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Music Media

The MP3 Troubles Continue 293

We've been choking on submissions about Napster and MP3 so here's a selection of them: Alexander Burke shared this ZDNet Article about how TVT Records (the fine folks who bring you Snoop Dogg) is getting into the let's-sue-Napster game. Borodir wrote in about how Suzanne Vega influenced the mp3 compression format, and Slashdot reader Napster Online told us about the Salon interview with Napster iCEO Hank Barry. Here's an editorial by John Perry Barlow about the whole Napster mess and a finally a ZD UK story about MP3 pirates going to jail in the future.
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MP3 Insanity

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  • Actually, I say it deserves +1 insightful.

    Excellent points.
  • The fact that it's TVT says alot. This is a record company that "gets it". I've been able to download 60 day time-limited tracks from all the artists on their roster off their site for quite a while now, which is why I'm now into Sevendust. I think TVT has got quite the handle on how the internet can be used to distribute music as a promotional vehicle. With that in mind, I find it an eye-opener that TVT is going after MP3.com. I would give TVT's reasons more weight, considering what they are already doing in their business model.
  • My name is Napster
    I live on the second floor
    I live upstairs from you
    Yes I think you've seen me before

    If you hear something late at night
    Some kind of trouble, about copyrights
    Just don't ask me what it was
    Just don't ask me what it was
    Just don't ask me what it was

    I think it's 'cause I bandwidth hog
    I try not to play MP3s too loud
    Maybe it's 'cause I'm new technology
    I try not to act too proud

    Lars only hits until you cry
    And after that you don't ask why
    You just don't argue anymore
    You just don't argue anymore
    You just don't argue anymore

    Yes I think I'm okay
    I got slashdotted again
    Well, if you ask that's what I'll say
    And it's not your business anyway

    I guess I'd like to be alone
    With my venture cap, no law books thrown
    Just don't ask about my IPO
    Just don't ask about my IPO
    Just don't ask about my IPO
  • Does anyone know much about [MP4]? How is it "more secure"? Does that mean that it will be encrypted

    Everything I know about MP4s I learned through Google [google.com]. Try M.I.T. [mit.edu] for the standard document.

    I love search engines...

  • In the United States, most people under age 16 can't work. I didn't start my CD collection until I was into college and got a job, and my parents didn't particularly want me working while I was in high school. That doesn't excuse theft, but it does excuse your outdated "work ethic".

    The Good Reverend
  • What will he do when the hard drive crashes or his sound stops working? What about his car? The portable mp3 players I have seen are way more expensive than a cd player. That's why MP3 CAN NEVER KILL CD'S.
  • Then let's take the people who copied that one book that so many people find important, what was it called? The Bible. I don't find it a book I am interested in but a lot of people do. Let's say you couldn't freely copy it right. One person controlled it. You know how many people would be deprived of something they hold very important to their lives? Well see this is where mp3s come in. A lot of people find religion important to them, I don't. But I do hold music very dear to my heart. I mean if I go to jail for wanting to listen to mp3s, can I at least take my Rio?
  • "While so far only Metallica and Dr. Dre have taken the step of moving against their fans, their lawyer Howard King says that at least five other artists have contacted him. Meanwhile, Ron Stone, manager of artists like Tracy Chapman and Bonnie Raitt, insists that the entire Napster movement is little better than thuggery. "Basically they're saying our art is worthless, it's free for the taking," he says. "Music used to be a collectible, now it's a disposable." With a few other artists and managers, he's starting an ad-hoc committee called Artists Against Piracy. Somehow it doesn't have the ring of Save the Rain Forest."
    -Newsweek (C)

    Um... I like the "disposable" bit. Welcome, Sir Dumbass, to the disposable culture you and the rest of the corporate entities created. Ever notice how you can't buy stuff that doesn't break after a year or so of use? And you can't fix it, so you have to trash it and buy a new one? And suddenly you're all pissy and moaning when other forms of "property" are seen in the same light by those who have been trained from birth to use it and throw it away by society.

    If you couldn't tell, I agree a lot with Sig11's post above on the subject. I think he hit the nail on the head.

    "Worthless" is another good word... Fits right in with the likes of Brittany Spears and N'Sync...


    --Fesh

  • Hahaha....that's the funny thing. Album sales haven't been hurt at all. Infact in the last couple weeks there have been multiple records broken for CD sale volume. This week Eminem sold 1.8 million CDs, that's the 2nd highest CD sales in one week. A couple of weeks ago everybody's favorite band N'Sync sold some ungodly number of CDs making thier newest CD the best selling in one week EVER! And last week Britney Spears newest album sold the most for a female artist in one week. Yea, napster's really killing the music industry. Boo-hoo. Taylor
  • The way our constitution is written in the US, you have every right not specified in law. The original writers of the constitution had some debate about whether to include the bill of rights, because by doing so, it implied you only had the rights specified, and anything else was iffy, but in actuality, the intention is that anything not specified, you have an implied right to. It appears they may have made a mistake by including the bill of rights.

    Anyway, just thought I'd point that out. Not sure if it has anything to do with the argument you two were having (sorry, I couldn't make much sense of either of your posts).
  • Last time I checked, Snopp Dogg was on No Limit records.....
  • Here is my understanding. Tee Vee Toons (TVT)used to put out records of TV show themes (actually they still do). TVT took a chance on Nine Inch Nails which paid off famously. Trent Reznor and TVT had a falling out after "Pretty Hate Machine" resulting in Reznor's refusal to work with with the label any further. Since NIN was still under contract to TVT this meant that the band refused to work on a follow up album and instead remained on the road. At this point Interscope stepped in and purchased TVT with the specific purpose of acquiring Nine Inch Nails. At least that was my understanding at the time. Now they claim to be an independant company, so I don't know if that is true. I do know that they merged with Wax Trax!, one of the greatest labels ever, and made it suck.
  • Eh, what? What I actually was saying (since you missed where I said that I didn't think that applied here) is that there are circumstances where it can be considered "right" (in the moral sense of the word) to break the law.

    No I got that.

    Natural Law (from encyclopedia.com) theory that some laws are fundamental to human nature.

    The right to listen to a song I create is in NO WAY a fundamental to human nature. All rights are societal constructs created over years of "civilization". There is nothing fundamental about it.

    I think you missed my point, what I was trying to say was that we have no inherent rights to any of these things. We only have the rights provided to us by Government (explicitly and implicitly:in the U.S. I mean). There is no law that says you have a "right" to the internet/tv/nicer car then the one I have etc..

    If this seems confusing it's because I'm tired and am not thinking completely clearly. Sorry.

    Marcus

    Flame all you want, I'll post more.

  • Once the necessity has been removed, it's no longer wise to make it a virtue.

    It's no longer necessary to work? Amazing.

    Times are a-changin', old fella. Go back to work and get over it.

    I am 24 I hope I'm not an "old fella" yet. :-)

    You have missed the point. A person who can afford to be on the net should be able to afford to buy a CD. End of story.

    Marcus

  • Napster only affects the distribution part of IP law. So, if you feel people should be able to distribute as they see fit, then what leg does the GPL have to stand on? There are arguments from some that don't think the GPL is just (that Quake thing a few months back comes to mind). If you want the GPL to mean more than the feces my dog manufactures, you must recognize that an author has the right to decide how his material is distributed.

    If you want to bitch about the RIAA complaining when people make MP3s of CDs they own, that's one thing. But just claiming "IP law is bogus" really denegrates what all this free software stuff is about as well. If you give can give me an MP3 of any song, then I can give folks copies of the Linux kernel (gcc, emacs, whatever) without any licensing, effectively making it too then public domain. Then anyone can create a nice operating system without these cumbersome restrictions.
  • Ooh. And I forgot... "our art"??? WTF? He's saying that he's just as responsible for the creative process of songwriting and performing as the artists he represents? "In my country, thees ees what we call BOOLSHEET!" Responsible for managing their finances, but in no way able to take any credit for creative matters such as art, in my opinion.


