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Who Runs RIAA's Settlement Information Center?

eatonwood writes "Who is behind the RIAA's collections efforts? This comment at CallFerret says it is a company called PSC and lists a bunch of websites and contact information for them, but the connection to RIAA is still not completely clear (aside from the presence of a couple of clearly RIAA sites on the same server as PSC's). Anyone know anything more about who is doing RIAA's dirty work?"

172 comments

  1. We? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone know anything more about who is doing RIAA's dirty work?

    Aren't we doing it? We're parrotting their *evil ways* around, keeping them in the media.

    1. Re:We? by sm62704 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Anyone know anything more about who is doing RIAA's dirty work?
      Aren't we doing it? We're parrotting their *evil ways* around, keeping them in the media.


      Whoever said "money doesn't grow on trees" never owned an orchard. Whoever said "there's no such thing as a free lunch" never had a grandma. Whoever said "the way to a man's heart is through his stomach" was obviously a virgin woman.

      Whoever said "there's no such thing as bad publicity" never owned a restaraunt that was in the newspaper because their samonella-poisoned food killed children.

      The RIAA is just plain evil and people need to know the evil they do. They will not gain from negative publicity. Would you have kept Sony's rootkit secret so they didn't get the free publicity?

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    2. Re:We? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the smartest thing that's going to be said in this thread and it's a shame that because it's an unpopular opinion, it'll never get modded anything other than flamebait.

    3. Re:We? by b4dc0d3r · · Score: 1

      Of course... the end result of exposing their rootkit fiasco was blu-ray winning the HD format wars. Precisely because of the publicity.

      Still think you're so smart Mister sm62704, if that is your real name?

    4. Re:We? by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      The end result of exposing their rootkit fiasco was absolutely nothing.

      Still think you're so smart Mister sm62704, if that is your real name?

      Hey, I like that, it made me laugh. My original four digit /.uid was 'mcgrew', which is my name. Changed email addresses and a lost password ruined that. That's also the one I used at k5as well. My domain, mcgrew.info, is down at the moment. My first name is mentioned in the latest diary (in which getting laid ruined my weekend).

      sm are my initials, 62704 was my zip code when I re-upped at /.. If you can talk mister taco into giving me my name back I'll appreciate it.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
  2. Organized Prank Calling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Someone should really setup a time to do a mass prank call attack. Could be quite hilarious.

    1. Re:Organized Prank Calling by jimmypw · · Score: 2, Funny

      Would slashdotting a telephone number work? Would it be a world first for slashdot to melt a telephone system.

    2. Re:Organized Prank Calling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Hi,

      I'm calling from Nigeria, and I downloaded around 1500 of your songs. Now I'm willing to pay your fee, but in order to do so I must first secure my payments. So I need about $50000, to be deposited on bank account BIC415.201.25521.33. And then I will be happy to pay you the millions of dollars you claim I owe you.

    3. Re:Organized Prank Calling by CRCulver · · Score: 1

      Someone should really setup a time to do a mass prank call attack. Could be quite hilarious.

      That would be appropriate, since the first album by the band that has brought independent digital releases to world attention, Radiohead's Pablo Honey , took its title from a hilarious Jerky Boys bit.

      Is there any statement from the Jerky Boys themselves about how they view the RIAA? I'd imagine such a free-spirited team to be sympathetic to the new world of independent digital distribution, and I'm sure we'd all love if they pranked the RIAA.

    4. Re:Organized Prank Calling by f1vlad · · Score: 1

      Greatest idea! :)

      --
      o_O
    5. Re:Organized Prank Calling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.4chan.org/
      Probably your best shot at making that a reality. I hear that /b/ has been whoring itself out to social causes lately.

    6. Re:Organized Prank Calling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not your personal army. GTFO

    7. Re:Organized Prank Calling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would be terrible! Who would call (913) 234-8181 as some kind of prank?

    8. Re:Organized Prank Calling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets do like Anonymous did to Scientology. Stand outside their office in masks and suits.

  3. Re:Mods == fags by ZeroExistenZ · · Score: 1

    Everytime I read the word "fag" I have to think to this song.
    It's funny how the meaning of the song might differ depending on the demography.

    --
    I think we can keep recursing like this until someone returns 1
  4. hmmm. by apodyopsis · · Score: 1

    I have no idea.

    But based on their litigious behavior to date publishing any details about them might bring down some legal wrath on your head.

    So... what exactly is covered by freedom of speech or right to know?
    - links to their website?
    - phone numbers?
    - photos of their HQ from public places?
    - whistle blower documentation?

    1. Re:hmmm. by jimicus · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Purely out of curiosity, does the US have any equivalent to UK Companies House?

      If they were a UK company, you could get a list of directors of both the SIC and various RIAA member companies and their home addresses through Companies House. All you need to do then is see if any names match up.

      Obviously this doesn't help if the company has been set up as a totally separate entity with a totally separate list of directors, but it would tell you pretty quickly if Mr. Bloggs (who lives at 9 Acacia Avenue) runs company A and Mrs. Bloggs (who also lives at 9 Acacia Avenue) runs company B.

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

      Purely out of curiosity, does the US have any equivalent to UK Companies House? I think there is.

      For Florida, there is: www.sunbiz.org which is the same as UK's Companies House (actually a bit better). I presume there are equivalents for other states, but I only know of Florida's one for definite.
    3. Re:hmmm. by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      If they were a UK company

      They are an organization that represents the music recording companies, all od which are multinational corporations like Sony with offices all over the world. I'm sure all the record companies have offices in the UK.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    4. Re:hmmm. by jimicus · · Score: 1

      The UK offices will almost certainly be subsidiaries, which may or may not share some of the directorships with their US parent companies.

      UK Companies House will know that they're a subsidiary of a US company, but probably not much more than that.

    5. Re:hmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Yes. The public can access (for free) corperate records at any secretary of state web site (where you register corporate names). The problem is you have to check all 50 states one at a time using different systems and cross reference them all. SO, while it can be done, it's so godawfully complicated and time consuming that just about the only person with the number of lawyers to do it is most likely the RIAA itself.

      And yes, I'm a certified paralegal. I search the Alabama SOS site all the time, and know from experience that (just to name a few) the Florida, Texas, Georgia, and Arkansas SOS sites are all free but are all equally hard as hell to use. Oh and South Dakota too. (We represent mostly trucking companies so they have accidents all over the place.)

    6. Re:hmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Purely out of curiosity, does the US have any equivalent to UK Companies House? Yep. Well, Florida anyway: www.sunbiz.org

      I presume other states would have equivalent sites.

    7. Re:hmmm. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that only applies in America if its a publicly traded company.

      Publicly traded, public information.

      Privately held, private information.

    8. Re:hmmm. by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      Of course, there's no reason that Mr. Bloggs would have to register the same house for each company; he could register one company for each of his homes... and maybe even throw in the summer cottage, a dropbox in Delaware and a few other locations.

      In the US, the places to check are IRS records and the credit bureau.

    9. Re:hmmm. by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Sony has no American parent company. Its HQ is Japanese. IINM Universal is French. That's two of the "big four".

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
  5. Re: Who Runs RIAA's Settlement Information Center? by gyepi · · Score: 3, Funny

    The Devil?

    --
    Attitudes make the difference between Space and Time: we want to MAX our temporal, and MIN our spatial extension.
  6. Re: Who Runs RIAA's Settlement Information Center? by RuBLed · · Score: 3, Funny

    But he runs the IRS... oh wait!...

  7. This is a tough one... by Torvaun · · Score: 1

    I'm gonna go with retarded monkeys.

    --
    I see your informative link, and raise you a pithy comment.
    1. Re:This is a tough one... by Rakeris · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm gonna go with retarded monkeys. That is awfully insulting to monkeys...
      --
      If brute force isn't working, you are not using enough.
    2. Re:This is a tough one... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My president is a retarded monkey you insensitive clod!

  8. Obvious answer... by Manip · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... Satin himself...

    1. Re:Obvious answer... by WarwickRyan · · Score: 1

      ..brings a new meaning to the Moody Blues' classic "Nights in White Satin"

    2. Re:Obvious answer... by MostAwesomeDude · · Score: 5, Funny

      ... Satin himself... Satin? Oh, right, the guy who tempted Jesse for Fort 'n' Daze in the Dessert.
      --
      ~ C.
    3. Re:Obvious answer... by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Dear /.,

      Mod parent up. Epic winnar.

      Sincerely,

      Life.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    4. Re:Obvious answer... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about this?

    5. Re:Obvious answer... by Kamineko · · Score: 1

      Eye... warship... satin?

    6. Re:Obvious answer... by backbyter · · Score: 1

      I thought this from reddit was hilarious:

      http://flickr.com/photos/zen/2344697/

    7. Re:Obvious answer... by Homer's+Donuts · · Score: 1

      ...That's Eval...

    8. Re:Obvious answer... by gEvil+(beta) · · Score: 1

      Oh c'mon! 3 hours later and this still hasn't been modded up?!?

      --
      This guy's the limit!
    9. Re:Obvious answer... by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      You sure you're not thinking of Velour?

  9. I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Auckerman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I honestly don't understand peoples absolute preoccupation with the RIAA. Let me ask you something...

    You're artist, designer, or coder. You make things. Doesn't matter what it is as long as it's easily copyable on the internet (music, images, web pages, software). You do this for a living. One day someone sets up a web page that gives what you sell for a living away to others for free. What would you do? How would you handle it? Would you just tolerate it? What if you began to notice you were no longer making $40,000 a year and ended up making only $20,000 a year? Would you give up the art that you love?

    I'll admit, what I do know of the RIAA is they are extremely heavy handed, so much so that it's entirely possible that innocents are wrapped up in their vendetta. They are sloppy, thuggish, and an out right bully. What can they do? What would you do, just start giving away that which you make your living on? Is that the answer? Is that what everyone wants?

    Maybe somehow I left behind on this whole internet thing, since I don't use Gnutella or Bittorrent. I pay for the stuff I use and listen to. I guess I'm a fool for seeing value in the arts that I love in my life, a value worth paying for.

    --

    Burn Hollywood Burn
    1. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Jugalator · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, I think I'd at least start collecting evidence that would hold up in court rather than trying to send people scary letters and cross my fingers that would do. RIAA's consistent abuse of the legal system is what I think stings me the most. Organizations set up to protect a business can and do survive without succumbing to such strategies.

      But then again... Maybe I would on the other hand want to be a successful lawyer enough to fall for these things, I'm not saying I'm perfect. If I were a lawyer, I'd want to be successful, and it's obviously a reasonably successful strategy for them, or else they wouldn't keep doing it. It depends on how much of a jerk I'd be willing to become.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    2. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by DingerX · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm against shoplifting, but I don't think that gives storeowners the right to summarily execute anyone they suspect of the crime.

      That's really the point. For music, we all believe that artists should get remunerated for their work. Want makes the RIAA evil is that (A) they don't work in the interests of the artists, and (B) their approach to their customers is insulting, intimidating, disdainful and invasive. Some would use stronger words.

