney Spears and Madonna?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    32. Re:He's right though by Hatta · · Score: 1

      It is wrong, and illegal, but it isn't stealing.

      It's wrong? Why? I'd say the morally wrong position is that it's OK to artificially impose scarcity on an infinite resource for personal profit.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    33. Re:He's right though by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      It's wrong? Why?

      If someone puts resources (time, effort, money, etc.) into something, and then says "I'm happy for people to have a copy of this under these conditions", do you not think it wrong to take a copy and completely ignore those conditions? (Where the conditions may include ideas like handing over some money, not taking the content and passing it off as your own produce, etc.)

      I'd say the morally wrong position is that it's OK to artificially impose scarcity on an infinite resource for personal profit.

      Where is the scarcity? CDs are pretty abundant, stuff released as downloads aren't really scarce.

    34. Re:He's right though by Schnapple · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I would just like to point out that in all my years of reading Slashdot posts, yours is the single best post I have ever seen with regards to both eloquently explaining why copyright infringement is not the same thing as theft, legally, and also conceding the fact that it is still illegal and wrong. I predict many other posters will take you to task over what you said but you really nailed it perfectly.

    35. Re:He's right though by DingerX · · Score: 1

      I'll concede your points, but state that the underlying notion is that "Gold is something that has value, and that can be owned." You're right, he should have used paper currency; we can use gold for all kinds of things, and that people like it being purty. But it is possible to imagine a society that, in spite of its inherent interest to us, placed no value on gold; or one that maintained that gold belonged to everyone; or one that decided that the whale, being a Royal Fish, when it washed ashore belonged to the king.

      Excellent point on the distinction between a business model and an economic model, but I disagree on the shiny: what has made copyright work in the past has been A) the scale needed to infringe on copyrights and B) the fact that the average person buys a tangible physical object.

      A) means the number of players is limited, and B) means that the people see themselves as buying something. Copyright is what "limits the supply" on your reading, but it's only really limited according to the owners' wishes and capabilities, and, generally speaking, scarcity doesn't have much to do with mass media's price. B) has a not-unimportant psychological effect. We can argue about whether ideas exist, but we can point to a CD and say "That exists".

      Long before any of this nonsense, people were making tapes of records, covering songs at performances, copying texts, and all without worrying about copyright issues. While it is copyright infringement, it's been a zone where societal norms and the law have been at odds. The economic situation has changed where what was once a tolerated popular activity on the fringes of the IP economy has rendered obsolete their current system. And no amount of social engineering, legislation and lawsuits is going to change that.

    36. Re:He's right though by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

      "There's something very basic in humans that less us understand the concept of "mine" and "yours", and apply it to physical objects. But what about ideas? Intellectual property is much more difficult for most people to wrap their minds around."

      You label intellectual property as "ideas". Patents may be "ideas", but music, movies, video games, software, books, are concrete implementations of ideas, that took time, money, resources to create. The idea of a spreadsheet isn't the same as Excel. The idea for a video game taking place on a ring-world fighting alien religious zealots and parasites is not the same as Halo. The idea for a song about a man telling his lady that he'll be home late because he's busy rehearsing with his band is not the same as "Beth" (I used that example, since we're talking about Gene Simmons :p)). There's a huge differnce between ideas and implementations of those ideas, even if those implementations can be stored as bytes. And it's not difficult to wrap one's head around, most people understand the difference, otherwise they wouldn't download the stuff in the first place, they'd just be satisfied with the "idea" for a particular song, movie, game, etc. (I doubt most people downloading songs would be satisfied with merely downloading the sheet music (though even that is beyond the "idea" stage for a song, but you get the point).)

      ""Downloading stuff that you didn't pay for" is not stealing. Stealing is a criminal act where you deprive someone of the use or enjoyment of property. Making a copy of a work is not criminal, nor does it deprive the copyright owner of anything. It can be against the wishes of the copyright owner, and the copyright owner can assert that you inflicted damages, but it is not stealing, just as hijacking an aircraft is not committing insurance fraud."

      So, if I hack into my business competitor's computer system and copy trade secrets, but leave them intact on his computer system, I've not "stolen trade secrets"? Sorry, but colloquially speaking, it is "stealing", and it's called that. Maybe in court it'd be called something else, but let's get real here. Colloqually, "stealing" is obtaining something without proper authorization. Downloading a copy of music outside of the terms of the "creator" is obtaining a copy of music without proper authorization. (One of the example sentences for "steal" at dictionary.com is "This author stole entire paragraphs from my dissertation".)

      Even if you don't consider it "stealing", it's certainly "cheating" (you're cheating the "creator" by making use of his work outside the terms he provided for its use), so it's still one of the classic wrongs (lie, cheat, steal, kill).

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    37. Re:He's right though by Hatta · · Score: 1


      If someone puts resources (time, effort, money, etc.) into something, and then says "I'm happy for people to have a copy of this under these conditions", do you not think it wrong to take a copy and completely ignore those conditions?


      Nobody's taking anything from anyone. No matter how many copies I make of $KISS_ALBUM, Gene Simmons has the same amount of albums. If I insert a shiny disk that belongs to me into a CD burner that belongs to me and produce another shiny disk, all I have done is use my property as I see fit (as free people do). Gene Simmons is not involved in that activity and deserves no compensation for it.

      I'm not saying artists don't deserve compensation. Just that they don't deserve compensation for copying. The fact that someone put some effort into making something does not negate my property rights.

      Where is the scarcity? CDs are pretty abundant, stuff released as downloads aren't really scarce.

      I'm talking about economic scarcity. A good is scarce if the supply is limited. Since the marginal cost of producing a copy of a song is 0, supply is infinite and therefor not scarce. If you have to pay in order to get a song, you are limited to how many songs you can afford. The resource has been made artificially scarce.

      Think about the implications of a resource without scarcity. If someone had a machine that made unlimited food could he morally deny anyone a meal?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    38. Re:He's right though by fuzznutz · · Score: 1

      Can anybody fill me in as to why downloading music without paying for it is ok?

      Downloading music without paying for it is not in itself illegal or even a tort. Downloading copyrighted music without the permission of the copyright owner may be.

      Besides, if Gene Simmons is on one side of an issue, the other side has to be the correct one.
    39. Re:He's right though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Well, Gene Simmons is right, sorta, when he points out the core issue:

              "The only reason why gold is expensive is because we all agree that it is. There's no real use for it, except we all agree and abide by the idea that gold costs a certain amount per ounce. As soon as you give people the choice to deviate from it, you have chaos and anarchy.""

      No, he's flagrantly wrong. Gold is expensive because it is a relatively unreactive, soft, malleable, conductive, brilliantly reflective metal. It's "expensive" because it is both useful *and* rare. Copper isn't as expensive, for example, because it is more reactive and more common. If gold were as abundant as copper, people would use gold, but they don't because there isn't enough that is extractable. Yes, a certain aspect of these metal's relative expense is because of sheer speculation on the part of people buying it, but their relative value to people mainly has to do with their relative usefulness and rarity. It isn't arbitrary economics.

      This is one of the reasons aluminum is cheap now compared to in the 19th century: back then, extracting it from ore was difficult and expensive even though the element itself is extremely common on the Earth. Once a better process was developed, its cost plummeted.

      Simmons is right to imply that things are only worth as much as people decide to pay for them, but there is always an underlying supply, demand, and usefulness issue. In the case of music, that amounts to the number, quality, and genre of musicians, and the fickle tastes of listeners and their desires for entertainment. But choosing "gold" as an analogy is pretty poor for this, because there will only *ever* be so much gold available in the world at a given moment, and we can't arbitrarily change the laws of physics to dial whatever attributes we want a particular element to have -- for some applications, we have to use gold. Musicians can always play more, more people can learn to play themselves, and musical tastes and desires for music at all can change far more easily.

    40. Re:He's right though by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      If I insert a shiny disk that belongs to me into a CD burner that belongs to me and produce another shiny disk, all I have done is use my property as I see fit (as free people do).

      In many jurisdictions this would be considered fair use or fair dealing and not copyright infringement, which rather invalidates your point. If you are going to make examples that claim that copyright infringement isn't wrong, at least pick examples that actually constitute copyright infringement.

      When my original post talked about copyright infringement, I was quite clearly talking about copying content which you have not purchased.

      Just that they don't deserve compensation for copying. The fact that someone put some effort into making something does not negate my property rights.

      You do not have the right to make and distribute copies without a distribution licence. Doing so would be both illegal and wrong. As mentioned above, making copies for your own use is fine and so I'm not sure why you are discussing it here.

      I'm talking about economic scarcity. A good is scarce if the supply is limited. Since the marginal cost of producing a copy of a song is 0, supply is infinite and therefor not scarce. If you have to pay in order to get a song, you are limited to how many songs you can afford. The resource has been made artificially scarce.

      Firstly, the cost of producing a copy of a CD is not zero once you include the production (of the content) and advertising costs. Just because something is very cheap to reproduce once the original has been made, doesn't mean the average cost per item is low.

      Secondly, if they were to just hand it out for free, as you seem to be suggesting they should, what is in it for the vendor? Why should they spend their time producing content that will gain them nothing?

      Think about the implications of a resource without scarcity. If someone had a machine that made unlimited food could he morally deny anyone a meal?

      Apples and Oranges - you don't need music in order to live. However, you seem to miss the fact that the drug companies already do this - they don't hand out drugs for free because it doesn't make economic sense for them.

      You can try and apply your thinking to any product, even things without a zero production cost. Take computers, for example - what gives manufacturers the right to charge any more than the materials cost for computers? Oh yes, it's coz there would be no economic gain for them if they didn't make a profit so why would they bother?

    41. Re:He's right though by Hatta · · Score: 1

      When my original post talked about copyright infringement, I was quite clearly talking about copying content which you have not purchased.

      My point stands. If person A makes a copy of a shiny disk in the privacy of his own home that's entirely his business. If Person A then gives that disk to Person B, that's entirely their business. The government has no place interfering in a transaction between two consenting people.

      You do not have the right to make and distribute copies without a distribution licence.

      Sure I do. I have the right to do anything I want that doesn't harm another person. Just because the current government doesn't recognize it doesn't mean it's not a right. That just means we live under an oppressive and corrupt regime.

      Firstly, the cost of producing a copy of a CD is not zero once you include the production (of the content) and advertising costs.

      I said "marginal cost". Words have meanings. Learn them.

      Secondly, if they were to just hand it out for free, as you seem to be suggesting they should, what is in it for the vendor? Why should they spend their time producing content that will gain them nothing?

      I'm not suggesting anyone give away anything for free. I'm suggesting that I have the right to do with my property as I please. That includes making copies, destroying it, giving it away, turning it into a collage, whatever.

      What you seem to be suggesting is that because someone put some effort into something they have a right to control its use. It makes about as much sense as having to pay the plumber every time you take a shit. Or giving a construction worker royalties every time you drive across his bridge.

      However, you seem to miss the fact that the drug companies already do this - they don't hand out drugs for free because it doesn't make economic sense for them.

      And that is absolutely 100% no question about it wrong! Just because the pharmaceutical industry is evil doesn't make it ok for the recording to be evil too.

      You can try and apply your thinking to any product, even things without a zero production cost.

      I wouldn't do that, my argument only applies to goods that are not scarce. And yes, I believe it works for all goods that are not scarce. If I had a machine that could create computers, or cars, or anything else out of thin air at no cost it would be reprehensible for anyone to try to stop me from distributing those goods.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    42. Re:He's right though by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      If there was a machine that can replicate a 500,000 dollar car for 100 dollars....wouldn't you be asking yourself....should I really pay 499,900 dollars just for design?...should cars cost so much?

      This is just market forces at work. People will pay (more or less) what they think a product is worth. If the vendor is charging too much, someone will produce a cheaper product and undercut them (possibly in the form of a bootleg, clone, knock-off). The vendor's job is to balance the price they are charging in order to maximise profits and minimise people going for the cheaper products. There is also the added complication that a reduced price may prompt your customers to buy more of the product, thus generating more revenue anyway.

      The music and movie industries are in the somewhat unique position that, because of their insistence on stuff like DRM, the "cheap knockoffs" are actually of higher quality than the legitimate product. And they have no one to blame for this but themselves.

    43. Re:He's right though by DingerX · · Score: 1

      Okay, they're things with notional existence. You can't point to them and say "This thing here". That sequences of bytes are intellectual property is a secondary issue. The point is: many people don't intuitively think of them the same way.

      For that matter, the notion that the value of something comes from the work put into it, and not from what it is, is a relatively late development (see, for example, all the medieval condemnations against lending at interest, since gold doesn't grow). In fact, this is the inherent contradiction in what I wrote earlier: while people seem to think value is something inherent in objects, it is actually a societally imposed (and negotiated) concept.

      There are criminal laws against copying trade secrets, and they are referred to as theft. The dictionary example is of plagiarism, where someone claims to be the author of the work of another. Positing that a copyright is property (and I'm sure you'll accept that), the equivalent case of "stealing" would be, "He is claiming copyright on my work." Many of us know people who have been victims of this sort of theft, but it's not the same thing as infringing a copyright.

      I'm not saying it's better or worse; just that the term "theft" does not apply, and if you insist on applying it, you are perverting the notion.

      "Stealing" is not obtaining something without proper authorization. We have rights, and we enjoy those rights, as long as they don't infringe on others. I don't want to live in a society that assumes no rights and requires "proper authorization" for mundane tasks. Infringement of rights is a serious crime, perhaps more serious than theft, but there's no need to get so riled up about it that you end up criminalizing everything in a sort of 1984-meets-Windows Vista dystopia.

      oh snap.

    44. Re:He's right though by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      If person A makes a copy of a shiny disk in the privacy of his own home that's entirely his business.

      Correct

      If Person A then gives that disk to Person B, that's entirely their business. The government has no place interfering in a transaction between two consenting people.

      Incorrect - unless you have a distribution licence this is illegal since you are infringing the copyright of the CD. I also maintain that it is wrong because it was clear when you bought the CD that this was not allowed. What do you believe gives you the right to acquire content and then completely disregard the wishes of the artist (which are protected by law). If everyone were free to distribute copies of the content, very few people would pay for it and the artists would not be able to make money. If the artists can't make money from their art it means they need to hold down another job which would massively reduce the amount of time they could dedicate to the art.

      Sure I do. I have the right to do anything I want that doesn't harm another person. Just because the current government doesn't recognize it doesn't mean it's not a right. That just means we live under an oppressive and corrupt regime.

      Why is harming another person excluded from your argument? The only reason you don't have the right to murder people is because the current government has revoked that right.

      According to Webster, the definition of a right is "According to the law or will of God" - ignoring the religious angle for a minute, this means that your rights are defined exactly by the current government - there is no such thing as a right that the government doesn't recognise, if the government doesn't recognise it is by definition not a right.

      What you seem to be suggesting is that because someone put some effort into something they have a right to control its use.

      Within the confines of the law, that is exactly what they have the right to do.

      And that is absolutely 100% no question about it wrong! Just because the pharmaceutical industry is evil doesn't make it ok for the recording to be evil too.

      So you would prefer they didn't make any profit from the drugs they produce? I can assure you that medicine would take a severe downturn since without any incentive to invest in the research there would be no new drugs. Drugs aren't invented by magic - there is significant investment involved and if there is no return on that investment then it just plain won't happen.

      If I had a machine that could create computers, or cars, or anything else out of thin air at no cost it would be reprehensible for anyone to try to stop me from distributing those goods.

      Again, this brings us back to the problem that there was investment required in order to produce these goods in the first place. If anyone can clone them at no cost there would be no return on the investment so why would anyone bother to invest in the R&D in the first place?

      Free redistribution works only in very specific cases. The software industry is a good example - Free software works because people can charge a significant amount for the services rendered rather than the software itself. If someone wants to buy a web server you can install Apache on a box and sell it to them. And the software is developed because people need a feature that doesn't yet exist and are thus willing to pay a developer to do the work. The work is non-trivial so most people can't do it themselves and therefore pay for it.

      This really does not apply to the music industry - what service are you going to charge for? CD duplication? Anyone can do that for pennies.

    45. Re:He's right though by dangitman · · Score: 1

      Drugs aren't invented by magic - there is significant investment involved and if there is no return on that investment then it just plain won't happen.

      Helping people isn't enough of an incentive for making new drugs? Saving lives isn't enough of an incentive? That's pretty fucked up.

      I think people would continue to create new drugs without profit motives, because money is less important than human survival and love.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    46. Re:He's right though by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      Helping people isn't enough of an incentive for making new drugs? Saving lives isn't enough of an incentive? That's pretty fucked up.

      When you look around for a savings account to invest your money in, do you look for the one with the highest interest rate or the one with a big fat 0%?

  23. But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution?) by compumike · · Score: 2, Insightful
    From the article:

    Every little college kid, every freshly-scrubbed little kid's face should have been sued off the face of the earth. They should have taken their houses and cars and nipped it right there in the beginning. Those kids are putting 100,000 to a million people out of work. How can you pick on them? They've got freckles. That's a crook. He may as well be wearing a bandit's mask. While the imagery is over the top, as is the assertion that it's absolutely every kid, the basic message is just about correct: lots of people are pirating music. I've been reading the other slashdot responses talking about the failure of the traditional CD business model... and believe it or not, the industry has (slowly) come around to alternatives, like per-track pricing. But even still, people continue to pirate at an alarming rate. And more than that, they think it's morally OK. And they think it's justified because of the failure of the music industry to adapt. That's plain wrong: the slow movement of the music industry doesn't make it right to illegally circumvent the legal market for their goods.

    And I think he's generally right that pirates need to be taken to court and prosecuted. This is a far better alternative than DRM, which hurts legal users too. Prosecute the criminals. I don't think that the slashdot audience can be self-consistent if it's both opposed to DRM and to prosecuting criminals.

    --
    Get started with microcontrollers today!
  24. The most important part is the music.... by dgun · · Score: 1

    ....he said, as he headed toward the wardrobe trailer, where he will spend the next 8 hours working on his hair and makeup.

    --
    FAQs are evil.
  25. Give me a break by Stanislav_J · · Score: 1

    Gene Fucking Simmons has made enough off KISS merchandise alone to more than comfortably support a small town, so he's got no room to beef.

    --
    "Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket." -- Eric Hoffer
  26. why do where care about Gene Simmons? by freedom_surfer · · Score: 5, Funny

    Gene Simmons also advocates public executions for drugs. If it weren't for drugs how could half his fans endure his music?

    1. Re:why do where care about Gene Simmons? by aquatone282 · · Score: 0

      I'm more worried about the other half that don't need drugs to enjoy Kiss.

      --
      What?
    2. Re:why do where care about Gene Simmons? by mqduck · · Score: 1

      How do you execute a drug? Is this a new computer geeky synonym for "ingest"?

      --
      Property is theft.
    3. Re:why do where care about Gene Simmons? by mqduck · · Score: 1

      > trip-balls /dev/me /dev/input/mouth

      --
      Property is theft.
  27. Logic? by djauto23 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The only reason why gold is expensive is because we all agree that it is. There's no real use for it, except we all agree and abide by the idea that gold costs a certain amount per ounce. As soon as you give people the choice to deviate from it, you have chaos and anarchy. And that's what going on. Hmmm...not certain if I follow his logic.

    1. Re:Logic? by bill_of_wrongs · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That can actually be used as a damn good demonstration of why he and other believers in "intellectual property" are wrong. The price of gold is determined by supply and demand. The supply is limited by the production costs per unit which can be estimated quite accurately. The same supply and demand mechanism also regulates music sales but for music the production costs approach zero as the number of copies approach infinity. Trying to artificially increase the cost of making a copy doesn't work in a somewhat democratic society, in order to enforce it you need some kind of dictatorship.

    2. Re:Logic? by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      Why hes talking about the International Gold Police who set the price of gold and insure that no-one mines and sells gold for less than that price. They're on Wikipedia, or will be in a second.

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    3. Re:Logic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed they are, but the full details of their shady work remain as yet somewhat sketchy.

    4. Re:Logic? by LehiNephi · · Score: 1

      The incremental cost depends on what medium you're using to distribute the music. You're right, however, that even for CDs, the manufacturing and distribution costs are practically insignificant compared to the sales price, and as the number of copies increases, the shared cost of production approaches zero.

      Music companies can artificially inflate the price of their CDs, however, because they have a monopoly on that specific work, granted by copyright. I think this is the "dictatorship" of which you were speaking.

      --
      Help find a cure for cancer. Join the [H]orde
    5. Re:Logic? by Kingrames · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually gold is one of the most useful minerals the world over. It's used in computers, for one, and happens to be a mineral that can easily be sliced very thin - only a few atoms thick. (I've heard of gold foil only 3 atoms thick, new records may have been set since then) Gold is a very versatile resource and for that reason, has been valued heavily in nearly every decade of humanity's progression.

      Its value is the standard unit of currency exchange the world over and is used to measure purchasing power in many countries because it's the most stable form of currency. An ounce of gold today purchases the same amount of goods and services as it would have 30 years ago, for example.

      Why? because it just happens to be. There's no real written in stone reason for it. If another candidate stepped forward to become the new standard currency, it'd happen nearly instantly and nobody would pay much attention to it whatsoever. It would be just another novelty bit of trivia.

      But it's wrong to say that gold is expensive because we all agreed on it. Nobody gets to decide that.

      --
      If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
    6. Re:Logic? by bill_of_wrongs · · Score: 1

      Not quite, I said "enforce". Copyright certainly grants a (long) time limited monopoly but this monopoly can't be effectively enforced without a dictatorship. Otherwise most people can obtain the means to make copies themselves and knowing they are unlikely to get punished will make the decision wether to copy or not regardless of what the law says.

  28. Gene Simmons? by damburger · · Score: 5, Funny

    Seeing as how my first thought on reading the summary was 'who is gene simmons', I think its fairly safe to say the final score is:

    College Kids 1, Retarded Old Drag Queen 0.

    --
    If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    1. Re:Gene Simmons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sh!t I'm over 40 and didn't know who Gene Simmons was. I've got to get out of the basement more.

    2. Re:Gene Simmons? by rideDPU · · Score: 1

      Beat me to it...

    3. Re:Gene Simmons? by ginbot462 · · Score: 1

      Damnit, and I already used my mod points today!

      --
      Atlas Shrugged : Thematic Story :: Battlefield Earth : Organized Religion
  29. I'm thinking of... by Sander_ · · Score: 1

    ...KISS and my lower spine now. Strange.

    -A

  30. Re:why do we care about Gene Simmons? by freedom_surfer · · Score: 1

    Doh! Must review subject too. Have taken to many drugs trying to enjoy Gene's music.

  31. Wow by Publikwerks · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So he wants to base his business model around suing college kids for downloading songs? Maybe if the recording industry focused more on innovation than lawsuits they wouldn't be in this mess.Everyone and their mother told them that the cd was a dead end, and yet they dragged their feet. Now, they can't catch up.

  32. Re:Im not on f---ing crack by Instantlemming · · Score: 1

    Either shut up or die? I hope that he will shut up when he dies. Would be a bit eerie if he didn't.

  33. Yesterday's liberals... by PinkyDead · · Score: 1

    ...are tomorrow's conservatives.

    --
    Genesis 1:32 And God typed :wq!
    1. Re:Yesterday's liberals... by dave420 · · Score: 1

      What are they today?

    2. Re:Yesterday's liberals... by PinkyDead · · Score: 1

      Working stiffs paying taxes that fund liberals in college and retired conservatives, with no time to contemplate the injustice of their situation.

      I think...

      --
      Genesis 1:32 And God typed :wq!
  34. Tag this article "pastit" by Von+Helmet · · Score: 1

    Or "Getoffmylawn".

  35. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by theheadlessrabbit · · Score: 3, Interesting

    why is it morally wrong?

    copyright law was intended to encourage artists to create new work by granting them a temporary monopoly on their work.

    with mass-reproducible art forms - music, photography, print, film, industries were created which took copyright away from the content creators

    once the copyrights have been acquired, the industry big-wigs have repeatedly bribed government officials and law makers into extending copyright protection to ridicules terms so they cab squeeze every penny out of each copyright they own, while the creator makes next to nothing from their work.

    so, is it morally right for large corporations to bend laws and buy-out politicians to allow their business model to work?
    is it right for laws to protect corporations over the rights of private citizens?

    as a private citizen, I believe the current situation is unjust, and I believe that a moral person has a moral obligation to fight unjust laws. But I also come from a country where blank media is taxed, to compensate the artists. so I steal as much content as I can. I've got to get my money's worth.

    I am a content creator myself, and I have been inhibited by these oppressive copyright laws.

    --
    -I only code in BASIC.-
  36. "I was made for suing you baby..." by Snufu · · Score: 0

    "I...Wanna rock and roll all nigh--hey...get off my lawn!"

    1. Re:"I was made for suing you baby..." by turing_m · · Score: 3, Funny

      God gave rock 'n' roll to everyone... except for college students, who are crooks.

      --
      If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
    2. Re:"I was made for suing you baby..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.mininova.org/tor/780824 and Gene Simmons... GFY!

  37. Outside the box by Stanislav_J · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I once had a small business (really more of a hobby than a major enterprise -- something to bring in some extra wampum) in which I sold unusual esoteric merchandise to a small group of fanatics (I think at most I had a few hundred folks on my mailing list). Sales were down and the economy was bad, so one month I did a "name you own price" special -- you tell me what you want and what you think is a fair price and we have a deal. And I had a higher net profit in that month than any other that year. Apropos of nothing, perhaps, as I know every business and industry is different, but the basic point is that often it is the unconventional business model that turns out to be the most successful. The more set you are in your ways, the more you stand to lose as the world passes you by.

    --
    "Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket." -- Eric Hoffer
    1. Re:Outside the box by tkinnun0 · · Score: 1

      Let me guess, that month was December, the next year you changed your business model to pay-what-you-like and made multi-millions?

      Or you discovered a thing called promotion.

    2. Re:Outside the box by Satorian · · Score: 1

      I occasionally order old books at an antiquary. Not really valuable ones mind you, but out-of-print runs, hard to obtain ones or plain obscure ones that never hit the market here. And this one particular antiquary I use does not have price lists. You call them, they ask you what you consider fair price for the item and then decide whether they want to sell it to you.

      Interestingly though, they never rejected an offer I made. Never. In fact, when I bought my first book there and was quite confused by the M.O., the friendly, old man laughed at my first bid (which was middle-of-the-road: solid amount, but something I would have been willing to pay for a clean copy) and sold it to me for half that.

      It's as if this dude runs the shop just for the fun of it and uses it to educate people to his own ways. While not exactly a model of self-determined price or freebies, it still makes for an interesting departure from standard business models.

    3. Re:Outside the box by Stanislav_J · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Of course, to be honest, it's probably more that the guy has other income, or is comfortably retired, and just runs the shop as a hobby. I've run into a lot of used book stores like that -- old dude in a checkered shirt, smoking a pipe, petting his dog and watching "Matlock." Gets maybe a dozen customers a day, of which 2 or 3 might actually buy something. Clearly barely enough income to pay his store rent...maybe. I always figured those guys were just bored old farts on a good pension (military or whatever) who just want to have something to motivate them to get out of the house and drive the '88 LeBaron (with only 43,000 miles on it) half a mile to "work" every day and get to meet a few folks, have some interesting chats, and stay out of the wifey's hair.

      --
      "Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket." -- Eric Hoffer
    4. Re:Outside the box by commieneko · · Score: 1

      That is essentially the case with most musicians but with the polarity reversed. It is not their day job, it gets them out at night, and they do it to meet chicks. It is the young man's bookshop...

    5. Re:Outside the box by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Terra Bite in Kirkland does this full-time.

      "Is it Working?

      Everyone always asks if it's working. Although we don't track by customer, we do track how many we serve, what we give out, and how much we take in. The result is that almost everyone pays, at least among the adults. A reporter sat in the store one day to watch people, and saw the same thing.

      On average, we take in less per person than the chains would. But we are also much more efficient than the chains. So we just need a high volume of people every day. Since the publicity, we've gotten to the break-even point. Our entire goal is just to break even, and we'll probably never do much more than that."

  38. What a coincidence... by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

    I was just thinking how shitty, artless bands like Kiss are probably to blame for music industry woes.

    --
    We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
  39. Re:Im not on f---ing crack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This gets modded up?:/ Shut up and die? Hampering the progress of mankind? You realize we're only talking about music here, right?

    My parents are old too, but that doesn't automatically discount what they say nor does it give an asshat like Simmons any more credibility.

  40. But do we really care? by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First off, some people need to RTFA, he is NOT talking about himself, but about new bands who dream of success who he claims will not be able to do it (or at least not the way he defines success, getting really rich of your image).

    So?

    Times change. Once you had far more theathers and far more places where plays could be held. Then the movie theather arrived and put countless performers out of business. Were once a musician was playing in bar now there is a sound installation. Where once there was an entertainer, now there is a big screen TV.

    Movie theathers too took a hit with the arrival of television. Live tv broadcasts took a hit when VCR's arrived and even more with DVR.

    Coal mines are gone in holland, because we discovered a gas field and bam, lots of people unemployed. Daf cars (trucks still exists) is gone and again, people out of a job because less and less people are needed to make cars and there are countries that can do it cheaper.

    IT is being outsourced as are call center jobs.

    The next generations job prospects are going to be different then today's.

    In a way, he says that himself, no band has managed to overtake KISS in merchandising. HE himself killed the dream off new bands in becoming the next kiss because he refuses to step aside. Shame on him.

    Lets say that not a single musician can make money anymore. Unlikely but lets assume it for a second, not a single person can make a single penny creating music. So?

    Where is it written that you should be able too? I am by training a baker, I am fairly good at it, (but not exceptionally so) and I left the business because it is a dead end. People buy their bakery goods from the factory and opening a new bakery shop is far to expensive and legally impossible. Zoning restrictions, a bakery works at night and produces noise and smells while by its nature it has to be in a residential area. That don't mix no more. The hygience laws have become so strict that it costs a fortune to fit out a new building and the costs (and shortage) of skilled labourers, plus the restrictions of what they are allowed to do means you need a massive amount of very expensive equipment, which because the demand for small scale equipment has plummeted is increasingly expensive.

    In short, society has killed the small baker shop. Of the people in my entire school only a handfull are still in the trade, a most of them because they inheritied the business from their parents.

    Do I see Gene Simmons give a shit about that? No. Why then should I give a shit if some other person has to give up his dream of being a paid artist and find another way of making a living.

    Lots of people try to make an argument that music sharing doesn't hurt the industry or that artist can compensate or that there are different methods of selling music.

    I like to take it one step further, why should society give a shit wether music creators can make money? Do we really want to make rigid laws for all people just so a few can make a living the job they want? I want to bake bread. Should YOU be forced to go to a seperate store in your area for your bread rather then go to the supermarket? Should for instance the dutch be forced to serve pie again on their birthday from the local bakery rather then "vlaai" (a kind of pie coming originally from a dutch province that comes from a chain of stores that get supplied by a factory).

    If you say no to that, then you should say no to everything the RIAA wants as well. Society should not have to bend over backwards just some people can make music for a living. Get a job.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:But do we really care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should society give a shit wether music creators can make money? ... Get a job. Because society is partly made up of "music creators", and when society ceases to give a shit about whether the society can make money then society fails. Now, after your eyes have stopped rolling down Mount Everest, actually take a second to think about what I'm saying. As a society we support each other; whether we're buying food, soap, services, entertainment or funeral arrangements, we're supporting someone somewhere for having done their part in providing all of that for us. Why does it happen that way? Because everything we do for someone else costs something of our own, and we all expect to be compensated for what we provide, for the "job we've got".

      Maybe you don't want to support others for what they provide. Well, good for you. Maybe you can find some cozy, isolated spot down in the jungle somewhere so that you don't have to worry about helping to support something/someone else for what they do/have done that has helped you, enlightened you, or entertained you in some way. But in the immortal words of Lou Caruthers, when Marty McFly asks him for a Pepsi Free: "you want a Pepsi, PAL, you're gonna pay for it."
    2. Re:But do we really care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Completely agree with everything you said there, except....

      Unlike bakery, people still can make a living out of Music. They just can't make 'a fortune' as easily.

    3. Re:But do we really care? by RicRoc · · Score: 1

      Great comment, I agree completely!

      There are many examples of industries like bakery that have changed radically - my father worked with type setting in his youth (he's a master typographer) but now that occupation is almost extinct. He had to start over from scratch three times, simply because technology made what he was doing obsolete. But the product is still alive: people still need nice-looking printed material, it's just made in a different way these days. At one time he was king of typesetting, now anyone can do a half-decent job with a PC.

      Music - and also IT - will, I believe, change in radical ways as well. Music will never die, but how it is produced and sold will change - perhaps in the same way bakery has: factories produce high-volume, low quality stuff, and individual (not-for-profit) artists will continue to create home-baked music. Maybe!

      --
      Who?
    4. Re:But do we really care? by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      I am by training a baker, I am fairly good at it, (but not exceptionally so) and I left the business because it is a dead end. People buy their bakery goods from the factory and opening a new bakery shop is far to expensive and legally impossible. Zoning restrictions, a bakery works at night and produces noise and smells while by its nature it has to be in a residential area. That don't mix no more. The hygience laws have become so strict that it costs a fortune to fit out a new building and the costs (and shortage) of skilled labourers, plus the restrictions of what they are allowed to do means you need a massive amount of very expensive equipment, which because the demand for small scale equipment has plummeted is increasingly expensive.

      Too bad you had to give up. Where I live some small bakers survive by becoming specialists. They make gourmet artisan breads, pies, custom orders, etc. Many also supply high end restaurants with high quality bread. They fill in the niché left open by industrial bakers. I don't know what they do about the smell but if I had to choose between the smell of freshly baked bread and car exhaust I'd take the bread.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
  41. Disingenuous argument by Arabani · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Regarding giving away music and making money off touring/merchandise:

    Well therein lies the most stupid mistake anybody can make. The most important part is the music. Without that, why would you care? Even the idea that you're considering giving the music away for free makes it easier to give it away for free. The only reason why gold is expensive is because we all agree that it is. There's no real use for it, except we all agree and abide by the idea that gold costs a certain amount per ounce. As soon as you give people the choice to deviate from it, you have chaos and anarchy. And that's what going on. His use of gold as an argument for why music shouldn't be given away is disingenuous. He's arguing that gold, not having any intrinsic value, derives its value from the fact that people "agree" on a certain price. But that's not the case (if it were, DOJ would be quite busy with price-fixing investigations). As any first-year economics student knows, in a (free) market, prices are determined by supply and demand. Gold is in high demand (because it's pretty, as well as having some industrial uses), but has an extremely limited supply (297 tonnes mined in 2005, costing an average of $237/troy ounce to extract). Therefore, $237/troy ounce is the minimum price of gold given a free market and assuming mining corporations are profit-seeking enterprises. It seems clear that the price of gold is in fact a very poor analogy to the price of music, because music is a) NOT in limited supply (one could argue the supply is infinite, depending on the medium and one's definition of "music"), and b) the marginal cost (how much it costs to produce another unit) is orders of magnitude lower than that of gold.

    As an intellectual exercise, let's stick to Gene's flawed analogy. Gold has a price because there's this idea that people "agree" that it should have a certain price. Now let's examine Radiohead's experiment. They're saying "you name a price, and we'll charge you that much". And so on an individual basis, each fan is agreeing with Radiohead that the price of the new album should be X dollars. Seems to me that Radiohead's model is exactly what he's arguing for. So tell me, what's wrong with giving away music?

