Grateful Dead Productions wants to pull MP3s
rsidd writes "According to latest information Grateful Dead Productions have asked www.deadabase.com to
pull MP3 files of concerts from their archives, or to
face legal action. I wonder, does this have the sanction of
the band, and if the band who pioneered free distribution
of their music does this, what else is in store? " From the tone of the information, this sounds like something that isn't at the sanction of the artists, BTW.
MP3 and similiar technoligies can do more to support the "artist" than any other distribution medium before.
I believe it's that more than anything that has RIAA freaking out. For the first time ever an artist or group has a medium to distribute their music themselves and make it instantly availible to a world wide audience, cutting RIAA completely out of the picture.
Your argument that I dont use MP3's because music is protected by copyright would be akin to saying I dont listen to music on CD's because alot of people have CD Burners at home now and can make their own copies, or tapes etc.
It's not the medium that's at fault for the actions of a few pirate sites on the web and college kids trading music across their lan network. The truth is MP3 music "pirating" isn't any worse than "pirating" that has allways existed with other distribution formats of music.
RIAA doesn't really care about pirating itself, in fact alot of times it helps them as someone downloads a new single on mp3 and says thats cool now I want the whole album on CD. You can see this in it's attempt to attack MP3 as a technoligy so hard.
The true fear hear is that if MP3 becomes too popular, and widely accepted as a standard then music artists will no longer need the big label record company's at all. Groups like public enemy are showing others that there are alternatives to being locked into a 5 year contract with a label company that jacks up album and concert prices sky high and then takes the majority of the profit. RIAA see's this and thinks what happens when all those 5 - 7yr contracts we currently control our big money making artists with come to term? If MP3 is acceptible then those artists have a chance to finally leave and distribute their next album themselves via mp3 downloads and direct cd sales off their web site.
MP3 doesn't take rights away from the artist it gives them way too many as far as RIAA is concerned.