    --Fesh

  • Maybe you should have made the IAAL(I am a lawyer) disclaimer, so everyone could see why you'd say such a dumb thing.
  • Copyright law gives the holder the right to prevent others from distributing their work (with the exceptions of fair use). It does NOT give them a right to restrict the usage. The only reason licensing agreements work is that you are agreeing to the rules, NOT by copyright law, they stem from contract law. Now, under fair use, I can ALWAYS make 1 copy for my own personal use. This does not violate copyright law. This creates some bizarre situations because the means of production are now commonplace. For example, I borrow a friend's CD. This is perfectly legal. I make a copy of the CD for my personal use. Also legal. I return the CD to my friend, perfectly legal. At no point has anyone involved broken the copyright restriction on distribution. However, say I tell my friend I like a CD of his. He makes me a copy. He gives me the copy. I have NOT broken the law, but he has. Why? There is NOTHING illegal in possessing copyrighted material, only in the distribution of it. As a result, the people downloading the music have broken no laws. Whether I have the CD or not, I may legally make a copy for personal use. User X makes a MP3 rip of a song. User X has created a derived work of the song, so copyright remains with the owner. I may then make my personal copy of this song. However, if I share it back out, then I am distributing copyrighted material, that is illegal. Copyright was designed to allow authors to profit off their books instead of allowing the owners of the press to take all the profits. This gave authors an incentive to write. It was NEVER meant to control the masses. However, with digital medium, the power to copy is with the masses, so what do we do? Alex
  • Who are the criminals here in the MP3 debate? Is it the people downloading? the lawmakers who passed silly IP laws like this? the courts for upholding such laws against public opinion and the constitution? The RIAA for engaging in unethical and monopolistic business practices

    Um, it would be the people downloading pirated songs.

    Or was this a rhetorical question?
  • No, it's not the people downloading, it's the people posting who are breaking current US laws.
  • How much of this do you guys think is driven by the artists, and how much by the companies *behind* the artists?

    I'm not standing up for Metallica or Dr. Dre, but I'm saying that they almost certainly had various suits whispering in their ears, "You know, those bad internet people are stealing your stuff!" It's the companies that are terrified, and it's the companies that are driving this whole thing.

    It doesn't matter that much anyway. With Gnutella et al., they won't have anyone to sue because there's no centralized "enemy" for them to attach.

    Quick! Spread out!

  • It goes like this. Metallica's lawyers sit at home on their asses watching CNN. CNN does a story about Napster or Gnutella or something. Metallica's lawyers think "hrm... Metallica music free, Metallica lose money. Metallica lose money, me no get pay, me no have cigar, me no have 400 servants. hrrrm..." and then the private firm is hired to look into it, and the rest is history. That's how it'd HAVE TO go IMHO. Through all this I respect ARTISTS like Ani DiFranco who understand their music is art and art is about freedom and free people should have open access to art. This CD may be copied freely. Things like that I like to see. You _know_ the lawyers are behind it and that the bands just don't care about their fans.
  • by Mr. Slippery ( 47854 ) <tms&infamous,net> on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @11:43AM (#1035494) Homepage
    There also won't be any reason to continue creating.
    I'm extremely tired of this argument, because it's not just wrong, it's doubly wrong.

    First, there are other ways than pay-per-copy for people to get paid for making art, music, literature, and software.

    Second, people can, will, and do create stuff without getting paid for it. I've spent hundreds of hours making poetry and music, resulting a total material compensation of one free meal at the sadly defunt Planet X coffehouse (for an Italian sonnet contest I won), a few free beers at the bar where I often play at the open mic, and a grand total of maybe $50 in cash.

  • Why should anyone have to prove to you that Napster == lost sales? It's illegal and it's theft.

    But... since you want hard proof. I um... know a guy who downloaded music off of Napster, and sold it to someone who would have definately bought the album in stores anyway, they even told him so
    ("Thanks. You just saved me $10). 1 case. Hard proof. Anything else you need?
  • Says who that CDs are being price fixed?

    The United States Department of Justice. That's who.

  • by helstar ( 172465 )
    the media and record companies will forget about mp3's within a few months, either that or they will find a way to distribute them on their own. the media is just bored because there are no good wars to report about for now.
  • Yup! Damn straight, that's all slashdot it. An underground communist revolution. ;-) Every 30 seconds a script written by the inner party Hemos, Taco flashes a picture of a penguin where the slashdot logo is that says "Big penguin is watching you under it." Infact Microsoft, Redhat, and Apple don't even really exist. They're all one entity that pretends to be at war to keep people loyal and under their control. By the way, This message never exsisted.

  • What about the portion of the population that already have natural (grey matter only) photographic memories?

    Are they commiting copyright violation every time they read a book?

    Remember the end of the british film adaption of Farenheight 451? All the guys memorising and repeating the texts of banned and burned books?

    I sure hope none of those books were copyrighted in the US. Forget the British laws requiring books to be burned. Those American copyright lawyers will pursue you to the ends of the Earth (well, to Norway at least), if they even THINK that you MIGHT be violating any copyright.

    john
  • I hold copyrights. Yes, registered in multiple countries, even.

    And I think that MP3 is cool and the enforcers of copyrights are usually corporate pirates, with little of the gains going to the producers.

    But I'm also sure that, since there are lawyers involved, noone will win.

  • by geekflavor ( 194602 ) on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @10:32AM (#1035501) Homepage
    As far as the article about going to jail for downloading MP3s, how can this be shown to be illegal without a search of the downloader's home to prove that they didn't have the CD from which the song came?

    On the other hand, this may become the newest excuse to break into people's homes. They got Al Capone with taxes, maybe they'll get people in the future for downloading Mp3s.

  • I listen to Metallica. I listen to Dr. Dre. I've been using napster since it was in early 1.0 versions. Thx info?
  • You've got to admit, Napster was looking for trouble when it started up. I mean, do you really think they'd expect the users to trade public-domain MP3s?
  • You should also notice the guitar in his hands, the stupid position he's in, and the headphones.

    Gee, could that guitar be connected to some sort of computer, which is capable of recording the notes he's playing? And gee, could he be setting up a program to record such sounds?

    SUE HIM!

    He may try playing Stairway to Heaven! Can't have that!

    Bleh. Gotta love journalism.
  • by Crazy Man on Fire ( 153457 ) on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @10:33AM (#1035505) Homepage
    <flamebait>
    i really like things that are free. it would be really nice if more things were free. i would like to get my music for free. however, i would also like to get my car for free. there are simply some things that are/never-will-be free. it is unfortunate, but deal with it! napster is great, but pirating songs is not great. we get upset when people violate the gpl, isn't it understandable that other folks would get upset when people violate their licenses? sure, cd's shouldn't cost as much as they do. stealing cd's is a sure-fire way not to get the price of music to go down! just because we don't like the law doesn't give us license to break it (especially when we depend on it ourselvs (gpl))...
    </flamebait>
  • ... I will.

    Dig this article [internetwk.com] about some other rockers (albeit some sucky rockers) who are doing pretty much the same thing.

    The Divine Creatrix in a Mortal Shell that stays Crunchy in Milk
  • Who are the criminals here in the MP3 debate? Is it the people downloading? the lawmakers who passed silly IP laws like this? the courts for upholding such laws against public opinion and the constitution? The RIAA for engaging in unethical and monopolistic business practices?

    To the industry - you brought this on yourself. You trained people too well to mindlessly consume, and now they do so without conscience. As you have so eloquently shown the general public, the only moral in this country left is the Dollar, and people have learned that lesson all too well - they now freely trade MP3s without any guilt. And I must ask, is it wrong? Motley Crue and Offspring are just a few of the many bands speaking out against you. Bands like Metallica and Dr. Dre who have sided with you and the pro-IP fight have met with icy criticism and a mass exodus of their fans.

    Your grip on music in this country will be broken. We will download and trade, eat away at your margins, lay waste to your corporate image and take pleasure in doing so. We have no remorse. Afterall, we're consumers.. just like you taught us to be.

  • I believe Tori Amos released the first single of the album "To Venus and Back" digitally before the acutal single was released on CD.

    This is actually one of the BIG problems the record industry has with Napster. The full contents of new works are on Napster *before* they make it to the stores. They claim this hurts the *pop* of the album and all the free advertising that comes with early sales numbers and genre ranking.

    They don't mention the free advertising that Napster does, but that side is debatable. Anyone want to?


    --
  • Um, no, you're the idiot. Gnutella doesnt ask for a credit card number. Stop trying to scare people, troll.
  • If you give can give me an MP3 of any song, then I can give folks copies of the Linux kernel (gcc, emacs, whatever) without any licensing, effectively making it too then public domain
    Ok, sounds good.

    Then anyone can create a nice operating system without these cumbersome restrictions
    Ok, sounds good too!

