Originally posted by: tenshodo13
Err I don't think this kind of definition is anything new. I can see where they are coming from, but still. However, I don't care, I haven't bought a CD in Years.
Originally posted by: tenshodo13
Err I don't think this kind of definition is anything new. I can see where they are coming from, but still. However, I don't care, I haven't bought a CD in Years.
Originally posted by: Tizyler
Originally posted by: tenshodo13
Err I don't think this kind of definition is anything new. I can see where they are coming from, but still. However, I don't care, I haven't bought a CD in Years.
I thought that everyone shared the outlook at as long as you owned something (be it a movie or music), then you could download it legally.
If copying = stealing, why haven't ALL P2P downloading mediums been halted? Wouldn't that make everything clear cut?
Originally posted by: Tizyler
Originally posted by: tenshodo13
Err I don't think this kind of definition is anything new. I can see where they are coming from, but still. However, I don't care, I haven't bought a CD in Years.
I thought that everyone shared the outlook at as long as you owned something (be it a movie or music), then you could download it legally.
If copying = stealing, why haven't ALL P2P downloading mediums been halted? Wouldn't that make everything clear cut?
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
http://arstechnica.com/news.ar...u-own-is-stealing.html
that company is scum.
"Pariser has a very broad definition of "stealing." When questioned by Richard Gabriel, lead counsel for the record labels, Pariser suggested that what millions of music fans do is actually theft. The dirty deed? Ripping your own CDs or downloading songs you already own.
Gabriel asked if it was wrong for consumers to make copies of music which they have purchased, even just one copy. Pariser replied, "When an individual makes a copy of a song for himself, I suppose we can say he stole a song." Making "a copy" of a purchased song is just "a nice way of saying 'steals just one copy'," she said. "
we are all criminals by sonys standards!!:|
Originally posted by: ultimatebob
If Sony thinks that copying CD's is sooo bad, why do they produce and sell both the media and burners do to it?
Amazing... This would be like the CEO of Penthouse or Hustler saying that masturbation is evil![]()
Originally posted by: Squisher
Am I allowed to sing a song in the shower without paying royalties?
We're "stealing" because the companies would like us to buy a copy for at home, for at work, for at the computer, for in the car, and for taking a jog. And maybe a limit as to how many times you can listen, so that you'll have to pay for it again and again.Originally posted by: ShadowOfMyself
The word Stealing is so misused nowadays its not even funny.. Everyone seems to have forgotten the real meaning behind it
For you to steal something, you have to TAKE AWAY SOMETHING FROM SOMEONE, however since digitally there is an infinite number of copies lying around, no matter how many times I download an album, I will never hurt the band or label, because I am not taking away from them at all! At the most, they get 0$ profit from me, which would happen either I downloaded or not
Also note that no one goes around downloading and saying its their own music, and that would be stealing as well (not physical but property nonetheless), but no one does it, so what are they stealing again? If I had my own band and released an album, I would be glad it spread all over the internet as fast as possible, for it would gather alot of potential buyers that wouldnt have known the band in the first place, and thus get me alot more profit than I could ever hope for through traditional methods... And this is why that is all bullshit, and you dont hear about bands quitting for lack of money, even the underground ones, because as much as they complain, its the very pirates that are said to "steal" from them that make it possible for them to be where they are, and if you think otherwise, think again
Maybe that's when it began, when they got a taste of the revenue streams generated when people bought another copy of what they already owned.Originally posted by: SludgeFactory
If the labels wanted complete control over their media and distribution, they should have stayed analog. Ripping vinyl and cassette is a PITA
But then they would have missed out on that massive CD windfall, getting people to buy the same albums a 2nd or 3rd time and covering up a lot of serious problems in their industry. Internet distribution could have been the same thing, but they completely missed the boat. You'd think it's 1997 by the way they're still trying to stomp out the ants one by one.
Only if you don't have an audience.Originally posted by: Squisher
Am I allowed to sing a song in the shower without paying royalties?
Too bad for them that they can't roll back to the mid 90's and resell the public a bunch of Eagles and Zeppelin CD's another time. The ironic thing is that before CD's got big, they didn't really know that the back catalog could be so lucrative. But I wonder how many times you can repackage "Back in Black" or license "Born to Be Wild" for the trailer of the latest lame-o Disney movie before the public just says enough.Originally posted by: Jeff7
We're "stealing" because the companies would like us to buy a copy for at home, for at work, for at the computer, for in the car, and for taking a jog. And maybe a limit as to how many times you can listen, so that you'll have to pay for it again and again.
More money still isn't enough.
No doubt they want it to continue. I've read a few articles lately that have hit on this point, that they thrived on total control and scarcity, but we're in an era of media abundance now.Maybe that's when it began, when they got a taste of the revenue streams generated when people bought another copy of what they already owned.
....and they're coming to realize their own obsolescence. As a result, they're throwing a legal temper tantrum.Originally posted by: SludgeFactory
No doubt they want it to continue. I've read a few articles lately that have hit on this point, that they thrived on total control and scarcity, but we're in an era of media abundance now.
There's definitely a ton of money to be made. It's just going to take some creative ideas to come up with the killer apps, and if (when) they come from outside the industry, some luck not to get sued out of existence first.Originally posted by: Jeff7
Change hurts initially, but ultimately, those who adapt can profit.
