If I had to guess I'd say I spend about £5 on music per month. And I'd say I spend about £20 a month buying tickets to see bands.
On average.
On average.
He was doing an impression of Parker and his hypocrisyZimmer wrote:
Probably.Vilham wrote:
You totally missed that one didn't you...Zimmer wrote:
stuff
So, does that make them invalid?mikkel wrote:
I've heard all of the justifications before.Lai wrote:
I download, then when I really like it, the quality or "unsolidness" will start to bother me and I buy the CD. No download = no real like = no buy CD.mikkel wrote:
While it's apparent to everyone that the record industry has been lying, cheating and stealing grossly and repeatedly, and in the most disgusting manner in this back-and-forth between them and copyright violators, I still wish people would cease to argue that violating copyright is an acceptable thing to do, and simply start voting with their wallets and their words. A bitterly spent dollar is just as good as any other dollar to this repulsive industry.
Not sure that any justification of illegal activity is valid except in extremis circumstances...which music certainly is not.Lai wrote:
So, does that make them invalid?mikkel wrote:
I've heard all of the justifications before.Lai wrote:
I download, then when I really like it, the quality or "unsolidness" will start to bother me and I buy the CD. No download = no real like = no buy CD.
No, I spoke out against it for absolutely no reason.Lai wrote:
So, does that make them invalid?mikkel wrote:
I've heard all of the justifications before.Lai wrote:
I download, then when I really like it, the quality or "unsolidness" will start to bother me and I buy the CD. No download = no real like = no buy CD.
yes.Lai wrote:
So, does that make them invalid?mikkel wrote:
I've heard all of the justifications before.Lai wrote:
I download, then when I really like it, the quality or "unsolidness" will start to bother me and I buy the CD. No download = no real like = no buy CD.
This has as much bearing on the legality of pirating music as a headline reading "Murderers Give Most to Charities Benefitting Dying Patients" has on the legality of killing people. In other words, it's wholly irrelevant.Wreckognize wrote:
Not to mention the massive amount of money illegal downloaders spend on concert tickets.
They've already made deals with iTunes, Audiogalaxy, Napster, and any number of other digital delivery services so people don't have to buy whole CD's for one or two songs. If that isn't enough to satisfy music fans and keep the recording industry from dying out, then apparently music fans don't care enough about music to keep the product coming.No matter how much the music industry tries to deny it, the business model of CD sales is dead, and no amount of litigation can bring it back. The music industry can either find a new way to make money off music or die off like any other company who fails to adapt to a changing market.
I agree with this, but I don't think the study was even beginning to claim that piracy is in any way legitimate - merely that the music industry is going about the completely wrong method of tackling it. All stick and no carrot, and it's not a very well-directed stick.HollisHurlbut wrote:
This has as much bearing on the legality of pirating music as a headline reading "Murderers Give Most to Charities Benefitting Dying Patients" has on the legality of killing people. In other words, it's wholly irrelevant.Wreckognize wrote:
Not to mention the massive amount of money illegal downloaders spend on concert tickets.
Again - this is not about "music fans don't care" (please read that statement again, because it sounds pretty misguided to me), it's about the fact that A. the business model provided by the industry is flawed (and the whole iTunes, Napster thing - it's the same model just on a slightly more detailed scale). There are alternative business models available, like Qtrax and other similar things (I don't think Qtrax is the most successful but it's the only one whose name I can remember) which do provide a model that will probably be much more suitable. And B. It shows that the stated aim of the music industry's current anti-piracy strategy i.e. to increase sales by forcing people to buy music legitimately, will most likely have the most opposite effect. Again... not a very well-directed stick.They've already made deals with iTunes, Audiogalaxy, Napster, and any number of other digital delivery services so people don't have to buy whole CD's for one or two songs. If that isn't enough to satisfy music fans and keep the recording industry from dying out, then apparently music fans don't care enough about music to keep the product coming.No matter how much the music industry tries to deny it, the business model of CD sales is dead, and no amount of litigation can bring it back. The music industry can either find a new way to make money off music or die off like any other company who fails to adapt to a changing market.
You don't seem to get it, do you?HollisHurlbut wrote:
This has as much bearing on the legality of pirating music as a headline reading "Murderers Give Most to Charities Benefitting Dying Patients" has on the legality of killing people. In other words, it's wholly irrelevant.Wreckognize wrote:
Not to mention the massive amount of money illegal downloaders spend on concert tickets.They've already made deals with iTunes, Audiogalaxy, Napster, and any number of other digital delivery services so people don't have to buy whole CD's for one or two songs. If that isn't enough to satisfy music fans and keep the recording industry from dying out, then apparently music fans don't care enough about music to keep the product coming.No matter how much the music industry tries to deny it, the business model of CD sales is dead, and no amount of litigation can bring it back. The music industry can either find a new way to make money off music or die off like any other company who fails to adapt to a changing market.