    You make some excellent points!
  • Good point. What I meant by work ethic is the desire to work to get things at all. The reasoning presented was that unfortunate net users can't afford CD's. This was used as a justification for mp3 downloading. I say you should work for what you get. If that means getting 150$ an hour and working ten hours a week so be it, more power to you. But you must try in the first place. If I ahve to work 60 hours a week, well that's my lot in life, but that doesn't justify theft. many people on the net (Dare I say..Netizens `;^) seem to think that the advent of the internet is the advent of getting everything in the world for nothing. Sorry but I disagree.

    Marcus

  • It's bad enough that our jails are so full of consenual criminal [mcwilliams.com] that rapists, murders, and other deviants get to go free in less than four years. Now we're going to add to the overcrowding!?!?! Intellectual property [ram.org] is going to lead to very oppressive laws if it is not stopped!

    --
    J Perry Fecteau, 5-time Mr. Internet
    Ejercisio Perfecto [nai.net]: from Geek to GOD in WEEKS!
  • I agree with you wrt to the fact that this digital medium is indeed an infinite product. Combine an infinte supply with a zero dollar price tag, and you've got an infinite demand in old school economics. The problem is not with the product, but the economy that supports these products. Who the hell is going to want to pay money for something they can get for free? It's not a supply and demand LAW for no apparent reason. This is something we'll be seeing more and more of...not only in music, but video, and all other digital medium that graces our presence in the near future. Perhaps the only solution is to tax the bandwith and distribute these bandwith taxes to artists and producers of these products. Anyone got a better idea?
  • I'll be happy to see you in jail

    Why, has it been lonely for you in jail since your last lover was released?

  • It seems to me that many downloads and swaps of MP3s are "fair use". Can I give a CD to a friend or relative? Donate it to a public library? Why not an MP3 file?

    The notion that sharing content in this way is illegal seems to have been created by the content industry, who would like to see content licensed preferably to individuals and maybe even on a pay-per-view basis.

    Maybe what sites like Napster should do is to create a simple "license manager" scheme that ensures that multiple individuals don't listen to the same recording at the same time. It seems to me that the intent of traditional copyright law would be satisfied that way and the music industry wouldn't have a leg to stand on. Of course, if that catches on widely, their sales would still plummet precipitously, because nationwide people would only listen to a small number of copies of most recordings simultaneously.

  • If the record companies actually succeeded in
    making it so that you had to either buy the media
    or have no way of listening to it, I think the
    impact would be felt on the popularity of certain genres of music. Ever since the days of open reel
    tape, music sharing has been a vehicle by which artists' popularity has grown, particularly those
    artists whose works are not played on the radio.
    There may be diminishing returns on the total strangulation of the trading community.
  • That is Dial-A-Song, and it still exists.

    The phone # is 718 387-6962

    It even has an (annoying flash) website at www.dialasong.com [dialasong.com].

    Copy:

    dialasong.com has bee updated and joined the on-line world. With the hip new flash streaming software, everyone is just a quick and easy click away from grooving to the new tracks from TMBG available at dialasong.com. Besides that, dial a song is also back on at 718 387-6962. After months of pure frustration with our computer based system, John and John have returned to the analog scene of the phone machine, and although the songs don't change as frequently, they are fresh fresh fresh and now we have a two song policy so you get more songs with every call.

  • As far as I can tell, you've kinda got it backwards. You're correct to say that "rights" are societal constructs. However:

    You have no intrinsic right to STOP people copying your work ad infinitum. (except by what means you have within yourself e.g. killing them.) Just as an artificially constructed law against killing people means that members of our society have a "right" to life, a law was invented that gives the creators of a work control over what other members of our society do with the work - the creators are granted an artificially constructed right, "copyright".

    For example, the copyright holder of software under the GPL grants any member of the public permission to copy and modify the source code, provided said member of the public releases all modifications under the same restriction if he distrubtes them - thus, the GPL uses copyright law to guarantee source code availability.

    The first copyright law I've ever heard of:


    The Cathach, or the "Battle Book" is the oldest surviving Irish manuscript psalter. Dating from the middle of the sixth century, only fifty-eight leaves survive.

    A copy of this psalter, known as the Battle Book of the Clan O'Donnell- kinsmen of Saint Colmcille (or Saint Columba)- was carried into battle to help its owners to victory.

    Saint Colmcille was accused of secretly copying The Cathach, the property of his master, Saint Finnian. The celebrated case of the dispute of copyright (possibly the first dispute of copyright) led to High King Dermott's historic judgement, "to every cow its calf; to every book its copy". The O'Donnell's were ordered to return their copy.

    Colmcille's disagreement with the verdict resulted in the battle of Culdreimhe, County Sligo, after which Colmcille, in repentance at the bloodshed, exiled himself from his beloved monastery at Derry Colmcille, and sailed to Iona in Scotland from where he lit the fire of Christianity in Britain.

    Thus, copyright is an articial right, introduced by a society, that must enforced by some power withiun that society, in this case the High King Dermott and his forces. What has changed is that now, by international treaty, copyright law applies to most of the globe. There is no reason why this could not change in future, in the face of the drastic social restructuring due to the Internet.
  • Apparently net access is practically free, and downloading MP3's is free, so.... I'll let you judge whether working is necessary for these things.

    The point is that spending $16 for a CD should not be considered a virtue. It ought to be considered really, really dumb, and it should make you feel like an idiot. You play into the hands of some very rich, arrogant, power-hungry people.

    What you are suggesting is that good capitalists should work and spend there hard-earned money on expensive CD's, just because it's the "right" thing to do. You may call it theft to do otherwise, but some people just call it downloading. Some people want to change your definitions of things, and possibly make the world a better place. The information age is about making things so cheap as to be practicaly free - and that is a serious threat to capitalism. So, our government is being asked to legislate profits for the "owners of ideas and knowledge", for the purpose of perpetuating capitalism. Those of us on the other side of the fence want to start the process of ending capitalism in order to build something new and better, now that it's slowly becoming possible (because of technology). Most don't realize this is what the fighting is about, because most don't want to think it's capitalism vs communism (which it isn't, really, but I'm sure you're thinking that after reading this).

    So, as I said, let's not make a virtue out of a necessity that's no longer a necessity (ie capitalism).
  • I agree with you about not wanting to be a teenager these days.

    In my day(our days, bet you /. folks didn't know you had all these MIDDLEAGED folks in your midst, did ya?), the draconian start of the 'War on Drugs', and specifically the war on marijuana, opened many eyes to the fact that our current government DOESN'T have our best interests at heart. The current war on REAL software innovation, (the lawsuits against Napster and DeCss, the mindless granting of software 'patents') has earned our "bought 'n' paid-for government" (TM pending) the same disdain that an earlier generation heaped upon it after the mindless vilification of the "drug" marijuana.

    Nixon started the war on drugs 28 years ago; the RIAA and the MPAA just declared war this year, seemingly with the backing of our courts.

    Let's hope this new war doesn't drag on quite as long.

    Maybe it's time for another 'tea-party'!!

    It's all about the donations...

    Ask Al Gore. He invented the internet, he ought to be rolling in dough now!!
  • Because.
    The fact that you may own the CD, and hence, have the right to make a copy of that CD does *NOT* imply (though it sounds bizarre) that you have the right to copy it from another source (ie: napster). Also, as the person offering the file for download is doing so illegally, any download you make of it would also be illegal, as you are participating in an illegal transaction.

  • It's true. That train left the station back in 1980 (82?) when the industry decided to go to CD's. The digital format is what makes the music easy to copy limitlessly. The personal computer, the internet, the MP3 format, are all technologies that assist, but really none were necessary once we had CD's. This has been coming for a LONG time. When internet bandwidth gets large enough, people will not trade music MP3's they'll be trading entire CD's in native format.

    Charging 25 cents or 50 cents a song download will prevent piracy, generate the required publicity, and allow a broader range of consumers to legally consume. I don't think it will hurt anyone's bottom line one bit, and I still think there will be a vigorous demand for CDs - audiophile quality recordings with collateral materials:

    My big thing is, there's WAY too much crap out there for me to even keep track of what music I like. I could buy all the CD's of all the bands I like, it would probably run in the thousands of dollars, but logistically, finding most of those CD,'s, figuring out which ones were ones I like and don't like, would be an impossibility. Being able to download MP3 tracks of everything for a few bucks more would make the task much easier for me, and believe me, would not compel me to not purchase a single CD of music I like. All it would do would be to prevent me from buying CD's I don't like. As it stands now, I was ready to go drop a few hundred bucks last month (stock options ROCK) on CDs of bands I liked in the 80's, most of which I have on Vinyl. I sat down and made a list, and couldn't find most of them at the record store. I ended up buying a Kid Rock CD, because I liked that Bawidibaw song. Every other song on that fucking CD was a peice of shit. So I decided not to buy any more CDs for the time being. Buying a $20 peice of shit is keeping me from spending probably hundreds of dollars on filling out the gaps in my music collection with other CDs. I have since amassed a large collection of MP3s, so I can better tell which ones I like.