      The RIAA right now is waging a campaign against music fans, in the name of artists (many of whom do not support their name being so used), and gee, if the people's rights, liberties and freedoms are caught in the crossfire, so be it. Hey, we can even reduce those too!

    3. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Nursie · · Score: 1

      No, you're a fool for believing that the actions taken by the RIAA are in any way appropriate to the situation they're in.

      Gather efvidence, get people prosecuted in a secure, legal way. You don't start sending threatening letters, suing people on spurious grounds and generally being a complete asshat.

      "I'll admit, what I do know of the RIAA is they are extremely heavy handed, so much so that it's entirely possible that innocents are wrapped up in their vendetta."

      That's completely unnacceptable. Ruining other lives because you're on a mission for some sort of revenge is never a good thing, never.

      You also make the false assumption that the people on the vendetta are in any way the artists. They aren't, they're managers and distributors. Which is the other reason they're losing out - you don't need physical distribution networks so much any more, their model is behind the times.

    4. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Gordonjcp · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What if you began to notice you were no longer making $40,000 a year and ended up making only $20,000 a year? Would you give up the art that you love?

      I'd probably give it up when I realised I was paying $39,000 a year "protection money" to the RIAA.

      The RIAA do *not* have the artists' interests at heart, except in so far as that if the artists aren't making money, the RIAA can't extort it from them.

    5. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Manip · · Score: 1

      I think a lot of people are upset with the music/movie/TV industries in general. We want DRM free, fairly priced, content that we can use on any mobile device.

      The only thing we seem to get are DRM-ed up pieces of content that only run on Windows, only on certain devices (e.g. iPod), and which cost MORE than buying physical content in the shops.

      As a random example I can either pay $10 to buy a DVD with special features in Blockbuster. Or I can pay $14.99 on iTunes. Naturally the iTunes one only works on Windows, has DRM, and no special features at all.

      It just feels like a bunch of old men who haven't court up with modern day life freaking out and lashing out at people because of it.

      PS - And don't even get my started on the whole "One Licence for the US, one for France, one for Germany etc" thing on online digital download shops.

    6. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference between $20,000 and $40,000 is the difference between poverty and a comfortable life. The difference between $12Bn and $15Bn is a few less yachts.

    7. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by ziggie · · Score: 1

      I guess I'm a fool for seeing value in the arts that I love in my life, a value worth paying for. If you give money to people who use protection rackets to artificially allow them to control the use of light and sound, then yes, you are a fool.

    8. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Lunarsight · · Score: 1

      I'll admit, what I do know of the RIAA is they are extremely heavy handed, so much so that it's entirely possible that innocents are wrapped up in their vendetta. They are sloppy, thuggish, and an out right bully. What can they do? What would you do, just start giving away that which you make your living on? Is that the answer? Is that what everyone wants? I don't pirate music either - that's not the issue.

      You've pretty much summed it up yourself. It's not just the fact they're going after music piracy - the problem is they're going after people with sketchy 'evidence', trying to manipulate the legal system to their advantage.

      They use their legal might to bully people into settling out of court [who may not have even pirated anything!] This is extortion, plain and simple.

      Even in cases where piracy is legitimately happening, the fine is often far higher than it should realistically be, given the transgression. To be sued nearly a quarter-million dollars for two dozen pirated songs is simply ludicrous.

    9. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Skapare · · Score: 1

      I'll admit, what I do know of the RIAA is they are extremely heavy handed, so much so that it's entirely possible that innocents are wrapped up in their vendetta. They are sloppy, thuggish, and an out right bully. What can they do? What would you do, just start giving away that which you make your living on? Is that the answer? Is that what everyone wants?

      Maybe what they should do in the few cases where it becomes obvious that they made a mistake and sued the wrong person is to stop the lawsuit and offer to pay all the costs incurred by the victim. That wouldn't be enough, but it would be damn good start. Or at least, just stop the lawsuit? No, these guys just press on. That is the same tactic used by some debt collectors even when faced with proof that they are collecting invalid debts or collecting from the wrong person.

      Wanting to collect from people that steal from you is one thing. Trying to be a bully just to scare everyone else is another. And being that bully against people that didn't steal from you at all is altogether worse.

      Maybe somehow I left behind on this whole internet thing, since I don't use Gnutella or Bittorrent. I pay for the stuff I use and listen to. I guess I'm a fool for seeing value in the arts that I love in my life, a value worth paying for.

      Believe it or not, there are people that download music from various sources just to get a sample to determine what it is they like and don't like, and then go buy what they like. Maybe the RIAA is upset they no longer buy what they don't like?

      --
      now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
    10. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by mithras+invictus · · Score: 1

      That analogy does not work because in this situation there's an extra party positioned between consumers and producers that acts as a gateway between the 2 and this third party made most of the money and decided what artists would get access to the market, what the public would be allowed to buy and at what price. The record companies saw digital music as a threat to their business model. They saw they could no longer control the supply and demand on the market and artists might even sell directly to customers. So they decided to try to put a stop to it. If they had started selling digital music in a decent format and at a reasonable price from the start there would never have been the problem of illegal downloads.

    11. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by cliffski · · Score: 1

      You are not a fool at all, you are an honest person who values the work others do. Thankfully, you are still just about in the majority, because if you were not, we literally would have nobody making music, games, movies or TV shows. (cue some idiot suggesting that youtube is an equivalent to Hollywood - if free content is so good, why is it in no torrent sites top 10?).
      It *is* scary how much the prevailing groupthink of slashdot is that "teh copyright owners are teh Satan" and that man is born with a god given right to food, shelter, and free music and movies. Especially because /. is mainly american, and americans are increasingly dependent on intellectual property for their economy.

      The thing that amazes me is that people in 'the file sharing community' get really annoyed by two things:
      1) people not 'thanking them for their work' when they upload someone elses work for free and
      2) Leeching.

      Seeing as the file sharers can only take all this free content because people like you and me pay the full price for it, it seems ironic that leeching is seen as so bad by a huge community built entirely upon the idea of leeching from everyone else.
      tbh slashdot stopped being a serious tech news site ages ago, its practically a blog for content piracy now :(

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    12. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by CRCulver · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Thankfully, you are still just about in the majority, because if you were not, we literally would have nobody making music, games, movies or TV shows.

      In Hong Kong, no one buys legitimate copies. Yet, there is a steady stream of new art because the market adapted to changing conditions there and found a new way to be profitable.

      Auteur filmmakers from Ingmar Bergman to Emir Kusturica and beyond have been unsure of the profitability of their ventures. Nonetheless, they still realized their visions thanks to private patronage.

      Many record labels releasing contemporary art music wouldn't make a profit even if they sold every disc they printed. Nonetheless, they continue to put out great music thanks to state arts subsidies.

      Getting paid for every copy of your work is a very recent thing, going back only a couple of hundred years. Before that, for the millennia of human existence, we still had artists. Just look at the wealth of great literature coming from Greece and Rome.

    13. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by rolfc · · Score: 1

      The same thing happened to the weavers in Coventry, UK in the 18th Century. As it was obvious that their technology was obsolete, and everyone had to loose from supporting them, no one did.

      I find it strange that people were smarter then than they are today.

    14. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by cliffski · · Score: 1

      Is this a joke?

      patronage...

      Ok cool, so we will have the music and the movies that the government and the wealthy would like yes?

      Kiss goodbye the grand theft auto
      Kiss goodbye to punk music
      Kiss goodbye to pretty much anything that criticises the war on terror or inequality.

      Its amazing what crap people will cling to if it lets them feel good about ripping off musicians...

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    15. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by JAlexoi · · Score: 1

      Ok.... The base rule, when I resort to getting stuff from bittorent: I have no access to the resource, that I want to have. And the publisher has NO intention of EVER letting me have it.(Consider me as a person with AIDS and the publisher a drug company with a cure, that just has no intention of letting me have access to the drug even at an unreasonable sum). I am not talking about source, code or anything, just the end product. Like a lot of ComedyCentral stuff.

    16. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Casualposter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The RIAA represents a group of companies whose primary business model for the last 30 years has been to repackage the same product and sell it to the same customers, over and over. The big boom in music sales was the CD as customers moved away from the fragile vinyl albums of yore. Once the majority of folks realized that CD's were very expensive, and just as fragile as vinyl, they were disappointed. New music, such as it is, has not been selling very well, as over prices songs compete with other forms of entertainment. For the most part, music is used to enhance some other activity, not as the primary entertainment.

      During the time that most people were switching to the CD, the record companies, members of the RIAA, colluded to illegally fix prices, and frankly the artists saw none of that money.

      Now, the with the customer able to obtain in a fast, easy, and durable form, the music that they want, for as little as 89 cents a track, the record companies are finding that their "buy the same stuff in a different format" business model, isn't working. Rather than attempt to adapt to the new market, arguably difficult and risky, they formed a different plan: litigation.

      The cost of filing a suit is trivial. The fear of being ruined in a lawsuit is tremendous, and most people will spend 4-5K dollars to make it go away rather than risk a lifetime of ruin trying to dig out from under a multi-million dollar debt. The fact that RIAA does not gather enough evidence to go to court, and that the evidence gathered is probably wrong as often as 20% of the time, is significant.

      The RIAA set up a call center based upon the the techniques of debt collectors, with out the restraint of actually having to be debt collectors. These settlements, as we have seen, are little more than the promise that the RIAA won't sue you again. BUT having admitted that you did violate the copyright, the victim has been set up for a second bite, once the music writers sue for infringement, and then the performers can sue again. So it appears that the business model of suing for millions based upon listening to music will be with us for a long time.

      Using the legal system to extort money from people is wrong. Making it a business, is particularly evil.

      --
      Creative Spelling Copyright (2002). May use without Persimmons
    17. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The beef with the RIAA is the heavy-handed approach you mention. There are ways to produce and sell media and make a profit, however the RIAA member companies no longer get to choose distribution model, nor dictate a hugely inflated price. They don't like this fact. Lawsuits against customers is their solution.

      You're paying 98% of that money to record company executives, not artists.

      There are plenty of examples of businesses whose profits were either obliterated or severely reduced due to technology. Adapt or die. The RIAA does not want to adapt.

    18. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by CRCulver · · Score: 1

      European arts ministries provide a good example that state-funded arts do not, in fact, produce only what the state wants. I doubt more than a handful of people in the French government have anything good to say about, say, the music produced by IRCAM, but it is already in its third decade of generous state funding. Similarly, few in the Finnish government listen to obscure comtemporary composers e.g. Kaija Saariaho, Magnus Lindberg, or Kimmo Hakola, but the commissions keep rolling in and the orchestras' musicians keep drawing their paychecks.

      Kiss goodbye the grand theft auto

      I, for one, would be happy to see big video games go.

      Kiss goodbye to punk music

      Great, I can only see that as a good thing. I'd rather listen to music whose performers seek greater musical abilities, not shirk them off.

