Leave him alone. He has trouble with the big words.Originally posted by: 95SS
You don't own the music. If you have a $20 bill, and steal another from someone, is that legal?
And it's RIAA :beer:
Originally posted by: M0NEYSH0T
If the RIA sues you for downloading music, but you already OWN that music, does the suit have merit?
Originally posted by: M0NEYSH0T
If the RIA sues you for downloading music, but you already OWN that music, does the suit have merit?
Originally posted by: Bowmaster
I don't think this has ever come up for trial. Either people have settled for like $3,000 or they have not answered the lawsuit. I'm really hoping someone with some cash will go after these nazi's...
Originally posted by: Bowmaster
I don't think this has ever come up for trial. Either people have settled for like $3,000 or they have not answered the lawsuit. I'm really hoping someone with some cash will go after these nazi's...
Originally posted by: SociallyChallenged
Originally posted by: M0NEYSH0T
If the RIA sues you for downloading music, but you already OWN that music, does the suit have merit?
If you already own it, why not just rip it onto your computer? It's faster than Kazaa too.![]()
Originally posted by: wkabel23
Originally posted by: SociallyChallenged
Originally posted by: M0NEYSH0T
If the RIA sues you for downloading music, but you already OWN that music, does the suit have merit?
If you already own it, why not just rip it onto your computer? It's faster than Kazaa too.![]()
Bingo!
No, that argument does not make sense. A person who purchases an album should be able to do whatever they want with it (modifying/transferring from one media to another/etc). Saying otherwise is like saying you can't put different wheels on your car because GM said so.Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
Just because you buy a cd doesn't give you entitlement to have that music in another form. It doesn't entitle you to go into a record shop and get the record for free, the 8 track, the tape, etc. The same can be said for mp3's. If they want you to have the music in mp3 form then the studio would sell you the music in mp3 form.
Do I think that's right? No. But, that's their argument and it actually makes sense.
And no I don't think file sharing is the reason the music business isn't making as much money.
Originally posted by: ThisIsMatt
No, that argument does not make sense. A person who purchases an album should be able to do whatever they want with it (modifying/transferring from one media to another/etc). Saying otherwise is like saying you can't put different wheels on your car because GM said so.Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
Just because you buy a cd doesn't give you entitlement to have that music in another form. It doesn't entitle you to go into a record shop and get the record for free, the 8 track, the tape, etc. The same can be said for mp3's. If they want you to have the music in mp3 form then the studio would sell you the music in mp3 form.
Do I think that's right? No. But, that's their argument and it actually makes sense.
And no I don't think file sharing is the reason the music business isn't making as much money.
Originally posted by: eigen
Originally posted by: Bowmaster
I don't think this has ever come up for trial. Either people have settled for like $3,000 or they have not answered the lawsuit. I'm really hoping someone with some cash will go after these nazi's...
I will glady do so, all I need is for everyone on AT to send me one penny.
It is legal to make copies of your CDs/CD tracks for your own personal use. There is no limit on the format they can be in. (EDIT: this is why you can make compilation CDs/tapes, or backup your CDs to a compressed audio format.)Originally posted by: ThisIsMatt
No, that argument does not make sense. A person who purchases an album should be able to do whatever they want with it (modifying/transferring from one media to another/etc). Saying otherwise is like saying you can't put different wheels on your car because GM said so.Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
Just because you buy a cd doesn't give you entitlement to have that music in another form. It doesn't entitle you to go into a record shop and get the record for free, the 8 track, the tape, etc. The same can be said for mp3's. If they want you to have the music in mp3 form then the studio would sell you the music in mp3 form.
Do I think that's right? No. But, that's their argument and it actually makes sense.
And no I don't think file sharing is the reason the music business isn't making as much money.
Originally posted by: SP33Demon
Yes, I thought there was a law that allows you to make a backup copy?
Someone else also mentioned that you should just "rip it". Not so fast man, I can't even PLAY some Cd's on my computer let alone rip them, due to copy protection (Yellowcard CD was the latest). Now the record companies can say you're lying about making backups b/c it was impossible to rip music from them.
Originally posted by: SP33Demon
Yes, I thought there was a law that allows you to make a backup copy?
Someone else also mentioned that you should just "rip it". Not so fast man, I can't even PLAY some Cd's on my computer let alone rip them, due to copy protection (Yellowcard CD was the latest). I can see it now... the record companies can say you're lying about making backups b/c it was impossible to rip music from them.
Then you can argue you did an analog rip. Or disabled CD autoplay. (which is the latest work-around) Or wrote on the edge of the CD with a Sharpie.Originally posted by: SP33Demon
Yes, I thought there was a law that allows you to make a backup copy?
Someone else also mentioned that you should just "rip it". Not so fast man, I can't even PLAY some Cd's on my computer let alone rip them, due to copy protection (Yellowcard CD was the latest). Now the record companies can say you're lying b/c it was impossible to rip music from them.
Originally posted by: M0NEYSH0T
Originally posted by: Bowmaster
I don't think this has ever come up for trial. Either people have settled for like $3,000 or they have not answered the lawsuit. I'm really hoping someone with some cash will go after these nazi's...
Yeah, I don't think we OWN the music anyway, rather, the license. So who cares where you get your copy of that music from?
Originally posted by: yukichigai
It is legal to make copies of your CDs/CD tracks for your own personal use. There is no limit on the format they can be in. (EDIT: this is why you can make compilation CDs/tapes, or backup your CDs to a compressed audio format.)Originally posted by: ThisIsMatt
No, that argument does not make sense. A person who purchases an album should be able to do whatever they want with it (modifying/transferring from one media to another/etc). Saying otherwise is like saying you can't put different wheels on your car because GM said so.Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
Just because you buy a cd doesn't give you entitlement to have that music in another form. It doesn't entitle you to go into a record shop and get the record for free, the 8 track, the tape, etc. The same can be said for mp3's. If they want you to have the music in mp3 form then the studio would sell you the music in mp3 form.
Do I think that's right? No. But, that's their argument and it actually makes sense.
And no I don't think file sharing is the reason the music business isn't making as much money.
As long as the mp3 you downloaded was the same version of the song as the one on your CD they can't get you for that. Technically it counts as procuring a backup copy. It's this exemption that makes it legal for me to have all my Bloodhound Gang mp3s on my computer even though some f%$#head stole the CDs from my car.
Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
Just because you buy a cd doesn't give you entitlement to have that music in another form. It doesn't entitle you to go into a record shop and get the record for free, the 8 track, the tape, etc. The same can be said for mp3's. If they want you to have the music in mp3 form then the studio would sell you the music in mp3 form.
Do I think that's right? No. But, that's their argument and it actually makes sense.
And no I don't think file sharing is the reason the music business isn't making as much money.
Originally posted by: SP33Demon
Yes, I thought there was a law that allows you to make a backup copy?
Someone else also mentioned that you should just "rip it". Not so fast man, I can't even PLAY some Cd's on my computer let alone rip them, due to copy protection (Yellowcard CD was the latest). I can see it now... the record companies can say you're lying about making backups b/c it was impossible to rip music from them.