How much do you spend on music each month?HollisHurlbut wrote:
This has as much bearing on the legality of pirating music as a headline reading "Murderers Give Most to Charities Benefitting Dying Patients" has on the legality of killing people. In other words, it's wholly irrelevant.Wreckognize wrote:
Not to mention the massive amount of money illegal downloaders spend on concert tickets.They've already made deals with iTunes, Audiogalaxy, Napster, and any number of other digital delivery services so people don't have to buy whole CD's for one or two songs. If that isn't enough to satisfy music fans and keep the recording industry from dying out, then apparently music fans don't care enough about music to keep the product coming.No matter how much the music industry tries to deny it, the business model of CD sales is dead, and no amount of litigation can bring it back. The music industry can either find a new way to make money off music or die off like any other company who fails to adapt to a changing market.
Nah, you'd be surprised at how much worse the smaller ones are because they can abuse their artists more (the smaller the record label, usually the smaller the artist, therefore the smaller the holding power the artist has on the record label).aimless wrote:
Not all record labels are evil. The major labels (Universal, Sony, Warner, EMI) are but there are plenty of smaller labels who are still in it for the music.
Except for the fact that a lot of the smaller ones are run by the artists themselves....Zimmer wrote:
Nah, you'd be surprised at how much worse the smaller ones are because they can abuse their artists more (the smaller the record label, usually the smaller the artist, therefore the smaller the holding power the artist has on the record label).aimless wrote:
Not all record labels are evil. The major labels (Universal, Sony, Warner, EMI) are but there are plenty of smaller labels who are still in it for the music.
No. That's untrue. There are smaller record labels, I know of quite a few. Friend works in one of them.Bertster7 wrote:
Except for the fact that a lot of the smaller ones are run by the artists themselves....Zimmer wrote:
Nah, you'd be surprised at how much worse the smaller ones are because they can abuse their artists more (the smaller the record label, usually the smaller the artist, therefore the smaller the holding power the artist has on the record label).aimless wrote:
Not all record labels are evil. The major labels (Universal, Sony, Warner, EMI) are but there are plenty of smaller labels who are still in it for the music.
You may not karma the same person in a 24 hour period.Red Forman wrote:
i like watching people justify stealing
Red Forman wrote:
i like watching people justify stealing
It's stealing a potential profit. If the record labels had their way, I would have had to pay for every song I have on my computer (and in fact I have for a good portion). This lets me receive something for nothing.Winston_Churchill wrote:
http://i109.photobucket.com/albums/n48/ … cylulz.pngRed Forman wrote:
i like watching people justify stealing
I honestly would never buy a CD and never have. Theyre not losing any money from me and not gaining any either. A different system is needed, concerts I will do once I live in a bigger city and, as Zimmer said, thats where artists make their moneyHurricane2k9 wrote:
It's stealing a potential profit. If the record labels had their way, I would have had to pay for every song I have on my computer (and in fact I have for a good portion). This lets me receive something for nothing.Winston_Churchill wrote:
http://i109.photobucket.com/albums/n48/ … cylulz.pngRed Forman wrote:
i like watching people justify stealing
When you think about it a CD is just a physical copy. The only original is the master recording tapes.
And yes, I pirate music. I don't try to paint it as anything different though.
I don't think anyone in this thread has said "It is ok to steal[pirate] because..." or anything along the lines of that.FEOS wrote:
You may not karma the same person in a 24 hour period.Red Forman wrote:
i like watching people justify stealing
Last edited by 13/f/taiwan (2009-11-02 20:15:07)
There are several who have done exactly that.13/f/taiwan wrote:
I don't think anyone in this thread has said "It is ok to steal[pirate] because..." or anything along the lines of that.FEOS wrote:
You may not karma the same person in a 24 hour period.Red Forman wrote:
i like watching people justify stealing
Yeah probably. I should read more, lol.FEOS wrote:
There are several who have done exactly that.13/f/taiwan wrote:
I don't think anyone in this thread has said "It is ok to steal[pirate] because..." or anything along the lines of that.FEOS wrote:
You may not karma the same person in a 24 hour period.
Last edited by 13/f/taiwan (2009-11-02 20:21:44)
You're saying it's untrue that there are a lot of small record labels run by artists.Zimmer wrote:
No. That's untrue. There are smaller record labels, I know of quite a few. Friend works in one of them.Bertster7 wrote:
Except for the fact that a lot of the smaller ones are run by the artists themselves....Zimmer wrote:
Nah, you'd be surprised at how much worse the smaller ones are because they can abuse their artists more (the smaller the record label, usually the smaller the artist, therefore the smaller the holding power the artist has on the record label).
I'm not talking about indie labels.
It's okay to pirate because if you like a band or artist you end up watching them in concert and supporting them that way...FEOS wrote:
There are several who have done exactly that.13/f/taiwan wrote:
I don't think anyone in this thread has said "It is ok to steal[pirate] because..." or anything along the lines of that.FEOS wrote:
You may not karma the same person in a 24 hour period.