      Kiss goodbye to pretty much anything that criticises the war on terror or inequality.

      A great deal of art these days is created with the goal of being subversive and questioning existing hierarchies. These artists don't seem to have had great difficulties securing funding for their rebellious visions.

    19. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Edam · · Score: 1

      What would you do? How would you handle it? Would you just tolerate it? What if you began to notice you were no longer making $40,000 a year and ended up making only $20,000 a year? Would you give up the art that you love? Well, "giving up the art that I love" aside, your opinion seems to be a very common one, and also one that I don't share and don't really understand. Many people seem to be of the opinion that just because you've put a lot of time and effort in to something, you therefore deserve to get paid for it.

      When you think about it, this is obviously not the case. It's like building sandcastles on the beach - they're ultimately worthless because the tide will wash them away. I think the problem here is that that the technology that allows us to share information has changed. It is now so trivial to copy massive amounts of data (films, music, etc) that value of that information is falling.

      Back to your example of no longer making $40,000 a year: It's the same scenario. If there are other companies offering the same thing as you make for free, then the value of what you sell has fallen. There's nothing to "tolerate", the market has just changed, that's all. In this situation, if you want to carry on selling something that has depreciated, your only option is to come up with a way to make the market *think* your product is different/better. Microsoft are doing quite well at this. Alternatively, you'll have to sell something else or find some other way of making money.
      --
      "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master." -Pravin Lal
    20. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      One day someone sets up a web page that gives what you sell for a living away to others for free. What would you do?
      Why don't you ask Metallica? http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/04/27/1458228

      Views on copyright-type issues have always been influenced by the level of technology. It doesn't seem to have been much of an issue before the printing press. As the technology has changed with computers and the internet, so has people's view of copyright. It's only to be expected. There are people who think it should or could stay the same - it won't. If you think of what is happening right now, with the law and people's behaviour being so out of sync, as a transition period to a new status quo, rather than as a mass outbreak of immorality, it'll make more sense.
    21. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by CRCulver · · Score: 1

      Its amazing what crap people will cling to if it lets them feel good about ripping off musicians...

      I should add that the new music I seek out is that produced by the alternative funding methods I mentioned. I'm not making apologies for "ripping off musicians" at all. I'm simply saying that the arts will continue to exist even after the demise of copyright-based revenue streams. It might not be the crap music and videos games you like, but nonetheless there will continue to be human artistic endeavours just like there were before copyright.

    22. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by bhima · · Score: 1

      What can they do?

      They can pursue their legal actions with honesty & dignity, while complying with rules of law. They could have kept up with technology. They can recognize that their business model is antiquated. They can stop pimping crappy formulaic music and over sexualized mouthpieces. They can stop the loudness arms race. They can produce a product worth buying, in a form worth buying. They can replace my damaged media for a nominal and fair price.

      Oh fuck it.. who am I fooling. As long as the RIAA is around they will never do these things and I will continue to pirate my content. As far as I am concerned they can go out of business, all of them, and the faster the better.

      This week I am watching the TV series "Jazz" (2001) it's 10, 118 minute episodes (which I got via Bittorrent) and I've downloaded music from about 30 different artists presented in the series (also via Bittorrent). Right now I am listening to Jelly Roll Morton and Bix Beiderbecke and very much enjoying it. There is no way I would have ever heard of these people or the music if paid attention to the RIAA. I would recommend that everyone who has even a passing interest in Jazz, see the films⦠you are bound to find a Jazz style you like that you have never heard.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    23. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by FreeUser · · Score: 1

      Kiss goodbye to punk music

      Great, I can only see that as a good thing. I'd rather listen to music whose performers seek greater musical abilities, not shirk them off.



      There was plenty of punk made outside of the recording industry's purvue. Some of the best stuff never made it to Vinyl, and only made it to CD when home studios became popular. Indeed, much of it would have probably vanished had it not been shared outside of the boundries the music industry would impose on us. Some of it with the Artists' blessing, some of it without.

      Kiss goodbye to pretty much anything that criticises the war on terror or inequality.



      Yeah, cuz no one will criticise the government, its foreigh policy, or the politicians that populate it unless they're paid cold, hard cash.

      Not.

      As an author I support author's rights, and that includes artists and musicians who make the films, musc, paintings, etc. we all enjoy. However, government monopoly entitlements are, in the best of circumstances, a highly ineffecient and imperfect way to implement artistic rights. They empower the middlemen, publishers and industry cartels, while simultaneously disempowering artists and their audiences. To characterise anyone who criticises the current monoply regime as theives, or imply they believe artists shouldn't get paid, is rediculous and intellectually dishonest. To attack those who decry the heavy handed and flagrantly unjust methods employed by those cartels against the innocent and minorly guilty ($250,000 for pirating a dozen $1 songs? Please) goes well beyond intellectual dishonesty.
      --
      The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
    24. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by cliffski · · Score: 1

      "It might not be the crap music and videos games you like"

      be careful buddy, you let your holier-than-thou snobbishness leak out a little there.
      if mere peasants like me and 95% of the population are happy to buy our 'crappy music and video games' why the fuck do we need arrogant elitist pricks like you to dictate what we are allowed to enjoy?

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    25. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by CRCulver · · Score: 1

      Views on copyright-type issues have always been influenced by the level of technology. It doesn't seem to have been much of an issue before the printing press.

      In fact, mass copying goes back to ancient Rome. When poets gave recitals, there was always someone transcribing the poetry, handing it off to a team of literate slaves, and having it copied and sold for profit. As the poets already had a secure source of funding, private patronage, they had no objections to this practice. The only time a poet seems to have raised a cry is when Martial attacked a guy who was copying Martial's epigrams and passing them off as his own verse. While copying was fine, plagiarism was not. And even then, Martial only lampooned him, he didn't call for severe legal penalties.

    26. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by CRCulver · · Score: 1

      I'm not dictating what you should enjoy. However, it seems a possibility that what you enjoy might find it increasingly more difficult to stay profitable (although, sadly, Hong Kong shows that might not be the case) and there would be less of it out there. I for one wouldn't find a problem one bit. You seem to be panicking about a coming crash of the media you hold dear, but not everyone cares and many would actually rejoice.

    27. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by johannesg · · Score: 1

      Although "everyone" is not a person and thus does not have a meaning, I think the majority of people would be happy to see a balance here: the artists get paid, and their customers get the type of access they desire. Ask around: I wager almost everyone here is happy to pay for content that they like, even if they have already downloaded it earlier.

      And in return for paying for that content, those customers want certain freedoms to deal with it in their own way. That means transferring it to another device, storing it for later replay, and the ability to resell the content later if so desired. It typically does not involve the right to put it on bittorrent though: most of us don't actually care for that. If we give a copy to a friend or neighbour it is because we were raised to be good people, and that means sharing what you own.

      Organized content producers see things differently: they want to be paid for every single use, every space- and time-shift, every resale, in perpetuity. They want to be able to take anything they like without paying for it, and incorporate it into their work (or even sell it as their own work). They want huge penalties to deter would-be copyright violators from "stealing" or "pirating" their content. And they want legislative and technical support to stop copyright violation, and push that agenda at the cost of all progress.

      Given this extremist viewpoint, customers are rebelling and calling for a counter-movement. That's what you are seeing here. It is not that we don't believe in copyright (we do!), or that we don't want content creators to be paid (we do!), but we detest the extremes the content producers are pushing for and refuse to accept them. We hate the fact that you get off with less punishment if you commit armed assault than if you copy a song - because we can tell the difference between good and evil, and we know that copying a song is, at a fundamental level, a far lesser wrong - or even not wrong at all. Sharing information is, after all, part of the basic human design; we were writing down stories back when we lived in caves and hunted mammoths.

    28. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      That is one point of view but there are others which could be considered when talking about the RIAA and their ilk.

      You're a hard working man and in the evenings you like a drink at your local. A couple of evenings a week some travelling musicians might come in and play you a few songs, some old classics and maybe one or two of their own and if you like it you might throw some money in their hat, since you can play a fiddle and your mate can play the tambourine you and your mates might have your own sing song on other nights of the week and if you liked one of the songs the band played you might sing a couple of theirs. The next week you drop by the pub you find it's been closed down and the landlord is facing massive fines for not having some sort of 'licence' for your sing song, he informs you the enforcers mentioned your name and said they'd be around to see you shortly. When they turn up, before they club to the ground and steal all your money, it turns out they're not even employed by the band at all but just printed out some of their promotional flyers but they're story is they now own all the music you and your mates like to sing in the pub.

      Or how about this.

      There's this new thing called the moving picture show you're read about in the scientific press and it looks to you like a good little money earner so you get yourself a camera and some actors and start to make some movies. Things go well and your movies are popular, you're making money. Next day some bloke turns up and says you need to pay him to use his movie technology, you need to pay him a lot but rather than doing that you skip town and move to a place called Hollywood at the other side of the country where you can use his equipment to make your movies and not pay this bloke a single cent.

      Or later

      His nephew hears about this new thing called cable which can let people watch more shows in their houses then ever before, he sets up a business installing cable to peoples houses and pumps in programs from conventional operators, the people love it, he makes lots of money. Next day some bloke turns up and points out it's illegal to just take peoples shows and put them on cable without paying for them and now he owes them all his money. The law changes and it turns out he doesn't owe them a thing.

    29. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by MrNaz · · Score: 1

      You've missed the point.

      The anger toward the RIAA is not because we (the Slashdot community) would prefer to get the product of artistic expression for free, but rather because they are attempting to collect huge sums of money on art that they had zero input in creating. We hate the fact that we are being persecuted by a bunch of people who have usurped the art work of others, and are using artificial mechanisms to monopolise others' enjoyment of that art. They are illegitimately standing between creators and admirers of art and acting as self-appointed thuglike toll collectors.

      Furthermore, they are actively derailing developments that will remove their ability to monopolise the creation and distribution of that art (these lawsuits are a part of that policy of derailment) in order to artificially preserve their own bloated and thoroughly unnecessary existence to the detriment of both artists and art consumers.

      --
      I hate printers.
    30. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I pay for what I listen to, too. But that doesn't mean I'm not worried about the RIAA. Between having a teenager in the house, hosting a public wifi hotspot, and having dynamic IP on my DSL, something as simple as actual innocence is no bar to persecution by RIAA's thugs.

      One of her friends could download something over my connection without any input from me, or the address I'm using today could be used by a file-sharing neighbor tomorrow, or some complete stranger might use my link for a file whose name looks like one the RIAA thinks it has the right to protect.

    31. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by phoenixwade · · Score: 1

      I honestly don't understand peoples absolute preoccupation with the RIAA. Let me ask you something... {snipe}

      I'll admit, what I do know of the RIAA is they are extremely heavy handed, so much so that it's entirely possible that innocents are wrapped up in their vendetta. entirely POSSIBLE? well, there is an answer to your first question. You might understand once you realize that it isn't that innocent people MIGHT get sued, harassed, and badly treated, it because they ARE being harassed, sued, and badly treated. And when it turns out that an innocent was caught up in thier shotgun litigation and decides to defend themselves, they cut and run, doing everything they can (until now successfully, for the most part) to cover the legal costs of those they targeted.