    Regardless, somebody needs to let Mr. Simmons know that he's living in a brave new world, and unless he has a burning desire to move in with the dodos, he needs to realize that the old models might not work anymore. That, or maybe he's trying really hard for the arrogant, self-righteous bastard image.
    1. Re:Disingenuous argument by Chemicalscum · · Score: 1

      It seems clear that the price of gold is in fact a very poor analogy to the price of music, because music is a) NOT in limited supply (one could argue the supply is infinite,

      The Pistols on the unlimited supply of music:

      there's unlimited supply
      and there is no reason why
      i tell you it was all a frame
      they only did it 'cos of fame
      who?
      e.m.i. e.m.i. e.m.i.
      to many people had the suss
      too many people support us
      an unlimited amount
      too many outlets in and out
      who?
      e.m.i. e.m.i. e.m.i.
      and sir and friends are crucified
      a day they wished that we had died
      we are an addition we are ruled by none
      never ever never
      and you thought that we were faking
      that we were all just money making
      you do not believe we're for real
      or you would lose your cheap appeal?
      don't judge a book just by the cover
      unless you cover just another
      and blind acceptance is a sign
      a stupid fools who stand in line
      like

      e.m.i. e.m.i. e.m.i.
      unlimited edition
      with an unlimited supply
      that was the only reason
      we all had to say goodbye
      unlimited supply e.m.i.
      there is no reason why e.m.i.
      i tell you it was all a frame e.m.i.
      they only did it 'cos of fame e.m.i.
      i do not need the pressure e.m.i.
      i can't stand the useless fools e.m.i.
      ulimited supply e.m.i.
      hallo e.m.i. goodbye a & m

    2. Re:Disingenuous argument by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      Therefore, $237/troy ounce is the minimum price of gold given a free market and assuming mining corporations are profit-seeking enterprises.

      Not quite. That's the minimum price for newly-mined gold, since if the offered price were any lower no one would bother to mine it (at a loss). However, the price of gold itself can be lower if the demand can be satisfied from the existing supply -- which is all the gold available for purchase, not just the amount mined in a given year. If the demand were to disappear -- if no one wanted more gold than they already had -- then the price would drop to zero regardless of the supply or the cost of mining it. (Obviously this is an unlikely occurrence, since the demand for gold for both ornamental and industrial uses is ancient and rather more stable than demand for most other goods.)

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    3. Re:Disingenuous argument by agent_no.82 · · Score: 1

      You forget: the market is composed of a number of people agreeing on the worth of a good or service. A good/service is only worth something in a market if somebody thinks it is. Supply/Demand is a summary of the decisions people might make a about the worth of a good/service.

  42. He's kinda right about merchandise, though. by ZombieRoboNinja · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's the same argument you hear from the hardest of the hardcore FOSS guys - that ALL products that can be reproduced electronically - music, code, games, books, presumably movies - should be available for free, and that the artists should support themselves either by asking for handouts or by selling something marginally related to their art.

    I'd argue that rock stars don't WANT to shill t-shirts, or they'd be in a t-shirt company. And honestly, if you're looking for LESS crappy pop music, do you really want to encourage them to base their economics on having faces that look good on lunch boxes?

    Same for programmers, of course. While the line is blurred in many cases, at heart I'd say many coders don't WANT to work as "support" for their own product. I mean, isn't that the basic coder stereotype, impatience with people who don't understand technology?

    The paradigm breaks down even more for novelists. A novelist's entire skill set revolves around writing stuff, and anything he writes is gonna take ten seconds to copy and upload, so without "intellectual property" of SOME sort he's basically SOL.

    FORTUNATELY, (and here's where I hopefully mitigate the -1 Troll points I foresee for this post), merchandising ISN'T the only way musicians can make money aside from CD profits. They also have that little niche called "live performances," which sustained them for a good 99.9% of human history.

    1. Re:He's kinda right about merchandise, though. by The_reformant · · Score: 1

      The only problem is that live performances are only profitable for the biggest of bands. The majority of small-medium touring bands will do it at a cost to them.

      --
      I have discovered a truly remarkable sig which this post is too small to contain.
    2. Re:He's kinda right about merchandise, though. by ZombieRoboNinja · · Score: 1

      But is that just an effect of the current economic model that incorporates CD sales? I've heard that a lot of bands tour basically as a way of advertising their CDs, whereas before the 70s it was the other way around - bands only sold records to get people to show up to their performances. If that's the case, ticket prices may be artificially cheap right now, and after the CD-sales economy crashes, they could rise high enough to support more touring bands.

      Honest question, because I really don't know much about the logistics.

    3. Re:He's kinda right about merchandise, though. by kongit · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Sorry I must disagree. Only the biggest of bands can make loads of money being a musician but smaller musicians can make a living. There are still places that value live music and often these places are small. The cost of performing is usually linked to the size of the audience: for a small audience you do not need $20,000 worth of amps and speakers nor do you have to pay the exorbitant cost to rent a large space to play in. So while the musician makes less money at small venues, he can still make enough to get by on if he plays enough. A good example of this is the number of professional jazz musicians, they normally don't play large venues but they can still make a living doing what they love.

    4. Re:He's kinda right about merchandise, though. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The cost of performing is usually linked to the size of the audience: for a small audience you do not need $20,000 worth of amps and speakers nor do you have to pay the exorbitant cost to rent a large space to play in."

      This is not true.
      It would be unusual for the band to provide the PA rig for the venue, large or small. Most venues will have their own, and an in house engineer. Bands in general do not own PA systems.
      Also you don't generally rent the space. Venues ask the band to play, and then either pay a fee to the band or take a cut of the ticket sales. As the bands bring punters which means bar sales, the venue wants the bands.

      The costs get larger with smaller venues, as you still have to get everyone there, give them somewhere to sleep afterwards, get all the bands gear there and in and out of the venue etc. The actual cost for the band does not change much on the size of venue, the expensive bit is not the performance but the logistics in making it happen.

    5. Re:He's kinda right about merchandise, though. by pxlmusic · · Score: 1

      this is true. i did a show last night here in Atlanta with an artist on the Noitekk label (who are often distrubted via Metropolis Records -- one of the biggest industrial labels on the planet) and i didn't make a dime. i don't know what the headliner made, but i hope it was at least somewhat worth their while to come up from Florida. i have done my fair share of unpaid shows (as i'm still starting out) because the experience and exposure are good. later on, though, there will be more of the merchandising. merchandising sales are what keep many bands afloat on their tours; for some, it's better than that. i don't know if it will go that far for me or not, but it doesn't hurt to try. i'm not quitting my day job just yet.

      --
      "If for any reason you're not satisfied with our service, I hate you."
    6. Re:He's kinda right about merchandise, though. by cozziewozzie · · Score: 0

      I'd argue that rock stars don't WANT to shill t-shirts, or they'd be in a t-shirt company.

      And I'd argue that rock stars don't want to sell CDs, or they'd be in the distribution business or logistics.

      I'd argue that rock stars want to do rock star stuff -- play live concerts, screw groupies, give interviews, party, be adored by the fans, and all that rock stuff.

      And an open music model doesn't take any of that away. Perhaps some changes would be there, but times are changing.

    7. Re:He's kinda right about merchandise, though. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You were great until you gave into the slashdot group-think that live performances is the answer.
      Most live performances barely break even these days, and often lose money. The purpose of the performance is advertisement for the CD, unless you're already a superstar.

      And of course, as you implicitly acknowledge, live performances do nothing for non-musicians (authors, video game makers, etc).
      Even in the music biz, there are song writers that write songs for others to perform, who get paid based on royalties and/or based on how well their previous songs sold. If all songs are free and only live performances are revenue-generators, there's no way to exactly measure the monetary worth of the song such that the song writer gets paid in accordance to the popularity of a song.

    8. Re:He's kinda right about merchandise, though. by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

      Coders expect to paid for THE NEXT peice of code they write.

      They don't expect to write whatever and have people force fed it through payola and etc.... except microsoft of course.

      But I think Slashdot has spoken on that..

  43. poor college kids by doyoulikeworms · · Score: 1

    It's that college kids don't have money anyway. They can't afford to buy your music either one way or the other. The best way to make money off these kids is to leave them alone... because they may become fans. Once these kids graduate, they'll have the money to support the artists they love.

    It's all OK though, because the college kids will graduate and they'll enter the upper tiers of the socioeconomic ladder. The kids have all grown up hating and fearing you, so good luck extracting dollars from their soon-to-be-lined pockets. You've dug your own ditch, and now get ready to lie in it.

    1. Re:poor college kids by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's that college kids don't have money anyway. They can't afford to buy your music either one way or the other. The best way to make money off these kids is to leave them alone... because they may become fans. Once these kids graduate, they'll have the money to support the artists they love.

      That's a great argument! I need a new car and can't afford it... but once I graduate, I'll have the money to support the auto manufacturers I love... (and for those that are tempted to jump on this comment and say something such as "copyright infringement isn't stealing", etc. - of course I know that. My comment is about the attitude implied, which I take to be "I can't afford it, but want it, so I will get it illegally and maybe make up for it later". For me, the question becomes - how far does that attitude extend?

      The kids have all grown up hating and fearing you, so good luck extracting dollars from their soon-to-be-lined pockets.

      I haven't grown up hating and fearing the music industry. I had the benefit of parents that taught me right from wrong, and when I am short on money, I have to forego luxuries until I can afford them. Sometimes that takes awhile. I don't feel deprived: I appreciate the music that I have more, because I earned the money that purchased it. I'm also careful when I buy music - I prefer bands that offer samples, naturally, so that I have an idea of what I am purchasing, but occassionally take a chance and buy something that looks interesting. Sometimes it works out, sometimes it doesn't - that's life.

      It's a pity that so many here seem to believe that they're entitled to things that aren't theirs for free and then go to such great lengths to rationalize it.

      It's even more sad to see how Slashdot seems to encourage this now - the number of truly nerdy articles has dropped substantially over the years.
  44. That's because... by NIckGorton · · Score: 1

    Damien Rice has that... what do you call it.... oh yeah, talent.

  45. Next thing you know... by Noryungi · · Score: 1

    Gene Simmons is going to blast college kids for engaging in sex before marriage.

    Something like: "Everyone knows stable marriages are the bedrock of civilized society, and stable marriages cannot be created except through abstinence before marriage! College kids these days are out of the f****** minds!!".

    This being said, of course, after performing the following song in full KISS regalia...

    Ah well, getting old and cranky will happen to us all, as they say. ;-)

    --
    The right to offend is far more important than the right not to be offended. (Rowan Atkinson)
    1. Re:Next thing you know... by samplehead · · Score: 1

      Gene and marriage?

  46. Simmons went into music to make money by simong · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I found a copy of Simmons' biography in a second hand shop and while it's an interesting read, he's a pretty dull guy. No vices apart from womanising, and it's fairly obvious that he saw music as a way of avoiding the day job, which he's managed to do for 35 years. It comes as no surprise that he mistrusts the way that the music business is going, and can't see the difference between file sharing and paid-for downloading. He is the epitome of senior music industry management - late 50s, tour jacket wearing, stuck in that notion of selling 'product'. Not being able to buy Kiss online won't trouble his income much, and it probably doesn't occur to him that more of his income these days comes from touring, merchandise and just being Gene Simmons. I can imagine that he was a slow adopter of the CD format too, and probably made sure that he got a good deal out of them before Kiss got digitised for the first time.

  47. Hey Gene.... by advocate_one · · Score: 3, Insightful

    BUT SOME ARTISTS LIKE RADIOHEAD AND TRENT REZNOR ARE TRYING TO FIND A NEW BUSINESS MODEL.
    That doesn't count. You can't pick on one person as an exception. And that's not a business model that works. I open a store and say "Come on in and pay whatever you want." Are you on f---ing crack? Do you really believe that's a business model that works?

    they got a heck of a lot more per album for themselves doing it that way than you get with your rip-off recording contract...

    /me thinks he's just jealous he didn't come up with the idea himself... cos if he tries it now, he'll just look like a me-too wannabee...

    --
    Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
    1. Re:Hey Gene.... by east+coast · · Score: 1

      they got a heck of a lot more per album for themselves doing it that way than you get with your rip-off recording contract...

      You have any numbers to back that up? Does Trend Reznor doesn't even have his goods out yet?

      There is a lot of this "artists don't even make XXX per album" posts but every single time I call someone out on this I never get a source for this number that they come up with (also, note that it's odd that this number changes all the time too. Hmmmm....).

      But Kiss is a well established band and, beyond the fact that their time has come and gone also contributing to their diminished sales, you can not deny that piracy has also hurt their cause. I'm sure the amount that Gene and his fellow classic rock counterparts makes per album is pretty decent. This isn't exactly his first time around the block.

      /me thinks he's just jealous he didn't come up with the idea himself... cos if he tries it now, he'll just look like a me-too wannabee...

      Actually, I think you're being short sighted. In a way I'm hoping that it's on purpose but I'm really not sure at this point. Gene understands the downfall of the Radiohead model: Once the media stops touting this up as an outrageous stunt and all that free publicity that Radiohead fed off of goes away the artists running the same model are going to have a much harder time making a sale.

      We had people here who claimed that they didn't know Radiohead and had no real interest in the music but were going to "buy" their album just in support. How does that work for artist #238 who does the same thing? Are all of these people willing to donate to the cause of thumbing their noses at the RIAA still going to support artists once the "point" is proven? What's going to happen when the Radiohead model turns from a novelty into the routine of any other purchase? Are people still going to ante up? I think this is a legitimate concern for the artist who considers this route for a release.

      It's far too easy to dismiss him as a simple naysayer without putting yourself in his place for a minute. The artists who choose to get into the Radiohead model are going to be taking a gamble with their own money. I'll be frank about it, if I were an artist today I don't know how much I would be willing to risk on the public's goodwill either. Think about it.

      --
      Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
    2. Re:Hey Gene.... by magus_melchior · · Score: 1

      Simmons' "rebuttal" is little more than a "You're wrong! [Why?] Because I said so!" response, as he really doesn't provide much of a reason, just an argumentative whack on the head. I seriously doubt that he was referring to the dilution effect that you're anticipating, should every band on the planet use Radiohead's model (that part of your argument could be taken as an appeal to fear, btw).

      And even so, given we have the technology to promote lesser-known bands and distribute their music with a fair price at a much lower cost than before (if it ain't there yet, the pieces for such a framework have already been invented), why would a band necessarily be lost in the digital sea?

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
  48. I blame the record industry by MadJo · · Score: 1

    for my low income.
    I'm sure I can find some correlation between the record industry, and me not earning enough money with my work. And I don't mean because I buy CDs, because I don't.

    Cry me a river, Gene Simmons.
    You do realize that these college kids are the core target for your publisher, although I doubt if an aging 'rockband' is in their interests, especially after your comments?

    And if they were sued out of existence, you are biting off the hand that could feed you.

    "Every little college kid, every freshly-scrubbed little kid's face should have been sued off the face of the earth. They should have taken their houses and cars and nipped it right there in the beginning."
    Right, and directly after that the music industry would really come to a complete standstill, because no one has money to pay for records, which would actually increase piracy, or decrease the will to even listen to music, if the industry was that vindictive and evil.

    If you piss off enough of your paying customers, you will find that they will push back, and you will not like it if that happens.

  49. I guess dinosaurs made the same noise when by presarioD · · Score: 1

    they were going extinct...I haven't bought a dinosaur egg for ages. In fact I've noticed that all the remaining ones I have are so old that have started to smell...

    --
    Yam, yam, uga booga, yam, yam, yade, yade, uga booga, yam, yam, yade, yade
  50. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by freedom_india · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well if you start suing whoever is listening to your music then pretty much you would be left all alone to listen to it.
    Music and art theft was and is a problem.

    Radiohead has matured and has shown the way. Apple is showing the path.

    Bands like KISS are still retarted and will always be. These guys want kids to pay $29.99 for a CD which contain 20 songs out of which 2 are good and rest are piss poor.

    Now that kids have the power to resist such payments, and instead pay only 99 cents for each track they like and refuse to pay 29.99 for crap, KISS hates them.

    KISS: Good riddance.
    The world would be a better place if a band like you disappears.

    Oh, and stop comparing yourself to Gold. Gold is valuable for 5000 years and still retains its lustre and value any day in any country.
    Your songs are worth the crap that you are tomorrow.

    --
    "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
  51. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by Marcus+Green · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "with mass-reproducible art forms - music, photography, print, film, industries were created which took copyright away from the content creators"

    Or to look at it another way, with mass-producible art forms, e.g. CD audio recordings it allowed musicians to create high quality products using their own resources for which they could retain copyright and sell directly to their public, i.e. via the web or at gigs. These people would invest considerable amounts of their own time and money in this creative endevour and it is a reasonable idea that they should be able to control its reproduction to gain financially.

  52. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's plain wrong: the slow movement of the music industry doesn't make it right to illegally circumvent the legal market for their goods.

    Look, it doesn't matter if it's right or wrong, it's simply a reality brought about by technological change. Either you adapt somehow or you're done for. It's just that simple. Thinking one can sue hundreds of million of people worldwide is illusionary, there is no way to get it back under control unless you employ police state methods anyway: If someone attaches a music file to an e-mail and sends it to a friend, how are you going to stop it? You'd have to monitor every single e-mail and then people would start using PGP... Complaining about copying is like complaining about the weather, it's here to stay.

  53. I got my Simmons's mixed up by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

    I first thought, "Are kids sweating to pirated oldies"? The horror!

  54. KISS by zukinux · · Score: 0

    KISS as in Keep it simple, stupid, not as kiss :)
    That's what Radiohead did, and man, it all comes back to them. They've earned it, and I appreciate them much more then anyone else.

  55. Gene's Shtick by samplehead · · Score: 1

    Gene is just promoting himself. He's is the brand. He's outspoken in order to create headlines to push his latest ventures that's all. The man is a savvy marketer.

  56. Capitals? by vistic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Did he write this or speak this? Are the capital letters from a citation that's accurate (Bartlett's Familiar Quotations?)

    In any case the quote has always annoyed me... but not as much as the conservatives who quote it (with a "when you're older and wiser, you'll come around" attitude about them). As I'm getting older I'm paying more attention to politics and getting more involved, and probably even more liberal than I was at 18.

    I've also taken it to mean that when you're 40, you have money and property you want to be greedy about and protect, and so don't care as much about the welfare of your fellow man. Likewise I'm better off than at 18, and it sure doesn't deter me from wanting to make the world better overall.

    1. Re:Capitals? by GrahamCox · · Score: 0, Redundant

      In any case the quote has always annoyed me... but not as much as the conservatives who quote it (with a "when you're older and wiser, you'll come around" attitude about them). As I'm getting older I'm paying more attention to politics and getting more involved, and probably even more liberal than I was at 18.

      I've also taken it to mean that when you're 40, you have money and property you want to be greedy about and protect, and so don't care as much about the welfare of your fellow man. Likewise I'm better off than at 18, and it sure doesn't deter me from wanting to make the world better overall.


      Amen! I was going to make pretty much the same point after reading the first post but you beat me to it. This quotation annoys the hell out of me too!

    2. Re:Capitals? by damontal · · Score: 3, Insightful

      you have money and property you want to be greedy about and protect

      ah, so protecting your money and property is now greedy? i guess you'd freely give up what money and property you own because you're not "greedy", right?

    3. Re:Capitals? by FauxPasIII · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > i guess you'd freely give up what money and property you own because you're not "greedy", right?

      Would I give up some of my money to support a sensible plan to improve the overall standard of living in my nation? You betcha! Voila une liberal!

      --
      25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
    4. Re:Capitals? by Eivind · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's a transparent dishonest and insulting debating-technique.

      "Offcourse you say that, you're a child. All children believe that. Once you grow up and get a little wiser, you will stop believing that."

      This is attacking the messenger rather than the message.

      It's also insulting. It states flat-out that "Anyone who disagrees with me, has no brain."

    5. Re:Capitals? by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      ah, so protecting your money and property is now greedy? Isn't that more or less the definition of greedy, being primarily concerned with your own possessions? And I don't think he was referring to protecting your money from a robber that will spend it on cocaine, but preventing it from being used by an organization to help improve people's lives and society as a whole.
    6. Re:Capitals? by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      That is not the definition of greedy. The definition is, having an excess of or a desire for more. Of course that's purely subjective too. Communism and other isms take from people and do not respect private property lines "to help improve people's lives and society as a whole." Hmm, that doesn't improve anything. It only pisses people off and creates a war because they're rights are being violated. Whereas, in a country like we have in the U.S., people can mostly volunteer their resources to help someone out, to better society as a whole, and feel really fulfilled about the act. Better society as a whole should never, ever be coerced. This is why, IMO, things like universal healthcare are evil. They remove choice, they remove people's chance to be warm and loving to those less fortunate, and it alienates those who adversely react to this robbing from those who have to give to those who might not have right now. (Side note, I'm not saying our current healthcare setup is great, insurance companies are pretty evil as well. But they were founded by our government once upon a time as well. I guess it just shows, don't send a government to do what citizens can do much better by themselves).

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    7. Re:Capitals? by plague3106 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      No, not at all. From Wikipedia: "Greed denotes desire to acquire wealth or possessions beyond the the needs of the individual especially when this accumulation of possession denies others legitimate needs or access to those or other resources. For example, amassing a large collection of sea shells would not be considered greed, unless in doing so, the needs of others was jepordized."

      Is it greed when a poor person wants to protect the small house they work to have? Is it greed for a poor person to have food in his house, enough to feed his family?

      I don't think you could actually argue that. So greed goes well beyond "protecting your property." There's nothing wrong with protecting what you've worked for (otherwise, why work at all? Might as well become a leech and go on welfare).

    8. Re:Capitals? by drsmithy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Funny, because I've always interpreted it as:

      The older you get, the more you understand the value of your own labour and the more benefits you have to show from it. Hence, when older, you're far more likely to care about the government taking it from you and people like you.

    9. Re:Capitals? by EastCoastSurfer · · Score: 3, Informative

      If you look at your paycheck, you're already giving up an excessive amount of your money under the guise of improving the standard of living in your nation.

    10. Re:Capitals? by EastCoastSurfer · · Score: 1

      This is why, IMO, things like universal healthcare are evil. I agree, and would also like to add that none of these universal healthcare plans ever address the most important question, "why is current healthcare so expensive?"
    11. Re:Capitals? by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's not a deep nugget of wisdom. It was a clever insult. Best not to read too deeply into it.

      But then, those who are using it are probably not the best judges of brains anyway:

      http://www.winstonchurchill.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=112

      "Conservative by the time you're 35"

      "If you're not a liberal when you're 25, you have no heart. If you're not a conservative by the time you're 35, you have no brain." There is no record of anyone hearing Churchill say this. Paul Addison of Edinburgh University makes this comment: "Surely Churchill can't have used the words attributed to him. He'd been a Conservative at 15 and a Liberal at 35! And would he have talked so disrespectfully of Clemmie, who is generally thought to have been a lifelong Liberal?"

    12. Re:Capitals? by Bud+Dickman · · Score: 1

      "I've also taken it to mean that when you're 40, you have money and property you want to be greedy about and protect, and so don't care as much about the welfare of your fellow man. Likewise I'm better off than at 18, and it sure doesn't deter me from wanting to make the world better overall."
      Here's the thing; conservatives who use that quote are insulting the intelligence of those they disagree with. It's not making a point, just attacking others who disagree with your philosophy on government. But the statement I've quoted from your post is just as poor. Do you actually have this idea in your head that conservatives don't want the world to be a better place? Because that's absurd. Perhaps some want to maintain the status quo and keep people in their station but I would say that most people, conservative or liberal or whatever handy label you want/need to use, are not evil and would like to see the world prosper and become a better place. The difference between people is how they believe is the best way to get to that point - not whether people should have better lives. Come on...
    13. Re:Capitals? by breagerey · · Score: 1

      This is why, IMO, things like universal healthcare are evil. They remove choice, they remove people's chance to be warm and loving to those less fortunate, and it alienates those who adversely react to this robbing from those who have to give to those who might not have right now.

      As long as we have had our current system people have had the chance to be "warm and loving to those less fortunate".
      That obviously isn't working.

      Universal access to healthcare is a benefit to society, not just to those who didn't have that access prior to some sort of universal plan.
      As such, if it's not being provided (ie: by those looking to have the warm fuzzies about helping their fellow man ) then government should ensure that it is somehow provided.
      Just like they build roads, maintain a military, or provide any of a number of things for the benefit of their people.

    14. Re:Capitals? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The older you get, the more you understand the value of your own labour and the more benefits you have to show from it. Hence, when older, you're far more likely to care about the government taking it from you and people like you.

      The older I get, the more I see how people who benefit from the system are not the ones doing the labor; the more I see that capitalism rewards parasitic investors, gamblers, the children of the wealthy, and the rapers of the land.

      To take music as an example, the older I get, the more talented people I see playing for tips in bars and the more manufactured crap I see hitting the charts. The more I look into the history of music, the more I see the most creative people getting screwed by the corporate swine.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    15. Re:Capitals? by clary · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I've also taken it to mean that when you're 40, you have money and property you want to be greedy about and protect, and so don't care as much about the welfare of your fellow man. Likewise I'm better off than at 18, and it sure doesn't deter me from wanting to make the world better overall.

      I'm over 40, care about the welfare of my fellow man, and try to do my part to make the world better. However, I don't want to take other people's stuff against their will to do it. I use my own time, talent, and treasure. That is the key difference between liberal/conservative and libertarian (in the US context), though many don't want to emphasize that.

      Several years ago I saw a long interview of Michael Kinsley (by Bill Buckley I think). Now, I couldn't disagree more with most of Kinsley's positions, but I respected his thinking as consistent and principled. He was quite open about his assumption that it was the proper and desirable function of government to redistribute wealth to achieve good outcomes.

      Try to get such a straight answer from a Republican or a Democrat today on the underlying principles of his political ideology. You might get a vague nod in that direction from a Democrat, but he will make sure the voters know that he only wants to take stuff from "the rich," which is always defined as someone who has more money than the voter. Worse yet, the Republican will lie their tails off, claiming to want to "let the taxpayer keep his money," all the while redistributing money for everything from sugar subsidies to bridges to nowhere.

      --

      "Rub her feet." -- L.L.

    16. Re:Capitals? by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Funny, because I've always interpreted it as:

      The older you get, the more you understand the value of your own labour and the more benefits you have to show from it. Hence, when older, you're far more likely to care about the government taking it from you and people like you.

      Funny then that the older I get, the more liberal I seem to be in some thought processes. I guess it's because I've gathered enough benefits to be comfortable and have had the time to see how my money is currently being misappropriated by businesses to offer me something less than I should be. By that, I mean that money I pay for things like insurance seem to be funding large double digit gains in insurance company profits instead of offering me better services, and that those services, by sole pain caused by those same insurance companies, cost much more than they should, thus creating a double-whammy to myself.

      Oh, and while I'm conservative in quite a few viewpoints, I by no means match the conservative or liberal labels as they currently exist in the US political landscape.

      And there's another quote from somewhere that I found funny: a liberal is a person who hasn't gotten robbed, and a conservative is a person who hasn't gotten arrested.
      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    17. Re:Capitals? by FauxPasIII · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > If you look at your paycheck, you're already giving up an excessive amount of
      > your money under the guise of improving the standard of living in your nation.

      Eh, I'm lucky enough to have a comfortable income, so yeah, I pay a good bit. But then,
      I get a top-notch highway system, a federally insured system of banks, police and
      fire protection, my food and water are relatively safe, my workplace is held up to
      a minimum saftey requirement... All in all I think I am getting a pretty good deal.
      If we had all the money back that we've flushed down the Iraq toilet, who knows what
      all nifty stuff I'd be getting for my investment in this nation?

      --
      25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
    18. Re:Capitals? by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The problem with the hard core "don't tax me bro" crowd is that they really really believe that there is no cost in letting people starve in the streets/have no education/have no health care.

      People don't passively starve in the street. They will try to find food. A large population of people who can't afford food is a serious problem, not because the more fortunate will have to step over them in the gutter, but because the more fortunate will come home to find that they've been robbed. Right now it's a truism that people don't steal to afford food...That's because they don't have to, because the government provides it.

      Likewise education. A well educated populace makes a better workforce, military, and tax base. What benefits the economy benefits most the people who have the largest stake in it: the rich.

      Health care. What do you think happens when a guy with no insurance walks into the emergency room with a legitimate emergency? Well, in LA, they let 'em die on the floor but in most places they treat them anyway and eat the cost. This person can't get the sort of routine care that would keep them out of the emergency room, but they can get the sort of massively expensive care that you get from the emergency room. That cost gets passed to the hospital, and then down to the first guy who walks through the door who CAN pay.

      There are a lot of things in society that have a cost. The hardcore conservative really believes that those costs don't exist...Everything would be just the same if they didn't have to pay for the damn poor people. Hardcore liberals? I don't know what the hell they believe in. Fairies? I don't know. They tend to push the right thing, but for the wrong reasons...Fuzzy relativist ethics rather than simple economics.

      The simple truth of it is that it is a lot better for society to shoulder costs like education, care for the disabled, workfare, etc, because if society doesn't shoulder the cost, then individuals have to shoulder the costs and that generally causes problems itself and results in a less effective solution. It's fair to talk reform, but don't try to pretend like the problem is the fact that the government spends money, while ignoring the reality of what would happen if they didn't.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    19. Re:Capitals? by AndersOSU · · Score: 4, Informative

      Umm, healthcare is expensive because (a) it requires doctors, who are highly trained professionals, (b) it is a matter of life and death, we place a very high value on life, (c) it uses state of the art technology, (d) somewhat parallel to c, it uses novel chemicals, which are expensive to develop, and (e) combining d and b, it requires human testing and as such is highly regulated, regulation adds cost, and (f) we live in a highly litigious society, and as such the cost of a mistake is enormous.

      That's not to say it shouldn't be cheaper, or that there isn't plenty of waste, but I personally think that doctors and researchers should be paid well, I think that we should have very good (read: expensive) people managing all the systems involved, and I am willing to pay for the safety and the new technology.

      Universal healthcare, or health insurance in general isn't about making healthcare cheaper, but rather about making the people with Jaguars subsidize the inherently high cost of healthcare for those with Kias.

      A great universal healthcare system would reward hospitals who successfully improve efficiency without impacting quality, but and acceptable universal healthcare system will not worsen efficiency and provide affordable healthcare to poorer americans, because we find value in our working class not dieing of cholera.

    20. Re:Capitals? by breagerey · · Score: 1

      violent bitch thug ?

      Did you actually expect anybody to take you seriously?

      -1 already
      lol

    21. Re:Capitals? by Kortalh · · Score: 0

      So, you would prefer to have the chance to feel warm and loving for yourself, rather than to let other people have the chance to be warm and healthy? That sure sounds a lot like the definition of greedy to me.

    22. Re:Capitals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm.... I've always interpreted it as:

      When you are 18 you are unsure of yourself and yet to make your way in the world. You feel that you may need the help of others and so you support those who will help you. By the time you are 40 you have made your way and you've forgotten those who have helped you get there.

    23. Re:Capitals? by letxa2000 · · Score: 1

      As long as we have had our current system people have had the chance to be "warm and loving to those less fortunate". That obviously isn't working.

      Why would you say that? The problem with health care isn't a lack of generosity of Americans but rather a bad system that hides the cost of health care from the user. If something looks free, people will use it carelessly by practicing no cost-benefit analysis. Regardless of the industry, this will always lead to an increase in prices.

      The solution to health care is making the costs 100% visible to the users so that free market competition actually works. Once you do that, prices will come down and more people will be able to afford health care/health insurance. It's entirely possible that the remaining uninsured would be few enough in number that they could be given insurance by charities--something which Americans do contribute to willingly without coercion and which does not require destroying the quality of our health care with socialism.

    24. Re:Capitals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You deny you are a violent thug bitch? It still doesn't change the fact you don't know what you are talking about when you use the words "benefit to society". Society is peaceful cooperation brought about by voluntary free trade, not thugish pillaging.

      I was -1 before that post. What incentive is there to be nice when you can be meta modded from 2 to -1 in one post because some fool takes religious offense to economic demonstration? I've had plenty of anonymous posts modded informative. I usually just post anonymously, but I accidentally logged in. Sorry, to disappoint your giddiness at thinking that specific post was modded down.

    25. Re:Capitals? by AndersOSU · · Score: 1

      The solution is to get government out of health care, and let markets work.

      First, there's no such thing as a free market, of course if you'd like to point me to a well functioning free market I'd love to be corrected.

      Second, are you advocating the abandonment of government healthcare regulation? If so, we could go into business together and make a fortune selling morphine addled snake oil as a cure all. Also, I'd like to remind you that we don't currently have a national healthcare plan, and that isn't working out so well, the market's invisible hand strangely hasn't appeared to correct the situation.

      Third, there are an estimated 12 million illegal immigrants in the US. That is >5% of the population. Do you believe that >5% of the population is the reason for high healthcare costs? Or do you believe that red herrings like immigration or Nazism will persuade others to come over to your way of thinking.
    26. Re:Capitals? by letxa2000 · · Score: 1

      The older I get, the more I see how people who benefit from the system are not the ones doing the labor; the more I see that capitalism rewards parasitic investors, gamblers, the children of the wealthy, and the rapers of the land.

      How old are you? It's amazing how many people that have reaped (and continue to reap) the benefits of a strong economy driven by capitalism somehow think they'd be better off without it.

      To take music as an example, the older I get, the more talented people I see playing for tips in bars and the more manufactured crap I see hitting the charts. The more I look into the history of music, the more I see the most creative people getting screwed by the corporate swine.

      Talented musicians historically did play for tips in bars and small venues. I don't see anything wrong with that. There is no reason a musician should be valued any more than a software engineer or an accountant. This idea that a musician can record an album and sit back and collect royalties for the rest of his life is absurd. That was the case simply because the distribution technology made it possible--not because there's any inherent reason someone should be able to record music for a few months and then kick back the rest of his life.

      I'm also not convinced that money has anything to do with quality. And I'm not particularly convinced that the quality of commercial music has fallen. Traditionally, generations aren't overly fond of music produced by subsequent generations. Parents in the 50's thought the rock of that day was vulgar and it had no redeeming value. Today, I'm parent-age and I think the same of rap. We tend to like the music we grew up listening to so just about everyone's always going to see the "quality" of music "fall" over their lifetime. It's not so much the quality has gone down, it's just that we get stuck in the type of music we like... and the music industry moves on. Now, though, people are just cynical and attribute it all to the big mean corporations depriving us of good music--because blaming bad evil capitalistic corporations is the "in" thing to do. Yet many young people like the music today. The day that they don't, the recording industry will go out of business. Older people just aren't the target audience of the recording industry... and really never have been.

      Welcome to the phase of your life where you're not young anymore. :)

    27. Re:Capitals? by harl · · Score: 1

      Your post ignored insurance and patents. Both are direct causes for high health care.

      Insurance companies, in the USoA, are against damage caps on lawsuits. If lawsuit payouts keep getting larger they can keep raising premiums. If lawsuits are capped then that is a cap to what they can charge for premiums. Remember your doctors, clinics, hospitals, and likely your insurance company, mine does to cover huge payouts, all buy insurance.

      Patents make what would be cheap drugs more expensive. I'm not going to debate the need for patents but I feel some refinement is in order especially with health care. Look at the Anthrax/Bayer/Canada situation from a few years ago.

      --
      I find being offended by me offensive.
    28. Re:Capitals? by Schnoogs · · Score: 1

      Depite your interesting history lesson the quote applies equally well to liberals and conservatives with lower case letters.

    29. Re:Capitals? by geoskd · · Score: 1

      Eh, I'm lucky enough to have a comfortable income, so yeah, I pay a good bit. But then, I get a top-notch highway system, a federally insured system of banks, police and fire protection, my food and water are relatively safe, my workplace is held up to a minimum saftey requirement... All in all I think I am getting a pretty good deal. If we had all the money back that we've flushed down the Iraq toilet, who knows what all nifty stuff I'd be getting for my investment in this nation? Ok, so for the same money, I have received:

      1) A so-so highway system that is largely in need of repair, and for which I get charged already in the form of tolls

      2) A system of banking in which those people who are responsible for loosing piles of money for their investors, are allowed to keep their own fortunes.