    RIAA - it is your business model that is screwed up, and in need of adjustment.

    I just remembered this old Metallica song. . .
  • I wish more bands would do things like that. [publish mp3's, fanclub mp3 albums, etc]

    LOTS of bands WISH they could do that, but
    they're totally forbidden to do any such thing
    by their record company contracts.

    As soon as ONE of the big record companies realizes the potential to be had in embracing this technology, that company alone will have the technological advantage over all the others.
    When the first bookstore went online, the rest had
    to go online too...

    When the first record company signs a contract with a band (and I mean A BAND, like, signs the
    next Nirvana or even, tragically enough, the next
    Britney Spears), and the contract states that the
    band *MUST* release in digital format at specified
    intervals, etc., it will be seen as a success story, and everyone else will follow suit, not
    wanting to be left behind.

    The "piracy" thing will be no more relevant after
    that revolution than Radio is today.

    If you had the engineers of the record mixing your
    mp3 from the beginning, you'd have a high quality mix. Bundle it with some graphics that add a marketing angle to it, and you've got something that will distribute itself. There will still be
    a reason to go buy the CD, online, or at the brick&mortar.

  • It sells wonderfully, even if its only a collection of bsides with a few new songs.

    The MP3 Album ("Long Tall Weekend") is some of their best stuff. Every geek should get his hands on it, for the song "Older" alone if nothing else.

    I hear they have a second offering (an "EP" this time) also for sale.

    Plus the dial-a-song, the website (tmbg.com), the fan site (tmbg.org), and the mailing list... As if all that isn't cool enough, they have their own Internet radio station at WiredPlanet.com, which will let you listen to a continuous random selection of TMBG and Mono Puff music. Alas, the streaming client is MICROS~1 only, for now.

  • Hmm. Pretty good explanation. Thanks. :-)


    ---
  • by anonymous cowerd ( 73221 ) on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @01:04PM (#1035581) Homepage

    No they're not. I defy you to show me one statute that says they are. That's pure rubbish.

    Jesus, I am ever glad I'm not a teenager these days, and I sure feel sorry for my kids. We thought we had a police state going in the late 60s and early 70s, but it was nothing compared to the damn universal police state they're running now, and everywhere you look it's just getting worse. It seems like everything is illegal these days - for example, bootlegging a couple of pop songs is now a God damned felony, that is, the same category as armed robbery, rape and murder, in Wisconsin - and if you're under 21 the assumption of all these curfews and searches and pisstests and assorted harassments is that you're guilty until proven innocent. And the police are completely out of control, as the Diallo and Dorismond cases in New York demonstrate. And while there were thugs in police uniforms back then too, at least there was also a principled opposition, whereas these days there's absolutely no one in public life who's willing even to consider reining them back.

    As far as all you jackasses I've read here with your "bootlegging songs means you are a criminal" crap, you're all a bunch of illiterate idiots, and I use the word "idiot" in its original etymological sense. A guy who clubs you over the head, or who robs you at gunpoint, or who breaks into your house and steals all your possesions, or who knocks a woman down and rapes her, now that's a criminal. For you blockheads to make a moral equivalence between real crimes like those and these trivial nitpicky little misdemeanors that these disgusting money-bloated tonedeaf RIAA swine are making such a howling fuss over, that only demonstrates that you suffer from the same complete lack of moral sense and proportion that the RIAA lawyers do. Have a happy police state, fools; I hope and expect that your blindered legalistic idiocy turns on you all someday.

    Sincerely WDK - WKiernan@concentric.net

  • Are TVT and Interscope still together? I hope I don't have to stop listening to my NIN cds. The newer ones are labeled with the Nothing/Interscope labels, but the older ones (broken) have TVT on the back.

  • "The fact that you may own the CD, and hence, have the right to make a copy of that CD does *NOT* imply (though it sounds bizarre) that you have the
    right to copy it from another source (ie: napster). "

    Yes, it does. Can you produce a cite, a ruling
    to the contrary? You are stating something as if it a fact of (US?) law, that simply hasn't been
    decided.
  • I have serious doubts that this will hurt Napster in the long run. Think about it, their name is all over the news, and people who did not know how to get MP3s off the net now have a great way to do it. Any publicity is good publicity. If the central Napster system fails, we could still always go back to IRC/FTP/Hotmail. There is no way to stop mp3 distribution.
  • But you don't have a leg to stand on when you advocate theft of copyrighted material.

    He certainly does have a leg to stand on. The point is, how much of IP law is reasonable. Just because it's the law doesn't make it right. If we continue down the path of ever strengthening IP laws against the tide of digital copying, we will get in trouble. Advocating civil disobedience has a long and honored history for us (in the US and elsewhere), and there are plenty of arguments to support his views.

  • by anonymous cowerd ( 73221 ) on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @01:14PM (#1035605) Homepage

    > When you make as much money as I do ($189K a year)
    > you will start to see that some people frankly do
    > not know what they are talking about.

    Excuse me while I vomit on your shoes. Congratulations, with that one line you achieved the most disgusting post I've read here all year, makes the goatse.cx pic look inoffensive in comparison. "When you make as much money as I do," take your $189K, turn it into one-dollar bills, roll 'em up nice and tight, and stick 'em where the sun don't shine, moneyswine.

    Sincerely WDK - WKiernan@concentric.net

  • Bands like Metallica and Dr. Dre who have sided with you and the pro-IP fight have met with icy criticism and a mass exodus of their fans.

    I seriously doubt that most Metallica/Dr. Dre fans even know what Napster is.

    However, I'm sure you wouldn't have posted without evidence. Please show your figures demonstrating that enough fans of these bands are boycotting to make a significant impact on their bottom lines.
  • by DeRobeHer ( 76234 ) on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @10:42AM (#1035618) Homepage
    After all the mess with Napster, mp3s, et alle, its good to see a band doing the Right Thing with mp3s. They Might Be Giants has a very 'geeky' and loyal fan base, but has trouble with record contracts. So, they get together with emusic.com, and say "We want to put out a mp3 only album". It sells wonderfully, even if its only a collection of bsides with a few new songs. A few months later, they add a mailing list, and people subscribe to get the latest TMBG news and here's the kicker: a FREE mp3 from the band with a short story behind that weeks selection. It may be a song from a live show that was particularly memorable, it may be a new song they're fooling around with, doesn't matter, the fans love it. Just last week, TMBG decided to put their upcoming EP on emusic.com. You pay $7.99, and get to download the 7 or so mp3s, and they then mail you the cd! Wow! Does it get any better? You've got fans that aren't mad at you, you get your music out, you make a couple bucks (probably more than you would if you had to deal with a record company), and people are generally happy! Whats so wrong with that?

    --
    Donald Roeber
  • by acb ( 2797 ) on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @05:44PM (#1035619) Homepage
    I'll probably get moderated down for this, but...

    If the music industry wants to throw the book at someone who makes copyrighted, commercially available recordings available for anonymous download, they have every right. Especially if the artists themselves are sick of having their recordings ripped off on a massive scale.

    There is a difference between lending a CD to a friend and making it available to millions of strangers.

    Sooner or later the RIAA or an artist will subpoena ISP logs, and some l33t mp3 p1mp will end up as Bubba's new bitch. And he'll have nothing to blame but his own stupidity for thinking that his IP address is sufficiently untraceable to commit a crime.
  • I believe Interscope (which launched Snoop Dogg's career, and specialises in sensationalist teen-rebellion music from gangsta rapcore to goth gone bad) was founded by none other than Dr. Dre.
    In any case, it's part of the Universal group, owned by that other recent newsmaker, Seagram.

    Mere coincidence?
  • by Janthkin ( 32289 ) on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @10:43AM (#1035625)
    Popular artists Johann Sebastian Bach, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and Antonio Vivaldi have also filed claims against Napster. Said Mozart: "It is thieves and pirates like these Napster people that drove me to my death, while I was so young. I want my own back!" Bach notes that "(C)lassical music is only dead because people don't buy it. They would, but Napster lets them have it free."
    In a related piece, Russian artist Stravinsky is hoping to use Napster to jump start his popularity in the U.S., which has declined somewhat since the advent of radio.
  • Hmm.. I'm not sure how the Brandenburg article is about "troubles", but anyhow...

