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Anonymity increases boldness. |
Isn't it true that the artist only makes about 1.5-3% of CD sales?
The only money the artists get is through touring(after Ticketmaster gets through with the ticket sales). How come we don't hear in the media bout the artists who work their butt off, and end up with nothing? The decisions of monolithic/monopolistic CEO's to spend millions trying to promote 50cent's "smack that azz" during Wimbledon has nothing to do with the multitude of downloading teenagers(who couldn't afford to buy it anyway). The fact is their bonus pay by itself just layed off another 5,000 workers. |
I like Netflix model of a monthly fee to have movies mailed to you or have instant downloads on your PC or Mac. I think it is like $10 a month and I can watch many movies right now. Theater releases, now that is a different story.
Speedy:) |
Bear in mind that Netflix is a US company. ROW results may vary . . .
I only d/l Top Gear via torrents. So I guess that means I am a thief. I might be able to get TG here via a sat or some $$s cable package that I don't need or want. I never steal movies or music. We rent physical DVDs at the rate of 2 per week for our projector movie nights. I pay for my music. And mp3s suck anyway. And yes, you can hear the difference . . . Ian |
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This area used to have two good rock stations (KSJO, KOME), one excellent alternative station (KITS) and 2 or 3 classic rock stations. In 1994, one of the rock stations (KOME owned by Infinity Broadcasting) switched formats to semi-alternative, playing a mix of the songs it used to play, and some of what the good alternative (KITS) station played. Still, between the 3 stations, there was always something on worth listening to. In 97, Infinity Broadcasting (since absorbed by CBS Radio) purchased the company that owned the good alt station, and the quality of the programming dropped. A year later, Infinity purchased another family of stations, and part of that deal, they were required to sell one of the other stations they owned in the area. The alt-rock station KOME got sold to the company that owned the other good rock station, KSJO, and one of the classic rock stations. KOME was killed off, and the frequency used by the classic rock station. The parent company has since been absorbed by Clear Channel, which decided a few years later to kill off the last remaining Rock station in the area when they turned KSJO into a Mexican Oldies station. Thankfully, one of the classic rock stations (KSAN) shifted their format a bit and play sort of a mixture of classic and current rock music, and for some unbelievably stupid reason, Pro football games. The other classic rock station broadcasts Hockey games. The two that play current music have pretty short playlists with heavy rotation. Frankly, neither of them are much worth listening to any more. Radio sucks. I do find it amusing that the music industry loudly proclaims that the reason they are losing money is because people are downloading music instead of buying it, but they overlook the possibility that people are not buying music simply because there is so much of what being put out is crap. I can't remember the last time I had any interest in buying a new CD. |
My tongue was somewhat in cheek. I pay for Sat radio and end up buying stuff I hear there. Broadcast radio does suck, but you get what you pay for.
There are plenty of screwed up reasons for why music sucks now (Clear Channel is a good place to start). But if people don't like what is being made, then don't buy it and/or make your own. What does offend me is people saying "music sucks" but then downloading a bunch of stuff for free. I guess it is good enough to steal but not good enough to pay for... |
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The RIAA cannot even consider the possibility that their lower profits may be simply because their product sucks. I pay for Sat radio as well, and of the recent stuff I still really haven't heard anything recently I liked enough to buy. The last music I purchased I got directly from the artist. Tom |
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I sometimes download TV shows that I have missed and I don't really consider that to be stealing. I am kind of old school when it comes to music. I have a huge CD collection. If I download a tune that I like I put it on a list and eventually buy the CD. For me, a digital itune is just not the same as having the CD. if that makes any sense.
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I buy my music from amazon or whoever(itunes etc) after hear it on the radio(which btw is NO longer really free...ever here of the performance tax?) |
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My only torrent use is for Top Gear. I don't have any qualms about downloading a program that isn't shown in the USA. If that makes me a criminal, so be it. In my younger days I was a Napster user, but today agree that it isn't right to steal music. |
It is not 'stealing'.
It is not 'theft'. It is 'copyright infringement'. All of you jokers claiming the moral high ground better look at your speedometer once in a while. |
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Some things that are grossly neglected in a lot of the arguments against filesharing: 1) Is it "lost revenue" if the "perpetrator" would have never purchased the music in the first place? The RIAA, MPAA, et al seem to think so, but they have a vested interest in equating every download of one of their products as a lost sale. I call BS. 2) Actual "theft" can be turned to a benefit for the perpetrator by fencing the stolen goods. Please show me examples of filesharers who have turned a financial profit out of their downloaded music/video/whatever 3) Some studies have shown that downloading actually leads to INCREASED purchasing of music. I know for a fact that this is true in some cases, though I do not have the numbers available to prove it on a large scale one way or the other. |
if i steal somebody's 911, he no longer has his 911. He owns everything he owned before, minus one 911.
if i copy mp3 from the Beatles, not one Beatle will own anything less compared to the moment right before the copy was made. (Unless Macca just happens to be divorcing again). Hence, it's not stealing, that's just the propaganda machine trying to demonize the act of making a copy. |
It all depends on motive.
If one intended on purchasing a copy of Beyonce's latest album but instead downloaded it, thus pulling income out of her and the record company's pocket - then it is stealing. If your buddy burns you a copy of Guns and Roses latest album, you listen to it, decide it is garbage and proceed to toss it into the trash (having never intended on purchasing it in the first place), then it is not stealing. No loss to any party involved except the word of mouth advertising that Axle is washed up. Now if one loved the album and decided to keep the burned copy in lieu of purchasing the original, then it reverts back to the theft argument. This argument is not black and white. It depends on why you are sharing files. TV Show sharing is another argument. If I forget to set my DVR to record this weeks 2.5 men, which I would have watched while forwarding through the commercials - is it wrong to download the torrent from Pirate Bay and give it a watch? I don't see how any party is harmed or robbed. |
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Many thieves keep what they steal. The mere fact that they do not turn all of it for profit does not lessen the crime. It should not take much imagination to come up with a few example all by yourself. Quote:
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We could go on all day with these easily refuted justifications for this kind of theft. Fact of the matter is, this material is produced for profit unless the artist says otherwise. Taking it from them, without paying them for it, is stealing. It's really pretty simple. No matter how many obtuse courses of justification you embark upon, you are taking someone's product for which you have not paid. |
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From now on I shall refer to "exceeding the posted speed limit" (a.k.a. "speeding") as either "vehicular homocide" or "murder". SmileWavy If artists want complete control over the consumption of their product, they should go to a concert hall, arena, bar, or street corner and perform. Remember, it's their choice to rely on on a stone-age Gestapo organization that sues grandmothers into bankruptcy for fictitious losses of revenue. |
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I torrent several TV shows now. some are off the air, some are ones that are in their 5th or 6th season that I've never watched before. I can watch the early shows from torrent, get interested, catch up, then watch the current ones live...therefore, I have become a NEW customer, where I would not have been before. Allowing me to "steal" the old shows puts me in front of advertising...seems that it would be a good thing, right? Now, I have started to watch some shows that are on cable (I do not have cable). I can see that being "stealing" like downloading music is "stealing", in that, I will watch old shows, catch up, and not watch new shows, shows which require everyone else to pay to watch. Eh...my moral compass isn't really spinning too hard with that one. Again, I'm mostly starting at the beginning of series that are now a few years in, watching episodes that I could not watch otherwise. |
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