      3) Police services who are very quick, methodical and vigilant... When it comes to handing out speeding or parking tickets, but couldn't be bothered to even so much as *show up* when my car was broken into. (as a side note, the perpetrator left their fingerprints everywhere, which my wife was easily able to recover as a demonstration to her first year criminology students).

      4) A top notch fire department who hasn't lost a foundation yet, (And which incidentally consists of almost all volounteers).

      5) You also forgot to mention the top rate schools our money buys...

      6) what about all of the people who are now entering their fifth generation of living off the public dole? We have done such wonderful things for them too haven't we?

      I'm a conservative, not because I think its right, but because the alternatives have all been demonstrated to be worse...

      -=Geoskd
      --
      I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
    30. Re:Capitals? by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

      Props to your comment. I've noticed from a reading of history that you'll traditionally find the conservatives to be among the enfranchised and the liberal/reformers among the disenfranchised. Conservatives have it good and want to keep it that way. Of course, your reformers might not really be about liberty and brotherhood but wanting to take the master's whip for themselves.

      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    31. Re:Capitals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's funny how many of the policies of the Communist Manifesto that the U.S. actually has, yet so many uneducated goofs pretend that the U.S. is some free-market economy.

      The U.S. has a highly interventionist economy where everyone from individuals to multinational corporations is on the receiving end of welfare from the government. Hope that helps.

      P.S. Kudos on blaming the government for the evils of gambling-based health policy. It's a magnificent stroke of intellectual douchery.

    32. Re:Capitals? by aggie_knight · · Score: 1

      Not to mention take "profit" out of the equation. I'm all about removing government from situations where competition ensures delivery of high quality goods and services, but the design of the current American health care system ensures neither. It is in the insurance companies best interest to have you consume as little of their service as possible, ensuring them to biggest profit. Because of this they restrict your ability to use their service as much as possible and make it difficult when you do use it. It is in the hospital's best interest to make you consume as much of their product as possible because that is how they get the most money. And because the person who is consuming the product is not the one that pays for it (the insurance company does) then they are relatively immune to the true price (we have our co-pay) even though in the end we pay for it through our rates. These two drives makes the system less efficient not more, and don't even get me started about the free market aspects of our health care system - they don't exist. Consumers cannot decide "this service sucks, i'll go elsewhere" because they are not the one that makes that decision (their employer does), and since the employer is not consuming the service, they care more about the cost. Without choice of provider and a clear association between purchaser and consumer of a good and service, free market economics just don't work.

    33. Re:Capitals? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      > i guess you'd freely give up what money and property you own because you're not "greedy", right?

      Would I give up some of my money to support a sensible plan to improve the overall standard of living in my nation? You betcha! Voila une liberal! But you don't just want to give up some of your money to support what you think would improve things, you want to take my money to do it as well. I much prefer to give my money to places that I believe will make things better rather than have my money taken by force to be applied where someone else (usually a beauracrat) thinks it will make things better (and going by the governments track record will make things worse).
      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    34. Re:Capitals? by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 1

      Um, just a "heads up" -- he was referring to the taxes listed on your paycheck. The taxes on that don't pay for your police protection, fire protection, the federal bank insurance, local water, or most of the highways you use, which are funded by different types of governments or taxes.

      It may be great to have these things. It may even be the cases that only government can be the source of these things! But if you're going to justify your paycheck taxes, you'll have to use a *different* pretense.

    35. Re:Capitals? by altinos.com · · Score: 0

      The problem with the hard core "don't tax me bro" crowd is that they really really believe that there is no cost in letting people starve in the streets/have no education/have no health care. Not quite. We recognize that in general, private charities are more efficient than government programs at providing services. Read "Why Government Doesn't Work" by the late Harry Browne for more information. Most libertarians are quite charitable, we just hate being forced to support some political crony's organization.

    36. Re:Capitals? by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      "I've also taken it to mean that when you're 40, you have money and property you want to be greedy about and protect, and so don't care as much about the welfare of your fellow man."

      Spoken like a man that's never had much money or property, nor having to defend it against those that want a piece of it in the name of "fairness".

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    37. Re:Capitals? by Toonol · · Score: 1

      It's also insulting. It states flat-out that "Anyone who disagrees with me, has no brain."

      Which is a terrible arguing technique, but it's also a consistent refrain from the left. Check out all the ego-stroking by leftist college kids in any political thread. It's bad from either side.

    38. Re:Capitals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm fairly libertarian but I still agree that everything you list is a good thing for the government to do. The problem a lot of people have is paying high taxes and watching it get spent on stuff like 1 million dollars for the Thomas Daschle Center for Public Service and Representative Democracy. Before you say that a million bucks is a drop in the bucket these earmarks add up to an obscene amount of money.

      Also police and fire protection are generally paid for by state and local taxes, unless you think police using SWAT teams and no-knock raids to invade homes (many times the wrong home) are a good thing. Those are usually financed (either through military grade equipment or actual cash) through federal funds. I think most libertarians have less hostility towards state and local than they do towards federal.

    39. Re:Capitals? by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      "The simple truth of it is that it is a lot better for society to shoulder costs like education, care for the disabled, workfare, etc, because if society doesn't shoulder the cost, then individuals have to shoulder the costs and that generally causes problems itself and results in a less effective solution. "

      The next time someone has the gall to claim that Slashdot is really a Libertarian website, please explain to me how the above post gets 5 stars and modded insightful.

      That post basically apes much of the Democratic Party platform

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    40. Re:Capitals? by YukonTech · · Score: 1

      So your sayuing healthcare is expansive because people are willing to pay anything to stay alive or in other words "it is a matter of life and death, we place a very high value on life".

      Its a shame that just because peeople value life, people think its ok to Overcharge, and rip people off when it comes to healthcare. The insurance companies in the states make a KILLING literally. They sneak and slide their way out of paying for things and people suffer.

      Healthcare is so messed up BECAUSE people treat healthcare like a for profit enterprise, and not a for LIFE enterprise. I'm not saying doctors shouldn't be paid I'm saying the insurance companies need to grow a heart, and provide the best most affordable coverage they can, NOT make the most profit they can no matter who gets hurt or dies.

    41. Re:Capitals? by Zabu · · Score: 0

      This is attacking the messenger rather than the message.
      Commonly used in propaganda; this technique is known as Ad Hominem.
      --
      It's all good.
    42. Re:Capitals? by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      "Would I give up some of my money to support a sensible plan to improve the overall standard of living in my nation? You betcha! Voila une liberal!"

      Be specific. All but the most hardcore Libertarians would be willing to give up some of their money for the betterment of their nation. The question is how much? I'd be willing to bet what your idea of "how much" is would be vastly different from mine.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    43. Re:Capitals? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "I've also taken it to mean that when you're 40, you have money and property you want to be greedy about and protect, and so don't care as much about the welfare of your fellow man. Likewise I'm better off than at 18, and it sure doesn't deter me from wanting to make the world better overall."

      Not so much you become greedy and all, but, that after time, you SEE first hand how hard it is that you have to work to get ahead in life, and you really start to resent what you see as forced wealth redistribution by the state.

      Personally? I'm starting to make it...I'm trying to really squirell away as much money as I can for retirement (I don't really have confidence that SS will be there to help me at all)...but, as I get extra, I like to donate of 'my own free will' to people less fortunate. I like to help the elderly and infirmed. I don't, however, think I should be forced to help worthless welfare people that are able bodied, but, won't get off their asses to get an education, or a job....

      You get to a point to where you see that you worked hard and made it...and you resent having to hand a lot of it over to someone that didn't choose to do things right in life...and yet still has their hand out for a handout.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    44. Re:Capitals? by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

      In any case the quote has always annoyed me...

      Good, think for yourself. That quote's just one guy's opinion. Winston Churchill, a great leader and all yes, but still...just some guy. Why do people toss about witty quotes from some old politician as though they were universal truths? Half the time (especially 20th century and beyond), the quotes were probably written by some unnamed speechwriter trying to market an idea to the masses. In that sense many famous quotations are just glorified jingles. Sure, many of them contain wisdom. But that doesn't make a memorable quote an absolute truth.
      --
      blah blah blah
    45. Re:Capitals? by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Third, there are an estimated 12 million illegal immigrants in the US. That is >5% of the population. Do you believe that >5% of the population is the reason for high healthcare costs? Or do you believe that red herrings like immigration or Nazism will persuade others to come over to your way of thinking."

      I think if we quit giving it to them for 'free' (real US citizens picking up the tab), it would go a long way towards cutting costs for the country...and maybe encourage them to go home, and try to immigrate the LEGAL route.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    46. Re:Capitals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, a lot of it goes towards paying for the Iraq war; at least if you're an American.

    47. Re:Capitals? by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      This is why, IMO, things like universal healthcare are evil.

      Well, I've never been turned away from a hospital because I didn't have an insurance card or my AmEx handy. I also never hear about my fellow Canadians bankrupted because of a critical illness. None of my friends, family or co-workers have lost (or heavily mortgaged) their homes because they got cancer. (FWIW, I know personally no less than six people who have had various forms of cancer in the past decade)

      Health care (the ability to be healthy) should be a fundamental right for everybody - not just those fortunate enough to be able to afford it.

      Whereas, in a country like we have in the U.S., people can mostly volunteer their resources to help someone out, to better society as a whole, and feel really fulfilled about the act. Better society as a whole should never, ever be coerced.

      ...

      They remove choice, they remove people's chance to be warm and loving to those less fortunate, and it alienates those who adversely react to this robbing from those who have to give to those who might not have right now.

      This idea always sounds great on paper but in reality how many people donate their time, energy, efforts, money and skills to the less fortunate? How many doctors go through med school only to open clinics that give health care away to the poor and needy? Atleast in a socialized health care system they get paid for their efforts at walk-in clinics.

      It always amazes me that the people so vehemently opposed to socialized medicine are nearly always the ones who have proper health insurance through work and don't need it anyways. Speaking of the definition of greed. Find me a hundred single parents who can barely afford to buy used clothing for their child(ren) who are strongly opposed to socialized medicine and there's a hero cookie in it for you.

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    48. Re:Capitals? by rtechie · · Score: 1

      3) Police services who are very quick, methodical and vigilant... When it comes to handing out speeding or parking tickets, but couldn't be bothered to even so much as *show up* when my car was broken into. (as a side note, the perpetrator left their fingerprints everywhere, which my wife was easily able to recover as a demonstration to her first year criminology students). The United States employs vast armies of police officers when compared to the Europeans. For the most part they are poorly-trained union workers. They don't do a good job because they have little incentive to do so. We, as a society, also dump everything on them. We have no public assistance, so they have to deal with the homeless, desperately poor, and drug-addicted. We have no mental health system, so they have to deal with all the people with mental health problems.

      (as a side note, the perpetrator left their fingerprints everywhere, which my wife was easily able to recover as a demonstration to her first year criminology students). Latent print identification is snake oil. Lifting prints from the crime scene doesn't accomplish anything because for identification prints have to be near-perfect, even slight smearing will make them useless. Such prints simply do not appear in the field.

      6) what about all of the people who are now entering their fifth generation of living off the public dole? We have done such wonderful things for them too haven't we? Where are these people? There is no "dole" or welfare in the United States to speak of excluding SSI. Are you saying disable people shouldn't get public assistance? Should the blind be living on the streets?

    49. Re:Capitals? by L0rdJedi · · Score: 1

      Would I give up some of my money to support a sensible plan to improve the overall standard of living in my nation? You betcha! Voila une liberal!

      That's the problem. What you consider sensible, someone else might not. Unfortunately, the government has a habit of making blanket laws that affect everyone.

      If you want to give up some of your money to support causes, then do it. No one's keeping you from paying more taxes than you have to. No one's stopping you from giving money to charities. No one's requiring you to do it either.

    50. Re:Capitals? by EmperorKagato · · Score: 1

      If we had all the money back that we've flushed down the Iraq toilet, who knows what all nifty stuff I'd be getting for my investment in this nation?
      A state that could afford to grant $500 Million to RTA for Metra, Pace and CTA.
      --
      ----- You know you have ego issues when you register a domain in your name.
    51. Re:Capitals? by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      Mr. Have, meet the Have-Not family. They outnumber you ten to one. Good luck.

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    52. Re:Capitals? by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      Latent print identification is snake oil. Lifting prints from the crime scene doesn't accomplish anything because for identification prints have to be near-perfect, even slight smearing will make them useless. Such prints simply do not appear in the field.

      So what, the police print every major crime scene because they like the smell of the powder?

      Any time our on site body shop deals with a stolen recovery they have to clean up a ton of print powder and wash off the wax pencil marks they use to highlight the areas that have usable prints.

      Do you get off on posting factually incorrect information, or are you just severely confused? Are you trolling or genuinely know nothing about the subject?

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    53. Re:Capitals? by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      Mr. Have, meet the Have-Not family. They outnumber you ten to one. Good luck.

      Here's the crux of the issue; we have a couple different kinds of "haves" here. There are those like me who've worked no less than 5 days out of the week since I was 16 years of age; sometimes working 2 or even 3 jobs equalling more than 14 hours work most days, working no less than 12 hours every day out of a 7 day week for months on end without a break to support myself. I've scrimped and saved, sacrificed some of the frills in life and believe I've genuinely earned my place in life, the things I own and the property I'm going to buy in a few months time. Should I be penalized for that? Should I give it away to someone who has less than me?

      I will grant you that people who have due to lucking out in the genetic lottery aren't necessarily as grateful for everything they own but what of their parents? Should they be penalized for providing for their children?

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    54. Re:Capitals? by FauxPasIII · · Score: 1

      > The problem a lot of people have is paying high taxes and watching it get spent on stuff like
      > 1 million dollars for the Thomas Daschle Center for Public Service and Representative Democracy.

      -nod- I fully agree. Wanting to cut out waste and pork spans both ends of the political spectrum,
      and its presence can be blamed on both.

      > Also police and fire protection are generally paid for by state and local taxes

      -nod- You and many of your sibling posters apparently took my using the phrase "my nation" to mean
      I was only talking about federal taxes. I have the same view of state and local taxes as federal;
      I'm willing to pay for what I use and benefit from, whether directly by using government maintained
      roads, bridges, schools, etc or indirectly by living in a community with (relatively) clean air and
      water, safe working conditions, decent labor standards, and living under the umbrella of protection
      from our armed forces and local police and fire departments.

      --
      25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
    55. Re:Capitals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I kind of wish the hardcore "don't tax me" crowd would set up a decent-sized experiment where people in a community paid for every inch of (ordinarily public) asphalt or concrete they walked or drove over, every streetlamp and watt to light it that they walked or drove under, every inch of sewer and every gallon of sewage they outputted, every police or fire call or standby hour ("We stopped that robber -- here's your bill), and a system to measure and appropriately bill everybody for their individual use. This should include billing visitors and punishing people if they try to use services without paying for them. And when they add all that up and realize how much *more* it costs than just taxing everybody and responsibly allocating within that revenue, maybe it would finally sink in that "no taxes" isn't always the most economical approach.

      Then again, maybe I'm wrong, and it would actually turn out to be profoundly cheaper and fairer to "pay as you go" for *everything*, but I kind of doubt it.

      And if an experiment like this has already been done, I'd be interested in the results.

    56. Re:Capitals? by Scrameustache · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you look at your paycheck, you're already giving up an excessive amount of your money under the guise of improving the standard of living in your nation. In the guise?
      Look around, stores full of valuables are protected by no more than a mere sheet of very breakable glass, foreigners walk the streets, people come and go peacefully and in good health busying themselves to their various affairs.

      Paved roads to every house!
      Electricity lighting every street!
      Clean water, hot or cold, at my whim!
      Garbage picked up twice a week! Streets swept!
      The city bus rolls around predictably for out convenience...

      My nation's standards of living are pretty fucking awesome, I just walked to the fridge to get some frikkin' milk and honey for my coffee, my feet warm on a cold autumn day: It's like I'm living in the promised land of legends!
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    57. Re:Capitals? by Trifthen · · Score: 1

      I get a top-notch highway system

      But mass-transit within every urban area in the US is an embarrassment, far below the standards in every major country. Even China has high-speed rail. So we get 1-hour commutes and requisite suburbs. Thanks, Federal Highway Commission!

      police and fire protection

      Which, thanks to the war on drugs, is probably at least one order of magnitude more expensive than it could be. Prisons, court time, raids, etc., are not free. I'm not saying police are bad, but they've been allowed, in general, to run amok. It's why you get things like Chicago cops beating up waitresses while off duty, and not being summarily fired for making the whole force look bad.

      The money that gets culled from your paycheck is generally managed like a teenie-bopper with their parents' platinum card. Even discounting the Iraq war, we're being royally reamed, and yet more budget increases go through every month, on every level of government. What gets me, is that all previous budgets are based on percentage, so you'd think that with inflation, the government would have all the money it needs since people would be, by definition, paying more already. Yet the sales tax in Chicago and most of its suburbs is just shy of 10%. Government never trims its belt. You pay so much because nobody has audited the fucking system, and so much pork gets in pretty much permanently.

      Sure, your money pays for a few good programs, but those are solidly embedded in an ocean of shit.

      --
      Read: Rabbit Rue - Free serial nove
    58. Re:Capitals? by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Well, in the old days Fire Departments were a private enterprise, so they'd gallop to your house and put it out, then present you with a bill.

      What's the logical extension of "I get paid for putting out things that are on fire"? That's right, they set fires to drum up business for themselves. They got in fights with rival firefighters if they happened to meet on the way to a "choice" fire. They engaged in mob-style protectionism (Dis is sum goood stuff! Be a shame if it all went up in smoke, eh Vinny?)

      Oh yea, the efficiency of private enterprise. For some services, it is by far better to have the profit motive removed.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    59. Re:Capitals? by vistic · · Score: 1

      Do you actually have this idea in your head that conservatives don't want the world to be a better place?

      Why is it again that gays can't get married? Oh yeah, because the conservatives "just don't like it."

      Why is it that welfare is bad? Oh yeah, because they need to help themselves, just like the conservatives did.

      Why cut funds for education? Oh yeah, because it's the conservative's money.

      Why fund a baseless war and kill people? Because the conservative administration are made up of, and friends with, war profiteers.

      Why not fund a public health care system? Because conservatives care more about money than kids.

      Oh of course not all conservatives follow the President on every item, but the President still has support from more than 1 in 4 people. And enough idiots voted for him, basically endorsing this whole agenda and set of ethics.

      Do I believe that conservatives don't want to make the world a better place? No, I believe they want to make the world a better place for themselves. The compassion I've seen for others, or even just simple tolerance, is pretty lacking.
    60. Re:Capitals? by bladesjester · · Score: 1

      he was referring to the taxes listed on your paycheck. The taxes on that don't pay for your police protection, fire protection, the federal bank insurance, local water, or most of the highways you use, which are funded by different types of governments or taxes.

      Actually, in a lot of places in the US, a portion of those things *are* paid for by part of the taxes that appear on your pay stub - under the heading of City Taxes. Oh, and that Federal Taxes thing that comes out of your paycheck and that you have to file paperwork for sometime in mid April to make sure you paid enough helps to pay for part of the other things on your list.

      --
      Everything I need to know I learned by killing smart people and eating their brains.
    61. Re:Capitals? by vistic · · Score: 1

      Like I said, I'm doing pretty well... and yet conservatives can't wrap their head around caring for others (uhhh... apparently), unless you have nothing to lose. Why is compassion and caring about others suddenly something only poor people do?

    62. Re:Capitals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Universal Healthcare... Subsidize...
      1) Every cent you spend on medical treatment and medicines: 100% tax deductible
      - provides direct assistance to lower income uninsured or under insured
      - tax incentive for higher income individuals to support medical facilities and providers

      2) Every cent you spend on medical insurance and your deductible/co-pay: 100% tax deductible
      - includes employers

      3) Every cent an Insurance Company spends on medical treatment for their customers: 50% - 100% TAX CREDIT
      - incentivize self-reform

      4) Uninsured who can't afford treatment: 100% TAX CREDIT for the portion paid by the hospital/physician, etc. who provides the service on behalf of the consumer.
      - directly incentivize care
      - provide a mechanism to reward providers for direct involvement in medical reform.

      5) OUTLAW Referral Kickbacks : Locally an MRI costs around 1250 w/o contrast - as much as $500 of this is a referral kickback.
      - a tip of a cost iceberg

      6) Extend Medical Malpractice responsibility to Insurance companies for delay of claim, inadequate care, termination w/o service.
      - a physician makes a choice because of the insurance restrictions that results in sub-optimal care...

      7) TAX CREDITS for preventative behaviour
      - fitness expenses
      - organic foods (voucher based?)
      - supplementation

      That would be a start...

    63. Re:Capitals? by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      The government has problems with efficiency, no question. But it doesn't necessarily follow that all private charities are better at caring for the sick, educating the poor, and nursing the elderly than the government...The government's care is the care the majority would approve of, and when it's not there are generally consequences.

      Private care is the care that the private charity would approve of. No oversight. No fixed standard. No fixed curriculum in the case of schools. I think a lot of religions would love to step into that role, and I think in general that would be a bad thing.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    64. Re:Capitals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because we find value in our working class not dieing of cholera <blunt> No we don't, because in a week there will be another 50,000 of them arriving from the southern border.</blunt> Besides, have you ever seen government control benefit an industry?
    65. Re:Capitals? by gbulmash · · Score: 1
      "I have the same view of state and local taxes as federal; I'm willing to pay for what I use and benefit from, whether directly by using government maintained roads, bridges, schools, etc or indirectly by living in a community with (relatively) clean air and water, safe working conditions, decent labor standards, and living under the umbrella of protection from our armed forces and local police and fire departments."

      Schools provide an indirect benefit, such as making both our nation and your local community more economically competitive. If ANYTHING has more long term impact on maintaining the standard of living of our nation and its economic standing in the international community than its educational system, I don't know what it is.

      The biggest priorities for this country are...
      • A kick-ass primary education system that is the envy of the developed world.
      • Clean and plentiful domestically produced energy.
      • Clean and plentiful domestic water and food supply chains.
      • A healthcare system that doesn't cause half of all personal bankruptcy filings in a given year.


      -G
    66. Re:Capitals? by Azuma+Hazuki · · Score: 1

      You've said, in far more articulate terms, everything I wish I always could have said to the people who believe there's no cost in letting people fall by the wayside. Thank you; I'm going to remember this the next time this comes up in conversation.

      --
      ~Eien no Inori wo Sasagete~ Searching for my Hatsumi...
    67. Re:Capitals? by AndersOSU · · Score: 1

      Besides, have you ever seen government control benefit an industry?

      Your kidding right? Government control almost always benefits an industry: defense contractors, ATT, commercial farmers, the list goes on, and on, and on. Government control always benefits somebody, unfortunately it is rarer that it benefits the public.

      However, there are plenty of cases when the government does help the public: education, highways, police, disaster relief, and so on.
    68. Re:Capitals? by Bud+Dickman · · Score: 1
      I thought about replying to you point by point but I honestly don't see the point. It's pretty obvious that you've bought into the whole "liberal vs. conservative", "red state vs. blue state" nonsense. Okay, that's great - you've found a team to root for.

      I mean - I could make snide remarks like you (Why should the federal government fund education? Oh yeah, because that way the federal government can supersede local control of a child's education.) but instead of doing that, I try to discuss issues with people. I don't discuss issues with a person that I've attached a label to, I treat everyone as a person with an opinion. If you try to talk to people a little more and demonize people a little less, you might find that others with differing opinions still have something interesting to say to you.

      The only label I would apply to people is when someone demonstrates they just aren't worth talking to because they aren't open to discussion. You got that label with your hateful rhetoric. Congrats.

      Oh - Kennedy didn't want the federal government funding education. Did he care about his money more than kids? But he was a Democrat??? What's going on?! SHOCK AND HORROR! ABORT ABORT! [Or maybe it's that issues are more complicated than your little labeling system allows for. I'm never going to reply to you ever again but maybe you can evaluate how open you are to differing opinions. I'd say not only are you currently completely closed off but you don't even have that much knowledge of the world. You have my sympathy. The education system has failed you.]

    69. Re:Capitals? by AndersOSU · · Score: 1

      Its a shame that just because peeople value life, people think its ok to Overcharge, and rip people off when it comes to healthcare
      It's not overcharging that's the problem, it is overpricing in the aggregate. The problem isn't that some evil big pharma says, "I noticed you have MS, that's a shame, for 20% of your yearly income we'll sell you the maintenance drugs you need to stay alive." In some ways that would be preferable to the current situation, where meds are sold at a fixed price. If I'm in upper management it might be a 5% ding in my income (which is covered by insurance), but if I'm working on the line, or unable to find employment because of my affliction, I flat out can't get the drugs I need.
    70. Re:Capitals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I get a top-notch highway system, Paid for by a gasoline tax

      a federally insured system of banks Banks pay for the FDIC

      police and fire protection Paid for by state and local taxes

      my food and water are relatively safe my workplace is held up to a minimum saftey(sic) requirement The FDA/OSHA usually look at records and see how companies follow their SOPs rather than seeing if the underlining food, toys or work conditions are safe. Not that expensive.

      The trillion dollar question is the income tax legal?

      here's a great video
      Sure mode me down for being a troll, but at least respond with facts.

    71. Re:Capitals? by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 1

      Actually, in a lot of places in the US, a portion of those things *are* paid for by part of the taxes that appear on your pay stub - under the heading of City Taxes.

      Still, in none of the US do *most* local funds come from income taxes; they come from property taxes.

      that Federal Taxes thing ... helps to pay for part of the other things on your list.

      For the things on *my* list, not very much.

      If we can zoom back out for a second though, to look at the "big picture", the original claim was (paraphrasing), I don't mind these taxes listed on my *paycheck*, because as a result of that, I get the tremendous benefit of {stuff}. Also, paying for the Iraq War sucks.

      Now we see, that despite paying these taxes, he STILL has to be hit with several other taxes to pay for those things, and on top of that, a lot of it is going to a cause he finds morally offensive!

      So, I'm not sure how much of a point was left. Again, maybe some of the taxes he pays are absolutely justified. But that doesn't say much about his "paycheck" taxes.

    72. Re:Capitals? by EastCoastSurfer · · Score: 1

      Where are these people? There is no "dole" or welfare in the United States to speak of excluding SSI. Are you saying disable people shouldn't get public assistance? Should the blind be living on the streets? They are everywhere. When I was a kid I worked in a grocery store. Each week this woman came in wearing her crazy clothes, etc... She drove a brand new Jeep Cherokee with huge rims, gold trim, and pimped out. She would buy more steak, eggs, etc... than my mom could afford in a month, and pay for it with food stamps. Then she would pull out cash and pay for all the beer she bought. While bagging this woman's groceries (and many others just like her) I saw first hand just how many able bodied people are on the 'dole.'

      The public dole is there to help people get back on their feet or the ones who truly need it because of disabilities or mental health issues. The last time I checked, 'laziness' or 'have as many kids as I can' isn't a mental health disorder.
    73. Re:Capitals? by Geoff-with-a-G · · Score: 1

      To take music as an example, the older I get, the more talented people I see playing for tips in bars and the more manufactured crap I see hitting the charts.
      Well, that one's easily explained. "Talented creator" is a poor metric. What matters is whether the music is actually good, and in this case, "good" is determined by the listener, not the creator or the critic. I believe that someone who is pleasing millions of people with music deserves more compensation than someone really talented creating music that only he and his buddies like. Call me a crazy libertarian anarcho-capitalist, but it seems to me that the degree to which other people give you the stuff you want should match the degree to which you give other people the stuff they want.

      Re: the charts, I do often wonder if the whole mp3 sharing issue is, not hurting, but skewing the music business. Those groups of people more likely to purchase music ought to find more music that feeds their tastes, while those who only download are left lamenting the fact that their favorite bands don't get the commercial recognition they deserve.

      Just a thought.
    74. Re:Capitals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The article you link doesn't mention insurance or a lack of an ability to pay at all. It sounds more like gross incompetence than anything.

    75. Re:Capitals? by breagerey · · Score: 1

      Why would I say "that obviously isn't working"? Because the post I responded to posited that the problem with universal health care was that it didn't give people a chance to take care of societal ills (literally and figuratively). We have never had universal care yet we do have healthcare problems- and not just overpricing. Therefore these imaginary good samaritans have not taken care of the problems. Regarding overpricing of what we do have, I have to disagree. How many people are *now given insurance by charities? There is currently no disincentive to do so and the number is small enough that I can't even find a statistic on it. I'm pretty sure if it was in anyway significant the charity providers (churches?) would be telling everybody who listen about it. So why should we think that the "generosity of Americans" will contribute more and fill gaps in the future that they obviously don't fill now ? Regarding socialism... get over it. Our society is rife with "socialism" that people like to ignore. Fire departments? socialism parks and roads? socialism weather broadcasts? socialism clean water programs? socialism To be more than a despotism any modern government needs to have some blend of socialist leaning programs.

    76. Re:Capitals? by rtechie · · Score: 1

      So what, the police print every major crime scene because they like the smell of the powder? No, because decades of false information have told them latent print identification works. It doesn't. The courts are beginning to figure this out.

      Are you trolling or genuinely know nothing about the subject? I know a lot about fingerprint identification. I've worked on electronic fingerprint identification, in QA. If you had done my work you would know that the ID software, which was far superior to the human eye, needed multiple high-quality images of prints to get a match. If it was smeared, it wouldn't work. Ever. What does that tell you?

      For the computer, "close enough" doesn't cut it. It must match the 16 points on it's map exactly. That's NOT how forensic fingerprint identification works. In "forensic" fingerprint identification they run the smeared print through NCIC and get a few dozen vaguely close (4 or 5 point) matches. Then a technician eyeballs it to make the "match". Fingerprint technicians seem to do a good job "matching" black men with criminal records and a lousy job "matching" anyone else. Objective studies show that on smeared prints, fingerprint technicians do only slightly better than chance. Not good enough.

    77. Re:Capitals? by rtechie · · Score: 1

      Whoops, here's the correct link.

    78. Re:Capitals? by tsotha · · Score: 1

      The problem with the hard core "don't tax me bro" crowd is that they really really believe that there is no cost in letting people starve in the streets/have no education/have no health care.

      This is sort of a jeuvenile understanding of conservatism. First of all, "letting people starve in the streets" isn't an accurate portrayal of conservative thinking. There used to be many more charities and fraternal organizations that helped people in need, and I don't see any evidence the government does a better job. Conservative opposition to most social programs arises not from the cost of the programs, but the loss of personal freedom and the social destruction that always accompany state abolition of personal responsibility.

      Take, for example, AFDC. What amused me about the welfare debates in the '90s was the pitifully small amount of mony the program actually cost as a direct budget item. I don't remember the exact numbers, but in comparison to the overall budget they were lost in the noise. BUT, as you accuse conservatives of ignoring the total cost of innaction, I will accuse you of ignoring the true cost of such programs. AFDC did more to create a permanent underclass than any program or policy, before or since. It resulted the destruction of families, and in the creation of neighborhoods where children were raised in the complete absence of legal wage earners. Children for whom existence was based on the assumption all things flow from the government or illegal activity. Who can be surprised when it becomes a self-perpetuating cycle? That's the type of effect people pushing for these programs like to ignore.

      Or take motorcycle helmet laws. We have motorcycle helmet laws in California. Certainly adult motorcycle riders are entitled to weigh the tradeoffs of wearing a helmet, but now the state is involved. The reason is we have laws that force hospitals and trauma centers to care for emergency cases (and also disability and medicaid for longer term care). The helmet isn't to protect the rider - it's to protect the state.

      And so it goes. If you want to see how this will pan out over time, you need do no more than look at Great Britain. There the health scolds have the force of law behind them because the taxpayers are picking up the tab. So they're gradually making unhealthy behavior illegal. Smoking, drinking, trans-fats... there's really no end to it.

      Assuming we get national health care in this country, which I think is a pretty good bet at this point, how long do you think it will be before the state starts to place "sensible" restrictions on our lifestyles? We'll begin to see the "smoking effect", where the majority is okay with putting restrictions on activities most people don't engage in by choice. Hang gliding, scuba diving, fast cars, etc.

      It's not about money. It's about responsibility and it's about freedom. Once you invite the bureaucrats into the your life to pay bills you invite them to tell you how to live your life, whether you realize it or not.

    79. Re:Capitals? by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      No, because decades of false information have told them latent print identification works. It doesn't. The courts are beginning to figure this out.

      Actually, it seems to me as if the judge doesn't want a man convicted based primarily on the evidence of a partial print lifted from a crime scene.

      I know a lot about fingerprint identification. I've worked on electronic fingerprint identification, in QA. If you had done my work you would know that the ID software, which was far superior to the human eye, needed multiple high-quality images of prints to get a match. If it was smeared, it wouldn't work. Ever. What does that tell you?

      That the software isn't terribly good?

      Fingerprint technicians seem to do a good job "matching" black men with criminal records and a lousy job "matching" anyone else.

      Ahh, there we have it, there's the strawman that ignited the remainder of this discussion.

      Thanks for coming out. Try again some other time.

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    80. Re:Capitals? by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      In the guise? Look around, stores full of valuables are protected by no more than a mere sheet of very breakable glass, foreigners walk the streets, people come and go peacefully and in good health busying themselves to their various affairs.
      I think you miss the point, sir.

      I believe the original poster is specifically referring to the 50+% of the budget than goes to such federal programs as Welfare, Medicare/Medicaid, and Social Security, all of which meet the definition of "guise of improving the standard of living" quite perfectly.
      That Medicare/Medicaid budget certainly isn't making our nation any healthier.
      The Welfare program isn't making us any less poor.
      And the Social Security program is failing to be any kind of a safety blanket whatsoever, with expectations of bankruptcy.
      And none of those programs are "paving roads, generating electricity, pumping clean water, or picking up garbage".

      The bulk of the things in your post are state-taxed privileges. Since the original poster was referring to federal spending (responding to calls for a Universal Healthcare plan), that which your state does for you isn't exactly applicable to the argument.

    81. Re:Capitals? by rtechie · · Score: 1

      When I was a kid I worked in a grocery store. ... I saw first hand just how many able bodied people are on the 'dole.' That was then, this is now. RIGHT NOW, in the United States, ABSOLUTELY NOBODY gets a "dole" except the handicapped. You pay into social security and unemployment. You have to work to get AFDC, and even then it's difficult. That's why we're seeing the big push for child support, and jail for not paying it. People who used to get AFDC now need child support to get by.

      The public dole is there to help people get back on their feet or the ones who truly need it because of disabilities or mental health issues. The last time I checked, 'laziness' or 'have as many kids as I can' isn't a mental health disorder. Which is what it has always been used for. Here is a simple question:

      What PERCENTAGE of the total amount handed out for AFDC, SSI, social security, etc. goes to fraud? 5%? 10%? Does that percentage completely invalidate the other 90-95% that is legitimate?

      Let me put it another way: Should we completely disband the armed forces because weapons procurement and spending is incredibly corrupt? Should we disband all police departments because some police are corrupt? If not, why not?

    82. Re:Capitals? by rtechie · · Score: 1

      Actually, it seems to me as if the judge doesn't want a man convicted based primarily on the evidence of a partial print lifted from a crime scene. There is no such thing as a "complete" print lifted from a crime scene. That's the point I was trying to make.

      Ahh, there we have it, there's the strawman that ignited the remainder of this discussion. What strawman? That black men with criminal records tend to be "the usual suspects" and are arrested far more often than white men with criminal records? That police, including fingerprint examiners, tend to be biased against black men? Sorry, those are FACTS.

      The problem we're talking about is called "experimenter's bias". The fingerprint examiner knows what conclusion he's "supposed" to reach, so the examiner consciously or unconsciously "finds" that the print matched the suspect. Studies have shown that when examiners work "blind" they do no better than chance.