    In an age when it is possible to become a multimillionaire on the strength of a half-baked idea, Brandenburg has done the unthinkable: He has failed to reap either wealth or publicity from his role in the creation of a staggeringly successful technology.
    [snip]
    Although the Fraunhofer Institute has received millions of dollars in licensing fees from its patents on the MP3 algorithms, Brandenburg has seen only a tiny portion of the revenues.

    I get the impression that this guy's motivation for innovating was rather unrelated to the promise of a temporary monopoly, thanks to the patent. So what useful purpose did the patent serve in this case?

    ObPlug: Ogg Vorbis [xiph.org]


    ---
  • Correct me if I'm wrong, but virtually all ISPs do log dial-ins. With a subpoena, an IP number and a time it is possible to obtain the details of who was using said number at the time. This has been used to prosecute crackers, and it's only a matter of time before it's used to prosecute music pirates.
  • Amen, brother.

    The most likely outcome is that there will be an out-of-court settlement, giving the RIAA control of mp3.com. Which will help them phase out unprotected MP3s as a format, marginalising it to the fringe, and later allowing them to intimidate player makers into removing MP3 support and ISPs into pulling sites hosting XMMS and LAME (using DeCSS as a precedent). De facto criminalisation of unencrypted music formats will follow, and once it's accepted by the public it will eventually be enshrined in law.
  • Everybody talks about MP3 when they talk about music on the Web. MP3 seems ubiquitous. Well, so does Windows. But as was discussed in earlier articles, MP3 has shaky legal standings as purely an audio format, without going into all this copyright junk. So might I refer you to the Linux / BSD of compressed music? It's called Vorbis [xiph.org], and we discussed it on Slashdot in an earlier article (here [slashdot.org]). I would rant on about how it is better, but I already have. To save you the read unless you want to, I refer you to my earlier comment here [slashdot.org].

    Vorbis Tools 0.5 is about to go out, as soon as my web server will accept my upload! In the mean time, bother me [mailto] if you want tarballs. And of course you do ;)

  • by acb ( 2797 )
    Copying a CD to a tape for your own use is OK (not sure if it's fair use or another doctrine). Making a mix tape is tolerated.

    However, there is a BIG difference between this and making a CD available, at virtually master quality, by strangers anywhere on the Internet. It's a matter of scale.

    The recordings belong to someone, who went to the trouble of creating them. The author of a work has a moral right to decide how it is to be licensed.

    It's like the analogy another poster gave: if you touch someone, you'll probably kill a few of their skin cells. If you kill a few of someone's skin cells, they'll never notice; if you kill a large enough number, you'll injure or kill that person.
    That is analogous to the difference between lending a CD you bought to a friend and putting it online for anyone to grab it.
  • by linuxonceleron ( 87032 ) on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @10:44AM (#1035643) Homepage
    I. Thou shalt have no other MP3 Search Engines before Me

    II. Thou shoult not make unto Napster any incomplete MP3s

    III. Thou shalt not take the name of the lord, Napster, in vain

    IV. Remember to use Napster every day to keep it holy

    V. Honor Napster's Father, IRC, and its Mother, Fraunhoffer

    VI. Thou shalt not /kill a Napster user unless you are Metallica

    VII. Thou shalt not try to pick up horny thirteen year old girls on Napster

    VIII. Thou shalt download MP3s that you do not have the CD of

    IIX. Thau shalt not lie to Metallica just to have your account re-activiated

    IX. Thou shalt not covet thy Neighbors DSL connection

    X. Nor their MP3 Files, or any other 'property' of thiers
  • by BlueBlade ( 123303 ) <`mafortier' `at' `gmail.com'> on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @10:45AM (#1035649)
    Somehow, after all these months of legal fighting over MP3s, I'm getting the feeling that it's already too late to stop the flood. We are seeing more and more lawsuits filed against sites like mp3.com and, at the same time, we are seeing more and more people trading the mp3s over the net. Don't beleive me? Just log on any IRC network and do a channel search on "MP3". Their average user load increases at about 5 a day, and when the channels get too crowded, another one forms.

    My point? Net users (especially young people, who don't have a lot of money to spare) have been accustomed to having free music. Sure, most still pay for cds, etc. Don't we all? I'll be the first to admit that downloading mp3s can lead to buy cds, as it happened to me, and not only once. But the fact is that very few of us are paying for more than 50% of their music.

    Don't hide your hand in the sands there, I know some of you will avoid any kind of piracy, but you just can't fail to see that it's not the case of the majority. I think that artists will simply have to adapt, probably by selling their tunes directly to the customer over the net at a very reasonable price, say, US $50 cents, so that a lot more will be willing to support their favorite groups. It's certainly sad news for the record industry. However, I think they will have to drop cd production to go back to what is their primary goal, after all : publicity for new artists. I'm sure they will be able to find a profit on the net, as everyone will eventually have to. It's the dawn of a new economic model, in which providers of products and services will have a more "direct" access to their customers than they had previously.

    The net will make it easier for everyone with a genial idea to profit from it. Because here it will matter less what you will hear about a product from publicity, but more what you hear your friends saying in chat rooms, forums, etc. It will finally allow customers to decide for themselves what's a good idea and what's not. Innovations, (true ones, not the kind claimed by Microsoft) will come with less resistance and will have a better chance to impose. Truly, a new kind of economics.
  • Quick; someone tell Edgar Bronfman (TVT's ultimate boss)...
  • disclaimer: I am not a lawer.
    I base these statements on material I have "read" and come to think are true.

    That said...

    Distribution of someone else's copy-righted work against their wishes is illegal. What's the difference between distributing an MP3 or MS Office 2000 over the net? Granted a lot more man hours probably went into Office 2000, but it is the artistic and creative talent ( beit good or bad ) of the artists. Though they may be altruistic ( such as free software or demo/free MP3s ), some earn a living off of it and thus can't afford to do so. ( A big record company, for example is probably not going to be able to fund itself solely through advertisements and concerts )

    Additionally, if in our market, if we don't like the price or quality of something, we really should boycott them. The market can work when we're not all materialistic. Prices are enormous because our Demand is excessively high. Hell, I'm sure that they could charge a lot more and even make more money ( e.g. the Demand curve is probably pretty steep ). You can't impose regulations on prices and still be a capitalist nation. ( Salary caps in baseball, for example was a demand-side issue. It was only because of a trust between demanders of baseball ( a virtual monopsony ) that prices were checked )
    I would not advocate illegal activities as a justifiable solution. ( With the exception of illegal laws ). Napster can be used in an illegal fashion, and it is indeed the responsibilty of the user to prevent using it in such an illegal fashion. I can see prosecuting individuals who violate the distribution laws ( even though I personally disagree with the prices of records and the supposed harm that MP3s cause the record industry ).
    Now the real controversy from my point of view are those that download or even make MP3s. If I'm using napster to download an assortment of MP3s. Some are actually legal ( though their quantity and value is questionable ). Since nobody really marks illegal MP3s as such, am I responsible if I download one? Under some circumstances, possetion is 9/10 of the law. If I don't own a metallica CD but I am found to have their entire works in MP3 form, am I in violation? I would believe this to be a violation of personal rights ( but this does impose a strong raise the same sorts of issues as drugs.. If the Demand is exceptional, Supply will find a way, no matter how drastic ).
    The issue of making a personal copy is where I'm specifically concerned. RIO and all those portable MP3 players are a great idea. I can have near-CD quality and convinience in a solid state-form. When used legally, it's of great value and of no harm to anyone. Of course, the legality limits us to a single copy. What does this mean, for example, if my children also get a RIO? Are they allowed to make copies off the same CD, or must I purchase 2 or 3 more CD's just as if we weren't using an MP3 player. Well, personally I find it ludicrous to have to make this purchase, especially since the limiited memory on a RIO requires me to erase it if I want to replace it with another CD. ( side: I don't own a portable MP3 player ). I'm sure the music industry would fight for those few extra dollars if they could, but really that is beyond our control. The 1-CD, 1-backup-copy idea is essential; what happens if I break, lose or wear out the CD, which often happens?
    Next, what happens when joe small company owner has an employee that has a massive array of hard drives ( a hundred Gig or so ) and tries to place his entire CD collection on it for his own personal enjoyment. Well, that's cool; one copy and all. But now what if he wants this same collection at work.. Well, he's willing to shell out the money to expand his workstation. Now he has two copies. Well, it stretches the law, but I would argue that it doesn't violate the spirit of the law..
    Next comes the communal nature of MP3s. If I invite some friends over, we can all listen to a CD. There is no way that the MPAA is going to charge per house-hold listener. Likewise if I make a single MP3 copy from a CD and it plays off a single computer and there's a bunch of friends around I shouldn't be in any violation. But what happens when I allow coworker friends to stream audio off of my shared hard drive? They are not physically making a copy of the MP3 and thus I am not distributing it ( unless some rogue co-worker makes a copy and potentially ignorantly makes it availabe on napster ). The solution to this problem would be a sort of MP3 jukebox client/server software with a potentially encrypted data channel.
    Lastly, and here is the kicker. I'm having a wedding and I'm going to DJ. But I don't have a couple songs that everyone loves. So I pool my resources with several friends.. I'm "borrowing" their music for a time and publicly displaying it. This pushes the law to the limit ( since a commerical establishment can't just play records for its customers ). Is there any difference between that and all of my friends bringing me their CDs and having me encode them int MP3 and store on my publicly sharable hard drive? Each user gets his/her own directory so they are technically making their own MP3 copies and it is achnoledged as theirs; It just happens to be on a network drive. So long as nobody listens to anyone else's directory, there should be no violation of law ( especially if this is the only copy ). But it is obsurd to believe that a shared drive is not going to share its contents. Thus it should be viewed as if all are able to read each others MP3s. This is kind of like the wedding situation where a community can make use of the pooled resources. So long as nobody actually copies the MP3s to their own drive or makes a CD burn of the MP3s there is no literal violation of the law. But essentially we are providing a dynamic juke-box to all employees. The only saving argument is that the bandwidth requirements will not scale very well ( especially on an inexpensive IDE device ). Thus we're not talking about all of IBM providing a juke-box to it's employees. There are of course caveats. Namely that drives are typically tape-backuped, so if the drive were destroyed ( say because a CD was being sold and thus the license is no longer valid, or because the owner of the drive is moving ), the company could simply restore from backup ( or even take the tape home in order to copy to their home machines ).