      Multiple instances of misuse of the legal system that definately has cost innocent people thousands of dollars, since defending themselves would be more expensive than just paying the extortion.

      That they are waging a vendetta, against their own customer base, well, that sort of thing is never going to go over well.

      And finally, with very few exceptions, the outcry isn't against the artists that create the "Arts you love in your life" it's against the RIAA and it's member record companies that are throwing the baby out with the wash.

      What surprises me is that, after 5 plus years of coverage on this issue, anyone that is savvy enough to comment on slashdot is also ignorant of these issues. But I avoided the knee-jerk "Label them a troll" response, since there are possible explanations for ignorance on this subject. And the post was at least polite.
      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
    32. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      You've bought into their lies. What if you were a popular author who wanted to set out to prove that people wouldn't pay for books if they could get them online for free and promised that he would put his next book online, chapter by chapter, until people stopped paying.

      Here's what happened: people didn't stop paying. However, the author stioo stopped writing the book. Who is wrong here? I was most amazed that people who had actually paid the asshat defended his actions. If I'd paid for some of those chapters I'd have demanded my money back.

      No well known creative person ever went bankrupt or had to go into a different line of work because his or her works were copied or dissiminated. Many had to stop creating for lack of publicity, however.

      If "free music" hurts artists, why do they allow it to be played on the radio?

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    33. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kiss goodbye to pretty much anything that criticises the war on terror or inequality.
      Yeah, HipHop Obama would have none of that crap.

    34. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you might want entertainment in the form of state-subsidies, but you try telling the average tax payer why he should pay for heroes or 24.
      that's a fucking stupid idea.

    35. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Stanislav_J · · Score: 1

      I'm against shoplifting, but I don't think that gives storeowners the right to summarily execute anyone they suspect of the crime.

      Silly analogy....they don't execute suspected file sharers. Um....well, not yet they don't. (Let's not give them any ideas, hmmm?)

      --
      "Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket." -- Eric Hoffer
    36. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by monxrtr · · Score: 1

      Even in cases where piracy is legitimately happening, the fine is often far higher than it should realistically be, given the transgression. The fine amounts are unconstitutionally excessive, and therefore illegal. And these conspirators have also bribed politicians to pass an unconstitutional length of term for copyrights. This creates more artificial scarcity for a longer time. This makes the public domain poorer, and artists themselves are also members of the public domain. They broke the original 14 year bargain. And given the pace at which information spreads today, even 14 years is now too excessive. This stuff is less important and less valuable than patents, and the laws need to reflect that reality. And lets not pretend either that artists don't wholsesale copy the ideas of others in their pretend "original" work.

      Copyright is exactly as silly as me claiming I own the oxygen in the air on planet Earth and attempting to enforce payment for everyone's "infringing" breathing of my air. And every artist who uses ideas which were created by others in his copyright claims (including the inclusion of public domain language words) is attempting to claim ownership of "air". The economic fact is copyright makes society net poorer and net less artistically advanced. Copyright is completely unnecessary to promoting the advancement of the arts and sciences, and only ends up hindering that advancement. And artists can continue to make a very viable living by seeking voluntary compensation in the free market without any need for copyright.

      The only thing which has changed is there is absolutely no profit to be made in the distribution business in the age of the internet, and prices need to reflect the reality that the cost of distribution for music is basically ZERO. It's economically inefficient and environmentally wasteful to try to deliver content on physical media. The record companies are trying to force everyone to pay the price of a first class stamp for every email message and internet post made. That's absurd, and that's why their stock prices are tanking.
      --
      "From DNA to P2P, we are all Copycats now. Go Go Copycat Power! Copycat Powers activate! Form of, a Copycat." --monxrtr
    37. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by reeherj · · Score: 1

      I think your missing the boat here. The reason the RIAA has caught so much flack is that they tried to supress "technology" to support thier sales of thier technologically inferior CD's. American consumers were obsessed with MP3's, spending large amounts of $$ on MP3 players and making thier own MP3 compilations. The RIAA refused to license the sales of MP3's, which left consumers to figure out solutions on thier own. Hackers stepped in and started a technological war with rippers (for creating MP3's from CD), jukebox applications (for organizing MP3's), Tag editors (for editing MP3 tags), and of course applications for sharing MP3's with others (satisfying demand for MP3's where no supply existed).

      The RIAA's response was to attack these providers and started selling "protected" CD's which just plain didn't work in many CD players. Enter Sony's Root kit disaster, aggressive prosecution of MP3 utilities, legislative lobbying to protect thier monopoly on CD's and you have the profile of an industry which is hostile to it's most avid consumers.

      Nowhere is there a better example of this than the spate of law suits that then followed. An industry suing the individuals who listen to thier music the most!

      I'm a software developer and so I understand the importance of intellectual property. But this whole issue really isn't about intellectual property (noone here is advocating The RIAA give away all music for free). The intellectual property argument comes in because the RIAA is looking for justification to pick and choose what technologies the customers use to listen to music.

      If you don't believe this is the issue, look at Itunes. This store started selling digital music which was available for free from other sources, that only worked on thier specific (and expensive) players, and which came with lock-in, and yet consumers went for it. Why? Simple. The consumers demanded digital audio which was easy and convient to use, Itunes delivered and is now the biggest album retailer. The fact is... people don't want to buy CD's anymore.

    38. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by dogzilla · · Score: 1

      First - I also pay for all my music. Mainly because iTunes purchases are incredibly friction-free and I value my time more at more than the $0.99/song or @$11/album they charge me.

      Having said that, there's a few flaws in your argument. You're conflating the major labels and their proxy the RIAA with artists. The majors have effectively based their entire business models on ripping off artists. Do some research if you don't believe me - there are many many many easily-found stories by artists covering just this topic.

      Second - no matter what the transgression, nothing justifies the abuses of our legal system and violations of our laws that the RIAA and their hired goons are undertaking. BusinessWeek (not a terribly great source, but a widely-read one and certainly not exactly a magazine targeted at activist geeks) just did a story that was particularly damning of the RIAA's "investigative" actions. Check it out.

      Third - the whole point of the RIAA's tactics have nothing to do with actually compensating artists for "stolen" music. Check around and see how many artists have received compensation checks from the money the RIAA has recovered from its successful shakedowns.

      Fourth - there is no indication that any recording artist has lost any money due to online piracy. The RIAA claims of piracy costing them $N billion dollars is based on wholly theoretical assumption that every download is a lost sale. This is provably not true. On the contrary, more music in varied styles is available now than at any point in the last 20 years. The music *industry* (and by that I mean the recording labels with their attendant flacks, parties, insanely large retinue of middlemen) is in disarray, because they have based their industry on moving atoms instead of bits and that industry is changing rapidly beneath their feet as artists dialogue directly with their audience, but starting out as a musician today, you have a better chance of earning a living than at any time in the past 20 (perhaps even 50) years. What you are seeing is the music industry moving from a feudal oligarchy to a far more democratic one. The feudal oligarchy is, understandably, somewhat upset.

      --
      The crimes of eBay are a disgrace to it's pig latin heritage!
    39. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by letxa2000 · · Score: 1

      Thankfully, you are still just about in the majority, because if you were not, we literally would have nobody making music, games, movies or TV shows.

      That's a silly grouping of unrelated fields. What is true of music is not necessarily (and isn't in fact) true of games, movies or TV shows.

    40. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by RobBebop · · Score: 1

      if the people's rights, liberties and freedoms are caught in the crossfire, so be it

      The artists signed their rights away when they signed the non-lucrative contracts with the RIAA member companies. The customers pay for an individual license to listen to tracks on a well-defined set of devices.

      Let's not confuse things... the music industry is not in the business of taking away rights. They have never given any rights which they can take away at this point.

      (A) they don't work in the interests of the artists, and (B) their approach to their customers is insulting, intimidating, disdainful and invasive. Good summary! That's a business plan that shouldn't have succeeded in the first place.
      --
      Support the 30 Hour Work Week!!!
    41. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by cyanid3 · · Score: 1

      The gaming industry seems to have the ESA, and the software industry has BSA, and both of them have been working in their own way to weed out piracy. And they seem to be doing fine by not going after individuals, but bigger fish like warez/release groups, modchip sellers, etc.
      The RIAA could simply go after torrent trackers which earn a profit via donations (there are a few torrent trackers who's admins are driving around in expensive cars bought from the donations of users) or the like, or they could similarly go after release groups. The kind of arrogance ( P2PLawsuits.com ) and blatant disregard of their own customers that the RIAA seem to show is quite disgusting IMO.

      --
      loldongs dongslol
    42. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by djdavetrouble · · Score: 1

      VERY WELL PUT!

      The industry blew it ! The recording industry messed up ! As soon as the music became digital, a new format was born. Even as hobbyists were trading mp3s for YEARS before the big P2P distrobution networks were created, The recording industry was busy with physical formats. Hi def this and audio dvd that. They had a chance, blew it, and there is no catching up to the runaway train.

      --
      music lover since 1969
    43. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by sconeu · · Score: 1

      The customers pay for an individual license to listen to tracks on a well-defined set of devices.

      Really? Show me how that's true.

      I have paid for a plastic disc with digital information on it. As long as I don't redistribute that information in violation of the law (note, Fair Use is part of the law), I am free to do whatever I want with that disc and that information.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    44. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by seanonymous · · Score: 1

      Personally, I would try to provide a product that competes with what is available for free. Many of the things that you can download from pirate sites are actually better than what you can get from legitimate distributors.

      For example, I can download a TV show in HD with no commercials and watch it on my TV. If I were to get the same show from the network, I'd need to first purchase DVR hardware so I can watch it on my own schedule, as I can with the download. Then I'd have to skip the commercials, which is something I don't have to do with the illegal download (but something that a U.S. judge has decided is perfectly legal to do). If I go to the network's website and try to watch a streamed copy there, not only do I end up having to sit through commercials, which are not present in the superior illegal version, but watching a streamed video from a network's website on my TV is not as straightforward as watching a divx/mp4/mpeg what have you, which can be played on whatever windows/linux/mac thing you decide to permanently attach to your TV.

      All that being said, it would be much easier for me to subscribe to a download feed from the networks, if they were to offer their shows in a standard, non-protected format, so that I am not limited in what I can watch them on. I might even pay for such a service. I recently purchased an iTunes plus album, so I'm not just bluffing.

      In short, competing with file sharing requires that you compete with all of the other benefits that it offers in addition to being free first - such as offering individual tracks from an album, and then you can charge for the convenience of buying directly from the source without digging through torrent sites.

    45. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by dogzilla · · Score: 1

      Is replying to your own post bad form? Meh, who cares.

      Interestingly, I just came across this relevant article on OReilly: http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2008/04/when-authors-ask-us-about-the-consequences-of-piracy.html

      --
      The crimes of eBay are a disgrace to it's pig latin heritage!
    46. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      The majority would probably agree with you.