      Lie detectors don't work either, for much the same reasons.

    83. Re:Capitals? by letxa2000 · · Score: 1

      Why would I say "that obviously isn't working"? Because the post I responded to posited that the problem with universal health care was that it didn't give people a chance to take care of societal ills (literally and figuratively). We have never had universal care yet we do have healthcare problems- and not just overpricing. Therefore these imaginary good samaritans have not taken care of the problems.

      That's because with the current price of health care, it would take an unreasonable amount of money from good samaritans to fund them all. Ironically, that's what government-coerced universal health care tries to do: FORCE everyone to be good samaritans. And, in the process, health care will be even more expensive because the cost of health care will be further hidden from the users which leads to abuse which will lead to ever-increasing prices which will make the coerced-good-samartian system even more expensive.

      Now, if we were to reform health care so that the costs were visible to everyone, costs would come down and more people would be insured. The number of people left uninsured might then be a low enough number who would have low enough premiums that charities might have a fighting chance at paying the premiums for those remaining people. That way the prices stay visible to the users, prices come down, and we have a good chance at actually getting everyone covered without government coercion and socialism.

      How many people are *now given insurance by charities?

      Because the price is so high. For the sake of an extreme example, if the annual premium for health care were $1 and we had one million uninsured, don't you think that some charity would pop up to raise a million dollars per year to get them covered? Heck, if one out of every 40 Democrats that want to take my money to pay for someone else's health care contributed a dollar to the charity, it'd be covered. Now obviously it wouldn't cost $1/year/person, but it stands to reason that the more accessible the price of health care becomes, the fewer people will be without it and the more charities will feel they have a reasonable chance at making a good dent in the remaining uninsured problem.

      Regarding socialism... get over it. Our society is rife with "socialism" that people like to ignore. Fire departments? socialism parks and roads? socialism weather broadcasts? socialism clean water programs?

      You gave examples of government public services, not wealth redistribution. We pay for fire departments with our taxes because we can't each have our own fire protection and because we don't normally need the fire department, but it needs to exist. Parks and roads? Again, we can't each build our own. Weather broadcasts? Not sure what you're talking about, but everyone is impacted by weather and not everyone can predict it themselves so it's reasonable. Clean water programs? I pay for my water by the gallon. And in all these cases, my use or non-use of the service does not have a significant impact on its cost.

      Health care is entirely different. If you make health care free, people will saturate hospitals and doctors offices when they get the sniffles. It will lead to a lack of resources being available for real emergencies and medical needs. There has to be a cost by the user every time he uses it. If you made gas free tomorrow, gas would quickly run out and a heck of a lot more people would buy large, inefficient vehicles. In short, gas would be abused because there'd be no motivation not to abuse it. Same with free health insurance.

      Anyway, the short answer: Health care is entirely different from the other public services you mentioned.

    84. Re:Capitals? by Aabra · · Score: 1

      Of course healthcare is expensive, but don't you dare try to touch it in Canada. No Canadian government has ever even hinted at changing our system over to the same as the U.S. It's just so incredibly obvious to everybody how horrible privatized healthcare is that it's not even thought of. We just debate over how much money to spend on it. A lot of money is wasted in the U.S. system on things that have nothing whatsoever to do with the hospital. All those private insurance companies have a *lot* of employees who make very good livings. So in the U.S. system you have to pay the salaries of all the hospital workers as usual, but in addition you have to pay for all those insurance company employees! Which system is more expensive now?

    85. Re:Capitals? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      > Universal healthcare, or health insurance in general isn't about
      > making healthcare cheaper, but rather about making the people with
      > Jaguars subsidize the inherently high cost of healthcare for those with Kias.

      The current system of distributed risk represented by the health
      insurance already being sold should be more than sufficient enough
      to deal with that. Decouple health care from employers and what we
      already have in place will likely be sufficient. Yet another social
      welfare entitlement is probably not the answer and will certainly
      ensure the least efficient solution possible.

      People are advocating brain surgery before anyone has bothered
      to try first aid.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    86. Re:Capitals? by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      This is why, IMO, things like universal healthcare are evil.


      Well, I've never been turned away from a hospital because I didn't have an insurance card or my AmEx handy. I also never hear about my fellow Canadians bankrupted because of a critical illness. None of my friends, family or co-workers have lost (or heavily mortgaged) their homes because they got cancer. (FWIW, I know personally no less than six people who have had various forms of cancer in the past decade)

      Health care (the ability to be healthy) should be a fundamental right for everybody - not just those fortunate enough to be able to afford it.

      Whereas, in a country like we have in the U.S., people can mostly volunteer their resources to help someone out, to better society as a whole, and feel really fulfilled about the act. Better society as a whole should never, ever be coerced.

      ...

      They remove choice, they remove people's chance to be warm and loving to those less fortunate, and it alienates those who adversely react to this robbing from those who have to give to those who might not have right now.



      This idea always sounds great on paper but in reality how many people donate their time, energy, efforts, money and skills to the less fortunate? How many doctors go through med school only to open clinics that give health care away to the poor and needy? Atleast in a socialized health care system they get paid for their efforts at walk-in clinics.

      It always amazes me that the people so vehemently opposed to socialized medicine are nearly always the ones who have proper health insurance through work and don't need it anyways. Speaking of the definition of greed. Find me a hundred single parents who can barely afford to buy used clothing for their child(ren) who are strongly opposed to socialized medicine and there's a hero cookie in it for you.

      So when charity doesn't work, because it's not really given a chance because the medical industry is so regulated, the answer is to turn it over even more to the government? Are you an elitist or what? Thank you very much, but we should all have the choice in what we do with our lives, not some overpaid politicians who really don't care about the public anymore (nor are any smarter than your average person). When charity doesn't work, we move to a coercive system? How does this make sense? You cannot rid the world of poverty and inequality. It's the nature of the universe. Believe in evolution - it's completely about inequality. It's a fact of life. But that won't stop me from helping the less fortunate and enriching my life and the lives of others in the process.

      Oh, and I pay 100% for my own health insurance. I'm a contractor, so I pick up the tab, completely. I've paid for most of my own things since I was 16. Don't talk to me about not knowing what it's like to bear the cost. Life isn't fair, goods and services are scarce, nothing balances these inequalities better than a truly free market. I'm not talking about socialism, fascism or even corporatism. I'm talking about the ability to openly trade and set prices so the citizen has full knowledge of price and differences in services. And when, not until then, a person's rights have been violated, may the government step in a bring justice to the situation (if they don't go and corrupt the situation first that is).

      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    87. Re:Capitals? by dangitman · · Score: 1

      Believe in evolution - it's completely about inequality. It's a fact of life. But that won't stop me from helping the less fortunate and enriching my life and the lives of others in the process.

      That's clearly nonsense, because you oppose the most effective measure to help the less fortunate - universal health care. It sounds more like you want to make a profit, or feel better about yourself, rather than doing the most good.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    88. Re:Capitals? by dangitman · · Score: 1

      The helmet isn't to protect the rider - it's to protect the state.

      That's fucking retarded. If there was no such thing as "The State", the helmet would still protect the rider. There are hundreds of thousands of people whose lives have been saved by helmets. Who is stupid enough to ride without a helmet, anyway?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    89. Re:Capitals? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      They tend to push the right thing, but for the wrong reasons...Fuzzy relativist ethics rather than simple economics. Well ya know, maybe they kind of, actually care about other people? Not everything in the world has to come down to 'what's good for me?' Sometimes you just want someone else to be happy. It's called love, maybe you've heard of it.
      --
      Qxe4
    90. Re:Capitals? by tsotha · · Score: 1

      Did my point make any sound as it soared over your head? Yes, of course lots of people would wear helmets even if they weren't forced to. And yes, helmets save lives. Personally, I would wear a helmet if I rode a motorcycle, and I would even go so far as to say it's not very smart not to wear one.

      But those aren't good reasons to bring the power of the state to bear on those who don't agree. If an adult doesn't want to wear a helmet, what business is it of the state? You could ride without a helmet in California for almost a century... all the way up to the time when the trauma care system ran into financial trouble.

    91. Re:Capitals? by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      Believe in evolution - it's completely about inequality. It's a fact of life. But that won't stop me from helping the less fortunate and enriching my life and the lives of others in the process.

      That's clearly nonsense, because you oppose the most effective measure to help the less fortunate - universal health care. It sounds more like you want to make a profit, or feel better about yourself, rather than doing the most good.

      Really, and you know me how well? And who's saying universal healthcare is the most effective measure to help the less fortunate? Who's going to help you when the bar is lowered for standard of healthcare than what you might be used to now because of medicine shortages, long lines to get somewhat basic procedures done, and when we no longer become the world's leading place to develop new drugs? Where's your imagination, why is it universal healthcare, or the current system we have now. We have a lot of bright people, we could solve this healthcare problem very rapidly if the government would get out of the way and stop meddling where they don't belong. Oh yeah, don't come crying to me when your choice in how you take care of yourself medically related is gone because the same government that seriously messed up the war in Iraq messed up your healthcare.
      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    92. Re:Capitals? by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      It always amazes me that the people so vehemently opposed to socialized medicine are nearly always the ones who have proper health insurance through work and don't need it anyways.

      ...

      Oh, and I pay 100% for my own health insurance. I'm a contractor, so I pick up the tab, completely. I've paid for most of my own things since I was 16. Don't talk to me about not knowing what it's like to bear the cost.

      I didn't talk about bearing the cost, I talked about having health insurance, which you clearly do.

      By the way, I've paid for everything in my life since I was 16. What do I win?

      Life isn't fair, goods and services are scarce, nothing balances these inequalities better than a truly free market. I'm not talking about socialism, fascism or even corporatism. I'm talking about the ability to openly trade and set prices so the citizen has full knowledge of price and differences in services.

      There's two things I see here that are completely counter intuitive. You say you want to help the less fortunate, but clearly that's only when you want to feel good about yourself, not necessarily when they need your help the most. Secondly, there's enough trouble with informed consent in the medical industry today - but you seriously want people to start price shopping their procedures? Who truly understands the difference between an MRI, CAT, or PET scan and which situation necessitates which test?

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    93. Re:Capitals? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      In the guise?
      Look around, stores full of valuables are protected by no more than a mere sheet of very breakable glass, foreigners walk the streets, people come and go peacefully and in good health busying themselves to their various affairs.

      I think you miss the point, sir.
      I believe the original poster is specifically referring to the 50+% of the budget than goes to such federal programs as Welfare, Medicare/Medicaid, and Social Security, all of which meet the definition of "guise of improving the standard of living" quite perfectly. Nope, you missed the point.
      Those programs don't stop people from being poor, they stop them from being poor enough that they'll revolt and take the food their hungry bellies demand from the stores by force, at night.

      It's bread and games, and it works as intended.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    94. Re:Capitals? by vistic · · Score: 1

      "Bud Dickman" made me a foe. And over-reacted to my comments instead of giving a thoughtful reply.

      Regarding the basically one thing you said in response to what I said... why do you think local governments are better suited or able to fund education than the federal government? Shouldn't there be a high standard of education and well-funded schools everywhere across the country? Not just in the rich areas? Local funding of education means that poor areas fund their schools poorly, are taught by the worst teachers, and then the kids graduate (or not) with a poorer education and make less money, which means those schools are then even less well funded. It makes the rich richer and the poor poorer. Federal funding for schools just makes sense because we should care the same everywhere.

      For someone who pretends to discuss issues with people, you sure did a good job avoiding doing just that, and instead paint me as someone who is so consumed by labels and stereotypes that I'm not worth talking to... even though in my previous post I specifically pointed out that of course not all conservatives follow the President on every issue. But regarding the things I pointed out... SCHIP, gay marriage, continuing to fund the war, welfare issues in general, etc... are you honestly not aware how partisan these issues are when the House and Senate vote on these items? Pardon me for not liking Republicans just because 98% of them continuously vote as a block in a way counter to common decency by my views. Even the more liberal Republicans like Olympia Snowe don't do near good enough a job. And even though I'm against roughly 98% of the Republicans... I'd guess I'm only for about 60% of the Democrats. But go ahead and pretend I see things only in black and white, red and blue... if that helps you avoid a discussion. You wonderful discusser, you.

    95. Re:Capitals? by Eivind · · Score: 1

      Did anyone suggest that arguing-techniques have any relation to political orientation whatsoever ? I dunno what, precisely, you're answering....

    96. Re:Capitals? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      And then there's aqueducts

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    97. Re:Capitals? by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      And then there's aqueducts lol! Exactly :)
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    98. Re:Capitals? by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

      It always amazes me that the people so vehemently opposed to socialized medicine are nearly always the ones who have proper health insurance through work and don't need it anyways.

      ...

      Oh, and I pay 100% for my own health insurance. I'm a contractor, so I pick up the tab, completely. I've paid for most of my own things since I was 16. Don't talk to me about not knowing what it's like to bear the cost.


      I didn't talk about bearing the cost, I talked about having health insurance, which you clearly do.

      By the way, I've paid for everything in my life since I was 16. What do I win?

      Life isn't fair, goods and services are scarce, nothing balances these inequalities better than a truly free market. I'm not talking about socialism, fascism or even corporatism. I'm talking about the ability to openly trade and set prices so the citizen has full knowledge of price and differences in services.


      There's two things I see here that are completely counter intuitive. You say you want to help the less fortunate, but clearly that's only when you want to feel good about yourself, not necessarily when they need your help the most. Secondly, there's enough trouble with informed consent in the medical industry today - but you seriously want people to start price shopping their procedures? Who truly understands the difference between an MRI, CAT, or PET scan and which situation necessitates which test?

      You really think the government would do a better job? If you do, I have no idea what government you've been observing for your lifetime. The one I've been observing (and have ready about in the history books) always shows an incompetent and generally abusive power that never even does an *ok* job, they just plainly suck.
      --
      -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
    99. Re:Capitals? by dangitman · · Score: 1

      But those aren't good reasons to bring the power of the state to bear on those who don't agree. If an adult doesn't want to wear a helmet, what business is it of the state?

      The state builds the roads, so it's up to the state to set the rules and conditions for using them.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    100. Re:Capitals? by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      Those programs don't stop people from being poor, they stop them from being poor enough that they'll revolt and take the food their hungry bellies demand from the stores by force, at night.

      That's a rather specious claim. By what proof/facts do you base this opinion on?
      Show me studies showing a substantial decrease in grocery store robberies following the implementation of any of our many social programs.

      It's bread and games, and it works as intended.

      You sound like the Simpsons with the Bear Patrol.
      If that's how ya think, I have a rock that keeps away tigers I'm looking to sell.
      It's working exactly as intended too.

  57. Next I expect Jagger to modify his lyrics by SeaPacific · · Score: 2

    "I said Hey! You! Get off of my lawn" damn kids. . .

    --
    James A. Watson - Sluggy Freelance Microcircuit Design Engineer
  58. priorities by FudRucker · · Score: 1

    the US Dollar is in the toilet, gasoline/diesel/fuel is more expensive than i ever seen it before in my life which drives the cost of groceries and everything else that has to be hauled by freight-train & truck up too. i would think anyone that works for a living has more important things to spend money on than music & video, you cant eat CD/DVD roms for breakfast, lunch & dinner...

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
  59. This is not the 80s by Alcoholic+Dali · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Gene Simmons is the product of the 80s hair band era where record companies were making money hand over fist. That era is completely gone, but his brain still functions with that time period in mind. In short, he's obsolete.

  60. A third model by anticlimate · · Score: 1

    Most of the comments on /. are suggesting that the future is giving away your music/book etc. and making money off merchandise etc. But I suspect, the much better form of "selling" your art would be (and probably will be) just looking for sponsors or patrons. It seems the artist sells her/his soul if he seeks sponsors, but we live in a pluralistic society with many ideologies, philosophies and the corresponding organizations/political parties/churches etc. An artist may choose from a large supply of supporters. And this system has worked for hundreds (if not thousands) of years. Even when only a few monarchs and one church were the only supporters of arts, many great artifacts were born (which doesn't mean I wish those times for today's artists when 99 % of your art had to depict/sing biblical stories or the greatness of XY king).

  61. He's done hundreds and hundreds of girls... by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 1

    ...so listen to your elders when they tell you college-age nihilists about right 'n wrong.

  62. Yes, imagine that! by ta+bu+shi+da+yu · · Score: 1

    All by dressing as a girl.

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
  63. More like ... by upside · · Score: 1

    Be good consumers and spend your money like previous generations used to.

    Kids these days spend their money on MMORPGs or whatever, instead of LPs and CDs.

    --
    I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
  64. Mediocre greedy bastard... by Opinion2k · · Score: 1

    First the music industry, in their never ending quest for more money and larger profits, kills good music by commercializing it to death. When confronted with the result, they subsequently blame their customers, bribe politicians and try to make a quick buck by suing a.o. mothers and college kids. All in the name of music and the artist, who they've previously ripped off. Well, Gene Simmons' second solo album says it all... Asshole (2004).

  65. The most important part..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "The most important part is the Money".

    There ya go Gene, Fixed that for you.

  66. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 1

    Ah, but when should you have started? Suing every person who made a cassette copy of the LP for their car? Those kids in the early Eighties who made cassette copies for their friends? Those who would tape radio shows, or even made their own mix tapes?

    No, the industry is in a tizzy because it's become so easy to make a copy that they have trouble justifying their existence. Making and distributing copies is no longer as expensive or risk-filled as it was when copyrights were first implemented. Slowly, it has eroded from needing expensive equipment to having the tools to make "good enough" copies for close friends to everyone having the ability to globally distribute, yet the idea behind copyright has not kept pace.

    It's best to remember that copyright originated as a way for publishers to ensure that the artist's commission could be recouped. They paid a fee to the writer or artist and swallowed the cost of printing and distribution. Copyright meant a competing print shop couldn't just make their own copies until a set time, when the cost of printing could reasonable be considered amortised. Changing it into a sort of welfare for publishers has been a disaster.

  67. Fine and sue all nite by Nazlfrag · · Score: 5, Funny

    You torrent everything we've got
    You keep downloading and your disk gets hot
    You drive us wild, we'll go sue crazy

    We'll twist the facts till they go in a spin
    The lawsuits just begun, we'll get you in
    You drive us wild, we'll go sue crazy

    You keep on shoutin', you keep on shoutin'

    I wanna obey the law all night, and not get sued every day
    I wanna obey the law all night, and not get sued every day
    I wanna obey the law all night, and not get sued every day
    I wanna obey the law all night, and not get sued every day

    We keep on saying you'll be fined in a while
    Smoking crack and opening shops just ain't my style
    You drive us wild, we'll go sue crazy

    Our lawyers demand everything you've got
    Baby, baby thats quite a lot
    And you drive us wild, we'll go sue crazy

    You keep on shoutin', you keep on shoutin'

    I wanna obey the law all night, and not get sued every day
    I wanna obey the law all night, and not get sued every day
    I wanna obey the law all night, and not get sued every day
    I wanna obey the law all night, and not get sued every day

    1. Re:Fine and sue all nite by spamking · · Score: 1

      Awesome . . .

    2. Re:Fine and sue all nite by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

      /me finds 14 year old girl to scream until she cries and tear her shirt off and throw it on stage.

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    3. Re:Fine and sue all nite by grub · · Score: 1


      /me finds 14 year old girl to scream until she cries and tear her shirt off

      I usually leave them dead in a ditch by this point.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    4. Re:Fine and sue all nite by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

      I find your ideas intriguing and would like to subscribe to your newsletter.

      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
  68. music is like gold by AFormalEvent · · Score: 0

    ah yes, music is like gold, essentially worthless but valuable because we all agree that it is. nice analogy gene.

  69. Music and Profit... by knghtrider · · Score: 2, Interesting
    --
    In America today you can murder land for private profit. You can leave the corpse for all to see, and nobody calls the c
  70. i blame gene simmons by TTL0 · · Score: 1

    kiss is one of the reason music sucks today and was built and enforced the idea of a band as a marketing scheme more than music.

    kiss sold out to mr $$ from day one.

    --
    Sanity is the trademark of a weak mind. -- Mark Harrold
    1. Re:i blame gene simmons by Moderatbastard · · Score: 0

      kiss sold out to mr $$ from day one.
      So shouldn't we write their name as "Ki$$"?
      --
      1/3 of jokes get modded OT. If you get the joke, mod 1 in 3 insightful/interesting/underrated to restore karma balance.
    2. Re:i blame gene simmons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot.

  71. Ki$$ my a$$ by n4t3 · · Score: 1

    This just proves what everybody has always known about KiSS - they are all about the money, period. That might be OK if they were talented too, but unfortunately in Gene Simmons case this is not so clearly true. If he can't figure out how to make money in the new reality that is digital content, he should retire and go fishing. Pointing the finger at American kids who share music (just like I did when I was a kid recording albums to tape to share with my friends) and ignoring the fact that the bulk of the rest of world (Asia, etc.) don't give a fig about his intellectual property rights at all is just stupid. I, for one, will not cry when the blood sucking record companies meet their well deserved inglorious end, and I hope it comes soon. I want to buy music directly from the artist, online - and I DONT need to go to a 50,000 seat stadium to watch Gene Simmons dance around in makeup from so far away I need binoculars to tell he's almost 60 years old.

  72. Aaaargh! by Saint+Fnordius · · Score: 1

    One more time...

    He isn't saying that it isn't criminal illegal or unethical, but it isn't stealing! Theft is a specific sort of crime. Now please, please stop calling it "stealing"!

  73. KISS? by Stooshie · · Score: 1

    Who is the KISS they mention in the article?

    --
    America, Home of the Brave. ... .and the Squaw.
  74. Gene Frenkle is better anyway by cab15625 · · Score: 1

    Gene Simmons is just bitter they he doesn't have as much cultural impact for "college kids" as Gene Frenkle.

  75. Um by styryx · · Score: 1

    Um: 'college' kids? Like children who, somehow, are connected with 'college'? You're not allowed to call people at college kids as they are adults. If not, then: Why won't you think of the children, Gene?

    In fact, today's children are tomorrow's college kids! You could sue the children out of existence now, while they're weak and vulnerable! That'll save you're industry! What with all the music you're making right now.

    Oh, wait. I just remembered. You're the guy who's famous for having a long tongue, right? It wasn't the music at all was it, tonguey?

  76. DAT as a historical example by PRR · · Score: 1

    I see where Gene says that downloading should have been stopped early on. It makes no difference, it would have eventually happened anyway.

    Anyone remember DAT cassettes? The record industry legislated them out of existance with a special tax. So what? Recordable CD's eventually came along and would have made DAT's obsolete anyway.

    1. Re:DAT as a historical example by Palpitations · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Anyone remember DAT cassettes? The record industry legislated them out of existance with a special tax. Interesting... I picked up a DAT deck around the same time as a CD burner, and a few years later I got a used Alesis ADAT deck, but I don't remember the decks or the tapes costing a whole hell of a lot for either.

      Not that I don't believe you, a quick look at the Wikipedia pages on DAT and SCMS (DRM used on DAT) mentions RIAA actions - but honestly, I never knew about it or noticed it at the time. Until you mentioned it and I looked it up, I actually had no clue that DAT even had a form of DRM - I used it solely for original recordings.

      A quick explanation for those that don't know - DAT is a digital audio tape, using PCM and roughly the size of a regular audio cassette. ADAT is similar, but uses something the size of a VHS tape and is capable of recording/playing 8 channels - until digital audio workstations and interfaces were common ADAT was the de facto standard for use in multitrack recording.

      Thanks for bringing that up, it brought me back to a time many years ago, and taught me a few things along the way :) I just wish one of the lessons learned wasn't "the more things change, the more they stay the same".
    2. Re:DAT as a historical example by PRR · · Score: 1

      Yep, the RIAA restrictions combined with NO record companies producing commercial recording available on DAT essentially relegated it to being a quasi "Pro recording" medium with only a small niche market... much smaller than it might have been without that intervention.

      But by 1999, CD burners were cheap enough that anyone could *cough* "backup" *cough* a music CD. That would have killed DAT as a piracy medium right there.

      By the middle of this decade high-speed home internet and P2P's would have happened anyway.

      It was a good racket while it lasted... put 10 songs on a disk and sell it for $15, even though only one or two songs are any good, and you have to buy the whole thing to get them.

    3. Re:DAT as a historical example by Palpitations · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I can speak to one commercial use of DAT... Before moving to a randomized playlist controlled by computer, a radio station where I grew up prerecorded shows for their late night hours on DAT and had 2 decks they swapped between. They recorded new tapes about once a month to keep up with what was popular, randomized the order they played the tapes in every night, and just had some poor bastard sit in the studio and transfer between the two for the graveyard shift.

      Actually, I'd say that would be a great job - just having to push a button or two and change a tape every hour or so - but because of FCC regulations against broadcasting dead air, they actually had to listen to the crap that was being broadcast to make sure everything was working as it should. Poor sap.

      Well, that, and I had actually had a job where I was paid to sleep 7 out of 8 hours a day unless there was an emergency. Kind of hard to beat that, even if the pay was horrible.

  77. DK by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

    I think the argument as to why thats a bad thing goes something like this:

    I'm tired of self respect
    I can't afford a car
    I wanna be a tool
    Don't need no soul
    Wanna make big money
    Playing rock and roll

    I'll make my music boring
    I'll play my music slow
    I ain't no artist, I'm a businessman
    No ideas of my own

    I won't offend
    Or rock the boat
    Just sex and drugs
    And rock and roll

    You'll pay ten bucks to see me
    On a fifteen foot high stage
    Fatass bouncers kick the shit
    Out of kids who try to dance

    If my friends say
    I've lost my guts
    I'll laugh and say
    That's rock and roll

    But There's just one problem.....

    Is my cock big enough
    Is my brain small enough
    For you to make me a star

    Give me a toot
    And I'll sell you my soul
    Pull my strings and I'll go far

    And when I'm rich
    And meet Bob Hope
    We'll shoot some fool
    And shoot some dope

    Is my cock big enough
    Is my brain small enough
    For you to make me a star

  78. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by g253 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It _is_ morally OK. Selling copies of a disk is wrong, because you're making money off someone else's work. Making a copy is sharing. Sharing is friendly and generous.

    Should I be sued if I make a copy of a cd for a friend who couldn't afford to buy it anyway? Should I be sued only if he could afford it? Why don't we sue everyone who's ever taped a tv show?

    If I want a friend to listen to this great song I discovered, I invite him home to listen to it. If he's currently living abroad, should I refrain from sending it by e-mail because it suddenly becomes evil?

    I think what you fail to understand is that the music industry is not in the business of selling music, it is in the business of selling a media container, a physical object on which the music is stored. The artists let them sell these containers in exchange for a share of the profit.
    For a long time capturing the music on a physical object was an expensive process, as was duplicating said object, wich justified the relatively high price of records. Modern technology makes recording and duplicating cheap and easy, so these people (music industry) simply have nothing to sell anymore.

    As for the artists, they will be just fine. There's plenty of ways to make money off your music. You can play live shows, you can offer it for download with ads on the page, you can sell merchandise, you can sell a container that's desirable and expensive/hard to duplicate (a cd in a nice looking digipack, or with a poster or whatever)... And yes, there was music and professional musicians before the invention of the gramophone.

  79. No, he didn't write or speak it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    It's apocryphal, apparently. There are various other suggestions for the origin of the quote.

  80. Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is he still performing? How can he play bass with that onion on his belt?

    And you kids - stay off his damn lawn.

  81. Read your own words again by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Say funeral arrangements. People do indeed provide that service, and we pay them for it. Now say that a medical breakthrough happens and dying becomes a thing of the past. No more dead, no more need for burials. Should YOU then be legally forced to die, just so funeral directors can continue making a living supplying that service?

    What I am saying is that if musicians can't make a living making music, they should stop doing that. Demand and supply, this does NOT mean, as you seem to think, that if you supply that you are entitled to a demand.

    Times change. Monks were once able to support their monestary by handcopying books. With the invention of the printing press, that job vanished. Should society be forced to stand still just so a handfull can enjoy the living they once did.

    Get this straight, I am not saying music should be free. I am saying that if people don't want to pay for your music, don't make it.

    Perhaps I spend too much time around performance artists. This is a group of people that feel they deserve tax money for their art. They need the tax money because nobody is willing to pay for it.

    I am going to introduce a law, and you must follow it, when ever you come across a street performer you MUST donate 10 dollars. You saw it, you gonna pay for it.

    Offcourse that is silly, as silly as people thinking they have a right to make a living in any job they feel like. I would LOVE to make a living as a gigolo for beautifull young ladies. Ain't going to happen and if the world isn't willing to bend over backwards for my needs then I sure as hell am not going to give a shit about some kid who wants to become rich making music in world that doesn't want to pay for music. Find another job, do it for free. I had to do that, I am forced to just do my amazing love making as a hobby with no more compensation that a "job well done".

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Read your own words again by Marcus+Green · · Score: 1

      You appear to take the view that copyright is driven purely by the creators desire for income. It can also be viewed as societies way of giving creators a reason to create, and so society benefits (as well as the creator) because new material is produced. Are you against the idea of copyright itself?

    2. Re:Read your own words again by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's the stated reason. Who in their right mind says "Hmm, I was thinking about writing this music, but I'll only have control over it for 70 years after I'm dead. I'll pass."?

      The real reason is that we're propping up a business model. A 5 year term with a 5 year extension is more than enough incentive to get people to produce.

    3. Re:Read your own words again by Marcus+Green · · Score: 1

      So you do agree with the idea of creators being able to control copying, you are just quibbling amount of time that permission is granted.

    4. Re:Read your own words again by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Only as a tool to ensure works are created with the final objective an enrichment of the public domain.

    5. Re:Read your own words again by Carpe+PM · · Score: 1
      Rock-n-roll was always about rebellion.

      Congratulations rockers, you've been rebelled against.

  82. Done that by boer · · Score: 1

    Actually according to his biography many people have fucked him. Apparently that didn't help this case.

    --
    (This sig intentionally left blank)
  83. KISS who? by zakezuke · · Score: 1

    Don't get me wrong, I know who these guys are. I was given their set of four solo albums, given as they were sold in record store discount bins with the selling point "they might be valuable one day". To give you some idea, Def Leopard Pyromania was something ubiquitous; almost everyone had a copy of that tape somewhere. These solo albums were more often than not returned. I still have them, but it's not like anyone wants them. I have no idea what they sound like, not like I haven't heard anything by them, they are just bland with the exception of their makeup and marketing. They sort of symbolize what I dislike about the direction music went toward the late 70s early 80s, all hair and no substance.

    Making the claim "it's all about the music" is rather ludicrous coming from these guys as I've never seen any evidence they actually love music. But as far as all glam no rock bands go, they do get some respect for making a buck all these years, though IMHO they hung around just long enough to be RETRO.

    But you can rather tell who's "all about the music" and "who's all about the marketing" by seeing if they have their vids on YouTube or not. Billy Joel is a good example. Same age as Gene Simmons but has most of his music vids on YT. KISS not at all. I would rather see Joel in concert than KISS any day of the week even if they did a super intense pyrotechnic show.

    --
    There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    1. Re:KISS who? by stewbacca · · Score: 1

      You need to watch the UK show "School of Rock" or "Rock School" or whatever it's called with Gene Simmons. His passion for the music comes across much more strongly than through makeup and big hair. Still, Gene Simmons is a pretty shitty bass player and an even worse vocalist, but I'll take all the classic KISS hits over the likes of shitty glam-rock bands of the mid 80s (Poison, Winger, Warrant, White Lion and the likes).

    2. Re:KISS who? by zakezuke · · Score: 1

      You need to watch the UK show "School of Rock" or "Rock School" or whatever it's called with Gene Simmons. His passion for the music comes across much more strongly than through makeup and big hair. Still, Gene Simmons is a pretty shitty bass player and an even worse vocalist, but I'll take all the classic KISS hits over the likes of shitty glam-rock bands of the mid 80s (Poison, Winger, Warrant, White Lion and the likes). He could have a passion for music I'm unaware of. I see only the enterprise. I do have some respect for the gent as he like others rather jump started the glam-rock scene, not that I like the scene. The few tracks i've listened to recently are at least OK, but lack a certain level of substance.
      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
  84. I am not so sure... by SerpentMage · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Let's tone down Gene Simmon's argument...

    1) Many artists these days are not the quality that one would expect. THOUGH, and this is a big THOUGH... There were plenty of garbage artists in the 80's, and 70's. You just don't hear about them now. Case in point Twisted Sister... I never did get that. Twisted Sister is an example of a band that was marketed with no talent.

    2) People don't buy music because they can rip it off somebody for cheaper. The reality is that if you can get for free you will not pay for it. And this is the case in college or university. I remember people used to photocopy entire text books because they were too cheap to buy the text book. Thus I can very easily see students not paying for music.

    Combine this with a general attitude of "we don't want to pay for anything" and you get a serious revenue problem.

    I actually don't believe the argument that if you have quality you will buy it. Take the Radio Head example. It's not a business model, point blank! Gene Simmons was a bit harsh in his metaphor. But the problem is that I doubt it covers enough to make a living. There was an author who gave away his book "in the spirit" of community. Well his latest book is not completely available anymore in free format. Why? Easy because people were not buying his book and his sales were hurting. And this is the irony. Somebody tries to do a good thing, and what happens? He gets kicked in the teeth.

    So in the end Gene Simmons is correct! Content costs....

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    1. Re:I am not so sure... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      There were plenty of garbage artists in the 80's, and 70's. You just don't hear about them now. Case in point Twisted Sister... Heh... Reminds me of a story from my youth. Twisted Sister was playing a concert nearby, and my family had a friend who worked at the airline they were flying in on. Security was tight, nobody was supposed to know they were going to be coming in at the time they were. He let us know, we went and bought some of their albums, and just happened to have them and a marker in our luggage when they were walking through the terminal (not that we were going anywhere). Got them to sign, and then turned around and sold them outside of the concert.

      I remember asking my parents why they were bothering because it was a horrible band... Yeah, that's random, and doesn't really have anything to do with the story, but still...
    2. Re:I am not so sure... by HBI · · Score: 1

      That is not correct.

      Twisted Sister was a pretty excellent club band, leaving out the stupid "Stay Hungry" thing. They actually did have talent and did pay their dues, playing around the NY area for about 10 years before becoming well-known. Then they allowed themselves to be turned into a parody of the kind of band they had been, and didn't care because they were making money.

      You chose a bad example. Maybe you don't like the genre or perhaps you never heard their non-Stay Hungry work.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    3. Re:I am not so sure... by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      There was an author who gave away his book "in the spirit" of community. Well his latest book is not completely available anymore in free format. Why? Easy because people were not buying his book and his sales were hurting. And this is the irony. Somebody tries to do a good thing, and what happens? He gets kicked in the teeth.

      I'm sorry, but: bullshit. You can't call people doing exactly what you have invited them to do, "kicking you in the teeth".

    4. Re:I am not so sure... by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Wrong wrong wrong WRONG.

      1) Many artists these days are not the quality that one would expect. THOUGH, and this is a big THOUGH... There were plenty of garbage artists in the 80's, and 70's.

      There were always garbage artists, and most of what you heard on the radio was garbage. That was the one single thing you got right in your comment. However...

      Case in point Twisted Sister... I never did get that. Twisted Sister is an example of a band that was marketed with no talent.

      Dude, Twisted Sister fucking kicked ass! Are you some kind of emo wuss? I have a live Twisted Sister CD, the lead man (can't think of his name, I think he's a disk jockey now) played that audience like Jimi Hendrix played a guitar.

      2) People don't buy music because they can rip it off somebody for cheaper. The reality is that if you can get for free you will not pay for it.