    Personally I believe that the law should allow this sort of activity, simply because there is a minimal infringement. So long as the copy of the MP3 drive is not distributed, and the owner of the drive can reproduce the individual CDs there is no evident violation. ( Thus, the same people that allowed the drive-owner to initially borrow the CDs should always be available for proof-of-license. ) A co-worker that brings the tape-backup home may not have all the contacts necesary to validate the hundreds/ thousands of CDs, and would thus be in violation. Thus a legal jukebox system would keep track of the owners of the associated CDs and for auditing purposes. Of course, I doubt the back-up system would have much justification since the "backup" is really the original CD. But it is, of course, impratical to re-encode thousands of CDs every time a drive is upgraded or otherwise replaced; Especially in a RAID configuration.

    Compressed audio are a leap forward in walk-man technology: solid-state ( shock-resistent, potentially water-proof ), infinite storage potential, ease of replication for multiple audio devices ( car, walk-man, home office, work office can all have the same CD-contents without requiring carring the CD or even player ( when player is cheap enough ) ).
    Compressed audio is a leap forward in jukebox systems: Multiplexing literally an infinite number of songs ( at $2xx for 40Gig ) to an infinite number of users ( limited by bandwidth and server capabilities, which are rarely dedicated and thus must compete for real-work resources ).

    Post-Lastly, to my knowledge you can not broadcast a song that has human voice in it without paying royalties ( hense elevator music in department stores ). Thus it would be illegal to broadcast this MP3 jukebox ( even in a legally secured/licensed fashion ) over the loud-speakers. It therefore becomes questionable at which point ( e.g. with how many users ) does a privately owned juke-box setup become considered broadcasting. 20 employees? 100 employees? To me, the very discrete nature of client/server suggests that so long as only individuals access the juke-box, it is not broadcast; We are not using multi-cast afterall; Aside from spending $50K on a ultra-RAID setup ( with redundant copies ), and multiple servers with independant ether-lines for different sections of the building.
  • I was on the street (2nd Street, to be specific) in San Francisco on Sunday, and saw a sticker on the back of a STOP sign. "MP3 IS NOT A CRIME," it had once said, à la "Skateboarding is not a crime." Funny thing is, the "NOT" had been ripped away. My partner in book hunting [hhtp] postulated that the RIAA employs at least one person to jam such culturejamming.
  • i would like to get my music for free. however, i would also like to get my car for free. there are simply some things that are/never-will-be free.

    Ya know, some people would have said the same thing about music a few years ago. As to your car example...nanotechnology. It (hopefully) promises to, in a sense, make the whole world digital. We need to learn, as a society, how to deal with infinite products. Music is our first challenge, and it should be an easy one. It's art and beauty after all, why shouldn't we share it?

    The problem comes if we decide to treat IP *exactly* like PP (physical property) then we will end up with a government that does nothing but protect the profits of corporations who have lobbied that government to change the laws to protect them. I don't want to wake up and find a world where the only thing that stands between me giving away a new car (that used to be a pile of sand) is a soldier with a rifle.

    And you are indeed a burning man [burningman.com] :)
    --
  • by isaac ( 2852 ) on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @10:49AM (#1035673)
    If anyone's pushing these Napster suits, my money's on Howard King, who happens to be representing both Dre and Metallica in these lawsuits and has the most to gain in any event.

    Anyone know who's representing TVT?

    -Isaac

  • Er... I said the right to life was artificial.

    Also, the only sensible way for you to stop someone taking your work, in the absence of copyright, is not to release it.

    Once you release it, in the absence of copyright, you shouldn't be surprised if someone copies it (if it's any good), and there would be nothing you can do about it, thus, you have no "natural right" to stop people copying it. If people can take it, then in the absence of a legal framework, they have a "natural right" (i.e. ability) to make a copy of it - i.e. they can. It is this right that copyright restricts. Remember, they are not taking something from you (since that would leave you with less), they are copying.

    Think about it. In the absence of copyright,all you really have is the power to decide whether to release/make something or not. Once you do that, you have no say if people can copy it. If it's a physical object, you can certainly stop people *taking* it, but taking isn't the same as copying, is it?

    Remember, copyright violation isn't exactly theft (although it may be artificially defined to be). Why? You still have the work, whatever it may be, even if I copy it.

    The concept of "taking == copying" you express in your post is thus inappropriate in the absence of copyright framework to give this concept any weight... so your argument is circular.

    Note that I'm not against copyright per se,This comment [slashdot.org] I made some time ago expresses my opinion - basically, copyright as a concept isn't too bad, but the current system has been perverted to the needs of corporations rather than the artists and society (e.g. American copyright can now last significantly longer than the average human lifespan. This is hardly in the interest of the artist, but is certainly in the interest of corporations with an indefinite lifespan, e.g. Disney).
  • I'm just wondering why they're not suing people for burning music CDs (cd-to-cd copy),

    CD copying is very similar to home taping. They don't like it, but they know that it's a small scale thing. I might copy a CD for one friend, but I'm very unlikely to stand on a street corner handing them out to strangers. Similarly ripping MP3s for a Diamond Rio, or whatever is still only losing one (potential) sale, for some non-trivial time investment on my part -- it's self-limiting.

    Napster changes all that. It's not only a good means of doing the previous level of minor copying, but it's also a better mass publication medium than commercial servers can offer ! Napster one track and that's several thousand lost sales, as a low estimate.

    I still don't know if Napster is the best thing for music since recording, or the worst thing. All I do know is that it's simply incompatible with the current model of the music industry; poor quality bands sold by high quality hype.

  • Notice how none of your examples are very IP related. Cars, clothing, food, internet service - those are products that actually cost money to produce and/or administer. I am not arguing capitalism doesn't work - it does. Much, much better than any central planning could ever do. But, there are other possibilities in store for us in the future. There will come a day when those things too become virtually free, but that day isn't here yet. I hope that when it does, you won't be one of those who insists we should pay for it anyway at inflated prices in order to be good, loyal capitalists.

  • by zeda ( 415 ) on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @10:52AM (#1035692)
    Look at digital cameras and scanners and microphones.

    Eventually we will be able to make digital cameras that are equivalent to eyes in terms of size and viewing range and all the technical aspects. Then we make microphones small enough to fit in the ear. Then we will have digital storage to record everything we see and hear. Combine this with a wireless link and the entire world can share.