      A small minority think it is okay to take your stuff without compensation, period.

      However, a large majority would say that you do not have a right to make money off of those creations as is currently legal. Corporations have twisted copyright to the point that you are losing support for it short term. The fact is that by the original reasonable laws, any songs or movies made prior to 1980 would now be in the public domain.

      Every time they pass a law extending the copyright on material whose creators have been dead for over a generation, a lot of people lose respect for all of copyright and lose the feeling that it is fair and should be complied with.

      Likewise, the 28 year period was based on conditions closing on three centuries ago. The intent was just enough of a right to encourage creation so that works would be created for the public good. After making a reasonable amount of wealth, the work would go into the public domain. I do not think that the amount of money generated by the beatles catalog qualifies as "reasonable". My opinion is that about an average lifetime's income (1.2-3 million) for one work is reasonable. At that point- create something else.

      And given the incredible glut of creators at this point, I do not think they need that much encouragement. Already, I have the choice between a season (22 hours) of an entertaining show for $16 or for $79. Since both are equally entertaining, I choose the $16- because later the $79 will be cheaper. You creators are competing for the $20 in my pocket-- the days of a captive market are over. The days of 1,000 items competing for the $100 in my pocket are here. I know those items physical cost of creation is 30 cents. I know your labor cost of creation was worth perhaps $3,000. I know the market sizes is now in billions. If you only sell 300,000 copies at .10 cents profit a piece you are making a year's income.

      I guess for small micro-markets a higher price is justified. But when you are talking about selling a billion copies of something (like Harry Potter), I think giving you $5 a copy is a bit absurd.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    47. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1

      You're artist, designer, or coder. You make things.

      You had me as far as "things". Unless you are referring to an act of cranking out physical objects based on your design, you are not making any "things". You are however transmitting information, your brain being the source of the transmission. "Things" and "information" however are wholly separate entities in this Universe and obey a completely incompatible sets of rules, information specifically not behaving in a way in which it is possible to assign it an "owner" nor it possesses the required attributes to make it possible for it to be "bought" and "sold". This is at the core of all the illogical crap which is the so-called "Intellectual Property".

      You do this for a living.

      In other words your livelihood is dependent on a delusion, success of which depends on a complicated dance of inane pretenses, make-believe games and illogic - all backed up by thuggish persecution. Such a thing is only possible in a thoroughly corrupt society whereby insane, illogical schemes can be propagated for centuries solely based on the idea that they make someone some money.

      One day someone sets up a web page that gives what you sell for a living away to others for free. What would you do? How would you handle it?

      In a sane world that would be a natural expectation based on the basic, obvious properties of information. Therefore you would do as much as you do upon hearing that the Sun is rising in the East ...

      But then of course in a sane world you would not be "selling" information "for a living", which in itself is a logical conundrum: how do you "sell" something which does not have the necessary attributes to be sold? You can only pretend to be doing so. The fable of the Emperor's New Clothes comes to mind ....

      This is in the essence the whole point of the thing: the technological progress has demonstrated, beyond any shadow of the doubt, that the "copyrights" (and other inanities) are simply unsustainable fantasies. People who are invested into making money on these nonsensical notions however are desperate to save them from their natural fate of oblivion and so are waging a take-no-prisoners war on anyone who would dare to point out the untenable illogic of their position. The "war" has only one direction to go: increasingly totalitarian measures, at some point inevitably resulting in utter breakdown of the society as in order to enforce these silly delusions some form of comprehensive restrictions on all human communication, all communication equipment and all computing equipment will be required.

      This is why all those who support the RIAA and similar operations are in essence proponents of totalitarianism and, ultimately, proponents of a "society" of feudal slavery where knowledge and access to it is what distinguishes the "nobility" from the "serfs".

    48. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      One day someone sets up a web page that gives what you sell for a living away to others for free. What would you do?

      And what if you were Ford and Toyota started the "free car for all" campaign? Would that impact your business plan? If noticed that Toyota dropped the warranty on the free cars and was trying to make money on the repairs and also charged for upgrades, wouldn't that cause you to re-think your marketing strategy? Or would you just file suit against them and claim dumping?

      What can they do? What would you do, just start giving away that which you make your living on? Is that the answer? Is that what everyone wants?

      Wait, the only two choices that exist are to do exactly what they've been doing forever, or to close the doors of their business and declare defeat? What kind of false dichotomy is that? How about they move to the iTunes model? People are willing to pay real money to get music from a place that makes it easy, has customer support, and guarantees no spyware/malware and such you could get with P2P apps and Sony CDs. The problem is that they don't like it. Well, it's too bad. The black market won't stop because someone doesn't like it. The only way to end it is to make undesireable to the consumers. The lawsuits haven't worked. Singles available for a reasonable price have been proven to work. So what do they pick to do more of and which are they trying to end? They aren't just evil, they are also stupid.

      I guess I'm a fool for seeing value in the arts that I love in my life, a value worth paying for.

      No, you are a fool for believing that suing your customers is a good business model when it has been proven they actually want to pay for it (at a price that makes a profit) but you are unwilling to sell it to them. The RIAA is 100% to blame. They hype things. They generate interest. Then they go out of their way to make it harder to obtain legally than illegally. People don't pirate because they are cheap. They pirate because it's easier. They are willing to pay, they want to pay, but the product is simply not available. And the RIAA blames them for not buying the same thing 10 times, one for every device they want to play it on. Would you be so willing to pay for your art if you had to buy a new painting every time you moved it in your house, when the illegal copies would even let you move it to a different house? Even if you take it down to paint the wall under, you have to call them to get the painting re-authorized to go back on the same wall in the same location you had it before. But if you got the illegal one, it works better in all senses of the word than the legitimate one.

    49. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kiss goodbye the grand theft auto

      I, for one, would be happy to see big video games go.

      Kiss goodbye to punk music

      Great, I can only see that as a good thing. I'd rather listen to music whose performers seek greater musical abilities, not shirk them off.



      You forgot to add "You damn kids get off my lawn!" and shake your liver spotted fist in the air menacingly...

      But hey, keep rocking that Cocteau Twins! (Ewww)

    50. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Tuoqui · · Score: 1

      Financial Execution is still Execution.

      The person only has the recourse to file Chapter 11 (which may or may not absolve them of the debt to the RIAA). Or fake their own death and get a new identity in good standing. Thankfully the latter is still technically feasible until they start fingerprinting and DNA testing everyone which is what they want to do.

      And they wonder why they dont want human cloning? It'd kill their #1 investigative tool, DNA. Then they'll have to go back to good old fashioned police work to solve crimes instead of punching up a database.

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      +2 Troll is Slashdot's way of saying groupthink is confused
    51. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by monxrtr · · Score: 1

      Well said. The only thing I would add is even those who are currently ostensibly benefiting from government interference caused artificial scarcity of knowledge are themselves poorer in strict economic wealth terms than they otherwise would be in the absence of copyrights and patents. Those old music industry executives are going to literally die premature deaths because of the choke hold they have imposed on the spread and advance of knowledge. By definition of artificial scarcity of knowledge, no matter how trivial, no matter what form, people are more stupid than they otherwise would be. And that's going to effect, and is effecting, the quality and price of their health care.

      And their copyright claims are doubly egregious because they make claims upon and insert public domain ideas into their claims. Can I take a public domain work like "Tom Sawyer" and get a copyright claim upon it? How about if I add a chapter or a few lines to the original, can I then take a public domain work like "Tom Sawyer" and get a copyright claim upon it in an addended circumscribed containing manner? Well, that's exactly what 99.9% of contemporary copyrighted works are doing, including public domain creations into their government interference enforced "imaginary property" claims. It's as if these fools who believe in copyright believe painting their neighbor's house with their artistic talent transfers ownership of their neighbor's house to themselves.

      All claims of copyright are nothing more than real trespasses on the real private property of others. They restrict the shaping of the property of others. That's why I say all these claims are even on their face invalid whenever they contain any piece of public domain knowledge within their claim. They are literally trying to tell you that you owe them money for the air you breath. All copyrighted books with any public domain words and all copyrighted music with any public domain musical notes are simply ripping off the public, *infringing* in their word of choice, on public domain property. And it's high time those claiming copyrights were kicked out, and fined in the meantime, $150,000 for every public domain word infringed, $150,000 for every public domain musical note infringed in all invalid and illegal claims of copyright which contain elements of public domain "property" within the claims.

      It won't effect these writers and musicians, as they claim they are true original artists. They don't want people copying them, so let's give them what they want, and see them produce art that doesn't copy.

      Now we can clearly see that copyright is nothing less than an assault on knowledge and free speech. It's solely a childish tyrannical attempt to silence competition. If these people have children, and one child is parroting every word another child says, do they bring their child down to the police station for "stealing"? Guess they aren't as upstanding and moral as they pretend to be.

      And remember, every artist gets exactly what they deserve when someone copies "their" 'work'. Really, we should even stop calling them "artists" and start calling them by the more epistemologically accurate term, plagiarists. And now you know why the skill most developed in liberals arts education is the art of bullshitting, pretending to say something new "in your own words".

      --
      "From DNA to P2P, we are all Copycats now. Go Go Copycat Power! Copycat Powers activate! Form of, a Copycat." --monxrtr
    52. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by BLKMGK · · Score: 1

      I find it odd you weren't modded up for this - a shame I have no mod points today. You've actually raised some interesting points - these folks are all so happy to take ideas until the shoe is on the other foot :-)

      --
      Build it, Drive it, Improve it! Hybridz.org
    53. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by drfireman · · Score: 1

      You're not a fool for seeing value in the things you love and wanting to reward artists for their dedication. You're a fool for thinking the RIAA somehow promotes this process. On the whole, the RIAA is deeply harmful to artists and consumers alike. If you really cared about the arts, beyond picking up the occasional Britney Spears album, then you would despise the RIAA too.

    54. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      You're artist, designer, or coder. You make things. Doesn't matter what it is as long as it's easily copyable on the internet (music, images, web pages, software). You do this for a living. One day someone sets up a web page that gives what you sell for a living away to others for free. What would you do? How would you handle it? Would you just tolerate it? What if you began to notice you were no longer making $40,000 a year and ended up making only $20,000 a year? Would you give up the art that you love?

      Ok, lets evaluate an example. I am a scribe. I hand-write copies of books for a living. One day somebody invents the printing press. All of a sudden I am no longer making 40K a year. What do I do? Do I force people to un-invent the printing press? I love scribery, but not enough to do it as a hobby apparently.

    55. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Captain+Sarcastic · · Score: 1

      Actually, you won't get modded down. What will happen will be even more depressing: you'll get modded up... as "+4, Funny."

      --
      Strike while the irony is hot! -- The Freethinker
    56. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Captain+Sarcastic · · Score: 1

      ... Ruining other lives because you're on a mission for some sort of revenge is never a good thing, never.... Why not? It's been good for the Bush administration...
      --
      Strike while the irony is hot! -- The Freethinker
    57. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      I followed you right up to your examples... and could think of reasons for patrons to support every one of those. Patrons aren't all white conservative US politicians you know.