      That's just retarded. Good music is like good drugs - give them a free hit and they'll pay for more. If your statement had any validity, every band you hear on the radio would be in dire poverty, because the radio gives music away for free! If you want to have the entire Top 40 in MP3 format, free and legal, is to plug your radio into your sound card and sample a Top 40 station for a couple of hours while you're hitting that crack pipe I see from your comment you must always have handy, and then spend ten minutes cutting and pasting into separate .wav files and let the computer convert them.

      The RIAA isn't against P2P because they're afraid you'll download the latest RIAA dreck, they're afraid you'll download one of the far better indie bands, like it, and buy the CD. Face it, the twenty bucks I spend on two (or four) indie CDs is tewnty bucks I don't have for a Kiss CD. Selling MP3s (let alone renting crippled DRM WMA files) is a stupid business decision. MP3s should be seen as advertising.

      Of course, for MP3s to work in this manner your music has to actually not suck, unlike most RIAA music these days. Don't any of the new bands know how to play anything in a major key? Jesus but this emo shit you kids listen to is depressing. WTF is wrong with you?

      And this is the case in college or university. I remember people used to photocopy entire text books because they were too cheap to buy the text book.

      Yeah, paper's free and your photocopiers don't have coin slots. Yeah, you're going to stand in front of a photocopier (why not a scanner? Dumbass kids!) all week. Right. Which record label do you work for again?

      I've noticed in my 55 years on this planet that people expect other people to be more or less like themselves. Honest people expect people to be honest, and thieves expect people to steal. I see which side of the fence you're on.

      Combine this with a general attitude of "we don't want to pay for anything" and you get a serious revenue problem. I actually don't believe the argument that if you have quality you will buy it.

      So tell me, why do bartenders and waiters make more money from tips than from the paycheck? There are very few people with the attitude you are talking about. Most people are more than willing to pay for what they get. Give them something free and they're even happier to pay for more of it; gratitude goes a long way. So does resentment.

      Take the Radio Head example. It's not a business model, point blank!

      Then why are they making so much money?

      There was an author who gave away his book "in the spirit" of community. Well his latest book is not completely available anymore in free format. Why? Easy because people were not buying his book and his sales were hurting.

      Bullshit. I see you neglected to name the author - Stephen King IIRC. He said he would keep putting chapters online as long as people kept paying. He was trying to make your point, that people wouldn't buy it if you gave it to them, and they surprised

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    5. Re:I am not so sure... by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

      >That's just retarded. Good music is like good drugs - give them a free hit and they'll pay for more. If your statement had any validity, every band you hear on the radio would be in dire poverty, because the radio gives music away for free! If you want to have the entire Top 40 in MP3 format, free and legal, is to plug your radio into your sound card and sample a Top 40 station for a couple of hours while you're hitting that crack pipe I see from your comment you must always have handy, and then spend ten minutes cutting and pasting into separate .wav files and let the computer convert them.

      The comment that ripping the Top 40 is free and legal is actually wrong. Yes it is mostly legal to copy and listen for personal purposes, but you can't redistribute it. People distribute this stuff and think it's ok, when its not! Each and every person has to listen and download for themselves.

      The radio issue is a tricky one because the problem is that the quality of radio is digital and that means your music is near perfect. In the good ol days of radio this was not the case and people bought music because of that. People bought music because what they bought gave them full quality music.

      > The RIAA isn't against P2P because they're afraid you'll download the latest RIAA dreck, they're afraid you'll download one of the far better indie bands, like it, and buy the CD. Face it, the twenty bucks I spend on two (or four) indie CDs is tewnty bucks I don't have for a Kiss CD. Selling MP3s (let alone renting crippled DRM WMA files) is a stupid business decision. MP3s should be seen as advertising.

      BS, the RIAA is not afraid of that in the least. This is about money and business. The Indie bands are not a dent. If Indie bands were a threat they would have been many many moons ago. The reality is that folks have taken it as a sport to rip off and not pay. Let's say that Indie bands were a threat, well the labels would have signed them up a long time ago.

      Think about this. Would a label boycott a band because they were "Indie?" Maybe one, or two, but not an entire industry. If a label can make money with a band selling music they will sign them up and start selling music. This is about business and if the band would sell music a label somewhere would sign them up. After all there X thousand labels in the US alone.

      >Yeah, paper's free and your photocopiers don't have coin slots. Yeah, you're going to stand in front of a photocopier (why not a scanner? Dumbass kids!) all week. Right. Which record label do you work for again?

      Excuse me? Are you accusing me that I am lying? Then you actually don't know what the heck you are talking about. Engineering books cost about a hundred bucks a pop. For an entire semster (4 months) you are looking at around 1000 bucks of books. At the university I went to we had bulk photocopying cards which sold at around a 5 cents a sheet. Take a typically engineering book at 300 pages, and that makes 15 dollars. So do the math, 15 bucks or 100 bucks? There were enough folks who chose to photocopy. I didn't copy because I wanted to keep my books, which I still have 15 years later.

      > I've noticed in my 55 years on this planet that people expect other people to be more or less like themselves. Honest people expect people to be honest, and thieves expect people to steal. I see which side of the fence you're on.

      Hmmm, you call me a liar, and a thief? Interesting... Using your logic that means... Interesting...

      >So tell me, why do bartenders and waiters make more money from tips than from the paycheck? There are very few people with the attitude you are talking about. Most people are more than willing to pay for what they get. Give them something free and they're even happier to pay for more of it; gratitude goes a long way. So does resentment.

      Really? What country do you live in? You see in your country yes bartenders and waiters make more money with tips. Not in my country or continent. You are using blanket logic and that is wrong. The trick is to see multiple perspectives and then make an assessment.

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    6. Re:I am not so sure... by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      And this is the case in college or university. I remember people used to photocopy entire text books because they were too cheap to buy the text book.

      Too cheap to buy the text book?! Dude, textbooks are expensive! Even used, books aren't cheap. And the publishers like to try to stifle the used book market by releasing minor revisions where they'll say re-write some of the problems so that if the prof uses the problem sets from the book you'll need the latest that isn't in the used book stores.

      People who are already working while going to school in order to pay tuition aren't going to want to blow another few hundred bucks a semester on books. So yeah, they'll find a cheaper way to get em. This is analogous to the problem with CDs -- is it just that people are too cheap, or is it that high school and college kids think $20 is way too freaking much for a CD? Hmm... How's iTunes doing again?

      Take the Radio Head example. It's not a business model, point blank!

      What's that? I can't hear you over the noise of Radiohead counting their estimated over six million dollars take. Maybe you don't think it's sustainable, or wouldn't work for other bands, or whatever, and that may be true. But you're assertion that it's not a business model "point blank" is just pissing into the wind of the practical real-world results.

      They offered a product. They made a boatload of cash. They had minimal costs (figuring out exactly how awesome this was for them we'd have to know more details, but it's obviously way lower cost structure than typical). To any businessman who was just looking at the numbers, that'd spell "success". They might be concerned with how to repeat that success, but you'd have to be a real blockhead dinosaur completely devoted to the way things used to be to try to call this particular case anything less than a stellar success.

      I think it's funny that you'd take the word of the guy who hasn't done anything but whore his image for thirty years over the ones who actually tried it and made it work. Sounds like sour grapes from a dinosaur complaining that the mammals will never make it, to me.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    7. Re:I am not so sure... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Learn to quote properly, you gay fucking bastard.

    8. Re:I am not so sure... by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Yes it is mostly legal to copy and listen for personal purposes, but you can't redistribute it.

      Who said anything about redistributing? There's no need to redistribut the God Damned top 40!!! It's on the God Damned radio, the whole POINT of the post is that for the top 40 at least, there's no need for P2P whatever!!!

      The radio issue is a tricky one because the problem is that the quality of radio is digital and that means your music is near perfect. In the good ol days of radio this was not the case and people bought music because of that. People bought music because what they bought gave them full quality music.

      "Digital" has absolutely nothing to do with quality. A cassette is analog, and (usually) inferior to the digital CD, but (again usually) superior to the digital MP3.

      In the good ol days of radio this was not the case

      Unless you're talking about Satellite Radio (which I can't comment on as I have no experisnec with it, but I understand it's more or less MP3 quiality) you're entirely incorrect. FM radio technology is virtually unchanged since its inception well over half a century ago. It's inferior to CD, but not by much and far superior to MP3.

      BS, the RIAA is not afraid of that in the least. This is about money and business.

      That's right, money and business - and competetion. Every single study except the one the RIAA paid for says that downloaders spend more money on music than those of us who don't download.

      If I illegallly download or legally sample a CD's worth of music there's still plenty of music to buy with the twenty bucks I still have in my pocket. If I buy four indie CDs with that twenty bucks, that's twenty bucks I don't have for an RIAA CD.

      It's about what you can afford to buy, not what you can get for free.

      The Indie bands are not a dent. If Indie bands were a threat they would have been many many moons ago.

      "Many moons" ago the labels were the only means of making a record. It's only been about as long as the RIAA labels have been screaming about "piracy" that the average mucisicn could record without the RIAA.

      "The reality is that folks have taken it as a sport to rip off and not pay."

      You say that. I'll believe it when I actually meet such a creature.

      "Let's say that Indie bands were a threat, well the labels would have signed them up a long time ago."

      They are the ones smart enough to know that the major labels are run by theievs and who would rather be assraped than sign with them. It ain't 1966 anymore, grandpa.

      Would a label boycott a band because they were "Indie?"

      That's stupid. It's the bands refusing to let the labels buttfuck them. More and more bands are starting to realize that a major label contract means signing away the rights to all their work. Only a moron would sign with a major label these days, which may explain why today's mainstream music sucks so bad.

      Excuse me? Are you accusing me that I am lying?

      Actually yes, I am. You could keep your photocopied "books" as long as you could keep your storebought paperbacks.

      Really? What country do you live in?

      The one who the RIAA lives in. We are talking about the Recording Industry Associaltion of America. They're not going after downloaders in YOUR country.

      Now go away, unless your industry changes its business model it will die.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    9. Re:I am not so sure... by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Learn to quote properly, you gay fucking bastard.

      He didn't seem all that happy to me.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
  85. Got one KISS CD... by not_a_product_id · · Score: 1

    ... be buggered if I ever buy any more. Ever. What a douche.

    --

    ---
    We spoke for about a half an hour. I don't recall a thing we said. - Colorblind James Experience

  86. the problem with the music industry... by maryjanecapri · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Lately I've been forced to listen to the radio at a lot. Between NPR, user-supported radio, and the standard fare, I have come to the conclusion that the downfall of the music industry can be blamed on one beast - radio. Why is that you ask?

    Think about it. You listen to FM radio all day and what do you hear? The same 10 songs (depending upon genre and station) over and over. So anyone wanting to hear new music (or even older music they have never heard) is out of luck. So what happens is people like me who gave up on the radio years ago quit buying music. We just listen to the same old stuff over and over again. We really have little idea that there might be something new and wonderful out there because the radio stations won't let us here it.

    Oh sure there might be stations in larger cities, or on XM radio...but barring that you are sequestered to the same ol' mix of the same ol' songs day in and day out.

    Oh and it doesn't help that there is hardly anything new and wonderful out there these days. The radio waves are filled with talentless hacks and CEO-created boy and girl bands, increasingly angry and ego-maniacal rap, depressing country...you get the idea.

    So maybe the recording industry should stop trying to lay blame on music pirates because they are typically only pirating old music because it's the only thing worth a damn anymore. Instead they should point the finger of blame back at themselves. Why?

    1) They bleed the musicians of all their profit.
    2) They only produce what they think are "sure things" which are, ultimately not. In that process they side step possible, actual talent!
    3) They create a situation where radio stations can only play what the music industry considers a "sure thing" thus filling the air waves with the same ol', played out music that we were tired of hearing a decade ago.

    Maybe the whole idea behind the advent of radio stations should come back to haunt us - to play good music. To play music worthy of buying. But that's not going to happen because there is no profit in that.

    And that's what it's all about you hokey pokey people.

    Blah!

    --
    nature loves variety::society hates it get your variety at http://www.monkeypantz.net
    1. Re:the problem with the music industry... by Opinion2k · · Score: 1

      This is what often happens when managers get the chance to take over. As soon as the creative and/or relevant people are overrun by the managerial class which is mainly interested in maintaining its own status-quo and like a swarm of locusts leave only a barren wasteland. You can see this happen everywhere, e.g. health care, music industry, IT sector (the Amiga comes to mind).

  87. is Gene Simmons "on f---ing crack?" by TheJasper · · Score: 1

    The record industry doesn't have a f---ing clue how to make money Poor little rich people. They are so clueless that they are mere milionaires


    I couldn't care less about the whole industry. Fact is I have tried to be good. I haven't made illegal copies. I haven't let people copy from me. What do I get in return? A tarrif added to every tape, cd or dvd I buy to pay for music other people "steal". Yes, even if I am burning 100% original content made by me. Even if I use it as coaster. So my attitude is finally changing. Fact is if the whole distibution mechanism was needed then they *might* have a moral high (or at least middle) ground. It isn't though. They just need it to maintain control. So if I'm paying for music every time I burn a program to a DVD, then I no longer have to buy it direct.

    This may not be the case in your country, but in the netherlands the music industry is a legalised and protected cartel. Almost every store (99.9%) offers the same prices. That's competition? On this end I'm looking up a dark hole which produces....well this is a family thread, so I won't elaborate.

  88. Kiss? Music? Squeeze me? by earlymon · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Let's remember a little history - I'm a geezer geek, so I'll help. AFAIR, Kiss hit the stage in makeup to cover up their day jobs - and it was popular knowledge that one of them was an accountant and they were all white-collar, up and comer types.

    Cheech and Chong, in their Alice Bowie schtick, referred to them lyrically as, "And I only know three chords!!" (Or was that Bachman, Turner, Overweight? Another distinction without a difference.)

    I knew of NO ONE at the college I attended in the early '70s ever owning, or even tolerating listening to, Kiss.

    One of the Marsalis brothers put it succinctly - it's a thing called rhythm. Young or old, college or not, there's a whole planet full of people that get that simple thing.

    Then, there's the rest of the polyester-wearing, mass-media slurping ugly crowd, served by "rock" bands like Kiss (apologies if reading rock and Kiss in the same sentence makes you as sick to read it as it did me to write it). Kiss "music" (translation: drek) seems targeted to only increase the population of the slurping Eloi - it's just part of the 8-track in the brain, endless loop program that most idiots seem to have running around in their heads. I'm sure there's an industry for that, but in the day, we referred to it as Madison Avenue, not the music industry.

    Eugene's only real problem (may we call him Eugene?) is that he's going to be the first to whine when his brane-programming revenue is threatened.

    Here's another happy slogan from an old college student of the '70s: When the revolution comes, he's going to be among the first with his back to a brick wall being offered the choice of a blindfold - or not.

    Hope this clarifies things from a certain point of view.

    --
    Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.
  89. Re: 200 year old issue! by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

    If my memory holds, this is called the discussion about a Line Item Veto.

    Presidents and Music Buyers want it, Congress and Record OldGuard don't so they can jam stuff you don't want into packages with stuff you do want.

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
  90. Ironic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    when he asks "are you on crack?".

  91. so, some freeloader doesn't understand ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the free ride is over - just because you're successful, doesn't mean you deserve an endless free ride

    if music hadn't been grossly overpriced, the 'industry' would be alive and well today

  92. Living up to their name by Arimus · · Score: 1

    I suppose one way of looking at his rant is taking the usual abbreviation of kiss.. keep it simple stupid - atleast with his rant he's simplified it...

    (Or is it more for their music, 3 chords is about their limit... )

    --
    --- Users are like bacteria -> Each one causing a thousand tiny crises until the host finally gives up and dies.
  93. Clearly, Gene is the one on crack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Clearly, Gene Simmons is an idiot for also failing to see the writing on the wall. How dare he actually blame students. Also, I might add, withuot a single shred of proof.

  94. Music For Free by Coldjin · · Score: 1

    You know I have to laugh to myself while reading all these posts. People here cutting up Gene for what he's said. Yet for the most part its true. Now I have been known to download the odd mp3 or so, but when you look at it there is a big problem out there. For instance, you would never go into a store and just take your favorite bands memorabilia without paying for it and not expect to be jumped by the security guard standing at the door - juiced up on steroids. Gene is also right in suggesting that you would never open a corner store and simply have people pay what they think is fair or can afford and expect to make a living that way. I mean this is just not good business, and that is what this is after all, a business. Musicians and Record labels are in it to make money, and that's it. This is there business, and anyway you look at it those who download mp3's without paying for them are stealing. Its that simple.

    So all you people who disagree with Gene should open your own business - let people pay what they want or just take what ever your selling and see how long you can stay in business for.

    1. Re:Music For Free by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      But couldn't you theoretically make more money by offering a product to people (a virtual one at that, esp. in the case of downloaded files) to pay whatever we want. If you contrast this with iTunes, I will only buy the albums that I think are worth $10, or the songs that I think are worth $1. If I was presented with the Radiohead model, I could buy more music, because I could choose to pay what I felt was appropriate for what I'm getting. If I feel your album is only worth $3, and I'm allowed to pay $3, then you get $3. If I feel that your album is only worth $3, and my only choices are buy it for $10, or not buy it, then you get $0.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    2. Re:Music For Free by Genom · · Score: 1

      anyway you look at it those who download mp3's without paying for them are stealing. Its that simple.

      Nope. It's infringement of copyright.

      The difference? If I walk into a store, and steal an album, that store can't sell that particular copy of the album anymore - as they don't have it.

      If I download a ripped album, infringing copyright, does anyone "not have" something? Nope. Everything is exactly as it was, with the exception that a new digital copy of those files now exists. Noone has technically "lost" anything. (Not even a "potential sale", as I may have downloaded it to sample it, and may *still* end up purchasing it, as well as other albums. Will I? Well, that's not certain - but neither was the sale of the album in the first place, so that's a null argument.)

    3. Re:Music For Free by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      For instance, you would never go into a store and just take your favorite bands memorabilia without paying for it and not expect to be jumped by the security guard standing at the door - juiced up on steroids.

      You know I have to laugh to myself when I hear comparisons like that. Information is not objects. Copying is not theft.

      You would never tell a joke you heard on The Daily Show at a party and expect to be jumped by the copyright cops, juiced up on steroids and monitoring all that you say to enforce the "rights" of comedy writers. And yet new jokes continue to be made.

      In fact, you would never sing a KISS song at a party and expect to be jumped by the copyright cops. (Well, I'd never sing a KISS song at a party, but you get the idea.)

      I've long argued that we should treat copying the same way we treat performance - do it for free and you're fine, do it for profit and you owe a royalty.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    4. Re:Music For Free by absoluteflatness · · Score: 1

      Except if I open up a store and let people pay whatever they want, once someone buys (or takes) something, it's gone forever. They have it, and I don't. Fortunately, digital things don't suffer from this restriction. No matter how many people decide they want to pay $0, I still have unlimited copies left to try and sell to anyone that comes in the door.

      If I could actually open up a store where I had an unlimited number of my items for sale and they took up no physical space, I think I'd probably do pretty well for myself, despite the price I charged. Analogies can tend to break down when confronted with the digital world of essentially cost-free copying and distribution.

  95. Ah, Gene Simmons. Such a noble creature. by Zeriel · · Score: 3, Funny

    Just because Gene Simmons can lick his own ass while playing guitar, he thinks he's qualified to comment on anything else?

    --
    "America has done some terrible things. But I know that Americans don't cheer when innocents die." -Dave Barry
  96. I...Wanna Laugh All Night...At You... by Prototerm · · Score: 1

    Yeah, put *that* tune on your 45 spindle and smoke it!

    --
    "My country, right or wrong; if right, to be kept right; and if wrong, to be set right." --Senator Carl Schurz (1872)
  97. Lampoon the bastard! by scharkalvin · · Score: 1

    You know, Kiss and Simmons deserve the Weird Al treatment.
    Come to think of it, Gene LOOKS like the character in the
    Weird Al video "I'll Sue you!".

    1. Re:Lampoon the bastard! by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      He is one step away from becoming an old man screaming "Get outta my yard you damn kids!"

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
  98. But they DON'T... :-) by crovira · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would hesitate to look at Gene Simmons for any kind of intelligent statement on anything.

    I never liked KISS.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
    1. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by Jaysyn · · Score: 2, Funny

      Ditto, but I'm only 30 so what do I know, right?

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    2. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I never new the guy (or Kiss, I was more of a Pink Floyd guy) until I stumbled upon his reality show! I have never see so much crap in an office, looking closely I realized it was all derivative/merchandising Kiss stuff. The guy has everything from clocks to ashtrays. I would not be surprise he has a dildo in the form of his tongue (or will soon if he reads this).

      He is the perfect example of 'free music get rich with merchandising'. But his words are not surprising, 90% of what he does now is related to bringing in as much cash as possible, "Bring more tits, sex sells", "Hey a few days of design, make it in china and we make 95% profit on those" (great thoughts to Kiss fans paying for all that crap), as long as it's not his daughter's ... for now!

      And he is SO proud of all that, he really believe King and obviously lost touch with real life. Make you think the Osbourne's are a nice neighboring bunch

    3. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by funkatron · · Score: 2, Funny

      KISS are ok apart from the songs with the words rock and/or roll in them

      --
      "Welcome to our world. We are the wasted youth. And we are the future too." Yes, I know these are stupid lyrics.
    4. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      too bad simmons has snorted most of his brains out. i for one found this insider store _way_ more an interesting read: http://www.demonbaby.com/blog/2007/10/when-pigs-fly-death-of-oink-birth-of.html

    5. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by Kennon · · Score: 1

      I would hesitate to look at Gene Simmons for any kind of intelligent statement on anything.

      Yeah I mean we are basically talking about an attitude with a tongue who managed to enthrall large numbers of drug addled white suburban kids in the 1970's. And now his biggest claim to fame is that he allows cameras into his home so that the world can do that car crash stare at him and his retarded brood. Be kind America, don't rewind these wash out has beens into reality TV shows and book deals please.

      --
      "All those moments, will be lost in time...like tears in rain..."
    6. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by DesScorp · · Score: 1

      "I would hesitate to look at Gene Simmons for any kind of intelligent statement on anything."

      Yeah, because this Gene Simmons guy is dumb and has never achieved anything, and hey, we should take that as gospel from some guy posting on Slashdot.

      --
      Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    7. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > too bad simmons has snorted most of his brains out. i for one found this insider store _way_ more an interesting read:

      I'm no fan of Gene Simmons, but to his credit, he doesn't drink or do drugs. Never has.

    8. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "too bad simmons has snorted most of his brains out. i for one found this insider store _way_ more an interesting read:"

      I think there's a pretty good record about Gene Simmons...say what you will about his greed and business acumen, but, he doesn't drink or do drugs...supposedly never has.

      He was after $$ and sex....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    9. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, I feel the same way about your podcasts, and think you're an idiot.

    10. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by jwo7777777 · · Score: 1

      I saw some sort of live tribute he did for some soldiers. Some lady in uniform asked him how many women he has slept with and he proceeded to whisper in her ear. She shouted "Oh my God!" or something like that and Gene proceeded to vomit some sort of putrid mis-quote of the Bible about how he is a religious man and has to "spread his seed."

      I get the impression that everyone on the planet now is less than 7 degrees of separation from him....

    11. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may not, but regardless, the man knows how to make money. He's a very successful businessman.

    12. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because this Gene Simmons guy is dumb and has never achieved anything, and hey, we should take that as gospel from some guy posting on Slashdot.
      Are we talking all achievements, or just worthwhile ones? Because if it's the latter, I think the basement dweller has the edge.
      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    13. Re:But they DON'T... :-) by jwo7777777 · · Score: 1

      In other news... college students today all pointed their middle fingers at Gene Simmons......

  99. Gene Simmons has nothing to worry about... by overlook77 · · Score: 0

    College students aren't downloading stupid Kiss songs anyway.

  100. Grab your boots! by StealthPanda · · Score: 3, Funny

    I think he got so angry that he might have dribbled a bit over the top of his Depends®.

  101. Stop complaining by mrjb · · Score: 1

    Gene, if those same college kids wouldn't start bands, your dear music industry that leeches on those talented college kids wouldn't even exist. So stop whining.

    --
    Visit http://ringbreak.dnd.utwente.nl/~mrjb/growingbettersoftware to download your free copy of the book
  102. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by richieb · · Score: 1
    These people would invest considerable amounts of their own time and money in this creative endevour and it is a reasonable idea that they should be able to control its reproduction to gain financially.

    Actually this is not a reasonable idea.

    I'm a software engineer and I create software everyday. I'm sure I suffer more than some guy writing a song. But if I want to get money, I need to continue working. I get no royalties from software I wrote 10 years ago (even though it is still used everyday).

    You should get paid for working - not for having done work once, and then be paid forever.

    --
    ...richie - It is a good day to code.
  103. I blame execs.... by blahplusplus · · Score: 1

    ... for causing rapid changes in markets thereby increasing the amount of education I need, thereby increasing college tuition.

    All is fair in love and war.

  104. yes by spaxxor · · Score: 1

    and the poor movie sales is because of halo 3, yes *nods head*

    --
    destiny, chance, fate, fortune; they're all ways of claiming your fortunes, without claiming your failures. -gerrard
  105. It's too late by gilesjuk · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Once something has changed that's it. You will need to lock up a lot of people to change the situation.

    It's the same with alcohol and drugs, once they've taken hold it takes a very determined leader to try and exstinguish such things. It was tried in the US in the early 1900s and failed.

    Gene is old school, he simply doesn't understand the way people think these days. I would love to see him survive on the money available to an average college student.

  106. music "industry" indeed.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has anybody had the idea that people might actually "buy music" if it didn't suck outright?

    I have a huge library of music (vinyl, tape and CD's and others) from the 1980's and back. The amount of music produced in the 1990's and later that I have purchased, using one means or another, is dramaticly lower. I just do not find most currrent/new music compelling enough to put money on it. I listen to it and it goes away. Before I get destroyed by flame... there is good music being produced, you just have to isolate it from the background noise.

    my $.02

  107. Well, He's born in Israel -- figure it out . . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Born 25 August 1949, Tirat Carmel, Israel.

    He's a real bonafide member of the Hollywood "tribe".

  108. Gene Simmons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The exercise-video guy? Why does his opinion on today's music industry count?

    What? Oh, that was *Richard Simmons*? Who's this Gene Simmons guy, then?

    KISS, you say? I think I remember them; weren't they, like, big in the '70s or something? I think the question still stands.

  109. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

    That's plain wrong: the slow movement of the music industry doesn't make it right to illegally circumvent the legal market for their goods.

    Right, because the music industry certainly gives a shit about right or wrong. Oh, wait ...

    --
    !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
  110. And all the subsidies! by FatSean · · Score: 1

    Farmers getting paid to not grow crops, or getting money to produce ethanol from soil-crops even though it's a down's syndrome solution to our need for energy. Algae in a vat FTW!

    Also, the most conservative states are the ones which, proportionally to tax contributions, get the most 'free money' handed to them by the Federal Government. Next time some guy from New Mexico or Alabama or Arizona starts bitching about lazy bums getting welfare handouts, remember this and smile ;)

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:And all the subsidies! by Blahgerton · · Score: 1

      As a resident of Alabama, I take offense to that statement. I'd like to know where this 'free money' comes from and where to get it. Alabama works hard at being the 48th/49th worst state in the Union, damn hard.

    2. Re:And all the subsidies! by hairyfeet · · Score: 1
      And I, as someone from Arkansas, take offense to yours. Ain't NO WAY you've managed to sink as low on the suck meter as we have. The only competition we have is from Mississippi, thank you very much.


      On the topic of Gene Simmons-Does anyone REALLY care what a guy who sells panties and perfume with his makeup clad mug on them to cash in on his 70's heyday really thinks? Hell, if Gene had his way we'd all pay a KISS tax, as I bet he thinks everyone just HAD to have copied his incredible 70's music. Luckily, while I did listen to them for a year (when I was 9) the NWOBHM movement quickly showed me what a bunch of lame shills KISS were/are. That, and "tears are falling", which had to be the biggest "we don't get glam but are going to try to cash in anyway" excuse for a video I've ever seen.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    3. Re:And all the subsidies! by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "That, and "tears are falling", which had to be the biggest "we don't get glam but are going to try to cash in anyway" excuse for a video I've ever seen."

      Speaking of....am I the only one that things Paul Stanley comes off as being a bit 'gay'? Every time I watch or listen to him speak....I gotta wonder...

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  111. Aww how cute! by scubamage · · Score: 1

    Hey look, a 50 year old rocker with no career has an opinion! Apparently he was so busy with his opinions that not only did he not pay attention to facts, but he managed to convince me that every bit of rebellious fun that was KISS's music is worthless tripe worthy of getting nuked off my PC. Grats Gene, not only did you make yourself look like a complete tool, but you lost a fan. Pathetic washed up hack.

  112. I have no brain by sm62704 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you're not a Conservative by the time you're 40, you have no money.

    A liberal wants you to give your money to the government so the government can give it to the poor.

    A conservative wants you to give your money to the government so the governmnet can give it to him. He says he's against taxes, but he's only against himself paying taxes. If you don't pay yours he's up in arms.

    The guy you see risking his life and spending his sweat to build that road isn't getting the government money. His employer sits back in his air-conditioned office and pays hime a pittance from the vast fortunes government gave him to build the road.

    Wealth isn't created in the board room or on wall street. Wealth is created in the factory, behind the fry cook's stove, in the programmer's cube, on the construction site. The wealthy don't create wealth, they aggregate it.

    America is strange in that its "conservative" party the Republicans would have you believe that they are Christians, when Christianity is decidedly anti-capital.

    -mcgrew

    --
    mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    1. Re:I have no brain by bitt3n · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you want to argue that the rich don't pay enough taxes, or that, though they do create wealth, people who build and run companies are compensated in excess of the wealth for which they are responsible, fine. However, extremist statements about how people who build and run factories, restaurants and other businesses are nothing but parasites on the people they employ, and want to use the government as a tool to suck the blood of the working man, make you sound like you walked out of a Soviet propaganda pamphlet from 1955.

    2. Re:I have no brain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most mainstream liberals just want temporary aid for the people who are the worst off and to keep government and big businesses off of the back of the rest of us. Any other claim is propaganda.

    3. Re:I have no brain by optimus2861 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wealth isn't created in the board room or on wall street. Wealth is created in the factory, behind the fry cook's stove, in the programmer's cube, on the construction site. The wealthy don't create wealth, they aggregate it.

      That a statement like that runs up to +5 without an appropriate rebuttal is a crying shame. So the restaurant owner who built the restaurant, bought the deep-fryer and other kitchen equipment, and pays the cook, isn't creating wealth by his actions? The factory owner who invests tens or even hundreds of millions of dollars in specialized equipment, the land the factory sits on, the building it's housed in, paying his workers and his contractors, isn't creating wealth by his actions? You think it would be better if those owners didn't do those things? Where are the workers then?

      I'll tell you: sitting on welfare whining they don't have jobs.

      Since this started with a Churchill quote (well, an apocryphal one anyway), I'll paraphrase one to finish: Capitalism is the worst form of economy, except for all the others that have been tried.

    4. Re:I have no brain by JonathanBoyd · · Score: 2, Informative

      America is strange in that its "conservative" party the Republicans would have you believe that they are Christians, when Christianity is decidedly anti-capital.

      It's against making money and the pursuit of wealth into an idol, but it's not intrinsically anti-capitalist. Take the story of Anias and Sapphira in Acts for example. They sold a field for profit and gave some of the proceeds to the church, but lied about how much. What was their sin? If capitalism was wrong, you'd think they would be criticised for not giving everything to the church, but they're not. Instead, they're punished for lying. Making money was no problem and neither was keeping some of it. Making it an idol was the problem.

    5. Re:I have no brain by porcupine8 · · Score: 1
      A conservative wants you to give your money to the government so the governmnet can give it to him. He says he's against taxes, but he's only against himself paying taxes. If you don't pay yours he's up in arms.

      I think you're confusing "conservative" with "Republican" here. I know, it's an easy mistake to make these days.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    6. Re:I have no brain by kimvette · · Score: 1

      A liberal wants you to give your money to the government so the government can give it to the liberal.


      I corrected your post for you. ;)
      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    7. Re:I have no brain by wolfemi1 · · Score: 1

      I don't think he said that they are parasites, but that they don't create anything. This is true to a point, though they can definitely help others to create and influence other things....

    8. Re:I have no brain by bitt3n · · Score: 1

      How can anyone take seriously the statement that a person who founds and builds up a company like Ford, GM or Google doesn't create anything? Such a position clearly underrates the value of gumption, balls, brains, and greed.

    9. Re:I have no brain by Bemopolis · · Score: 1

      How can anyone take seriously the statement that a person who founds and builds up a company like Ford, GM or Google doesn't create anything?
      Your Google example fits here. However, the persons that "founded and built up" Ford and GM are dead dead dead. Those companies are at worst run by people like "Chainsaw Al" Dunlap, who work to squeeze out all the money they can before hopping the next train, or at best, run by their retarded descendants. You know, like our country.
      --
      "I guess the moral of the story is, don't paint your airship with rocket fuel." -- Addison Bain
    10. Re:I have no brain by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      ...extremist statements about how people who build and run factories, restaurants and other businesses are nothing but parasites on the people they employ, and want to use the government as a tool to suck the blood of the working man...

      No, they have their uses and society wouldn't be what it is without them. Someone has to control the wealth. But the wealthy think they are above us "little people". They pay a disproportionately small amount in taxes as a percentage of their income, and think they're getting ripped off. They think the world not only owes them a living, but godhood. They think they are above the law, and they're mostly right. I find their attitudes offensive.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    11. Re:I have no brain by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      So the restaurant owner who built the restaurant, bought the deep-fryer and other kitchen equipment, and pays the cook, isn't creating wealth by his actions?

      No. He didn't build the restaraunt; he hired someone who did. The construction worker who did the actual building created the wealth. He didn't create wealth by buying a deep fryer, he invested his wealth.

      You think it would be better if those owners didn't do those things?

      I never said that. Your straw man is on fire.

      I'll tell you: sitting on welfare whining they don't have jobs.

      If I was on welfare I'd be whining about not having a job too, while I was looking for one.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    12. Re:I have no brain by Tuoqui · · Score: 1

      Warren Buffet did the math and came out that he was paying 18% in tax while his receptionist was paying 33% in tax.

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      +2 Troll is Slashdot's way of saying groupthink is confused
    13. Re:I have no brain by sm62704 · · Score: 1
      Acts 4:32-37 says that the early church was decidedly communist.

      "And the multitude of them that believed were of one heart and of one soul: neither said any of them that ought of the things which he possessed was his own; but they had all things common.
      And with great power gave the apostles witness of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus: and great grace was upon them all.
      Neither was there any among them that lacked: for as many as were possessors of lands or houses sold them, and brought the prices of the things that were sold,
      And laid them down at the apostles' feet: and distribution was made unto every man according as he had need.
      And Joses, who by the apostles was surnamed Barnabas, (which is, being interpreted, The son of consolation,) a Levite, and of the country of Cyprus,
      Having land, sold it, and brought the money, and laid it at the apostles' feet."

      Then there are various things Jesus said: - mark 4:19 "And the cares of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, and the lusts of other things entering in, choke the word, and it becometh unfruitful."

      Mark 10:23-25

      And Jesus looked round about, and saith unto his disciples, How hardly shall they that have riches enter into the kingdom of God!
      And the disciples were astonished at his words. But Jesus answereth again, and saith unto them, Children, how hard is it for them that trust in riches to enter into the kingdom of God!
      It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.
      Matthew 6:26-32

      Behold the fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into barns; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much better than they?
      Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature?
      And why take ye thought for raiment? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin:
      And yet I say unto you, That even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.
      Wherefore, if God so clothe the grass of the field, which to day is, and to morrow is cast into the oven, shall he not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith?
      Therefore take no thought, saying, What shall we eat? or, What shall we drink? or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?
      (For after all these things do the Gentiles seek:) for your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of all these things.
      Jesus was homeless. Matthew 8:20"And Jesus saith unto him, The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests; but the Son of man hath not where to lay his head."