    What will copyrights mean then?

    You read a book, you are scanning a book, once you read a book anyone can read a book.

    You see a movie you record your exact vision and exact sound. Then everyone can see the movie through your eyes and ears.

    You hear a music, everyone hears music.

    Once technology progresses enough to replicate our actual organs' capabilities, there will be no use for copyright. You will be able to replay experiences exactly as you experience them. Others will be able to replay those same experiences.

    We are not there yet, but OCR will progress until we can reliably scan books just by photographing or reading them.

    Minidisc and mp3 recorders will get smaller and smaller.

    Digital camcorders will shrink.

    We will probably not achieve perfection of the replication or sights and sounds, but at what level of quality will it not matter. The audio-philes will still be upset, the video-philes will never be pleased, but most of humanity will be able to share everything they experience at a sufficently advanced level of quality.

    What then? There is no copyright, unless you ban all recording of anything. This might be possible, but is it ethical to assume that something you can see and hear you can't record? Why? You are already experiencing it, are you not allowed to have memories? Or is it only ethical to have bad memories.

    What about hearing aids, or vision aids for people will impared sight? Are those illegal. Can they be modified to record?

    What does this mean now. Can I carry a digital camcorder around everywhere I go, watching movies, visiting concerts, probably not. Why not?

    We must start thinking about what happens when technology changes all our old assumptions. This is merely the beginning.

  • Here's another article [newsweek.com] (rejected by the nazi moderators :) on Newsweek [newsweek.com] about the whole deal with Napster & the RIAA. Notice the picture of the kid, presumably downloading mp3's from the internet. Notice the massive rack of CD's he has behind them. Think he pays for his music?
  • oh geez yes, lets listen to the RIAA, put my ass in jail for listening to music i could easily record off the radio or borrow from a friend, but let the fucken rapists and gang bangers and gun running criminals have a hay day.

    wtf has this planet come to? Charge for speech but let people who do the real crime run free because real crime keeps corporate america on its feet (wonder how many insurance companies would exist if people were shot for stealing.. how many.. i know the RIAA would loose about 23% of its profits if people were not constantly buying 2nd/3rd copies of there cd's and tapes after being robbed/stolen/broken or missing somehow).

    So how about we start our own litigation group to force our rights and freedoms and first ammedments rather then listen to some people who make money off other peoples livliehood and raise crackhead children to run the underground and criminalized music scene?

    People are supposed to evolve, a community is built around music and the ideas behind that music. I for one listen to it for my own reasons, and i could care less how rich someone else gets.. the same goes for my job, i work for someone elses reasons and i don't have anyone litigating in court to protect my job and my publishings and my speech, so wtf should musicians get any better treatment? Insure your success by being who you are. People by Tool music to hear Maynord sing, people listen to Prince to see his crazy acts, girlies like the backsteet boys because they're cute. Nothing the RIAA does or will do can change that, so why today in a market that exists like this would artists dip into there earnings to protect the interests of corporate america and why do they think it benifets themselves to screw the very people that have probably purchased there music anyhow? Maybe i pirated it, but my friend bought it because he never heard it, or maybe i didn't have any money but i'm enjoying it.

    People steal my shit all the time, and the police for sure could care less, and the mayors and people who can make decisions live pretty and don't see what goes on until its too late.

    So "pirate on" and do whatever your heart desires. Until the government can uphold our rights as a citizen of the states, i won't respect the rights of corporatism and political wheelin and deeling persons.

    BTW, i paid 50.00 to see NIN and Perfect Circle.. you bet i took my recorder with me to have an archive of something i paid for. (and btw, yes.. someone stole the 35.00 shirt they stiffed everyone for).

    So RIAA, quit crying, and i hope to god none of my tax money supports your group.

  • by _xeno_ ( 155264 ) on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @10:54AM (#1035699) Homepage Journal
    just because we don't like the law doesn't give us license to break it

    Sure it does, if the law is unfair. It's called civil disobedience [walden.org].

    Unfortunately, I don't think this law is unfair. However, should a law infringe on our basic natural rights, then it is not just our right to disobey it, it is our duty as well. At least accoring to Thoreau, who has inspired some really great people in history. But the next time something like DeCSS happens and you want a historical context for spreading the source around, remember Thoreau's essay.

    Disclaimer: No, you really don't have a right to break any law you disagree with.

  • For the last time (ok so you'll probably hear this many many more times) the reason why all of this is happening is that the business model needs to be changed. Our money (music buyers) is being misdirected. I don't want to steal from the mucisians. My father has been a musician all of his life and if someone stole his songs I would be furious. The people who benefit from CD sales are the record companies. Most of the artists revenue comes from touring. I want to see the artist get more of a cut from the CD sales. I want to see reduced CD prices. With a good online service for providing MP3s that provides enough income to support the tours artists would make as much if not more than they already do. Record companies can bite my ass.


    My Home: Apartment6 [apartment6.org]
  • This is a little bit redundant, man.

    Metallica has already said (numerous times) that their suit is mostly driven by their personal managers (who apparently have been with them almost since day 1 and who they consider the "fifth and sixth members of Metallica."

    Further, Dr. Dre hardly seems to be being "manipulated" by "various suits". He's made it clear that the thing that he's most concerned about, above any artistic integrity or idealism, is his paycheck.
  • In my infinite wisdom (snicker, snicker), I've figured out why the record companies dislike MP3 technology. It isn't that it cuts down on the number of albums sold, it's that it cuts down on the number of bad albums sold.

    I haven't bought an album I didn't like in the past two years. Before that, my CD collection was a hit-and-miss set of Micheal Jackson albums. Now, I can grab any CD out of my CD pile and have a smooth seventy-four minutes of aural pleasure. For every good song on my hard drive, I've got the CD within arm's reach.

    Napster may die, but I wouldn't worry about MP3 going away. Everybody's got them, and other trading mediums like IRC and newsgroups still exist. The beat will still go on, and Napster's presence in it is moot, at best.

    So, as a note to the RIAA and kin, get in on the action before she goes home. Does anyone have an official lawsuit count, so far?
  • I seriously doubt that most Metallica/Dr. Dre fans even know what Napster is.

    I used to listen to Metallica's older albums quite a bit before I heard about their intent to interfere with non-commercial sharing of copyrighted music between individuals via Napster. Now I'm so angry with them that I refuse to buy or listen to any of their music ever again. Bad laws are bad enough without strongarm enforcement of them through DMCA process abuse and civil lawsuits by deep-pocketed members of the copyright cartel.

  • by Christopher Thomas ( 11717 ) on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @11:14AM (#1035720)
    Try this search and tell me that doesn't make an impact.

    Follow your own links. I see a couple of hundred names on the most populated sites - and fewer than ten names on most links.

    The search returned about 280 pages. The Fermis out to maybe ten thousand names, if you're *EXTREMELY* optimistic.

    Contrast that to the vast number of albums sold. Looking considerably less significant, isn't it?

    Of course, the industry has a few words about the impact on sales as well.

    Looks like a typical fluff piece written by a third-party journalist. What of it?

    Now, about those figures... look here, here and since some fans even feel they are directly harming metallica they've setup a site to pay lars back.

    Your first link states that CD sales are declining near universities. By 7 percent.

    What fraction of the population goes to university? Relatively small.
    What fraction of the population buys CDs? Relatively large.

    You become Enlightened.

    Or, take the geographic approach. Assume that 5% of all stores selling CDs are near a university. They've had sales drop by 7%. This gives you a whopping 0.35% sales hit. Not looking terribly significant.

    Your second link seems to be another third-party journalist article advertising "GoodNoise". There is a link included to an RIAA statement providing "evidence", but this link is dead. This article, lacking a critical component, supports neither of our cases.

    Your third link, to the "pay Lars" site, lists a grand total of $399.00 raised at the time of my viewing (during the writing of this message).

    If the number of people on this site is supposed to be representative of the number of people boycotting, then the boycott is in a sorry state indeed.

    Let's take the more plausible approach, and say that the ratio of payLars-ers to boycotters is equal to the ratio of boycotters to CD buyers. This boosts the number of assumed boycotters very substantially.

    It's still not enough. To make the numbers easier, let's assume that Metallica makes the piddlingly small sum of $4 million on sales. Using the ratios above, this gives an estimate of the number of CD buyers per boycotter as being sqrt($4m / $400), or 100. Again, the boycotters are at at most a 1% level.