    58. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what percentage of the top 100 movies, music and tv is currently supported through patronage? if its a better system, why is it not being used anyway?

    59. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed. I got sent a DMCA takedown notice (invalid in my country) for obtaining an audiobook that is unlikely to ever be released here (and therefore protected by my country's cross media import laws).

      I can't even tell them that there's demand for their product here, they just treat me like a criminal.

    60. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Auckerman · · Score: 1

      Suing customers? Customers pay for products, not download them from people who may or may not have paid for it. When you start up a competitive service that gives the same exact product that someone else produced and one that you may or may not have paid for away for free, you are breaking the law. You may not like it, but you don't have the right to do that. It's not for you to decide that someone's music should be free. If you are sued, I have no sympathy for you, sorry. If you don't like the practices of the RIAA, then don't consumer their products, at all.

      --

      Burn Hollywood Burn
    61. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by DiEx-15 · · Score: 1

      I agree fully.. furthermore I find it insulting that the RIAA blames something it does not understand for the decreased sales in music. Lets forget music as of late isn't all that great and people are wanting to spend money elsewhere. The RIAA's thoughts are - "By [Insert deity here or leave blank if you are an athiest]! Music sales are in the toilet and we must get our money somehow! So lets extort and not improve the quality of music!"

      Now I can't say the MPAA can say similar things like the RIAA because last year was a "Banner Year" for movies. So the MPAA can't really truthfully say... oh wait, THEY STILL SAY PIRACY HAS DECREASED SALES DESPITE A BANNER YEAR!

      This goes to show that the RIAA does not have anything but its own interest in mind. Eventually I hope and we all hope this will be what ends their idiotic campaign.

    62. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by bobs011 · · Score: 1

      No need to worry about $40,000 a year. The RIAA is outsourcing all song writing to India and China.

    63. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by Smordnys+s'regrepsA · · Score: 1

      Only problem with all that is that the RIAA has admitted that they are losing money hand over fist because of their litigations. The only reason they're doing this is to keep us nice and fearful so we only download from them, not TPB.

      --
      Just -1, Troll talking to another.
    64. Re:I know I'll get modded down for this comment by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Suing customers? Customers pay for products, not download them from people who may or may not have paid for it.

      The worst offenders of non-profit illegal distribution are customers in every sense of the word. They pay more than I do for RIAA products. They have large "legal" collections and even larger "illegal" collections.

      When you start up a competitive service that gives the same exact product that someone else produced and one that you may or may not have paid for away for free, you are breaking the law.

      I never said anything to the contrary.

      You may not like it, but you don't have the right to do that. It's not for you to decide that someone's music should be free.

      I never said anything to the contrary.

      If you are sued, I have no sympathy for you, sorry. If you don't like the practices of the RIAA, then don't consumer their products, at all.

      I never said anything to the contrary.

      It seems you don't disagree with the substance of what I'm saying, but you disagree with the tone in which I say it. The RIAA doesn't provide products that customers want. Customers still buy, and buy more now than before P2P. But, they also acquire the products illegally. The main reason they acquire it illegally is because it is not available leally in the most desired forms, at any price. I agree with you that the solution is for everyone that downloads things illegally to stop being a customer (whether they continue to download illegally will have no effect on the outcome). When sales drop, then they will have to change or go under. But consumers will never exercise that level or restraint, so advocating that is a useless stance. So, what does that leave for solutions to the problem? Continue suing customers?

  10. who is doing RIAA's dirty work? by ziggie · · Score: 1

    who is doing RIAA's dirty work? Do you mean: Who is using threats of violence, theft, and abduction to control information and make a small number of people wealthy? If so the answer is the governments, all of them, so far...

    The only solution I see is a democracy*

    A democracy is a long sought after system of self control that has only recently become technically possible to achieve. Who will be the first?

    1. Re:who is doing RIAA's dirty work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A democracy is a long sought after system of self control Nope. Self governance is autocracy, and usually doesn't scale well beyond 1.

      Democracy is control by the populace, quite literally and in spirit. Whether the form of representative democracy most "western" countries employ is the best implementation is debatable, and that is probably the point you're trying to make.

      "Self control" has nothing to do with government, and everything to do with morality (you know, "that which we pretend sets us apart from the other beasts on this planet") and society ("we work together because we cannot survive alone").
    2. Re:who is doing RIAA's dirty work? by ziggie · · Score: 1

      Nope. Self governance is autocracy, and usually doesn't scale well beyond 1. Autocracy is the self rule of a person
      Democracy is the self rule of a people.

      Democracy is control by the populace, quite literally agreed

      and in spirit. In spirit? A thing either is or isn't especially in a system that controls many people on this planet. Do you run Linux or do you run Linux in spirit?

      Whether the form of representative democracy most "western" countries employ is the best implementation is debatable Republics are not an implementation of democracy and no amount of political fluff is ever going to change that fact.

  11. Try Calling... by pandrijeczko · · Score: 0

    ...1-800-GIVASHIT.

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  12. You don't wanna mess with the RIAA by bluemetal · · Score: 1

    "Oh, you don't wanna mess with the RI double A.
    They'll sue you if burn that CD-R.

    Doesn't matter if your a grandma, or a seven-year-old girl,
    they'll treat you like the evil, hard-bitten criminal scum you are."

  13. My sympathy is with you.. by hansraj · · Score: 1

    but as pointed out many times before here of slashdot, charging the kind of money that is being charged for music is an untenable business practice in the light of the capabilities of the technology that we have. Either one can try to criminalize all sorts of sharing (even the stuff people *want* shared like your favorite Ubuntu iso) or give it up. Copying stuff is easier than ever and a certain level of "piracy" (I suppose a level that won't be convenient to you) will always be there.

    I would rather not go into an argument of whether or not you deserve being paid, the way you want, for the content that you create, but times change. Sometimes to the detriment of some people. The ever-popular example of horse-carriage makers comes to mind.

    I really think "resistance is futile" ;-)

    1. Re:My sympathy is with you.. by CmdrGravy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Bang on, technology provided the means for this whole business to thrive in the first place and now technology has changed and can take it all away again.

      There has always been music, humans like music and it's never going to go away so if 'artists' can't make money using current technology then they need to stop trying, the world doesn't owe them a living, and do something else. Other music will come in to fill the gap and match up with the new technology. In short music is important, 'artists' or particular performers aren't and their marketing and manufacturing businesses definitely aren't important on any fundamental level.

  14. If it's really important to them ... by Skapare · · Score: 1

    ... then they would leave a message, or send you a letter, or sue you.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  15. Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by evilandi · · Score: 1

    What would you do, just start giving away that which you make your living on?

    Yes, that is exactly what I would do - it is exactly what I do now.

    I get paid for writing bespoke software. The programs are customised to my employer's requirements. Anyone can have a copy of the software, because that isn't where the value is. The value is that I configured it just for them; I changed bits or wrote entirely new bits that fit them exactly. I wrote a new module to work with their esoteric payments system. I changed the software so the interface was accessible to their staff in another country.

    Equally, with a music album, the value isn't in something that was written last week or fifty years ago. The value is in the tour ticket, the t-shirt and pre-ordering the next release. If the fans want a new album, they should have to group together and put enough money in the pot to make it worthwhile for the artist. When the artist releases the album, he gets paid that pot of money and no more. That way, the artist is encouraged to make new work, rather than be lazy and live off something he did in the 1960s. Meanwhile the fans maybe get an exclusive packaged CD, whilst everyone else in the world can take a free copy.

    This is called Street Performer Protocol.

    People should be paid for doing, not paid for something they have done.

    --
    Andrew Oakley - www.aoakley.com
    1. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by evilandi · · Score: 3, Interesting

      To put it another way:

      Imagine if bricklayers had to be paid by every person who visited a house they built several years ago.

      That would be almost impossible to police.

      But it is even more difficult to keep track of people who listen to music or watch video. That's even more difficult to police.

      Instead, bricklayers get paid for making new buildings, and not for buildings they've already finished. Equally, artists should get paid for making new art, not art they've already finished.

      --
      Andrew Oakley - www.aoakley.com
    2. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Culture20 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Those analogies have nothing to do with cars.

    3. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by cliffski · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "People should be paid for doing, not paid for something they have done."

      as a matter of interest, what is your view of inheritance tax?
      Surly it should be 100% right?
      23% of the richest 1,000 people in the UK did NOTHING to get the money but be born with rich parents. They are paid for doing nothing, and never have contributed anything whatsoever.
      Surely if your principle holds, it should be illegal for your parents to leave you anything in their will right?
      If not, explain to me the difference.

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    4. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Yetihehe · · Score: 1

      Imagine if bricklayers had to be paid by every person who visited a house they built several years ago.
      Like entering a museum?
      --
      Extreme Programming - Redundant Array of Inexpensive Developers
    5. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by EatHam · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      People should be paid for doing, not paid for something they have done.

      as a matter of interest, what is your view of inheritance tax? Surly it should be 100% right?
      This non-sequitur brought to you by the letter fruitbat.
    6. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by damienl451 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      To put it another way: Imagine if bricklayers had to be paid by every person who visited a house they built several years ago. That would be almost impossible to police. But it is even more difficult to keep track of people who listen to music or watch video. That's even more difficult to police. Instead, bricklayers get paid for making new buildings, and not for buildings they've already finished. Equally, artists should get paid for making new art, not art they've already finished.

      Those analogies are usually unhelpful. Bricklayers don't need to be paid by everyone who visits the house because a) they have never been granted ownership of any part of the house b) they agreed to be paid a finite sum of money upon completion of the job.

      However, if I *own* the house, I am entitled to charge everyone who wants to visit it.

      What I profoundly dislike about anti-copyright activists is their desire to force their views upon everyone else. At present, nothing prevents artists from doing what you have suggested above. It's up to the artists to decide whether they want to charge everyone who listens to what they have created, or simply want to give their work away for free.

      You should never forget that copyright has tremendous benefits and, in many cases, protects the "little man" too. Do you think that a struggling artist would be happy to learn that a big-name band has "stolen" one of his songs, but he has no recourse against them?

      I personally think that there is value in what was written 20 years ago! I enjoy listening to the artist's performance, and I believe that he should be compensated for his work. Do you think that all artists are immediately catapulted to stardom and have a fan-base that is large enough to make your proposal practicable? It might work, but only for well-known artists or bands.

    7. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by mr_matticus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Let's try something that's actually parallel.

      Imagine you're a bricklayer building houses and the concept of credit doesn't exist, and everybody simply has to pay up front in cash for the whole price of the house. Suddenly you go from working on 100 buildings a year to one because 99% of people can't afford to buy a whole house with cash.

