The Eye
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Another Eye to the World
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08 Jan 08 Don’t Stop The Music

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image On the one hand we have and those that use those networks to gain free, illegal downloads of music; on the other hand we have the who win suits such as that against a Minnesota woman in October 2007, who was ordered to pay over $220,000 for downloading two dozen songs.

My take on it all is this.

I work. I expect to get paid. However much I enjoy the work I do, I need to get paid to be able to pay my way in the world. That’s how it works. Therefore I have no problem with an artist getting paid for the music they produce. I also have no problem with the company that distributes their work – usually a – getting paid to do so – after all the is employing people and paying them, and they in turn need to be paid. It’s how our economy works.

I don’t think it’s fair to expect to be able to freely download music without paying for it, but I am concerned that artist – that has produced the work – gets their . If anyone is to get rich in the deal, it should be the artist.

Now, who gets rich in the court case above? Why, the lawyers of course. How much of that $220K went to the artists in compensation for the illegal downloads? I suspect very little.

The RIAA really only represents the major labels anyway. The major labels are not run by , but by who are only interested in the bottom line (which is important in any business) and not the work itself. This is why we end up with some artists churning out album after album of music of . They’re simply used as a .

Well, there’s more. One tends to assume that buying a CD allows you to do what you wish with it – almost. We all know you’re not supposed to copy it for your friends, or post it online for filesharing.

Of course, before the digital age, copying still went on, but taping the to the didn’t give a very good , and if we liked the music most of us would tend to go and buy the song anyway.

There was some talk a few years ago, that if you bought the vinyl album, you’d also really need to buy the cassette for use in the car. I would suspect very few people ever did that, and anyway, that idea went away.

It’s reappeared.

Sony have suggested that if you want the song on your ipod as well as the CD for the car or living room, you need to buy the CD AND a digital copy.

Over to the RIAA, and they duck the issue saying that “copyright law is too complex to make such sweeping statements.” Hang on one cotton picking minute. I thought the RIAA was the representative body for the American recording industry? Don’t they employ teams of lawyers to sue people for downloading songs illegally? Don’t these lawyers know the copyright laws inside and out? Enough to sue that woman for $220K for those 24 songs, but not enough to tell me or you if it’s ok to rip a CD to my hard drive to play on my own mp3 player when I’m out jogging or walking the dog.

If it did go that far I think most people would simply stop buying CDs. Actually myself I haven’t bought a CD for some time. I download, legal, digital copies of what I want these days. I play in the home on the computers, or on my mp3 player, which I can also use in the car. Why do I need to buy a CD at all, or burn music to CD anyway?

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