    Try this again with Metallica's real income. Or better yet, stick to counting boycotters themselves so that you have a real number.

    Summary: Your figures serve only to underscore how few boycotters there are, compared to the CD-buying masses.

    I eagerly await your rebuttal.
  • Have you read anything here or on any of the other news sites in the past few weeks? I'm guessing no... Here's a recap.

    Nobody is going after anybody for illegally downloading songs from Napster. No one is going after anyone and requesting proof that they own the CD since they downloaded songs from it. The grounds that the labels, bands and lawyers are using are that the people they're going after are makind their (the artists) copyrighted materials available for download by people who don't have the legal right to do so.

    No search of a house is necessary. They can just say "look at this college student. Now look at the 10,000 songs in his shared Napster directory. He made each and every one of these songs available for the entire internet population to download.

    It's a point that seems to get overlooked over and over... Napster helps perpetuate it, I think. But the fack of the matter is that no one's is gettting yelled at or risking getting in trouble or being kicked off of napster for downloading songs. That's happening because they're making those songs available to other Napster users...
  • From the is-anyone-else-sick-of-this-yet dept.

    ...yes, we are. But you keep posting the stories. Too bad I can't filter out any story with "MP3" in the title or story blurb.

  • Of course as soon as I'm linked from Slashdot, Covad has a massive outage in the S.F. Bay area taking Technocrat down. Thus, the John Perry Barlow editorial is off the air for a few hours.

    Bruce

  • I am not sure I entirely agree with your economic assessment. It relies heavily on a static supply and demand, but the U.S. economy has been growing at a high rate, ceteris paribus, for a while (say 8 or 9 years). As such, the demand has risen dramatically while the pricing has changed somewhat (perhaps 20% over the same period).

    This indicates to me greater profit-taking by members of the supply-side, even while more records are sold (remember also that this period has dramatically lowered the costs of production of the physical medium). In fact, this is almost a given with the higher volumes sold (when Britney Spears is becoming a multi-millionaire, it must necessarily be a goldrush).

    I am not saying you are dead wrong, but I think the economic picture is optimized for maximum profitability, and maybe we from the outside do not see all revenue outcomes, especially in a mature big-money business.

    -L
  • by dirk ( 87083 ) <dirk@one.net> on Wednesday May 31, 2000 @11:21AM (#1035734) Homepage
    After all the mess with Napster, mp3s, et alle, its good to see a band doing the Right Thing with mp3s. They Might Be Giants has a very 'geeky' and loyal fan base, but has trouble with record contracts. So, they get together with emusic.com, and say "We want to put out a mp3 only album". It sells wonderfully, even if its only a collection of bsides with a few new songs. A few months later, they add a mailing list, and people subscribe to get the latest TMBG news and here's the kicker: a FREE mp3 from the band with a short story behind that weeks selection. It may be a song from a live show that was particularly memorable, it may be a new song they're fooling around with, doesn't matter, the fans love it. Just last week, TMBG decided to put their upcoming EP on emusic.com. You pay $7.99, and get to download the 7 or so mp3s, and they then mail you the cd! Wow! Does it get any better? You've got fans that aren't mad at you, you get your music out, you make a couple bucks (probably more than you would if you had to deal with a record company), and people are generally happy! Whats so wrong with that?


    There is absolutely nothing wrong with that. I wish more bands would do things like that. But i don't think we should force any band to do it. If you want to release MP3's, go right ahead. Give away all the music you want, do whatever you want with your music. The catch is you can't make other people do what you want with THEIR music. If TMBG want to give away songs, more power to them. But if Metallica doesn't, you shouldn't steal them. It's similar to the GPL. It's a great license, but just because it's a great license doesn't mean we should force everyone to use it. It's one choice of many, just like releasing MP3's is a choice you can make.

  • The Brandenburg/Suzanne Vega article mentioned a new format that Brandenburg's research group is working on - MP4, which the article called a "more secure" compression algorithm than MP3. Does anyone know much about this? How is it "more secure"? Does that mean that it will be encrypted (and thus, a new tool for the Evil Recording Industry (tm))?
    "The world doesn't really need more busy people, maybe not even more intelligent people. It needs 'deep people'..."

  • just because we don't like the law doesn't give us license to break it

    Did you ever study the Boston Tea Party in history class?

    The Americans were protesting both a tax on tea(taxation without representation) and the perceived monopoly of the East India Company. [britannica.com]

    If it weren't for our ancestors breaking "the law." We'd still be under the rule of Britain.

    acm

  • Net users (especially young people, who don't have a lot of money to spare)

    Maybe they should spend less time on the net and more time at a job. Back in the Good Old Days(tm)(c)(r) (you know, the stone age like 10 years ago) I had to work so I could buy my favorite CD. Was that so bad? No. I think this is one problem in our country as kids are growing up with no work ethic. Life is so hard I have to download MP3's because I can't afford a $12 CD

    Get a job and get over it.

    Marcus

    Flame all you want, I'll post more.

  • I posted this on Kuro5hin earlier today. As a general rule, I don't like regurgitating posts, but this new /. story is sorta making my point, so here it is [dons asbestos suit, sets procmail filters on]:

    I am amused when people (especially those on that Other Site) claim that anonymity is: a) a God-given right, or b) what the Net was based on.

    Bollocks! (b) especially is wrong... when the ArpaNet/Internet started there was no anonymity because everybody on the Net just plain knew everybody else --the couple of CS schools and National Labs online were and still are a pretty close community. Then for years, the internet was full of static-only IPs and real-people-only e-mail addresses: you were far from anonymous.

    Anonymity on the Net was introduced either directly by real privacy advocates (who can forget anon.penet.fi that Scientology practically shut down) or, more commonly, by anonymity-through-obscurity: FreeNet (the original Freenet, not the Gnutella/Napster clone) and later AOL, HotMail, etc, etc.

    Now, (a) is even less true: what human society ever was based on anonymity? NONE. Actually, anonymity in the Real World is either associated with cults and/or military organizations --where the person 'must' be erased to establish groupthink-- or to avoid prosecution.

    But what really, truly bugs me (and you cannot say than on /. on penalty of burning at the stake) is this whole self-serving attitude that the new wave of 'privacy advocates' is assuming. Anon.penet.fi served a noble cause; it might have been used for practical jokes and/or ordering God-knows-what, but it also served as the only way for whistleblowers to speak (e.g. the Scientology case). The 'new' Slashdot-fed "privacy advocates" (and they deserve to be in quotes) are using the otherwise noble flag of privacy (a whole different issue than anonymity as another post explained very well) to *justify* their *stealing*.

    If you are too cheap, or too lazy and are gonna break the law by going on Napster and downloading some MP3s (which I won't say I haven't done), you should have, really, the balls to stand up and say: "I know this is wrong, I know this is stealing someone else's work without their consent, but I am just too damn {lazy|cheap}!". The attitude of "Since I am doing this, it *has* to be right" (vis-a-vis "It is right, that's why I will do it") is Puratinistic and hypocritical.

    Are record companies charging too much for a CD? yes they are (cry-babies; a CD back in Europe can go for $20 easily). Are we *justified* to go out and steal the companies' property? no we are not. "Justified" is a very heavy word. Don't overuse it...


    engineers never lie; we just approximate the truth.
  • Who are the criminals here in the MP3 debate? Is it the people downloading?

    Yes. The law is clear here. They are violating the record industry's copyrights on the vast majority of downloaded files.

    The lawmakers who passed silly IP laws like this?

    Yep, lots of them are criminals, but not because they pass silly laws. No law against passing silly laws. And laws which protect the works of an individual are not that silly.

    the courts for upholding such laws against public opinion and the constitution?

    It's not the court's duty to rule based on public opinion (thank God!). I also don't see how copyright violations are a constitutional issue.

    The RIAA for engaging in unethical and monopolistic business practices?

    Probably.

    Come on, this is silly. Sorry you want all your music for free. It's not legally available for free. That's clear. That's the law. Heck, I don't even think it's a bad law.

    Don't get me wrong, when the RIAA tells me it's "illegal" for me to convert my OWN CD to MP3 format, I get really really pissed at their attitude... But you don't have a leg to stand on when you advocate theft of copyrighted material.


    ---
  • Once the necessity has been removed, it's no longer wise to make it a virtue.

    Times are a-changin', old fella. Go back to work and get over it.

Understanding is always the understanding of a smaller problem in relation to a bigger problem. -- P.D. Ouspensky

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