      Or imagine you've got a $100 million building full of historical artifacts. Now, you could sell it to a private owner for a rich guy's playground. You could sell it to a rich, old philanthropist who would open it to the public for free, if you're lucky enough to find one. You could also set it up like a gallery and charge admission, since each person would be willing to pay a token amount to enjoy the experience without having to buy the whole building that they have no hope of ever affording.

      In other words, artists only get paid for art they've "already finished" because it hasn't been paid for yet. Some is more profitable than others. Why do you want to restrict artists to recouping costs, but let businesses turn unlimited profits? How does that even begin to make sense?

    8. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by F�an�ro · · Score: 1

      Surely if your principle holds, it should be illegal for your parents to leave you anything in their will right?
      If not, explain to me the difference. The difference is that inheritance is not payment for anything, and never was intended as such.
      This is quite obvious, after all your children do not have an inherent right to the money: you are free to spend it all before you die. (althought your laws may retrict you totally disowning them of what is left AFTER you died)

      Inheritance is a donation. Therefore children are of course not "paid", and it does not matter whether they did anything to earn it.

      Just as you are free to donate any amount you want to an artist, you can donate any amount you want to your children, in case of your demise. Neither has an inherent right to this donation.

      Now we could argue why donating to your children after you death is taxed differently than other forms of donation.
      My guess would be because
      1) the state is specifically supporting families with all sort of privileges. That is a goal in most countries.
      2) Tax-free or low-tax donations are open to abuse: you could classify any payment as donation to avoid taxes. Since you have to die to do the same with inheritance, abuse is strongly limitet.

      but that is ouf course a matter entirely unrelated to the "People should be paid for doing, not paid for something they have done" discussion.
    9. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by dkone · · Score: 2, Funny

      OK Mr. Analogy man, lets see if you can clear up this one. Let's say you are a bricklayer who also writes music AND built a brick house for a famous musician that you also co-recorded a top ten hit with. Let's also say for the sake of clarity that the house is filled with old barber shop memorabilia. Now who gets paid and how much?

      DK

    10. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by letxa2000 · · Score: 1

      If not, explain to me the difference.

      That you and I don't have to pay for the guy who inherited a ton of money to do nothing. We (those that buy music, anyway) do have to pay for the musician who sits on his bum doing nothing but collecting royalties from something he created decades ago.

      I agree that there is something not quite right about bands being able to produce music for a few years and then do nothing the rest of their life. It's not that I oppose that from a capitalistic standpoint--everyone, myself included, would love to be able to quickly make enough money so that we could then be able to do whatever we enjoy... including absolutely nothing.

      But I'm not persuaded by arguments that because this has been possible for many in the recording industry that it can or should stay that way. Making music is, from a business perspective, not like winning the lottery. It's a job. And if they want to keep getting paid, they should keep working. That either means making new music or going on lots of tours and playing the same stuff you recorded 20 years ago.

      Personally, I feel quite strongly that music should be 100% free and shared. Musicians should make their money on tours or other life performances. That's pretty much the way it was for all of human history before the recording industry came around within the last century.

    11. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by iminplaya · · Score: 1

      However, if I *own* the house, I am entitled to charge everyone who wants to visit it.

      But you're not entitled to prohibit me from replicating it. You don't own my copy. And you don't own what's inside my copy.

      And furthermore, let's not forget that copyright exists to protect the distributors, not the creators. Your boilerplate arguments don't hold up.

      --
      What?
    12. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's up to the artists to decide whether they want to charge everyone who listens to what they have created, or simply want to give their work away for free. For a large part, it is not. The regular exposure channels (radio, most stage venues) are completely dominated by multi-billion dollar corporations, with which small artists cannot compete. So in order for any artist to get any mainstream exposure, he is required to enter a contract with some vendor. And yes, I know that there are different shades of evil, but the fact that the market is completely monopolized (to be more correct: oligarchized) remains.

      So yes, while I agree that it should be the artists' choice, that does not mean that that choice can be made without severe consequences to the artists' livelihood.

      Other than that, I agree with your general opinion. As both a musician (only support) and a software coder, almost everything I do to make a living is covered by copyright. But that does not mean that I support the blatant copyright abuse and general disregard for ethics that the MAFIAA has been displaying.

      I personally think that there is value in what was written 20 years ago! I enjoy listening to the artist's performance, and I believe that he should be compensated for his work I personally think that there is value in what was written 70 years ago. But of what value should that now be to that artist? As it it now, that work is still protected until 2040 (at the least; life+75, right?). Reprinting such works now is not profitable, so it will be left to rot.
    13. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by aproposofwhat · · Score: 1

      the house is filled with old barber shop memorabilia. Now who gets paid and how much?

      Answer: the person with the cutthroat razor from the barber shop.

      --
      One swallow does not a fellatrix make
    14. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it might be easier for you to use this analogy.

      In the Christian belief system it is believed that our Saviour The Lord God Jesus Christ is the creator of everything and a divine being with a deep love of each and every one of us. Other, heretical, religions have different, wrong, gods and some even split up the many tasks The Lord Jesus Christ is capable of performing into seperate deities. But ultimately, if it helps the heretics come into christs fold you could imagine that all these different beliefs are simply different views of the same mountain. Each believer finds his or her own path but ultimately the destination is the same.

      In this way it can be seen that although there may be many analogies they are in fact One In The Lord and can be used equally even if the car analogies may seem truer and more righteous from an individual viewpoint.

    15. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by cliffski · · Score: 1

      "Personally, I feel quite strongly that music should be 100% free and shared. Musicians should make their money on tours or other life performances. That's pretty much the way it was for all of human history before the recording industry came around within the last century."

      Others may feel that way about all property. After all, for probably BILLIONS of years, there was no concept of property at all, so why the hell should "The Duke of Westminster" own half of the property in London? Native Americans had no concept of personal property, so why don't we go back to their system? I'd suspect you would suddenly get every worked up if one of them drove off in your car for a day...

      I'd also like to see evidence that musicians 'just produce music for a few years and then do nothing for the rest of their life". How many musicians keep on making music despite being millionaires? And I like the 'few years' bit. Are you counting the ten or more years when they were struggling musicians you hadn't heard of?

      Plus, take a look a Richard Branson or Steve Jobs. they just wrote software for a few years, and then could do nothing for the rest of their lives. Is that fair?
      How about the guy who invented the milk carton, he is a billionaire. Just for inventing the milk carton. He doesn't have to work either.

      I still don't see ANY justification for why people who make a lot of money making something you can steal at thepiratebay are EVIL whereas people who make a way bigger fortune making stuff you can't steal etc are somehow just regular guys who lived the American dream.
      face facts, its backwards-justifying being able to rip off musicians, when you haven't found a guy to rip off Branson or the tetrapack guy.

      --
      DRM-free indie games for the PC and Mac: Positech Games
    16. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Eivind+Eklund · · Score: 1

      What I profoundly dislike about anti-copyright activists is their desire to force their views upon everyone else. At present, nothing prevents artists from doing what you have suggested above. It's up to the artists to decide whether they want to charge everyone who listens to what they have created, or simply want to give their work away for free. This stuff could easily be turned on its head. Pro-copyright people are using guns (in the hands of the police) to force people to follow their idea of how people should behave.

      I'll also note that my personal view of this is that I'm in favor of shorter copyrights and more obligations for the copyright holder (e.g, having to release source code when the copyright term is up), not no copyrights.

      Eivind.

      --
      Doubting the existence of evolution is like doubting the existence of China: It just shows that you're uninformed.
    17. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't see the difference between giving and taking?

    18. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Mr.+Beatdown · · Score: 1

      Where's BadAnalogyGuy when you need him? Won't somebody please think of the children?

      --
      My fellow Americans, let's restore the death penalty for child rapists. Let's do it . . . for the children.
    19. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow
      nobody FORCES you to have any music kid. if you don't like the fact that Joe Blow is charging $10 for his music, live without it.
      How would you like it if musicians started dictating to you how the hell YOU should run your business? with the threat of just stealing from you if you don't agree with them?
      People like you, with your overblown sense of entitlement to other peoples creative efforts just make me despair. the world doesn't owe you free music kid.

    20. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm still trying to figure it out.

      You see I know that the bricklayer was on a train that left Kansas City at 12:25pm and while traveling he wrote a song at 3 notes per minute. Also the memorabilia (2 boxes) had been shipped to his home from 2 different cities. One was twice as far away than the other and one of these rains was an express that traveled at 60MPH (the other train left at 1:45pm.)

      Now assuming that he paid for shipping at $.45/mile and all three trains unexpectedly met at some central spot where he picked up the packages, paid for the shipping used and "cashed in" on the percentage of the $1000, 3000 note song he had written on his planned 3 hour train ride.

      How much money did he make or gain at the end of the day?

      Note: I sure hope that it can be calculated given the information provided.

    21. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Harodotus · · Score: 1

      ...the bricklayer was on a train that left Kansas City at 12:25pm and while traveling he wrote a song at 3 notes per minute. Also the memorabilia (2 boxes) had been shipped to his home from 2 different cities. One was twice as far away than the other and one of these rains was an express that traveled at 60MPH (the other train left at 1:45pm.)

      Now assuming that he paid for shipping at $.45/mile and all three trains unexpectedly met at some central spot where he picked up the packages, paid for the shipping used and "cashed in" on the percentage of the $1000, 3000 note song he had written on his planned 3 hour train ride.

      How much money did he make or gain at the end of the day? The answers are simple, they don't let you pickup packages mid-shipment. You don't get paid for partial incomplete songs.

      As a bricklayer, you should know that no payments come till ALL the work is done.

      Also, If you're wasting your money on old barbershop memorabilia then shipping fees are the least of your financial worries.
      --
      Its not users who are broken, it's systems not taking account their likely behaviour and fixing it technically.
    22. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      What I profoundly dislike about anti-copyright activists is their desire to force their views upon everyone else. At present, nothing prevents artists from doing what you have suggested above. It's up to the artists to decide whether they want to charge everyone who listens to what they have created, or simply want to give their work away for free.

      Are you insane? At present, nothing prevents me from giving someone a copy of something except the copyright restrictions that are forced on the populace at the threat of violence.

      Copyright itself is a view forced on everyone else!

    23. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      Actually, all of this raises a good point:

      The analogy should be that the artist is the bricklayer -- both get paid to do their job.

      The RIAA are the homeowners... and they're getting upset that everyone is peeping through their windows looking at their architecture without paying them the full price of admission.

      They then refuse to pay the bricklayer his wages because the bricklayer agreed to the job on being paid a percentage of the profits that were to be made from those tours.

      They also sue all the people looking through the wages, as well as those who tell others that they can also see the neat architecture through the windows, because in their view those people are "stealing" the tour admission fares. Each person who glances through one of the windows is tallied as "lost revenue".

    24. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      s/through the wages/through the windows

      Gah... can't believe I missed that one.