      You might think about that the next time you badmouth the homeless.
      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    14. Re:I have no brain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      You might think about that the next time you badmouth the homeless.

      Only problem is, many homeless are bums and Jesus is make-believe. You may as well defend the obese by saying Santa is also fat.

    15. Re:I have no brain by JonathanBoyd · · Score: 1

      Acts 4:32-37 says that the early church was decidedly communist.

      No it doesn't; it says that the early church shared possessions. This was entirely voluntary and done out of love for one-another. Within communism, it would be a requirement This is what one commentary has to day about it: 'As in ch. 2, what is important here is not to whom the possessions actually belonged, but rather the believers' attitude toward them. Once again it is clear that the selling of goods had to do with need and was not a formal condition of membership.'.

      Then there are various things Jesus said: - mark 4:19 "And the cares of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, and the lusts of other things entering in, choke the word, and it becometh unfruitful."

      It's important to take verses in context. This is from a parable about responses to hearing the word of God and is warning that some people will get distracted by other things and fail to respond correctly to what they have heard. It's not an endorsement of any particular socio-economic theories.

      Mark 10:23-25

      Wealth in of itself wasn't the problem here; it as the man's dependance on it.

      Matthew 6:26-32

      Again, this is about dependence and security. Jesus is berating those who worry about their material possessions, rather than trusting God to provide for them. It is not criticising the concept of having wealth, but rather of requiring it in order to have security.

      Jesus was homeless. Matthew 8:20

      During his mission, yes, but there are no prohibitions against members of the church having homes. He was warning about the cost of discipleship and about how God needs to be prioritised above everything else. It wasn't a blanket prohibition against any of his followers owning homes.

      You might think about that the next time you badmouth the homeless.

      Would you care to point out where I did that?

      Incidentally, if you're seriously interested in this issue, rather than just trolling, I'd suggest using a more modern translation than benefits from better manuscripts and more modern scholarship and reading a few commentaries on the relevant passages to see what other people think of them. When you just post a list of verses of the KJV and follow it up with a strawman attack, it gives the impression that you've just cut and pasted everything from some website that wasn't particularly interested in studying the text properly.

      And one more thing: what do you make of Anias and Sapphira in acts 5?

    16. Re:I have no brain by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Here in the US, the Republicans actually believe that they're conservative. Go figure.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    17. Re:I have no brain by porcupine8 · · Score: 1

      Yep, they're as confused as everyone else. If anything, they're the ones creating the confusion in the first place.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    18. Re:I have no brain by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      A rich neocon wants you to give your money to the government so the government can give it to the rich neocon.

      I corrected your post for you. ;)

      I forget who the comedian lampooning liberals was, but he was correct when he said "oh you poor hungry thing! You need money! Here, have some of his!"

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    19. Re:I have no brain by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      If you don't want to believe contemporary witnesses, that's your business. His existance was documented. To argue that he was simply executed rather than dying for my sins would be a valid debating point, his extensively documented existance itself isn't.

      My roommate was homeless before I let her move in with me; she's now paying me rent. Not much rent, as cab drivers don't make much money here despite working 12 hours a day 6 days a week. Next time you take a cab, please tip the driver! Especially if she's an attractive woman, she might be my roommate.

      Many != "all" or even "most", although I might hazard a guess that most homeless may have mental health problems (that my government refuses to address) that contributes to or causes their homelessness. Why is John's cancer or Jane's AIDS ok, but Willie's schitzophrenia isn't?

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    20. Re:I have no brain by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      No it doesn't; it says that the early church shared possessions.

      That's what "communism" is.

      Within communism, it would be a requirement

      No, within Communism it would be a requirement. I didn't say they were Marxists, but communists. Lower case "c". As in "hippie commune".

      It's important to take verses in context

      That's right, and the context of this verse is what makes a member of the flock stray - in the case of the quoted text, MONEY and the cares of the world. "The love of money is the root of all evil".

      Wealth in of itself wasn't the problem here; it as the man's dependance on it.

      Do you know any wealthy people who aren't dependant on their wealth? I don't. Money is more addictive than any drug. The word "jaded" comes to mind.

      there are no prohibitions against members of the church having homes

      I didn't say there was. My point in quoting that is that most of your Republican money worshipers look down on poor people, and look at the homeless with even more disdain. No Christian would look at a homeless person and think anything except "there but for the grace of God goes me".

      Would you care to point out where I did that?

      Sorry, not targeting you specifically, but anyone who happened to read the comment.

      I'd suggest using a more modern translation

      Some time in the 1970s my Grandmother gave me a "modern translation" called "The Way". Rather than saying "thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor" it said "do not lie". Nope, lying is NOT a sin according to the King James scholars; the sin referred to there is slander, not lying.

      So no thanks, I'll stick to the KJV if you don't mind. It's been around for over a thousand years now.

      And one more thing: what do you make of Anias and Sapphira in acts 5?

      I agree with your take on it.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    21. Re:I have no brain by JonathanBoyd · · Score: 1

      That's what "communism" is.

      There's a difference between choosing from time to time to act in a manner that would be consistent with communist principles and being 'decidedly communist.'

      No, within Communism it would be a requirement. I didn't say they were Marxists, but communists. Lower case "c". As in "hippie commune".

      They operated within the rest of society, rather than separating out and did not consistently share possessions; it was done when a need was spotted, therefore it is somewhat different to a commune.

      That's right, and the context of this verse is what makes a member of the flock stray - in the case of the quoted text, MONEY and the cares of the world. "The love of money is the root of all evil".

      Re-read what you just typed. It's not money, but the love of money. Money in itself is not a problem, it's money becoming an idol and therefore taking God's place. And once again, the context of that verse is responses to the word of God, not the use of money.

      Do you know any wealthy people who aren't dependant on their wealth? I don't. Money is more addictive than any drug. The word "jaded" comes to mind.

      I do. Besides which, it's what the Bible says about money that we're discussing, not your limited experience of people's flaws.

      My point in quoting that is that most of your Republican money worshipers look down on poor people, and look at the homeless with even more disdain.

      I'm not American and as a ministry student earn considerably less than the average wage, as do a fair chunk of people I know.

      Sorry, not targeting you specifically, but anyone who happened to read the comment.

      If that is the case, then I politely suggest you should perhaps be clearer concerning whom your statements are addressed to in the future. Saying 'You might think about that the next time you badmouth the homeless.' kinda gives the impression you're addressing me. If that wasn't the case, then apology accepted.

      Some time in the 1970s my Grandmother gave me a "modern translation" called "The Way".

      Can't say I'm familiar with it, but it wounds like a paraphrase i.e. not something that particularly highlights the benefits of better scholarship and sources.

      Nope, lying is NOT a sin according to the King James scholars; the sin referred to there is slander, not lying.

      I agree, but why do you trust the KJV or something else? How do you know its translation is accurate?

      So no thanks, I'll stick to the KJV if you don't mind. It's been around for over a thousand years now.

      More like 400 years and that isn't an advantage in any way, shape or form. The language is archaic and the meanings of quite a few words have changed. The manuscripts it was translated from are inferior to those of many modern translations - if you want something that's been around for a while, you want early manuscripts and therefore modern translations. And we understand Greek and Hebrew better now than people did 4 centuries ago, so even working from the same manuscript, we'd produce a better translation now.

      You clearly don't like paraphrases (neither do I incidentally), but the North American Standard Bible, English Standard Version (my personal favourite) and Holman Christian Standard Bible are all very accurate, literal translations that you would benefit from using.

  113. Gene is Right, but the idiots will hate by MrHyd3 · · Score: 0

    The thought process that exists about giving things away just kills me. I see "creative" artists make paintings, take PICTURE who want paid or compensated, but when some of these musicians want their payday....these same people complain? One the flip side, how many times have you bought a CD to hate every song but one or two? You're stuck with the environmental waste of a CD case and paper. I personally like the per song purchase.

    I think this whole "creative" stuff is overhyped anyway...go smoke some more hash

    --
    -------- Of all the things I've lost, I miss my mind the most. --Ozzy
  114. Relevant? by wezeldog · · Score: 1

    I think Music from "the Elder" is as relevant today as when it was released...

  115. Gene Simmons by jvlb · · Score: 1

    An article about dinosaurs back-to-back with one about Gene Simmons' opinions. Are you going to try to pass that off as mere coincidence?

  116. He's right by Torodung · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "That's not a business model that works."

    Truer words were never spoken.

    Here's the truth also, Mr. Simmons. No business model will work because in the age of computerized publication, content is no longer a business. Period. It's too easy to produce when your average high-school student, with a job as a checkout bagger, has access to cheap (and complete) digital publication and production tools.

    I can do the job of what used to be a $1M+ recording studio/pressing plant on a $500 PC, and post it to a bittorrent on a $25 Internet account, and retain full rights. This means I can't make money off of the music alone. QED.

    This brings us back to square one, as you say, "The most important part is the music. Without that, why would you care?"

    Right again, Mr. Simmons. Music is no longer a business. Trading oil futures is a business. Music is not. It is about the music, again. All you businessmen need to find a business to get into. I suspect you were never actually a musician, but I could be wrong.

    Gutenberg put a lot of preachers and wandering storytellers out of business too. He put the entire Catholic Church out of business, in fact, in the space of about 100 years. This is the kind of change we are talking about here. This is big. I think we should do it with fewer "Inquisitions" this time, if we can avoid them, as you so stupidly encourage.

    It's also quite normal. The world changes. There is no longer a business model for making money off of content. End result: There's a mountain of crap out there and it's harder to find quality stuff, but there's a banquet of quality under that mountain, so you must make money some other way. There's no longer any money in content alone.

    You want a business model? Reliably help people sift through all the crap. You'll be in direct competition with Google, of course.

    Sad but true. Your day is over, Gene. Adapt or die already.

    --
    Toro

    1. Re:He's right by philicorda · · Score: 1

      "I can do the job of what used to be a $1M+ recording studio/pressing plant on a $500 PC"

      No you can't.
      A sound proofed and treated room with facilities for recording a band is not the same as your bedroom.
      If you mean "I can make electronic music on my computer that I think could sell" then I agree.
      If you mean that a $500 PC gives you the same facilities as a $1M recording studio then you are insane. Even a few pairs of decent headphones cost more than that.

    2. Re:He's right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen.

    3. Re:He's right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although his numbers aren't correct, his premis is. Most of the multi-million dollar music industry is based on electronic music. Hell, You don't even need to be a musiscian to create product. Just make a beat, rip an old well known lick that has already been recorded, add your own lyrics and Presto - Product.

      I'm an million+ dollar studio owner, and the hand writing was on the wall a long time ago. I've adapted and still exist because of it, while many have disappeared. One thing we don't do anymore is make very much pop music. What used to be a mainstay is now
      relitively a rare occurance.

      The recording industry was tiny to begin with, and because of tech, you can practicly count whats left on your hands and feet.

  117. cover of 'Schools out for suing'. by sjwest · · Score: 1

    Sounds good, better stick some drm on it though.

  118. More QQ from musicians... really gets to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pardon me for not feeling back for Gene Simmons. When my career of choice earns me enough money to rest comfortably in a veritable mansion, and become relatively unemployed, but not have any cash flow concerns? Then I'll feel bad for him, or any other musician. He's just another jackass to toss in the Metallica heep of old-world thinking and lack of vision.

  119. Re:He's not right though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think Gene Simmons is on crack and should not run for president of the United States of America.

  120. Saul Williams - Niggytardust by un1xl0ser · · Score: 1

    I just wanted to mention that Niggytardust, the new album by Saul Williams (produced by Trent Reznor) is available online. There are two options:

    1) Pay nothing. (192kbps mp3)
    2) Pay $5. (192kbps mp3, 320kbps mp3 or FLAC)

    http://niggytardust.com/

    I got the FLAC, haven't listened to it yet.

    --
    v4sw6PU$hw6ln6pr4F$ck 4/6$ma3+6u7LNS$w2m4l7U$i2e4+7en6a2X h
  121. Gene Simmons is a dolt (proof) by raidfibre · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you're unsure that Gene Simmons really isn't an idiot, read this transcript of his interview with Terry Gross on NPR:
    http://www.rof.net/wp/carriep/TERRYGRO.HTM

    Terry Gross: Are you trying to say to me that all that matters to you is money?

    Gene Simmons: I will contend, and you try to disprove it, that the most important thing as we know it on this planet, in this plane, is, in fact, money. Want me to prove it?

    Terry Gross: Go ahead.

    Gene Simmons: The first thing you need -- besides air, which so far is free, and by the way if you went scuba diving, you're paying for air -- the other thing besides that is food, it's what we need to survive. I don't know what other tool I would use besides money to buy it. Although, as a woman of course you have the ability to sell your body, then get the money, and then, with that, get food. But ultimately money is part of it. And so --

    Terry Gross: [laughs] You -- you -- you are weird.

    Gene Simmons: Really? How do you get food?

    Terry Gross: Well, not by selling my body. But --

    Gene Simmons: But that's a choice you have that I don't. But getting to the money part, money is the single most important thing on the planet, including the notion that uh, love gives you everything. That's a lot of hogwash. Because although I subscribe to the romantic notion of life --

    Terry Gross: Well, let's cut to the chase. How much -- how much money do you have?

    Gene Simmons: Gee, a lot more than NPR.

    Terry Gross: Oh, I know. I -- you're very defensive on money, aren't you?

    Gene Simmons: No, I'm not, I'm just trying to show you that there's a big world out there, and reading books is wonderful. I've certainly read, well, perhaps as many as you have, but there's a delusional kind of notion that runs rampant in --

    Terry Gross: Wait, wait, could we just get something straight?

    Gene Simmons: Of course.

    Terry Gross: I'm not here to prove that I'm smart --

    Gene Simmons: Not you --

  122. Washed up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do we expect from a washed up has been and a RIAA sock puppet? KISS was a good band back in the 70's but their time has passed. Just like the old way of distributing music has passed.

    Isn't Gene Simmons Jewish?

  123. DMCA gets us again! by MunchMunch · · Score: 1
    "the slow movement of the music industry doesn't make it right to illegally circumvent the legal market for their goods."

    Damn you, 17 USC 1201!

  124. College Students by Shaltenn · · Score: 1

    College Students Blame Gene Simmons For Crappy Music (which causes Music Industry Woes).

    News at 11.

    *breaks out the notepad* Gene Simmons - RIAA Shill.

    --
    If you were offended by anything I said... No, I'm not sorry. Please lighten up.
  125. I Have Fond Memories of KISS ca 1977 by aquatone282 · · Score: 0

    . . . memories of throwing Ron Ramey's KISS collection off his back deck and shooting at them with a 12-gauge shotgun.

    Sigh. . .

    --
    What?
  126. He may be right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but it's all academic now, and I don't care and don't feel sorry for the short-sighted music industry. I think what Radiohead did worked okay now because it is novel approach at this point. Give it away and let people pay what they want. There were fools who gave them money to support this new model. When every band starts giving away their music are these same fools going to give money to all of them. They can't, so however much this charity made Radiohead's venture a success, it will make others who follow the same approach later more likely to fail from a commercial standpoint.

    Having said this, I think Radiohead's approach is viable from the band's point of view because typically bands don't make much from CD sales, the labels do, and I think this ploy is more about sticking it back to that industry and also a way to go with the flow piracy-wise. So, WTF, give the music away on the Internet and let people pay us what they want. Whatever they make doing that is gravy money to them because the music will be pirated anyway and they never got much of it in the first place because the labels gobbled it up. The key to this that people miss, I think, is that Radiohead is still releasing the music on CD (they probably used their giveaway ploy to bargain a better distribution deal too). They'll still pick up sales from people who don't use the Internet, and probably get some sales from some of the same fools who gave them money for giving away free music too! They also got a lot of publicity out of doing this. A lot of people had probably never heard of them before this. So, they've probably got the first mover advantage amongst bigger name bands in this, but what they're doing is not new because a lot of bands give away their music for free on the Internet.

  127. F--king fools by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If it weren't for digital music and downloads, some illegal, few people would be buying music anyway. We're buying more than ever thanks to innovations like the mp3 player and iPod. Of course he ignores the fact that Radiohead made more money than the rest of the schmucks with a record label. Of course he forgets that college students are the target market for the music industry. Make good music, have fair prices, and people will pay them.
    God, these people are dumb.

  128. Gene Simmons Never Had a Personal Computer... by IGnatius+T+Foobar · · Score: 3, Funny

    GENE SIMMONS NEVER HAD A PERSONAL COMPUTER WHEN HE WAS A KID.

    How do we know? We know because our own well-documented research has shown conclusively that a child who lacks his own personal computer during those earliest school years will very probably grow up to be a bass player in a heavy metal rock band who wears women's fishnet pantyhose and sticks his tongue down to his kneecaps. Just like Gene Simmons.

    Your child's future doesn't have to look like this.

    The Banana Junior 6000 Self-portable Personal Computer System, complete with its optional software - Bananawrite, Bananadraw, Bananafile, and Bananamanager - is just what your four-year-old needs to compete in today's cut-throat world of high tech and high expectations.

    The Banana Junior 6000...Buy one before it's too late. Gene's mother wishes she had.

    --
    Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
    1. Re:Gene Simmons Never Had a Personal Computer... by IGnatius+T+Foobar · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Ah, here it is ... if you don't recognize the prose in the above post, here's the original Bloom County cartoon from which it is taken.

      --
      Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
  129. Seriously, I have to say this by JudgeFurious · · Score: 1

    "SmallFurryCreature" I take my hat off to you. That was easily the best post I've ever read in a thread on this topic. It might have been the best post I've ever read. I've certainly never written anything that good.

      That was so good that I'll be copying it for use in the future during discussions on this topic on other message boards I frequent and in conversations with friends. This post gets pasted into emails going out to people I takl to on both sides of this argument. I promise you I won't take credit for writing it and will credit it to "SmallFurryCreature" on Slashdot. You cut right through the bullshit and nailed it.

      Bravo!

    --
    Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
    1. Re:Seriously, I have to say this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are very easily impressed.

    2. Re:Seriously, I have to say this by janeil · · Score: 1
      "Judgefurious" I take my hat off to you. I read smallfurrycreature's post, felt the immediate need to praise it with a reply, and your post just says everything I would have said and more.

      And I'd be glad to support a law forcing us to buy fresh bread from a neighborhood bakery.

  130. KISS merchandise worth? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Yes, i agree their *merchandise* is/was worth more then Elvis's. Their music isn't however.

    Back in Elvis's days, selling barbie doll representations of yourself or playing cards wasn't really on the radar. Making decent music was.

    College people made the industry. and i do agree they will break it too. But not for the reasons some bitter has-been like Gene thinks it will.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  131. Admiration gone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To think I used to admire that jackass...

  132. Carnival of Souls by night_flyer · · Score: 1

    The Carnival of Souls would not have been released if it wasnt leaked to the internet. It was the last album before they put the makeup back on, and they were just going to shelve it. It is arguably their best Album

    --


    Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
    Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
  133. Miss the point by localman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    'Come on in and pay whatever you want.' Are you on f---ing crack?"

    He's right about that... the "pay what you want" model won't work long term. It works now because it is novel, because the fans want to support the artists in this movement, and because nobody knows what everyone else pays... yet. But it would devolve into people just taking stuff because they'd feel like suckers whenever they found out they paid more than average. "Pay what you want" would end up like every other soft shareware project.

    But that's not the point: the point is cheaper a-la-carte music, where more of the money goes to the artist and less to a marketing/distribution corporation. The price can still be set, like at iTunes. But there's finally a little competition in music distribution industry (thanks to illegal downloads) and as with most competition, the consumer wins.

    Cheers.

  134. What?!? by JK_the_Slacker · · Score: 1

    Let me get this straight... he thinks that the music industry should have sued college kids out of existence... I am NEVER touching drugs. EVER.

    --
    I'm waiting for a "-1 somepeoplejustshouldn'tgetmodprivileges" meta-moderation.
  135. GENE Simmons by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

    I feel stupid now. The whole time I was reading this I was picturing RICHARD Simmons saying this, and wondering why in the world he would care, unless the college kids are downloading a bunch of "Sweatin to the Oldies!". :S

    --
    "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
  136. means a lot coming from an old perv by saintsfan · · Score: 1

    i have an opinion on IP that I don't want to discuss. instead, how about the fact that an old pervert is trying to make a case? seriously, pray your girlfriend never runs into this preditor as mine has.

  137. He's got a point by danielk1982 · · Score: 1

    Pay-what-you-feel-is-right is not a business model, its charity.

    I don't think its a great idea when its for music, and I don't like it when its advocated for Software and Software Developers.

    1. Re:He's got a point by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Musicians make money from live performances, not record sales. Records are advertisements for their live shows. Every time they get a sale of more than $0, they're making money where they shouldn't expect to. Because people get to listen to the music for free (or as much as they want to pay), the band gets much greater exposure, and so their ticket sales for live performances go through the roof, which is where they make their money. The only people who get hurt through these pay-what-you-want schemes is the record label, and they shouldn't even exist any more. They should feel lucky they lasted this long, count their millions, and fuck right off.

    2. Re:He's got a point by danielk1982 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >Musicians make money from live performances, not record sales. Records are advertisements for their live shows.

      This is a stupid notion that will not die. Musicians do make money from record sales. Sometimes, their percentage is low, but thats because they probably sold the rights to publishing houses which do make money off record sales. If there was no protection on published music, musicians would not be able to do that. Indirectly or directly, lack of record sales hurts musicians.

      Fact is that their works, under copyright law, are protected. Even if artists never made a dime off of recorded music, there is still the fact that pirating music is illegal, and that *only* owners of copyrighted content have a right to decide the method of distribution for their works.

      >Records are advertisements for their live shows.

      No they aren't. Records are protected works. They could be used as advertisements for some artist's live shows, but thats up to the artist to decide - not you.

    3. Re:He's got a point by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Fair enough - they do make money from record sales, but then they make far, far more from live shows. They also lose money from record sales, as it means people have to pay money to hear their music, which might mean some folks who like their music don't realise that, and don't end up going to the live show. So, if the albums were released for free, they'd get maximum exposure, and the chances of them finding more of their audience increase greatly. Records are an anachronism, just like the record industry. Live music was here before both of them, and will be here long after they're both ancient history.

      Just because a record is a protected work doesn't mean to say it shouldn't be distributed freely. If artists heard the real, true story about record companies, they'd come to the same conclusion. Of course it's up to the artists, and the fact some don't like it means they have no idea what's going on. If they'd never even heard of a record company, chances are they wouldn't give a rat's ass people are downloading it for free, I'm sure. And records are advertisements for live shows, regardless of what anyone might say. They can still be protected, but their main function, whether desired or not, is to advertise a band and build awareness of their music.

    4. Re:He's got a point by prshaw · · Score: 1

      >>Just because a record is a protected work doesn't mean to say it shouldn't be distributed freely.

      No, it doesn't mean it shouldn't be, but since it is a protected work it means the owner of the work decides if it is or not.

      If you own a car it doesn't mean you have to sell it for book value, you can give it away for free if you want. And if I think you should give your valuables away for free it doesn't mean you have to, the choice is up to the owner.

    5. Re:He's got a point by bleedingneon · · Score: 1

      That "charity" may have netted Radiohead more than $2 million, if numbers from studies such as this hold up: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21656525/. No, it's not a effective model for every band, but it sure puts record companies looking dumb when the band bypasses them and proves they don't need the label or even an outside service like iTunes. Simmons is a washed-up, bitter old man who is clinging to what little notoriety he has left.

    6. Re:He's got a point by dave420 · · Score: 1

      Of course they should do with it as they want. But as cars in showrooms aren't seen as promotional items that should be given away to get repeat custom, albums shouldn't be put on the "oooh this costs money" pedestal. The owners are obviously free to do with it what they want, it's just that at the moment most of them are ignorant of the real reason albums exist.

  138. college kids have no money by moracity · · Score: 1

    to buy music, so how could downloading music by college students actually affect sales? Before the internet, people would probably chip in for a tape or CD, then make copies for everyone.

    Personally, I recorded music from the radio when I was too poor to buy music.

  139. In other news... by Serhei · · Score: 1

    Guess whose music the college kids are going to start pirating just because?

  140. It takes a thief to know a thief by hyades1 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A guy whose main contribution to music is the length of his tongue has the nerve to rant about what works for musicians? Give me a break. Kiss stole Alice Cooper's act, stole Ozzie Ozbourne's riffs, stole their makeup from some San Francisco Hallowe'en party, and stole lyrics from whatever washroom wall was handy.

    If this guy ever had a creative bone in his body, nobody's yet seen any evidence of it. No doubt he thinks he's owed money by the three or four pathetic losers who are downloading his drek for free. After all, when you haven't released an album in a decade or two, maybe you start doubting your ability to steal from internet-savvy artists.

    --
    I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
  141. Conservative = Criminal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Aside from the fact that being a conservative actually means being a criminal (check the news, orange jumpsuits are officially their new uniform), I thought this quote by Simmons was interesting:

    "The most important part is the music. Without that, why would you care?"

    Let's combine those two ideas, and ask "Why would anyone care about Gene Simmon's music?"

    Gene is just angry that all the money he is 'losing' will mean he has to get one less lapdance a year. Maybe his fragile ego can't handle the fact that Metallica will always be downloaded far more than KISS. Heck, Vanilla Ice is probably downloaded more than his butt rock.
  142. Knights In Satans Service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Knights In Satans Service ... well *duh* of course they're on the RIAA's side.

  143. Will wonders never cease by ProppaT · · Score: 3, Insightful


    Gene Simmons saying "It's about the music." I thought it was about the merch and pyro?

    --
    Wise men say, "Forgiveness is divine, but never pay full price for late pizza."
  144. 13 tracks of crud by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People are done buying 13 tracks of crap for the one song they like.


    Or you can simply listen to artists that put a lot of good songs on an album. J. S. Bach, Beethoven, Palestrina, Shotakovich all have hour-long pieces of music that are quite wonderful, and you can buy a high-priced album from a well-known ensemble for 'full price', or if you're just curious, pay $9 for a Naxos CD.

    Don't listen to crap, life's too short.
  145. Yeah, honestly. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sue the college kids out of existence? What, all of them? Aside from being impossible, the economic consequences would be pretty devastating.

    I didn't read the article (sue me), but I have never found "are they on crack" to be a logically-sound attack or defense for an argument. Sounds like he can't get his head around the peculiarities of digital distribution, nor the reasons why such peculiarities could potentially make such a business model functional. Even if it turns out that this business model is doomed to fail, it won't be for any of the reasons that Gene Simmons would offer.

    Times change. Cope.

    1. Re:Yeah, honestly. by hedwards · · Score: 1

      I think that there's a certain kind of irony in the fact that Gene Simmons a member of perhaps the most whored out rock acts of all time is complaining about the music being put last in some of the new business models.

      Gene is perhaps the last person that should be arguing that musical quality and not forming a borderline cult in order to hock cheap trinkets to them is the way of the music business.

  146. I think it gets spent on government programs. by FatSean · · Score: 1

    My info doesn't break down the handouts, but you can start here:

    http://www.taxfoundation.org/UserFiles/Image/Blog/ftsbs-large.jpg

    Nothing wrong with getting a little help, I just can't stand a hypocrite.

    --
    Blar.
  147. Gene Simmonsaurus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yep, he's a dinosaur alright. I was a teenager in the 1970's when that costumed abomination called 'KISS' first hit the scene. All I could think was WTF? This must be what all those anti-drug TV commercials were warning us about. I was already a hard rocker, my early childhood influenced heavily by the tail end of the hippy era of the late 1960's thru the early 70's, but I thought KISS was some kind of stupid gimmick, their music sounded fake and it sucked. They even tried to turn them into comic book characters in 1977 for crying out loud.

    Someday I hope to see Gene Simmons selling Depends with his old music on TV someday. Now that would be quite fitting, since every time I hear a KISS song, I feel a puddle of warm runny shit welling up in my pants.

  148. "Why would you care?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We don't care, Gene. Music is becoming more about the live experience. Cool album covers to upset the parents went out of fashion in the 70's.

  149. A Word for Gene by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1

    Gene Simmons, Kiss-Off!

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  150. Why is gold is expensive Gene? by warren_spencer_1977 · · Score: 1

    Some folks may wish to discount his business opinions, since Gene apparently doesn't know where the world's gold goes:

    The only reason why gold is expensive is because we all agree that it is. There's no real use for it, except we all agree and abide by the idea that gold costs a certain amount per ounce.

    Wow.

  151. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by Marcus+Green · · Score: 1

    "I get no royalties from software I wrote 10 years ago (even though it is still used everyday)."

    Thats the agreement you entered into. Other people write software, retain the copyright and continue to generate revenue on new sales of existing work.

    I continue to sell books I wrote several years ago. I wrote them, I sell them directly as pdf files via the web, there is no "industry" between me and the end user. The possibility of people paying for new material I write motivates me to write. If the law did not give me control over the copying I would feel far less inclined to write. If creative people do not have that financial motivation creative endevour would tend towards those who are independently wealthy, very committed or have wealthy patrons.

    Are you are against the idea of people who create having control over the copying of that material. That is not the current legal status quo in most of the world.

  152. Hey, I'm a College Student! by ArikTheRed · · Score: 1

    Gene... who?

  153. re: Simmons isn't a musician by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    Bingo! He's really NOT a musician anymore. A buddy of mine used to work for a large financial firm, and he flew out to New York a few years ago to some kind of convention. Of course, this included mingling with many from the Wall Street community. (He did QA testing and support for one of their stock market ticker type applications.) He actually ran into Gene Simmons at this thing, and was a little taken aback. He was dressed in a business suit and talking stock options and trading ... *nothing* like you'd picture a member of KISS looking.

    The man can tell you much more about investment advice than he can which new models of electric guitars are any good. That's for sure.

    KISS hasn't been anything but a "franchise" to make money off the older crowd's past memories, for at least the last 20 years now.

  154. self-serving quote by kpharmer · · Score: 0

    It appears that there is no evidence that Churchill ever wrote or said that quote, and it has been attributed to a number of others before him.

    Never the less, it may be less a bit of wisdom and more a self-serving quote to justify old stodgy conservatives.

  155. I think... by ruben.gutierrez · · Score: 1

    he should stick to selling diet plans.

  156. Taxes and agression by gobbo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I get a top-notch highway system, a federally insured system of banks, police and fire protection, my food and water are relatively safe, my workplace is held up to a minimum saftey requirement... All in all I think I am getting a pretty good deal.

    Don't assume that you're getting all that stuff from federal income tax. Most of that is allocated to paying off loans, so you're actually mostly servicing the banks, not The People.

    All those nifty civilized things your tax money gets that don't count as usury or murderous are primarily coming from the plethora of other less obvious taxes: property, goods/services, state income tax, etc.

    If we had all the money back that we've flushed down the Iraq toilet, who knows what all nifty stuff I'd be getting for my investment in this nation?

    Yeah, I wonder just how effective half a trillion dollars would be if applied to international pro-democracy propaganda, educational support programs, donations to civil society, and even providing support for local pro-democracy institutions? You know, empowering local Iraqis and Afghanis to rise up and build an equitable system from the grassroots? I'm guessing 500 billion bucks buys a lot of freedom using non-violence-- if that's actually your goal. It's ten times the domestic annual education budget, so one could easily double the domestic budget, and 'educate' the world too.

    Here's what Americans would have gotten out of such a radical foreign aid approach: goodwill, security, credibility, a stronger domestic civil sector, more freedom at home, less fear and twisting of the national political culture. Less opportunity for kleptocrat fascism at home. Very likely, actual modern democracies in target countries. A safer world, a smaller american military, fewer overseas bases and invasion forces. Less money and power flowing into Halliburton, Lockheed et.al., and a different track for the future, one that doesn't need FEMA preparing for martial law.

    1. Re:Taxes and agression by encoderer · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Don't assume that you're getting all that stuff from federal income tax. Most of that is allocated to paying off loans, so you're actually mostly servicing the banks, not The People."

      The federal budget is, obviously, free for all to peruse. According to my math, our debt service last year amount to about 13% of our federal budget.

      Not a small amount, but no where NEAR "most."

    2. Re:Taxes and agression by Estanislao+Mart�nez · · Score: 1

      I get a top-notch highway system, a federally insured system of banks, police and fire protection, my food and water are relatively safe, my workplace is held up to a minimum saftey requirement... All in all I think I am getting a pretty good deal.

      Don't assume that you're getting all that stuff from federal income tax. Most of that is allocated to paying off loans, so you're actually mostly servicing the banks, not The People.

      Yeah, you're right. It's awful that my tax money is used to pay the loans taken out to pay for stuff like top-knotch highways systems or fire department equipment.

    3. Re:Taxes and agression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point,

          What if you'd just gone to Saddam and said, "here's 100million, it's yours after you've established democracy in Iraq and abdicated"...

  157. It was an accident to begin with by mlwmohawk · · Score: 1

    The whole Music industry as it exists was envisioned by Harry Houdini. His idea was to record his performances and charge for copies of them, rather than do it himself. That is the model by which all recorded media has been sold.

    What has changed is that the primary investment required to produce the goods, the physical media, has shrunk to almost nothing. The manufacturers no longer provide a service. Instead they are looking to artificial remedies to prop up their business model that was created by technology but has now been taken away by technology.

    Gene Simmons is a primary example of someone who does not see that the corruption of society required to maintain the old business model will, in the end, destroy a lot more than just the music industry. In the long run, all our freedoms will have to be eliminated to protect the industry, because there is no way to stop it in a free society.

    The battle is coming and its a big one. I think 100 years of media conglomerates has been quite enough, thank you very much.

  158. Gene is wrong. by Fuji+Kitakyusho · · Score: 1

    I just downloaded the entire KISS discography, and it's been years since I attended college.

  159. Liberal is more like socialist not libertarian by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

    In Europe liberal does not mean anti-government, and it is nowhere near libertarian.

    In the US liberal does not mean libertairan either. Liberal in the US would be something more towards socialist.

    I believe, is that in the US the matter of the economy is already settling - capitalism is the only force people will tolerate, so the choice between parties lies on social issues.

    That is not true, economic issues are also of great important to US voters. Also, capitalism is not a force that is tolerated, it is considered a decision making process that we believe is more efficient than central government planning and an efficient way of rewarding risk taking and demonstrating initiative. Government is the force that is tolerated, and government does excerpt force upon both individuals and corporations. This includes some socialist concepts.

  160. KISS: All about the music ?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't think of a single KISS song, but I certainly can picture them. Perhaps Simmons has a broader definition of 'music' in mind.

  161. Re: Simmons isn't a musician by FireFlie · · Score: 1

    Not a musician!? 20 years?! Tell me with a straight face that this isn't music!!!

  162. Gene Simmons knows business ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I would hesitate to look at Gene Simmons for any kind of intelligent statement on anything. I never liked KISS.

    That is a fairly ignorant statement, personal opinions regarding his music prove nothing. If anything, a quick investigation of his career should demonstrate that he is highly intelligent and highly successful in areas of business.

    Besides, doesn't the evidence prove him correct? Bands that were incredibly well known and highly regarded, thanks to the promotion of those evil record companies executing that old business model, chocked while experimenting with a new business model. What do you think will happen to new and unknown bands? Face it, artists have always needed sponsors, the royalty and churches in the past, the record companies in more recent times. Support directly from fans yields merely subsistence in the optimistic scenarios.

    1. Re:Gene Simmons knows business ... by ssstraub · · Score: 1

      The only thing it proves is that Gene Simmons is more interested in MONEY and FAME then he has ever been interested in music as an art from. It's merely a means to an end for him. This should surprise no one that knows his history or has ever listened to him talk about KISS.