    25. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by mr_matticus · · Score: 1

      Are you insane? At present, nothing prevents me from giving someone a copy of something except the copyright restrictions that are forced on the populace at the threat of violence. No, it's the fact that it's not your work to copy. The fact that it has to be backed by law simply reflects the basic greed and misplaced entitlement of, among others, the Slashdot audience. At some point, you will simply have to grow up and accept that paying $10 for a CD does not give you ownership of the work itself any more than buying one movie ticket gives you ownership of the theater building or buying a single soda makes you an owner of Coca-Cola.

      Copyright itself is a view forced on everyone else! Copyright isn't forced on you. You're free to release your work under whatever terms you wish. Other people can enforce or not enforce whatever they choose as allowed by law. If someone creates something, then that person gets to set the terms of how many rights and to how many people he sells it off. You, the customer, don't have any rights until you buy them.

      If you don't like copyrights, support artists who use alternative terms. Too bad if that means you can't get DVDs of your favorite TV show. It's their show, they financed it and produced it, and they get to decide how they want to make it available. You don't get to set aside those terms and decisions and steal it because you don't approve of their business model. Sometimes, believing in something means sacrifice. If you don't have the fortitude to give up some ultimately pointless entertainment, the strength of your convictions is sorely lacking.
    26. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      You, the customer, don't have any rights until you buy them.

      I have a fundamental right to freedom of expression. The first ammendment makes no statements on how original that expression must be. On it's face that means I can express myself using the exact same words you do if I want to. However, in the interest or encouraging the arts and sciences we the people have agreed to limit these inherent rights.

    27. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Hotawa+Hawk-eye · · Score: 1

      So if He is the creator of everything, then He holds all the copyrights (as the original creator) correct? If that is your belief, could you use that along with freedom of religion as some sort of defense against the RIAA (or at least to drag out the trial, making it more expensive for them, and giving them a reputation as an anti-religious organization?)

    28. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by Auckerman · · Score: 1

      Brick layers never had to compete with their own product, because unless you turned them into a slave, it's impossible. Your analogy fails.

      --

      Burn Hollywood Burn
    29. Re:Bespoke Software and Street Performer Protocol by mr_matticus · · Score: 1

      The first ammendment makes no statements on how original that expression must be. No, for two very good reasons: first, there's no such thing as an "ammendment" and second, because that's what the Supreme Court is for.

      Your right to free expression covers your original expressions. It does not cover, and never has, the simple duplication of someone else's. The First Amendment is not unlimited, nor is it absolute.

      Further, duplication is not even expression. You have an Amend. I right to sing a song or paint a painting modeled on one you've seen, but a simple, mechanical act utterly devoid of creativity or critical thought like copying isn't expressive.
  16. Re:Mods == fags by dintech · · Score: 4, Funny

    Indeed. I had to give up the fags. I was getting through ten a day. Sometimes up to twenty on a big night out. When I had that many I used to feel really bad when I woke up in the morning. Also lots of people complained about the smelly butts. I think I was desensitized to the smell and never noticed. I never could tell my parents about it either, I always had to have a shower before I saw them in case they could tell. I felt ashamed and I'm glad I quit.

  17. Top Candidates by flyneye · · Score: 1

    I figure they're in cahoots with Satan or high ranking Democrats.

    --
    *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
  18. Re: Who Runs RIAA's Settlement Information Center? by Missing_dc · · Score: 1

    Actually, its not the Devil himself, he is more of a salesman. You are looking for Infernos Perpetual Collections from the 7th plane of Hell. It is run by an Arch-Demon who (for obvious reasons) cannot be named. These guys are viewed as being soft, since the down payment is a little blood, but they are willing to stop collecting if you give them a good fight or an arm and a leg, preferably yours.

    --
    How amazed would you be to suddenly find that you just forgot what I wrote and you needed to reread my post.... again.
  19. Re: Who Runs RIAA's Settlement Information Center? by Silver+Sloth · · Score: 1

    Hmm...

    According to Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman in Good Omens Hell has much to learn from the modern software license. I'm not sure that I would necessarily quote Messrs Pratchett and Gaiman as infallible sources but...

    --
    init 11 - for when you need that edge.
  20. ..but I repeat myself.. by cheros · · Score: 1

    I figure they're in cahoots with Satan or high ranking Democrats. .. but I repeat myself (with apologies to Mark Twain :-).

    --
    Insert .sig here. Send no money now. Owner may sue, contents will settle. Batteries not included.
  21. Who Runs RIAA's Settlement Information Center? by plover · · Score: 1
    Master-Blaster runs RIAA's Settlement Information Center.
    "Can't hear. Louder!"
    Master-Blaster runs RIAA's Settlement Information Center.
    "Still can't hear. Say louder!"
    MASTER-BLASTER RUNS RIAA'S SETTLEMENT INFORMATION CENTER!!
    "Embargo off."

    Somehow the mental image of toiling amongst pig manure to make money for the RIAA just seems incredibly apropos.

    --
    John
    1. Re: Who Runs RIAA's Settlement Information Center? by sm62704 · · Score: 1

      Pat Robertson runs the RIAA? Well that would explain a lot of things, you may be right.

      --
      mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest
    2. Re: Who Runs RIAA's Settlement Information Center? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't know their full names, but looking at the reserved parking spaces:
      "Lennie the Snake"
      "Big Paulie"
      "Kneecaps"
      "Freddie the Weasel"...

      It would be stereotyping if we were to hazard a guess.

    3. Re: Who Runs RIAA's Settlement Information Center? by jimicus · · Score: 1

      Have you been reading Tom Holt?

    4. Re: Who Runs RIAA's Settlement Information Center? by Missing_dc · · Score: 1

      I assume you mean me. No, I had to look him up on Wikipedia. It just makes sense. The Devil would be too busy to collect on his own, so why not outsource. The names, places and rules of conduct were purely based on dim recollections of AD&D Planes rules a good dose of humor and some magical common sense.

      --
      How amazed would you be to suddenly find that you just forgot what I wrote and you needed to reread my post.... again.
  22. News, Editorial, or just plain campaigning? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is this news, or opinion, or campaigning or maybe it's Ask Slashdot? Cos, I don't see anything factual here that could be described as news, and the tone of it sounds like an editorial, and I didn't think slashdot did those.

    Oh, hang on, it's a kdawson effort. That means it's opinion and campaigning pretending to be news.

  23. Who Run RIAA Settlement Center?! by Tink2000 · · Score: 1

    Master Blaster runs RIAA Settlement Center.

  24. neat if RIAA werent tryin to cover their tracks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    riaa is startin to lose. Time goes by it will lose more. Governments do not really HAVE to pander to this cabal of rich hooligans. When the people finally find out the truth about how much riaa is robbing them blind whilst hiding behind its swindled artists, there will be hell to pay and riaa knows it. That is people all over the world. They wont even be able to hide in their financial haven, the Cayman Islands, those Reggia (copyright sold to chinese robber barons) lovers would love to throw those real live fat slobs to feed the great white sharks. Maybe the band, Great White, will be there to help them. ..Eh Mon!

  25. Spoiler... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For those with GP's level of mastery of English orthography, we should explain this translates to "Satan, the guy who tempted Jesus for Forty Days in the Desert".

    Nice one, got me stuck on "Fort 'n' Daze" for a few secs (I guess because I have only read religious texts in the likes of HHGTTG, Ender's Game etc). I especially liked Jesse, since Jebus is a bit overdone...

  26. RIAA Callcenter Details by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In a former life, I worked for the lawfirm who at that time almost solely represented the bulk of all RIAA lawsuits - this information was not available to me upon hiring. To give you an idea of how it works - there were in excess of 24 floors of lawyers in this building. While their primary focus was not that of the RIAA business, it was certainly one of their cash-cows. On one of the floors, out of access for even the most senior IT guys was a highly secured room which housed non-other than the infamous RIAA callcenter. On one or two occasions I was given access to this room for audits of equipment. Staffed with 8-10 desks was the callcenter in full force. Since this time, said law-firm has lost their 'contract' with the RIAA and I no longer know where they went to nor how their setup is (put the timeframe at roughly 3-4 years ago). I will say that floating around freely were 'guidelines' on a single sheet of paper outlining what the 'suggested' fee's were for people that would settle based on a few factors such as how many times they were 'caught', their financial background, etc. The goal as published on this single sheet of paper was to get as much as possible. While I never heard it or read it, it made the pretty clear picture that you were to get as close to that as possible or hand it off to one of the 'esteemed' lawyers. Having said all of that, I will now be in hiding for the rest of my life.

  27. It is the artists by MooseTick · · Score: 1

    "Anyone know anything more about who is doing RIAA's dirty work?"

    As much as they don't want you to think it is them, the artists are the cause of the RIAA. If they refused en mass to continue creating/releasing their art until the RIAA disappeared, it would cease to exist.

    I don't care how many say the RIAA doesn't represent them, as long as it is funded and allowed to represent the "recording industry association" then it does represent them.

    1. Re:It is the artists by sickspeed6 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is only slightly true. As it turns out, i was recently graced with the excellent opportunity to attend a Q&A with Mitch Glazier the Executive Vice President of Government and Industry Relations and Jonathan Lamy the Senior Vice President of Communications. Right now the RIAA is funding its campaign, in large part, by the money it makes off of the pre-settlement letters and lawsuits that they win. now, if the artist simply said, we take away your rights to all future music, eventually, the RIAA would cease to exist. As a side note, I have never met two more idiotic morons in my life, literally the dumbest people I have ever met, also, slimy...it was like talking to the Lucifer himself, only x2.

  28. Isn't it obvious? by CSMatt · · Score: 1

    The answer is demons. Demons are helping the RIAA.

  29. Yeah, everybody knows... by pem · · Score: 1

    The way to a man's heart hangs directly below his stomach.

    1. Re:Yeah, everybody knows... by darthdavid · · Score: 2, Funny

      His small intestine???

    2. Re:Yeah, everybody knows... by DonnieD701 · · Score: 1

      My wife always says that the way to a man's heart is through his chest with a sharp knife..

      --
      A witty saying proves nothing. Voltaire (1694-1778)
    3. Re:Yeah, everybody knows... by JosKarith · · Score: 1

      Under the left floating rib, at a rising angle of 45 degrees. Preferably with the blade perpendicular to the spinal column - don't want the blade sticking betweeen back ribs in case of overpenetration.

      --
      'Don't worry' said the trees when they saw the axe coming, 'The handle is one of us.'
  30. Chack the mailbox by houghi · · Score: 1

    The orginal story to this. there it is said to be MediaDefender.

    I browsed somewhat through it (did a mgrep on slashdot and such things) and saw that they talked about changeing IP's on a regular basis. So download the mbox and start reading.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  31. Tagging system broken by CmdrPorno · · Score: 1

    How come RIAA posts no longer carry the MAFIAA tag? Did Slashdot ban certain tags from further use?

    --
    Sent from my iPhone
  32. Satan. he's an intern. but he might not work out by swschrad · · Score: 1

    just not nasty enough for the RIAA.

    --
    if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
  33. Re: by clint999 · · Score: 0

    Am I the only one that is completely confused?
  34. A question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder if they get paid on commission?