      He is an excellent businessman, but a lousy artist.

    2. Re:Gene Simmons knows business ... by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Yours is equally ignorant. Gene Simmons remarks are worth as much as Richard Simmons remarks on the subject. Nither one are experts in any way shape or form on the subject. "doesn't the evidence prove him correct?" No because all evidence I have seen proves otherwise. are you basing it on your subset of evidence or mine? Who's subset is more credible?

      There is as much credibility in the statements made as the crap yelled at me today on my way to work by the homeless nutjob holding the "the end is near" sign.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    3. Re:Gene Simmons knows business ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

      He is an excellent businessman, but a lousy artist.

      My point is that artistic talent is irrelevant when developing a new business mode, therefore as an excellent businessman he better qualified.

    4. Re:Gene Simmons knows business ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

      Gene Simmons remarks are worth as much as Richard Simmons remarks on the subject. Nither one are experts in any way shape or form on the subject.

      Gene has mastered the machinery of artist development and promotion, he deeply understands the business. Your statement proves you unqualified for this conversation.

    5. Re:Gene Simmons knows business ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'd heard an interview with Aimee Mann (of "Til Tuesday" fame) who said that after leaving the record labels her artistic freedom, connection with the audience and bank account all improved. She claimed that while touring small venues on her own she was making substantially more money than she did when 'Til Tuesday' had their biggest hit. While bands get a large up front payment, the costs they are charged by the record company quickly eat up all that cash.

      New and unknown bands have great opportunity to gain exposure now via the Internet, as individual fans aren't required to form a significantly large audience share for a radio station to pander to their interests.

      There's a battle outside
      And it is ragin'.
      It'll soon shake your windows
      And rattle your walls
      For the times they are a-changin'.
    6. Re:Gene Simmons knows business ... by vcalzone · · Score: 1

      The only reason they've needed record companies is because something like the Internet didn't exist. We JUST got to the point where streaming full quality audio/video is a viable option for mass distribution less than five years ago. That's hardly enough time to claim that this system doesn't work. The fact that someone of Radiohead's caliber is trying it means that it DOES work.

      Besides, as mentioned before, they don't need a record label as much as they need a promotional agency. Once such agencies exist that can get artists on the radio or in magazines, the game is OVER. But don't cry a tear for the big labels anyway. If they hadn't turned their organization into a machine that shoves all the real talent onto independent labels, they might still be surviving.

    7. Re:Gene Simmons knows business ... by nagglerdamus · · Score: 1

      most, if not all, of my favorite bands arent signed with a major label, or even a label or that matter. why sign with a major label? what possible reasons can there be these days?: distribution? its called the internet. getting your name out there? again, on the internet, if your music doesnt suck, itll get noticed. to make mad cash money? being poorer is cooler if done right anyway -- its the struggle that helps, humbles. still, even if your aim it to get stupid rich, labels arent needed.

      so yes, us college kids killed the music industry much like something killed the dinosaurs. you grew fat and cumbersome, then we struck. those fit enough to survive we'll allow with us. gene simmons: nope, dead my lost friend; maybe we'll use your stuff if its free... maybe. probably not, but maybe.

      were all just waiting for the baby boomers to retire anyhow, thats when things'll get really interesting. youre angry over this?

    8. Re:Gene Simmons knows business ... by darkwhite · · Score: 1

      Bands that were incredibly well known and highly regarded, thanks to the promotion of those evil record companies executing that old business model, chocked while experimenting with a new business model. What do you think will happen to new and unknown bands? Face it, artists have always needed sponsors, the royalty and churches in the past, the record companies in more recent times. Support directly from fans yields merely subsistence in the optimistic scenarios. That's a pretty ludicrously out-of-touch take on the situation.
      --

      [an error occurred while processing this directive]
    9. Re:Gene Simmons knows business ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gene Simmmons may be a successful businessman, but his music is horrible. Like a lot of "successful businessmen", he's also a bit of a selfish jerk. The makeup gimmmick and a cool logo made KISS a lot of money, but that doesn't make him an expert on the music business.

    10. Re:Gene Simmons knows business ... by madsenj37 · · Score: 1

      You are correct, with the assumption that all musicians want to make a huge name for themselves and want lots of money. However, there are plenty of musicians that do not want to be as big as Radiohead or KISS, nor do they desire the same amount of wealth. This means that the internet model works perfectly fine for them. Different models for different desires. Business models are always changing. Personally, if I can get the music of a band for free, I am more likely to go to concerts and buy other merchandise which is not something that you can steal so easy. Music is about the experience and most people want to experience bands, not just CDs. I can name several bands that I have seen more than once because of the experience a show provides.

      --
      Choosing the lesser of two evils is a choice for evil.
    11. Re:Gene Simmons knows business ... by ealar+dlanvuli · · Score: 1

      um, is the riaa astro-turfing slashdot? I keep seeing very short rebutals of this form.

      Sean

      --
      I live in a giant bucket.
    12. Re:Gene Simmons knows business ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Face it, artists have always needed sponsors, the royalty and churches in the past, the record companies in more recent times.

      Rubbish. I write songs using my computer and an old guitar. I'm not signed to any record company, so are you trying to tell me that what I create isn't art? Perhaps you meant:

      Face it, artists have always needed sponsors in order to get very rich, the royalty and churches in the past, the record companies in more recent times.

      Which makes more sense.

  163. Mister Sleaze by sm62704 · · Score: 1

    (No apologies to Stanley/Delaney =P)

    You need suin'
    You're lookin out for download dance
    Yeah, it's true
    You know you got to take your chance
    When I laugh
    Well baby don't you know you can cry
    Cause you ain't enough money to keep the monster satisfied

    Well you know
    I got the kind of suin' that you need
    I'm so crass
    That's why the ladies call me Mister Sleaze
    They call me Mister Sleaze

    You try suckin'
    But gettin' on your knees don't make it
    You try teasin'
    But baby you can't even fake it
    Make it clear
    But baby you can even see my lawyer
    So stop those tears 'cause baby you can't even leave

    Yeah, you know
    I got the kind of suin' that you need
    (The kind of suin' that you need)
    That's why the ladies call me Mister Sleaze

    Well you know
    I got the kind of suin' that you need
    I'm so crass
    That's why the ladies call me Mister Sleaze
    Mister Sleaze

    (repeat and fade)

    --
    mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
  164. It needed some destroying by Atroxodisse · · Score: 1

    The music industry stinks. It needs to be torn down and a new model put in it's place. I see no problem with the music industry being destroyed, no matter who you blame.

    --
    Read my short stories - You won't regret it.
  165. Cost of good sold by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I open a store and say 'Come on in and pay whatever you want.' Are you on f---ing crack?"

    But he's assuming a standard store model selling standard goods that are tangible and need to have their stock replenished as they are sold.
    With digital music, the cost of creating the goods is fixed and completely unrelated to the number of units sold. Nobody's on crack - they just understand accounting and economics better than he does.

  166. 7ft cat suit and oral sex by Simonetta · · Score: 1

    All this from a guy who's greatest contribution to his civilization is dressing up in a 7 foot (3.2 meter) cat suit and wagging his tongue incessantly in the mass media simulating cunnilingus. That's it. Now he's saying that thousands of people should be thrown in jail because they are no longer giving him their money.

    This guy is a total asshole. No one should take him seriously.

  167. Not surprising. by MistrBlank · · Score: 1

    Gene Simmons and KISS have always been about protecting their image to sell more product. He is right, there is more in the value in KISS army gear than there is in Elvis stuff, only because there is so much of it out there. I remember the resurgence of KISS merchandise in the 90's. They have plastered their name and logo over everything (for the second major times of their careers). They are ONLY about making money and milking the cow for all it's worth. His opinion is therefore IRRELEVANT, he is the old model and the old model refuses to adapt to the new or even acknowledge it.

  168. So... has anyone tried this? by jadin · · Score: 1

    When asked about Radiohead and Trent Reznor's recent support of a different direction in music distribution, he says "that's not a business model that works. I open a store and say 'Come on in and pay whatever you want.' Are you on f---ing crack?" Are there any physical businesses that have tried this? I'd be curious as to the results. It's my perception that when asked to pay what they want, most people actually decide what it's worth to them, they don't conclude "OMG FREE!"
  169. Gene Simmons? HAHAHA! by morari · · Score: 1
    Maybe he should try making some new music. I don't think rehashing a then-washed up stadium/glam rock band is a great way to continue one's career. This is a group that never had integrity and still allows their faces to be plastered on any piece of merchandise that might conceivably make money. Of course, this strategy only works if they break up and do a reunion show every several years...

    Oh, but he has a reality show nowadays, doesn't he? That must mean that his opinion means something to the mass of bumbling morons out there.

    --
    "He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." --Paul Atreides, Dune
  170. He was NEVER relevant, always about the $ by elrous0 · · Score: 2, Funny
    KISS were a bunch of over-commercialized, over-hyped, over-rated posers from day one. They didn't BECOME about the money. They never WEREN'T about the money.

    This was a band that was putting itself on kid's lunchboxes, launching a cartoon, and putting themselves in comic book form almost from the minute they formed. Gene Simmons has the gall to say "it's about the music" when his band concentrated much more on their marketting and pyrotechnics show than they EVER did their music, and when his whole shtick was to wear stylized makeup and create an on-stage persona that played to lip-synced tracks.

    Who the f**k is he kidding?!?!

    Gene Simmons is just a greedy old fart who is mad than he might take a hit on that monthly royalty check that he so richly undeserves. He's worried he might have to cut back on his "Jewel-Encrusted Ferarri" budget this year.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    1. Re:He was NEVER relevant, always about the $ by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      Reduced to defending KISS on Slashdot is the highlight of my day, but this band starved the first few years and sacrificed everything for FAME and GROUPIES. I work with a former uber-fan/Kiss Army member from the music industry and the stories are fascinating. It wasn't until well after 'Alive' or 'Destroyer', with the end of the gravy train looming into view, that MONEY took primacy. For a band with 35 years behind them the golden days were short lived true, but they did happen. And while the music won't last they worked their asses off on the early tours and kicked out one hell of a show. One of my all time favourite concerts was Kiss at Cobo Hall/Detroit (some of which ended up on Alive 1.)

  171. MOD PARENT UP by businessnerd · · Score: 1

    Great article. This guy pretty much sums up what we've all been trying to say here on /., but has a lot of interesting facts about some of Gene's litigious adventures. Being a music writer, he also has some good insights on the industry, old and new.

    --
    "It's not whether you win or lose, it's how drunk you get." -- H. J. Simpson
  172. False Dichotomy by Bryansix · · Score: 1

    Bringing Liberal and Conservative into this argument introduces a False Dichotomy of the situation. Not because there is a third, fourth, or even fifth option here but because being Liberal or Conservative HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH WHAT YOU THINK ABOUT FAIR USE! I would classify myself as Conservative but I still think that the RIAA should not be suing college students. Especially because the RIAA can never prove who even took the file; but also because its not fair to assume that if somebody shares a file all of the sudden they are thiefs. The Recording Industry is burning both ends of the candle; screwing the artist and the consumer at the same time. This is ridiculous.

  173. Musical creativity does not indicate business ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Radiohead and Reznor have more creativity in their little fingers than Simmons ever had.

    Musical creativity does not indicate business sense. I believe that Simmons has adequately demonstrated that he does have far greater business sense. I wouldn't dismiss his insight so quickly, we are discussing a new business model.

    Radiohead and Reznor have deviated from conventional rock mediocrity and at least been creative. Kiss just upset parents in the 70's and sang the music that now appears on MOR stations everywhere.

    And your children/grandchildren will be saying that Radiohead and Reznor just upset parents in the 90s and merely appear on the oldies stations nowadays. Musicians sell rebellion to youth, they engage in the outrageous to establish credibility. The bar gets moved up and their antics become quaint in a couple of generations. Sorry, but Reznor will join Elvis and the Beatles in this regard. I'm not sure he will have their longevity though, he may be too closely tied with the culture of the 90s.

  174. Whiney by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gene Simmons whines are boring as hell. The machine that allowed him to exploit the very kids he's complaining about, has finally been run into the ground. The years of an tiny elite, wealthy group of businessmen controlling the culture of the streets (with the effect of locking out 99% of the artists), is over. Good riddance, Gene. Take your millions and choke on 'em.

  175. in that world ... by freaker_TuC · · Score: 1

    .. we would need 3 more worlds to survive overpopulation;

    I surely hope this isn't called a "medical breakthrough" since our bodies are not even made for such extensions..

    --
    --- I am known for the ones who want to find me on the net. Is that a privacy risk or a privilege? One might wonder..
  176. You believe a reality show? by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 0

    Has anyone seen his "reality" show? My wife loves it, but I can't stand it because it's all about him trying to sell Kiss' collective souls for as much profit as possible. The guy seems like he cares much more about making money than enjoying life. He comes off as loving money more than his family.

    You seem quite confused. You quote "reality" suggesting that reality shows do not offer reality, yet you use the contrived and highly formulated and edited show as a basis for your judgement of a human being?

    I would not look to him for advice on what a good compromise in a new market economy is when it comes to digital distribution.

    If he is such a businessman and really knows how to sell things, one who has succeed in the 1970s and continues to do so today, doesn't that make him well qualified to help create a new *business* model?

    Don't confuse a new technology, a new distribution mechanism, with a new business model. It will most likely remain necessary to heavily promote new artists to bring them to the attention of the mass market. This means investors with deep pockets willing to fail 90% of the time, investors who will need to make massive profits off of that 10% to pay for the other 90%. The level playing field based upon community ranking will not work. There will be enough artists who want that massive world wide success and will sign the deal with the "devil" who will get the marketing machine rolling, and it will succeed as it always does.

  177. Have you ever played ultimatum? by DMNT · · Score: 1

    I think Radiohead went overboard. There is not a valid business model when you say, "Pay whatever you want". If you disagree with this conclusion than consider how you will respond when your employer or customers decide they will start paying you whatever they want to and if that's not enough for rent, too bad for you. It's no way to make a living.

    There's an interesting game called Ultimatum out there. Let's say we're playing it and I'm the person that does the cut. The rules are as follows: I choose how much each of us gets (let's say we have 100 USD to share) and you accept or reject it. If you don't accept, neither of us gets anything. If I give you too little (99-to-1 or 90-to-10) you can go "screw you guys" and I lose also.

    If your customers offer you this kind of scheme you wouldn't be playing with them in the future, right? You're actually kind of playing this game when they want you to do something for them. If the price is too high (they get too little, you get too much) they'll disagree and there won't be a sale.

    Of course when the work is done beforehand and the payment is not mandatory the thing is quite different, but my view on the music has been since 90's that it's not the record I'm buying I'm paying for, it's for the next record they're going to make - and if they cut the middle man it's even better!

    --
    ?SYNTAX ERROR
  178. Money Grubbing Simmons - not surprised by valhallaprime · · Score: 1

    Years ago, in the late 90's, one of my Dewey beach housemates was a buyer for Spencer's Gifts. She handled the Kiss merchandising as well. Gene "Tongue the dolla$" Simmons would call up every day to her to get the -daily- sales figures from Spencer's sales war-room. She thought it was so funny, as she wasn't a real fan, and that their "reunion" tours and public appearances always coinciding with declining sales of their Spencer's merchandising.

    After all those years between then and now, I finally watched that show a few months back that follows him and his family. Seeing how he is in real life, her conversations in dealing with him become so much more indicative of the type of person he is. This guy, since the early days of the band, is only in it for the money, hands down. The comments from him in TFA are zero-surprise for me.

  179. Gene Simmons modded -1, Flamebait by billcopc · · Score: 1

    Ok, this has gone on for far too long. In traditional Billco fashion, I'm pulling out all stops!

    Gene Simmons is a joke. He hasn't sung or spoken anything worth hearing in three decades. He claims to be the biggest dog in the world (whores are cheap!). He's not even from here, he immigrated to the USA as a child yet stomps around like he's America's golden boy.

    The man's a has-been's has-been, and the only way he can get anyone to even look at him is to behave like a ravenous ape. He will say and do anything to get attention, and this is a prime example.

    The man has nothing to gain from combating piracy. His best years are long gone. He just wants to go around the talk show circuit for a while, make a last buck then die doing speedballs off a dozen underage hookers' asses.
    FUCK HIM!

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
  180. Libertarianism by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    "Just about everyone outside the US views libertarianism as some sort of extreme anarcho-capitalism being economically far right, and socially conservative (Small government)."

    That used to be true, but it isn't any more. Libertarianism in this country has changed radically. At one time, Libertarians were for small government first, and then social conservatism second. Libertarian Republicans raised money for Barry Goldwater by selling Bibles at his rallies in the early 60's.

    My, how they've changed though.

    In the past twenty years, Libertarians (both LP members and Libertarian Republicans) have done a 180 on social issues, embracing abortion on demand, the legalization of prostitution and drugs, and turning very hostile to religion. There's a strong atheist contingent in Libertarian circles now. In addition, they're polar opposites of conservatives (and the vast majority of the population, for that matter) on the illegal immigration issue, advocating open borders and a completely open labor situation. To top it off, they've become damn near isolationist in their foreign policy thinking.

    These aren't your father's Libertarians. And that's why there's a messy divorce going on in the GOP right now. The Conservatives and the Libertarians have basically realized that their ideas are becoming mostly incompatible.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  181. Carry on copying by cabalamat3 · · Score: 1

    Gene Simmons has blasted 'college' kids and claims that they have destroyed the music industry

    Well if unauthorised copying has already destroyed the music industry, then we might has well carry on doing it, since it can't do any more harm to that industry, right?

  182. This from the musician with a reality tv show. by DragonTHC · · Score: 1

    Gene, you're a relic. I love your music, but you're obsolete.

    --
    They're using their grammar skills there.
  183. Rock Band? by mabu · · Score: 2, Informative

    People complain that KISS is not exactly great music. Of course not. This is the band that had to dress up in ridiculous costumes, employ every gimmick imaginable from fire breathing to smoking guitars to get peoples' attention. I'm amused at this point, that people don't realize Simmon's chauvinistic and anti-P2P comments are merely part of the same gimmicks he's always employed to get attention: do/say something obnoxious.

    Simmons falls into the same category as Ann Coulter and Bill O'Reilly. The worse thing that can ever happen to them is to be ignored. If you really want him to be as irrelevant as he ultimately is, you'll ignore his idiotic rambling. Even his reality show is staged. It's all a farce and he's laughing at all of us for even taking the time to call him a douchebag.

  184. Well he is... by SnailNobra · · Score: 1

    I could make a racist comment about his ethnicity but I'll let that one die.

    --
    Nihilism means nothing to the dancing peasants
  185. asshat says what? by Some_Llama · · Score: 1

    Seriously, does anyone care what this guy has to say? not to mention he is already been proved wrong....

    If i wanted to know something about KISS i'd ask gene simmons, if I wanted to know anything else (dating advice, how to raise kids, etc.. (well maybe not makeup removal..) he'd be the last person i'd ask.

  186. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by EllisDees · · Score: 1

    >Are you are against the idea of people who create having control over the copying of that material. That is not the current legal status quo in most of the world.

    I'm all for the people who create new material having control over it for the limited time that was the original bargain, around 20 years seems fair. You get to make money off of it for a while, and then society gets the benefits of using it as a base for more creation. A lifetime plus 70 years is such a joke that I feel no remorse ignoring copyright laws completely.

    --
    -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
  187. Re: Simmons isn't a musician by Fizzl · · Score: 1

    Surely you jest? It's just a lame version of Prodigy's song. Not that I'm into the original version all that much either.

  188. Who is Gene Simmons? by janrinok · · Score: 1

    As a non-American, may I be permitted to ask "Who the hell is Gene Simmons?". Is he important to Americans, or anyone else for that matter? Why should what he say be of interest to 'geeks'?

    --
    Have a look at soylentnews.org for a different view
    1. Re:Who is Gene Simmons? by fotbr · · Score: 1

      As an American, I'm also asking "Who the hell is Gene Simmons".

      So to answer your other question, no, he's not important to Americans, or probably to anyone else.

    2. Re:Who is Gene Simmons? by AceCaseOR · · Score: 1

      For the record: Gene Simmons is the lead singer of Kiss, one of the most popular horrible "rock" bands in the history of merchandising. The band is known by it's copious amounts of merchendising, their flashy stage shows, flashy face-paint and costumes, and rather poor music (the sole exception being "Rock and Roll All Night").

      To give credit where credit is due, they've certainly done a helluva job of selling out.

      --
      Zagreus sits inside your head, Zagreus lives among the dead, Zagreus sees you in your bed and eats you in your sleep.
    3. Re:Who is Gene Simmons? by freedom_india · · Score: 1

      Oh... so its them !
      I was wondering who made my 2 yr old cry in fear when he opened the days' newspaper a few months back...
      Damn, i ought to sue Simmons for child abuse.

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
  189. gene simmons blames college kids by avalone · · Score: 1

    oh please will someone please tell that old fart, that the REAL Reason NO ONE Is Buying CD's is that their just to damned expensive it makes more sense getting them from I - Tunes Or Any Music Store Download service then going out and buying a $20.00 + cd when you could just buy a spindel of blank CD's Or DVD-R's For The Same Price, All I Can Say To Mr Simmons Is CHANGE OR DIE

  190. I wonder if he realizes... by direpath · · Score: 1

    ...how many of those college kids were exposed to KISS through their downloads and actually bought his t-shirts, box sets, etc.

    This is what the opponents to digital distribution without DRM typically fail to realize. All that money you spend on marketing cannot even begin to compare to the exposure you get from your music being downloaded.

    I swear there was a research study done recently that pointed out that people who download music tend towards buying more CDs and other merchandise. They have a greater exposure to new music than a guy listening to the same tunes on his iPod or the person who listens to the radio.

    Word of mouth = most efficient advertising ever.

    --
    "It's amazing what velocity can do when human beings are in season" -Matthew Good
  191. But does Gene Simmons know music? by crovira · · Score: 1

    "Artists have always needed sponsors", like Van Gogh?

    Mr. Simmons has never impressed me as a musician. (I feel the same way about KISS than I did about Sigue Sigue Sputnik. Like "Why Bother?") Its a question of taste.

    What I object to is that the artist always seems to get fucked by the very promotion machine that makes him or her the "artiste du jour" and then cuts the artist to ribbons with drugs and debauchery before moving onto the next "artists du jour". (I don't see KISS headlining anywhere anymore, now do I? [But then I wouldn't go see KISS play anyway, so I ain't looking am I?])

    I have a great deal more respect for the Jonathan Coultons of the world than for the Gene Simmons.

    If KISS had not been promoted and had to go forth on their talent only, they'd still be a bar band, playing at a strip mall in some suburb somewhere, with day jobs to go to. (Like MOST artists.)

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  192. I Blame Gene. by radiumhahn · · Score: 1
    "Gene Simmons Blames College Kids For Music Industry Woes"

    I Blame Gene for the music industries woes. He is part of the machine that flooded the market with commercialized crap that has nothing to do with quality artwork. We hear your crying and whining Gene. But don't cry to us because you don't like the smell of your own farts.

  193. Well I did have a colunmn in AI Expert by crovira · · Score: 1

    and I have a documentation technique named after me.

    I also have written about twenty or so articles about computer programming and object-orientation and have a few bogs about things.

    Some people who post to /. actually have brains.

    And what have YOU managed to talk a publisher into?

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
    1. Re:Well I did have a colunmn in AI Expert by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      and I have a documentation technique named after me.

      I also have written about twenty or so articles about computer programming and object-orientation and have a few bogs about things.

      Some people who post to /. actually have brains.

      And what have YOU managed to talk a publisher into?

      I've written articles, too (published even!). I can create a blog also, but I know that nobody really cares how spicy my curry was today, or how many red cars I passed on my way into work, or any other mundane nonsense that goes on in my life.

      See, once you realize you're just like everyone else around here, sitting at your keyboard staring blankly at your monitor killing time between working and whatever else you do in life rather than making hundreds of millions of dollars like Gene Simmons you'll be much happier and in the process you'll look like less of a heel when you wave your "accomplishments" in people's faces. For the record, BTW, unless people know who you are by the mere mention of your name, nobody's impressed.

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

  194. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    "with mass-reproducible art forms - music, photography, print, film, industries were created which took copyright away from the content creators"

    What? Who took that copyright away? Not Congress, which is the only entity that can grant or revoke it.

    What you're really saying is "if technology allows me to copy it, I'm going to do it no matter what the law says". Technology allows you to break into my house with a lockpick. That damn well doesn't make it moral.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  195. Link by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 1

    I'm not clicking on that link until someone who's not at work can prove the parent poster isn't with the GNAA.

  196. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by theheadlessrabbit · · Score: 1

    bytes are not atoms.

    if i steal your coat, you won't have a coat. if I sneak up on you, measure your coat, and reproduce it at home, you haven't lots anything. same thing with digital copies.

    --
    -I only code in BASIC.-
  197. Gene Simmons the Hypocrite by TapedeckNinja · · Score: 1

    "Simmons is writing his third book -- "Ladies of the Night," a "personal and historical overview" on the profession of prostitution -- coming this spring via his own publishing company, Simmons Books."

    So ... when Gene Simmons wants to break the law by soliciting prostitution, it's okay. In fact, it's even okay for Gene Simmons to write a book and make millions of dollars recounting his lawless ways.

    I myself have plans to write a book, called "Rock, and Roll Over On Your Fans." It is a sordid tale recounting the hundreds of thousands of people that have lost their jobs due to me downloading KISS albums. Oh wait ... I forgot, I hate KISS. These former rock-and-rollers are turning into everything they grew up hating and railing against.

    "You don't have money or a fancy car And you're tired of wishin' on a falling star You gotta put your faith in a loud guitar."

    Yeah ... but you have to slip a $20 into Gene Simmons' pocket before that loud guitar starts playing.

  198. Re:Kiss? Music? Squeeze me? by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    "Here's another happy slogan from an old college student of the '70s: When the revolution comes, he's going to be among the first with his back to a brick wall being offered the choice of a blindfold - or not."

    Your revolution is never coming. Not in this country, anyway. And the reason why no one listened to, or in your own words, tolerated the listening of bands like Kiss is because you wannabe-hippies lived in a completely different world than the blue collar kids that listened to Kiss and went to their concerts.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  199. Demonwhore and the KISS Kasket by mojoNYC · · Score: 1

    I have a friend who used to work for a merch company that did KISS stuff, who spilled the unsuprising fact that Gene is the biggest whore in the rock biz (this is all Gene's doing, plus a little from Paul--they cut out all the other members years ago). There are KISS condoms, a KISS coffeeshop, probably a KISS douchebag, and the piece de resistance, the KISS Kasket It should come as no suprise that Gene has zero interest in anybody who's not a potential customer, or who's not a chick.

  200. One of the side effects of cocaine is delusion by Thundercleets · · Score: 0

    Gene (Chaim) ought to lay off the stuff.
    Kiss was a great band at one time but The Beatles?

    He used to be a school teacher in Israel so Chaim should be able to do maths.

    Maybe he is talking about T shirt sales.
    I don't think The Beatles sold allot of T-shirts.

  201. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  202. Q.E.D. by fuzznutz · · Score: 1


    Hey Media Cartel Apologists. It's official.

    If Gene Simmons is on one side of the copyright issue, the other side must be the correct one.

  203. Two words: SHANNON TWEED. 'Nuff said. by mosel-saar-ruwer · · Score: 2, Insightful


    I would hesitate to look at Gene Simmons for any kind of intelligent statement on anything.

    Okay, admittedly, Shannon Tweed is only his "common law" wife, but she was the queen of the B-movies, back in the 1990's.

    Her magnum opus, A Woman Scorned, is one of the epic B-movies of our era.

    Check it out some time.

    1. Re:Two words: SHANNON TWEED. 'Nuff said. by hondo77 · · Score: 1

      She was A queen but I would hesitate to call her THE queen. Give me Shannon Whirry any day (please).

      --
      I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
  204. Going Further Off-Topic on the Health Care Debate by Mekkis · · Score: 1

    First -- I'm aware this post & my response are off-topic. I'm fine with modding down. I've been wanting to discuss this topic for a while so I'm going to go right ahead with my off-topic post.

    Health care is expensive, yes, and for the reasons you state as well. However I think you're missing several key points in your argument. Medical training is only expensive for the prospective med school student because the U.S. government allows it to be. The U.S. stands alone among Western nations in its opinion that medical care is not considered a public service.

    Medical training is only minimally subsidized by tax dollars. Med school (and health care in general) would be affordable if the U.S. government placed as much value on medicine as they do on the military industrial complex. Consider the no-bid contracts to Halliburton or the other greedy piglets suckling at the teat of government funds. Review the reports from the Office of the Inspector General in regard to Halliburton property in Iraq and you'll see just how much of our tax money Cheney's cronies have run off with. Halliburton can't account for 75% of the items it supposedly purchased with tax dollars -- and this isn't just office supplies. This is stuff like bulldozers, tractor trailers, computer equipment, etc. But somehow nobody squeaks about "fraud" or "waste". These thieves hide under the blanket of "support the troops" while they bleed the nation dry of funds that could be used for other, more constructive uses. All this while the real soldiers fighting the war have to deal with reductions in combat pay, removal of death benefits and reduced funding to the VA. Go fight and die, but don't get wounded because we don't have the money to take care of you.

    But I digress. We're talking about what makes health care expensive. Has anyone considered the vicious circle that medical costs increase to meet the increasing cost of lobbying to keep costs high? The higher costs to consumers get, the more lobbyists you have to hire to explain to Congress why costs should be allowed to be so high, which in turn increases costs to consumers.

    Let us consider the other factor driving up health care costs: drugs. The average person buys the line that pharmaceuticals cost as much as they do because the costs pay for research into new drugs. This argument holds as much water as your average Kleenex(tm), however, because drug research is the one aspect of the medical industry that is heavily subsidized by the government. The drug companies don't tell you about the real costs to them -- lobbyists and advertisements, both of which are entirely superfluous. Drugs are wildly profitable, especially if you need the drug to survive. Like HIV/AIDS or cancer patients. Or hemophiliacs.

    Are you familiar with the situation hemophiliacs have to deal with in this country? No? Did you know the average hemophiliac runs a tab of $250,000 to $500,000 a year in clotting factor alone? Not preventative care, not doctor visits, not emergency room costs, just the drug they have to take to keep from bleeding to death. Severe hemophilia cases run well over $1,000,000 a year in factor. This isn't something they caught from indiscreet sexual encounters, this is a genetic disorder. But U.S. drug manufacturers make a killing of folks with this disability. Drug manufacturers in the U.S. keep the cost to create a unit of factor a closely-guarded secret. Why? Because they might get hauled into court for price gouging if it ever got out. In every western nation but the U.S., factor is fully subsidized by the government. Everywhere but here Hemophiliacs don't have to pay a red cent for having been born with a handicap. Yet here they can't get insurance coverage -- or if they do they burn through a lifetime's worth of coverage in 18 months.

    Let me address your next point: "we live in a highly litigious society". True enough. But have you ever stopped to consider the reasons behind why there are so many med

  205. Bars and strip malls without promotional machine by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

    Rants about KISS' artistic talents are useless. Artistic talent is of no value when developing a business model.

    Your rant on the promotional machine chewing up artists supports my point. Simmons survived and mastered that machine, therefore he seems better qualified to develop a new business model that supports development of new artists and uses modern distribution.

    Your observation that most artists would be struggling at bars and strip malls without the promotional machine is correct. The fact that some artists aspire to more guarantees that the promotional machine will continue and that with high failure rates one successful artist will have to support many unsuccessful ones.

  206. But Gene's good! by superbus1929 · · Score: 1

    It's funny, because I love Gene's box set. Why, I downloaded it off of a torrent site, and I love listening to it!

    Keep rocking on, Gene! :P

    --
    Let's stop dilly-dallying and just change "-1: Overrated" to "-1: Disagree" or "-1: Doesn't Subscribe to Groupthink".
  207. Raidohead a failure? by tonedevil · · Score: 1

    Bands make an average of $1.00 per cd sold, Radiohead's experiment gave the band $2.26 per "cd" downloaded. I'll take failure like that if it is offered.

  208. It's not the RIAA/MPAA, it's the jews by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a indisputable fact that Jews control the music and movie industries. They always have.

    Thus it should come as absolutely no surprise that filthy, greedy jew Gene Simmons, who not surprisingly advocates genocide against Muslims, is advocating suing white kids.

  209. npr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Speaking of Terry Gros, A business model where you pay what you want... isn't that NPR?

  210. So What??? by fuzznutz · · Score: 1

    I would love to find a "job" that allows me to sit around, watch TV and belch creatively, but nobody wants to pay me for my artistic abilities when they can "copy" my belching technique. I still continue to do what I love, but only for close friends and family.

    If you can't make money doing something you want, you had better want to do something else. Music isn't dying. The music industry cartel is declining compared to what they would prefer, but music is thriving.

  211. lets set priorities straight by Jeld · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "with the labels also to blame for not properly suing them out of existence"

    College kids are, and will be a higher priority then music industry. Hell, we can live without good music, (remember the 80s?), but we cannot, as a society, live without college kids.

    --

    Everybody Lies. But it doesn't matter since nobody listens.

  212. Bargaining??? by kabloom · · Score: 1

    "that's not a business model that works. I open a store and say 'Come on in and pay whatever you want.' Are you on f---ing crack?" Sure it's a business model that works. That's how they set prices in the marketplaces in many countries outside the US. The buyer and seller haggle over the price in person until they either agree on a price, or they give up and decide that the product isn't worth it.
  213. Without Iraq? I have an answer..... by tacokill · · Score: 1

    I'll tell you what additional "nifty" stuff you'd get: nothing.

    If you think Iraq is stopping them from spending money, then you need to start paying attention and understanding the federal deficit.

  214. Well... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    As someone with a big mouth and a lot of definite political views, there are a freaking ton of libertarians here, as compared with the actual proportion of society at large that espouses those views.

    The fact that they're not a majority here only underlines the fact that they aren't a majority anywhere but on libertarian political sites.

    And finally, there are a lot of democrats that would scream bloody murder at some of the things I think are good ideas. The economic realities that persuade me that social services are a good idea also make me union-unfriendly, tariff unfriendly, and a solid proponent of a vastly simplified tax system.

    The costs of dealing with the juveniles, elderly, and infirm exist for all societies. If you live in the US, you're going to learn more about that than you ever wanted to as the boomers start retiring. For every person who didn't save enough, there are kids and grandkids who are going to be feeling a financial hit as they try to take care of mom and dad.

    Now a hardcore big 'L' Libertarian (neo-liberalism here, like the political party, not the little 'l' libertarianism which is the opposite of fascism) would say, "Good, they should have known better, and it's sure as hell not my fault, and not my responsibility." Sure, they may donate, but only on their own terms, and only to things that make sense to them personally. Assuming that their distaste for large bureaucracy carries over to big charities, they'll be spending their money on targeted charities (e.g. Meals on Wheels, not United Way). Assuming that the amount of money remains the same (which it won't), some charities will experience a glut, and others will experience a shortfall. Some services will be provided, and others, not.

    Without any society-sponsored solutions, any shortfall will have to be made up by the families. Some family members may have to quit work, in order to care for loved ones...Another strain on the economy. The family has less money over all, and therefore less disposable income, which means less purchasing, which means less manufacturing, which means less manufacturing jobs, which means less jobs for countless other people up and down the economic food chain. Now imagine the biggest demographic bulge in our countries history, and imagine what that will be like without a full-societal effort, managed by an organization which is capable of directing the money where it is needed. Welcome to the Libertarian paradise.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  215. "used to be" by Torodung · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I can basically do Decca Records circa 1934, or Motown circa 1965, on a $500 machine, right now. Not the masters, of course, but the end product that everyone listened to and loved. That's what I meant.

    Nobody cares about the lost fidelity. Damn few can hear it. I happen to be one of those who can, but that doesn't mean that I'm blind to the realities of the popular music market. They're compressing most of the fidelity out of modern pop recordings now, precisely because people can't hear the difference.

    Didn't the word "pressing" tip you off? Or perhaps you skipped over the words used to be. Re-read it. I was thinking of a studio and record pressing run circa 1965, played back on the technology of the age or through a transistor radio.

    I can absolutely produce that sound on $500 worth of equipment.

    --
    Toro

    1. Re:"used to be" by philicorda · · Score: 1

      I didn't say anything about fidelity. Todays cheap digital stuff blows away most classic studio tape machines.

      A studio is a place where people can get together and perform, and make a nice recording of it.

      You cannot reproduce that on a $500 computer, as the people will not fit inside the computer.

      While emulating the of sound and music of old records with musicians playing together, you might consider what it is about those performances that make it worth emulating.

    2. Re:"used to be" by Torodung · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. I'm a musician. Most of the pop that sells big these days is not really all that musically interesting. You can't produce really meaningful music on that $500 dollar box, but you can produce a lot of the stuff that sells (currently), and so it is inherently cheapened as a "business opportunity."

      As you said. I could make a fair buck with it.

      But if someone wants to produce something that I, personally, would ever want to listen to, the producer will frequently need the million dollar studio, with an acoustically engineered space and quality recording equipment. Techno's about the only exception to that rule.

      Hope you see this, because I fundamentally agree with you. We're just making different points.

      --
      Toro

    3. Re:"used to be" by philicorda · · Score: 1

      I see your point now.

      I suppose it's not very black and white nowadays anyway. Musicians recording together in a studio will have their own home setups too, and will create parts and bring them to the studio. Or vice versa where you do the drums and guitars in a studio and then take the multitrack home to do overdubs and mix.

      It will be interesting to see what happens when the market for most of the music people make on $500 computers gets really saturated... I think there is perhaps one more revolution left in pop music, perhaps the next will be anti sequencing and a return to performance? All you need for that is a decent stereo pair and something that sounds nice to record.

      I've done quite well out the hip hop stuff I've made with a computer and a rapper, so I can't complain. But I agree it's still players and performace based stuff where the music get really exciting.

    4. Re:"used to be" by Torodung · · Score: 1

      Bingo. If there's money to be made, it's in providing a premium product to the wealthy connoisseur for money they are willing to spend. The new market for such riches is more like Mozart's time, where you had a court composer.

      Honestly, I like this scenario, but the folks in L.A. are sweating bullets. Thanks for sticking with me. You were right on about the money and value of the equipment. I've added you to my "friends" list.

  216. Pass on your genes! by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    Gene Simmons should shut the hell up and tell his almost 6' tall, gorgeous, black-haired, big-red-lipped daughter to turn 18 already so Maxim can do a spread, thanks.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  217. Re:Bars and strip malls without promotional machin by dishpig · · Score: 1

    Artistic talent is of no value when developing a business model.

    Unless the appeal of that artistic talent to the consumer is the very foundation of your business model. Then it's pretty much essential.

    But I see your point. His business acumen is relevant to his opinion in this case, not his artistic talent. The opinions of celebrities on subjects other than their craft are often given undue attention. Just because you can shred a guitar, that doesn't mean you have a knowledgeable opinion about deforestation.

    I have to go ask my architect about time travel now.

  218. US national healthcare plans - are working fine! by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    Actually, we DO have a national healthcare plan in the USA
    for the senior citizens. It's called Medicare and the seniors
    like it very much, thank you for asking.

    The whole fear mongering about national health insurance/care falls flat on its face when you realize that we already have massive government run health care systems that function rather well: Medicare, medicaid, VA hospital, and congressional/civil service health plans.
    Not perfect by any means, but certainly not worse than many private plans.

  219. Gene Simmons is a Jew, after all. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a verifiable fact that Jews are known for being sharp in business matters. My accountant is a Jew, I wouldn't trust my financials to any other race. Before you accuse me of being biased, I gave the Negros, the Japs and even a honky a chance. Stolen funds, bad accounting, you name it. Once I installed the Jew this shit stopped. I then used a wop to put pressure on the revious bean counters to get back what was mine.

  220. Dubious employment claim. by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    "putting 100,000 to a million people out of work"

    Let's say all those kiddies miraculously start to pay $1 for each song they download starting today. JUST WHAT JOBS WOULD BE CREATED?
    Where do you think the money will go? to 1 million progammers building better music sharing software? or to Warner executive bonus pool?

    Simmons is guilty of deception or willful ignorance. Take your pick.

  221. Don't have to imagine it, we've got it. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    But it has nothing to do with libertarians.

    It's the 'capable of directing the money where it is needed.' clause that's the kicker.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  222. Pay What you want by Vampyre_Dark · · Score: 1

    I've read about a restaurant that runs under the pay what you want model, and they were doing very well.

  223. Still basically that whay many rural areas. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    You can ether pay a small 'subscription' to the fire department prior to needing them or pay their big fee when when you have a fire.

    Yes they often won't start fighting the fire until you sign on the dotted line.

    It's easy to remove the profit motive, you just charter a non-profit fire department for the county. It's not a simple ether/or question. Many shades of gray.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  224. Re:"KISS" by hobo+sapiens · · Score: 1

    What?!

    Gene Simmons is not a musician. He may play an instrument, but he is no musician. Hopefully you understand the distinction. Prince is actually a very good musician and a damn good guitar player. You may not like his music due to your prejudices, but you cannot discount him as a musician.

    Another contrast: Gene Simmons is a tool who just wants to make money. He has no morals or principles, he is just a self-absorbed jerk who wants to fill his pockets. Gene Simmons is the essence of a sellout -- one who uses every possible means to make money, integrity be damned. Practicality over idealism every time. Prince actually speaks out against the record industry and their draconian practices. I attended one of his shows and was given his latest CD. So was everyone else who attended. Prince embodies what people here talk about: using CDs to advertise his shows.

    You can always tell a good musician by how he plays live, not how he plays on record. Why else do you think all the posers are so pro-RIAA? Because if they had to make a living performing they wouldn't be able to cut it. Real musicians, ones who can play their instruments, write songs, and express themselves, sound GREAT in concert and the CD is just a substitute for the live performance. Posers are the ones where after you have the misfortune of attending one of their shows, you feel ripped off. Real musicians stay relevant for decades, and posers fade out after a few years. If it weren't for his outspoken idiocy, Simmons and the horse he rode in on (KISS) would have faded away a LONG time ago. Even if people still know who Gene Simmons is, who gives a CRAP about the music? Even if you like the 70's thing, there are WAY better bands from the era who were doing things that were actually groundbreaking. KISS appealed to kids because it made their parents and teachers gasp. KISS is the musical equivalent of pro wrestling; a caricature of itself, just a bunch of kitsch.

    --
    blah blah blah
  225. Dear Gene.. by Anonymous+Meoward · · Score: 1

    Ignore the damn kid throwing up on your lawn. It's just me.

    Sincerely,

    Jeff Tweedy

    --
    --- The American Way of Life is not a birthright. Hell, it's not even sustainable.
  226. Depends where you draw the line. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Sure people who don't have Ferrari's outnumber those the do.

    How about people that own real estate (or are on track to own real estate). That's often the key to long term financial success.

    How about people who have jobs? They vastly outnumber the combined numbers of parasites and those that truly can't work.

    Finally how about those that have guns and know how to shoot straight? The have-nots might come for what I've got, but they'll be holding their pistols 'gangsta' style. No worries.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  227. 14 billion a year! What results? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    We have sent far more then half a trillion (2007 dollars) down the foreign aid shithole.

    What have we got to show for it? The president of Nigeria has a nice private jet. Israel is doing OK with our money, but everywhere else it is stolen by the third worlds corrupt leadership.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  228. Arrested for running a private plan like SS. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    You won't know how well FDRs work turns out until after the baby boom has retired.

    Basically they kited a big old check. The trust fund has only Federal IOUs in it.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    1. Re:Arrested for running a private plan like SS. by Tungbo · · Score: 1

      Thinking of these programs as a 'fund' is fundmentally inaccurate.
      'Pay as you go' programs are essentially backed by the political will
      of the citizenry. Do you worry about there not being a 'fund' for the
      defense spending? I doubt it. Since we value this service, we vote to fund it.

      Even corporate pension funds which as fully funded from an actuarial point of view can
      be raided or depleted by the funding corporations. So there is no way to actually
      protect these funds. It really is all down to the will of the voters at the time.

  229. KISS *is* in at least one comic... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Confusion followed...She thought they were an Anime cartoon :-/

    See Erfworld and go just before Parson's Klog pages 7 & 8 (i.e. about 3-4 strips ago from today's) and you'll find the "Knights In Stanley's Service."

    They look better as cartoons, frankly. And apparently their ideas are loony enough...

    1. Re:KISS *is* in at least one comic... by toriver · · Score: 1

      There was also the Psycho Circus comic books, related to the album/movie/whatever it was.

      And then there is the atrocity of a B movie called "Kiss Meets the Pahntom of the Park"...

  230. And later in the interview he said ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Get off my lawn you damn kids!!!"

  231. Re:Going Further Off-Topic on the Health Care Deba by AndersOSU · · Score: 1

    I'm going to start off saying that I think it is pretty clear that in general we agree that the current healthcare system in the US is pretty darn broken, because I'm going to spend the rest of this post talking about specifics upon which we disagree.

    I don't think that medical training is only expensive because of the government, a MD is not subsidized in the same way that a law degree, a engineering degree, an MBA, or any other advanced degree is not subsidized. Medical training is also expensive because it's a lot of work, it takes a long time, and it involves a fair amount of time on very expensive equipment.

    There is a lot wrong with the pharma industry, the emphasis on maintenance drugs rather than cures, and the obscene amount of money they spend on advertising not least of all. In general though, it is my opinion that in general the patent system actually functions pretty well for pharma. It costs a ton to develop a new drug, and dumping money into pharma R&D is really something we want to encourage. What we should be doing is severely limiting the amount of money that pharma can spend on advertising, which typically outstrips their R&D spending, and demand more complete disclosure so that things like fen-phen and vioxx are less likely to happen, and also so that when a drug does come off patent generics are actually able to produce it - although this is more of an issue with biologicals like factor VIII than drugs.

    On law and medicine, I really don't see the high malpractice insurance costs as a problem with the healthcare system, but rather as a problem with the judicial system. With all the money being thrown around in these cases, how hard would it be to hire a judge who is actually either an expert, or at least extremely familiar with the medical field. Someone who actually understands what is involved in the practice of medicine could quickly and efficiently dismiss frivolous suits. I am of the opinion that tort reform capping damages is actually a bad idea. The problem isn't the guy who gets the wrong leg cut off and sues for $10 million, he probably actually deserves it, the problem is the people who are outraged when they have a known complication for a procedure and sue for $50000.

  232. The "Most Important" part by abb3w · · Score: 1

    "The most important part is the music. Without that, why would you care?"

    That's only the second most important part. The most important part is the audience's love of music... because unless that is there, they won't care, and they won't pay.

    The RIAA, by trying to reduce the channels that music leaks through without revenue, along with their increasing push to market shine on a sexpot rather than musical talent, isn't eroding their customer base, but it's underlying foundations. This is why suing Girl Scouts for singing popular songs was utterly asinine. My older sister spent twelve summers at Girl Scout camp between her time as a camper and counselor. Peter, Paul, and Mary was a major chunk of their songbook at that time. Guess how many of their albums she now owns? Guess who is the only musical act her impressionable "baby brother" has ever bothered to see live?

    Gods, these people are morons... and the talentless ones are in charge.

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
  233. The internet is overrated ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

    distribution? its called the internet. getting your name out there? again, on the internet, if your music doesnt suck, itll get noticed.

    That's an article of faith not an established pattern. Look at the one thing that has worked, Apple's iTunes store. Partnered with big media and included DRM, and it became wildly successful. It's nice that they are dropping DRM now.

    In reality the internet offers you more access to fans but you also have more competition, they cancel out to a large degree. The band that parters/sells out to big media/PR will dominate regardless of whether distribution is physical or digital. Those that do-it-themselves will be pretty much like the bands on the college circuit.

  234. Re:"KISS" by AceCaseOR · · Score: 1

    I dunno... Kiss tends, from what I understand, to make more money from Kiss Nation at live shows, as well as their copious amounts of merchendising (action figures, comic books, video games, pinball machines, etc.) Especially considering that their albums are, in general, crap.

    --
    Zagreus sits inside your head, Zagreus lives among the dead, Zagreus sees you in your bed and eats you in your sleep.
  235. don't worry gene... by timmarhy · · Score: 1
    .. I still love you and have downloaded your entire kiss collection as proof.

    no not really, i think your music is ass.

    I doubt simmons attempting to critique and one is going to sting much.

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
  236. The internet model is the college tour model by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

    You are correct, with the assumption that all musicians want to make a huge name for themselves and want lots of money.

    No, that is not what I say. Replace "all" with "plenty of". There are plenty of musicians who want the fame and money and in partnership with big money/media they dominate popular music and commercial sales.

    However, there are plenty of musicians that do not want to be as big as Radiohead or KISS, nor do they desire the same amount of wealth. This means that the internet model works perfectly fine for them.

    The internet model will work about as well as the college tour model. Internet advocates tend to only see half the picture, the reaching the fans half. What they fail to see is the competition half, all the other bands trying to reach the same fans. Instead of competing on the local college circuit bands going the internet route will have to compete globally. Greater reach and greater competition will cancel each other out to a large degree.

  237. Re:But... he's totally right! (DRM or prosecution? by richieb · · Score: 1
    Are you are against the idea of people who create having control over the copying of that material. That is not the current legal status quo in most of the world

    I'm not against copyrights in general. Just the current version of system is bad. I'm all for 14 year term for all copyrights.

    Furthermore, I thought that copyright should not be sellable - it should always belong to the author, who could then license copies for money.

    --
    ...richie - It is a good day to code.
  238. Well.... by saltlyck · · Score: 1

    It's business that ruined music, Period. I don't think Britney Spears would even have one album if talent were the model for music today.

  239. It still didnt cost much by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    Dude, all your goodies cost less than 5% of your taxes, the rest 35%+ goes direct to the suits that run the banks!

    ie, your still paying for WW1 and WW2.

    Now check inflation from 1913....

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    1. Re:It still didnt cost much by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Dude, all your goodies cost less than 5% of your taxes, the rest 35%+ goes direct to the suits that run the banks! Well, corruption is always a problem.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

  240. Hello Kettle, Meet Pot by AnalogDiehard · · Score: 1

    So Gene Simmons performs music that glorifies devil worship (God Of Thunder), substance abuse (Cold Gin), and adultery (Lick It Up) but doesn't like it when kids "steal his music"?

    --
    Eternity: will that be smoking, or non-smoking? I Corinthians 6:9-10
  241. shut up Gene by kehren77 · · Score: 1

    This from the man who has put the KISS logo on every item he possibly can. And who has also brought you about 40 farewell tours.

  242. What a Loser... by gary+gunrack · · Score: 1

    He should fade to obscurity and die a pauper from malnutrition like a real musician.

  243. B*llocks!... by Wonderkid · · Score: 1

    a) The music industry has itself to blame for overcharging. b) When I was a wee lad, we used to use tape cassettes to record of the radio AND copy out buddies original cassettes or vinyl. HOWEVER, and this is the important bit and the cruz of it all, someone had to pay for the original if it was not recorded off the radio (where the DJ would often talk over the intro and/or ending) so everything worked out ok really. Just like people BUY books and lend or give them to friends and family. Greed has and always will be the downfall of any entity. Even Apple's greed is going to hurt their sales of the iPhone in Europe.

    --

    O'WONDERWe're working on it.

  244. Re:Kiss? Music? Squeeze me? by janeil · · Score: 1

    Your revolution is never coming.

    Great response and right on the money! I say this even though I'm one of those wannabe hippies, grew up in the 60's, listened to my older sister's albums in junior high and high school, hit college in the 70's and hated the contemporary music of my time! Disco was the end of the world as I saw it.

    Not in this country, anyway.

    Yeah, we were completely wrong to think the USA had a future of peace and freedom and equality for every citizen. Turns out america really is a racist and imperialist country, this new century is much more true to our heritage.

    Darn that different world.

  245. Re:B*llocks!... Oh my spelling! by Wonderkid · · Score: 1

    Typical, I write a great piece, but because I have been down the pub, it's full of typsos! Sorry folks! I'm not as think as you drunk I am !

    --

    O'WONDERWe're working on it.

  246. Paternalism by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

    Clean water, hot or cold, at my whim!
    Garbage picked up twice a week! Streets swept!
    The city bus rolls around predictably for out convenience...

    My nation's standards of living are pretty fucking awesome, I just walked to the fridge to get some frikkin' milk and honey for my coffee, my feet warm on a cold autumn day: It's like I'm living in the promised land of legends! I dunno about you, but I buy water (and the gas to heat it with) directly with a portion of my paycheck AFTER taxes have already been taken out; same deal for garbage service and bus rides (though I wouldn't be surprised if the latter was tax-subsidised as well). I also pay for my milk and my honey and my tea (not a coffee person myself), and the gas that heats my house, and the house itself (well OK, I pay somebody else for the privilege of temporarily living in his house, which I'm not so happy about, but that's another rant).

    You're right that times are pretty nice for us in the modern world; but don't give the government credit for all that. A lot of the things you praise are paid for voluntarily by peoples' hard-earned dollars completely apart from money taken by force as taxes; and while some of the tax money does go to fund some nice projects as well, I'm not entirely convinced that people wouldn't pay for such things voluntarily, if faced with the harsh alternatives. Just as when kids grow up and move out on their own they learn to voluntarily do all the chores they used to be coerced into doing at home, simply because having a filthy stinking house with dirty dishes and laundry piling up isn't very pleasant, I think that society, if "kicked out of the house" so to speak, and no longer under the "parental" supervision and care of the government, might grow up and learn to take care of itself. Then again, when kids really mature to that point, they usually move out voluntarily... so maybe the fact that so many people still support paternalistic governance is evidence that we, on average, aren't ready for independence yet.

    Of course, even given that, there's the further problem that the "parents" we've got are all just as much "children" as the rest of us, so really any "parenting" going on will be of the "hey you seem smart, can you help me with my homework?" type (yeah right), or the "yes sir mister bully sir whatever you say sir please don't hurt me" type.

    (Please note I'm not meaning to agree with the "you'll be a conservative when you grow up" notion of the quote a couple levels up. I don't consider myself a conservative at all. I am an anarchist; or a "libertarian socialist" if you can wrap your head around that turn of phrase).
    --
    -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
    "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
  247. And does that justify paying $21 an album by crovira · · Score: 1

    when the artist only gets about $1?

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  248. And I'm not trying to impress. by crovira · · Score: 1

    But what have YOU published?

    Its a question of advancing the cause, not of self-aggrandizement.

    I was publishing back when it was virtually unknown. Now with the rise of Linux and the self publication model, you surely have done something, anything, to get some recognition.

    After all, it is a reputation based world now..

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
    1. Re:And I'm not trying to impress. by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      I was publishing back when it was virtually unknown. Now with the rise of Linux and the self publication model, you surely have done something, anything, to get some recognition.

      So you were publishing when nobody knew about the publication, and now people are publishing and nobody cares? Wow. That's a hell of a sweep. :)

      Sorry chum, but your pithy little articles and your own self aggrandizing tactics on Slashdot still don't make you more worthy of an opinion than Mr. Simmons. But hey, thanks for playing. :)

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    2. Re:And I'm not trying to impress. by Blkdeath · · Score: 1

      Wow. I hadn't realized the nature of your published "work". A quote from your most recent, and the only podcast of yours I could stand to fast forward through pretty aptly sums it up (paraphrased); "Everybody with a megaphone believes they have something to say that people want to listen to."

      Well, my friend, it appears that the Internet is your megaphone, and I wish you luck on your corner of it. Always remember; your blog is unique, just like every other one out there. Keep up the ... work.

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

  249. Socially conservative = small government? by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

    Just about everyone outside the US views libertarianism as some sort of extreme anarcho-capitalism being economically far right, and socially conservative (Small government). I think you guys in the old world must have a different definition of "socially conservative" than we do, too, cause over here it means being in favor of traditional institutions and ways of life and opposed to anything which threatens or competes with them, and as such is strongly opposed to personal liberty and in favor of pervasive government intervention in people's personal lives to make sure they are living "morally". That is, the complete opposite of the libertarian position, which holds that people should be left the hell alone unless they're hurting someone else (or their property). Libertarians over here sometimes describe themselves as "economically conservative, socially liberal".

    ObRant: liberal and conservative are not antonyms, "conservatives" are in many ways more liberal than "progressives" who in turn are in many ways more authoritarian than "conservatives" (though as I see it both the "left" and the "right" are really incoherent mixes of liberty and authority). A true liberal is anyone anti-authority; a true conservative is anyone happy with the way things are now (and as such "conservative" is a temporally relative term; today's progressives may be tomorrow's conservatives, if the win the battle today). A better term to pair with liberal or libertarian would be "social" or egalitarian, though I'd argue even those aren't rightly opposed to one another but two separate axes of orthogonal but interdependent concerns (see "libertarian socialism" and most of the anarchist movement). But "conservative" and "progressive" are really the oddballs of political terminology, because they don't rightly pick out any particular political stance but generic support for "the way things are" (at least right here and now) or "the way things should be" (but what way is that, exactly?).
    --
    -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
    "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
  250. Well at least I have a real name by crovira · · Score: 1

    instead of a sad moniker of the bubonic plague, which happened long ago to people who couldn't possibly have known any better, right?

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  251. Haw haw haw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a HUUUGE collection of mp3s, many of them obtained for free through various means.... I am proud to say that there isn't a single solitary KISS song anywhere in it. Thats right Gene, your shit isn't even worth listening to for free. I could have your whole discography within an hour and it would cost me nothing, still not interested.

    Seriously 'Up all night, sleep all day'?? what kind of lame ass cliche of a song is that? If I had written it I would've been too embarrassed to release it.

  252. Gene Simmons does not know what he's talking about by rfc1394 · · Score: 1

    The only reason why gold is expensive is because we all agree that it is. There's no real use for it, except we all agree and abide by the idea that gold costs a certain amount per ounce.

    This quote alone shows his lack of understanding, perhaps lack of intelligence and definite misunderstanding of finance. He may be a fairly good businessman or he's just lucky he's got other people to handle his affairs. But he obviously knows very little about the cost of things. Let's examine the issue, shall we?

    1. First, someone has to dig holes in the ground
    2. have mining equipment to dig the holes
    3. have miners to go into the holes
    4. and blast out rock
    5. rock has to be crushed and ground for the processor
    6. then refined and processed to extract the ore

    Okay, let's say that it costs about $10 a ton to process ore-bearing rock, and your intent is to make a profit of at least $2 a ton. If you can extract, say, 6 pounds of copper per ton (which I think is about right), and you can wholesale it out at $2 a pound and make a profit. But if you have to process 40 tons or ore to get enough gold to make one ounce, then you have to charge around $400 an ounce (or whatever gold costs now) when dividing up costs between the two ores. Simmons probably thinks gold grows on trees, I'd be surprised if he even knows that people mine it like coal or copper. Or I wonder if he'd realize that because on 40 tons of ore they can get, say, 2880 ounces of copper (troy ounces: 12 ounces per pound) and one ounce of gold, then gold should, on the basis of scarcity, be 2880 times as expensive as one ounce of copper. Since, in our example, copper costs about 16c an ounce, an ounce of gold would then cost $480.00. Or whatever the numbers are, you can probably get the idea from what I've just said. Gold is much more scarce than copper in ore-bearing rock, thus it costs a lot more.

    Now, I don't know whether his line There's no real use for it meant no use for gold, or he, in effect, is saying there is no reason gold should be so expensive. Obviously the second reason is wrong, and as for the first, there's no use for gold except fillings, electrical components, anti-corrosive plating in thousands of applications from marine connections to flatware, and a store of wealth. Yeah, I guess there really isn't any use for gold or any reason it's expensive. No reason at all.

    --
    The lessons of history teach us - if they teach us anything - that nobody learns the lessons that history teaches us.
  253. This is Gene Simmons we're talking about. by Chas · · Score: 1

    The guy who'd merchandise his own mother, not for a buck. It's gotta be at least $100. All he understands is "you have to give me money". Economics? That's for lesser beings! (Ace? Paul? Peter? You wanna deal with economics?)

    Note: I'm not saying that the man making a buck (or even a lot of bucks) is bad. I'm just saying his understanding of reality beyond "Gene Make Money!" is somewhat skewed...at best.

    Honestly, the music industry killed the music industry.

    What? It had lots of help? Sure!

    Arbitron and other market studies that lead them into decade-long stretches of canned acts because of "trends".
    The recording industry for narrowing down opinions of music that "matters" to what some suit-monkey with a big desk thinks (and I use the term most loosely) might sell (and we're back to Arbitron). Not to mention the fact that their IDEAL model of how things SHOULD be would have you paying every single time you heard the song (not just every time you wanted to hear it).

    There are some people who've paid for the same content up to SEVEN TIMES (Record, 8-Track, cassette, CD, DVD, digital audio in expiring format #1, digital audio in expiring format #2). And that's for old stuff.

    What about the new stuff? Crap, crap, and more formulaic crap with smidgens of decent content few and far between, but you practically have to buy an artist/group's entire fucking catalog just to get what matters!

    Fuck, the movie industry learned a long time ago that 2-3 sequels is about all a franchise can handle.

    What makes the music industry think that "Oops I Did It Yet Again For The Umpteenth Time, Series 12, Installmment 5, Printing 2 (Sanitized by censors for censors)" is going to sell?

    I don't begrudge anyone the right to make a ridiculously good living. But if you're selling fertilizer, I'm not a farmer. So don't expect me to buy.

    And no, you're NOT going to sue me into buying your crap. If I'm not going to download it from a file sharing network, I'm not going to buy it either.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  254. Isn't She Dead? by pipingguy · · Score: 1

    Helluvan actress.

  255. KISS has always been an Alice Cooper Rip Off by huffmysachtel · · Score: 1

    I was there. I lived it. KISS or more accurately, their A&R people, hijacked the makeup and special effects from Alice Cooper but always SUCKED in comparison! They're nothing more than constructs of the music industry.

    Don't believe me? Just compare the songs between the two bands.

    Kiss has always been a pathetic joke.

    Anyone remember the stupid "Love Gun" paper doll toy?

  256. There's a quote for everything: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Everyone's a Democrat until they get a little money. Then they come to their senses!"

    - Harold Weir

  257. Re:US national healthcare plans - are working fine by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    medicaid, medicare and the VA examples of healthcare that functions well?

    Examples like these are why many of us OPPOSE any more big government adventures into healthcare.

    There's nothing like a military medical facility to give you a proper appreciation for the market driven alternative.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  258. He must be permantly distracted... by gevantry · · Score: 1

    Gene Simmons doesn't get it. His beloved music industry (the labels) forgot that marketplaces are like living systems, not fossils frozen in amber. Marketplaces ebb and flow, they adapt and evolve because they must to remain responsive the the needs and preferences of those who come to them, or as the case may be, go to those who might want something.

    The music industry forgot this essential reality: it is they who needed to adapt to the marketplace, not the marketplace that needed to adapt to them. When they could easily control all aspects of of their product, they could define what the marketplace would be and who could enter to participated in the commerce. The Internet has basically freed the marketplace and allowed it to resume its natural evolution. The music industry's rigid business model has collapsed like a building made of toothpicks because its architects failed to heed reality.

    Now they weep and mourn. I hear Mary Hopkins in the background singing their lament, "Those Were the Days." I hear them in their cocktail lounges, perhaps recounting "We'll No More Go A-Roving..." Poor Gene Simmons and his record label mourners, poor corporate lotus eaters forced to see the squalor just beyond the bubble of their dreams. He's like Mistah Kurtz. "He dead. A penny for the old boy."

  259. Re:US national healthcare plans - are working fine by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

    No kidding. Couldn't say it any more clearly. Keep the government out of our lives. Why do people think governments always have their best interest in mind? How are they any less corrupt than anybody else? AND, when a government is corrupt, there's nothing we can do about it. When private citizens or companies are corrupt, people go to jail.

    --
    -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.
  260. another sucking dinosaur by peas_n_carrots · · Score: 1

    LoL I got this story and the story about the translucent-headed sucking dinosaur mixed up at first. Kids, let Gene Simmons be a poster boy for what happens when you smoke too much crack.

  261. Hey but aren't those grounds pretty... by wilec · · Score: 1

    As someone who been inside the health care industry for the last 20 years I can assure you that there is a horrendous percentage of this money spent on things that have no real direct relationship with the delivery of medical care. I happen to work at one of the better managed organizations both from a medical and business view, but it is the exception.

    Probably nearly a third of your health care costs go toward bloated administrative costs. How medical care professionals and institutions get paid is a quagmire of private and government plans that requires multiple, confusing and usually duplicated efforts and paperwork. While dealing with the bureaucracy of government programs is indeed a hassle the challenges are often trivial when compared to private insurers that quite frankly do their best to not pay their obligations at all if possible and have evolved slow pay into an art. Then there is the issue of top level management staffing levels and compensation which are both often obscene, all the while lower level managers and staff are run dangerously lean in both salary and staffing levels. The salaries of the insurance executives and staff figure into this in the same manner as far as you and I are concerned even if from the opposite perspective industry-wise.

    The next largest black hole involves marketing and the associated 'appearance' issues. Sadly more often that not an organization is bleed pale by advertising and cosmetic 'improvements' to facilities and grounds. Local media is often a player in this. If anything does go wrong, and of course it does far too often what with the typical low staffing levels and money diverted for real needs, then the local media will hound the institution relentlessly. Subsequently or sometimes concurrently the other hand of the media is in the organizations pocket for 'image recovery' advertising.

    As for direct medical costs, the areas of emergency care, medical imaging, cancer treatment and surgery often though of as the 'expensive part' of the equation is dwarfed by long term care costs. I guess it is politically incorrect to point out that this more often than not involves a patient who has passed the average lifespan. Many families of of average means or less will see their entire inheritance siphoned away in grandpas or grannies last two months, or maybe weeks, of life.

    Finally another huge issue that is a bit harder to quantify with numbers but I believe has the largest impact of all. There is a reason why health care organizations often find themselves in highly litigious circumstances. Simply put the medical care establishment due to some of the reasons stated above along with other equally inexcusable reasons every year manage to kill more people that auto accidents, firearms, and illegal drugs combined. These are deaths caused by misdiagnoses, medication mistakes, equipment failures, simple negligence and the biggest of all infection control failures.

    There is a lot of work to be done before we can expect to have reasonable quality health care at a reasonable cost. Many of the entrenched players such as the insurance, medical prosthesis and drug industries have no reason to want change in their part of the camp. With the system so broken medical care professionals, administrators and support staffing are nearly hopelessly beleaguered in most cases where they try to improve things. Every year now for what seems like forever I hear 'you have to work smarter and do more with less' and we do pretty good at it, but the costs keep going up anyway. Hey but aren't those grounds pretty, my look at those Italian marble floors, oohhh you just gotta see the granite fountain in the patrons garden and did you see that new TV spot with Dr so and so....

    Wabi-Sabi
    Matthew

    Oh as for the topic of the article, screw Gene Simmons, I say boycott anything he has ever done or will ever do, like any of it was worth listening to anyway.

  262. Simmons is an ignorant dolt. by iviagnus · · Score: 0

    What an ignorant dolt.

  263. You're making the same mistake with Radiohead by Calledor · · Score: 1

    By that I mean plenty of music groups online now sell songs 1.99 or thereabouts without itunes. Radiohead made a legitimate gamble that if they put their stuff up for "whatever you want" they would get purchases from people who don't necessarily like their music, but like the statement their action makes, however with proven outlets like itunes there is no reason to suspect that such a system wouldn't be profitable or viable if not in the same stupifyingly successful way record sales used to be.

    The primary problem is the level of money people want for what they do and what people want to spend at any given time. I don't have any of this guys music because it really is all terrible, and if his group didn't do the makeup and had all of their fantastical performances then he would never have gotten the money to be an asshole to begin with. Were it not for free radio music letting people hear Kiss no one would have showed up anyway. Oh, also, do you know what musicians did before the recording industry? I don't but I can count on one hand the bands I know before the 50s.

    So a half century, tops, of the music industry, and now bands and music will die because people want MUSIC and not an experience that involves waiting for crap, in a crap format that leads them to a crap performance. Oh yes, lets sue the college kids for copying music! However when a rock star gets caught doing every kind of illegal drug known to pharmacology lets check him in to a five start hotel so he can get sober long enough for milking part of his career where people by his shit because they hope it as good as his one time hit.

    The economy sucks right now in the states, people are not overly happy, and while this normally can be a boon to the entertainment industry, it really depends on what they are selling and how they are selling it. Just like Japan's population decline might not be a bad thing because it is possible that many people should live on one island, it might not be a bad thing for musicians to get paid something reasonable so they save it and down blow it all before the end of their careers. Have you ever seen a VH1 special about poison? I don't know any of their songs but the whole cast of characters strikes me as the most angsty group of old codgers I have ever seen with an entitlement boner. Some of their sentiments could be taken as death threats towards kurt cobain, and it is a pitty no one is giving them shit for it.

  264. Re:US national healthcare plans - are working fine by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    'The system in question is our very own Veterans Health Administration,
    whose success story is one of the
    best-kept secrets in the American policy debate.
    In the 1980's and early 1990's, says an article in The American Journal of
    Managed Care, the V.H.A. ''had a tarnished reputation of bureaucracy,
    inefficiency and mediocre care.'' But reforms beginning in the mid-1990's
    transformed the system, and ''the V.A.'s success in improving quality, safety
    and value,'' the article says, ''have allowed it to emerge as an increasingly
    recognized leader in health care.''
    Last year customer satisfaction with the veterans' health system, as measured by
    an annual survey conducted by the National Quality Research Center, exceeded
    that for private health care for the sixth year in a row. This high level of
    quality (which is also verified by objective measures of performance) was
    achieved without big budget increases. In fact, the veterans' system has managed
    to avoid much of the huge cost surge that has plagued the rest of U.S. medicine.'
    By PAUL KRUGMAN
    27 January 2006
    The New York Times

  265. Re:US national healthcare plans - are working fine by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    I would not assume either the government or private corporation has my interests at heart. Only I can advocate for that. Contrary to your example, privatization does not hold down corruption. The NYC transit system used to be operated by many independent companies. The whole set up was scrapped and merged into 1 singlt MTA precisely BECAUSE of rampant corruption and payoffs. Thus far, people complain about the fares, but I hear no accusation of corruption within the MTA.

    Would you be happier if all US military activities are subcontracted to Blackwater?
    I support a case by case analysis of whether a function is better handled via private entities of public one. Prejudgement is nonoptimal, IMHO.

  266. Re:US national healthcare plans - are working fine by jimmy_dean · · Score: 1

    I would not assume either the government or private corporation has my interests at heart. Only I can advocate for that. Contrary to your example, privatization does not hold down corruption. The NYC transit system used to be operated by many independent companies. The whole set up was scrapped and merged into 1 singlt MTA precisely BECAUSE of rampant corruption and payoffs. Thus far, people complain about the fares, but I hear no accusation of corruption within the MTA.

    Would you be happier if all US military activities are subcontracted to Blackwater?
    I support a case by case analysis of whether a function is better handled via private entities of public one. Prejudgement is nonoptimal, IMHO. I absolutely agree with you, but the one thing about a private company is that if there is corruption, they can be fired. The government (aka public interest) cannot be fired. The government can monitor and fire a company that becomes corrupt. If the government is corrupt at it's core, electing new officials won't necessarily take care of the problem.
    --
    -> Sometimes, you just gotta break free from the shackles of proprietary code.