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The Death Of Intellectual Property 407

sheath writes: "The National Post has an article on the possible death of intellectual property as a result of trends on the net. They quote William Gibson as saying, 'This may be the end of a 90-year window when it was possible to make money off recorded music.' Interesting piece from a mainstream (in Canada, anyway) source."
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The Death of Intellectual Property

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  • Absolutely. Copyrights, for example, are intangible, but are considered property.

    Copyrighted material, on the other hand, is not property, never has been, and never could be outside of an Orwellian world where up is down and black is white.

    The Jefferson quote (boy, that's a good one) is an excellent refutation of your outrageous claim. If that's not enough, please check out some of my posts from Friday and Saturday, as they're pretty lengthy and I have no desire to retype them again and again and again.

    Remember above all else, ideas aren't like property; an infinite number of people can have them at once. If I 'took' your opinion and also claimed that ideas were property, this doesn't keep you from holding the same opinion.
  • We've got to do better than making art disposable and hope some rich guy picks up the trash. I am thinking that a connection between PayPal and Napster... might go a long way to making us honest again and keeping music afloat.
    I've been playing with the idea for a more general version of this, that would allow voluntary sponsorship of websites (and thus any activity, since a band or artist could just set this up on their website). The idea is that you could pay to put a sponsored link on someone's website, and you'd pay what it was worth to you. On every page view in someone's browser, a link would be selected from the pool based on how much the sponsor paid for it - if you paid $10 and other people paid a total of $990 for the month, your link would have a 1% chance of coming up for that page view.

    I think that such a democratic form of patronage will work better than the "pay-per-copy" model that dominates music, or the corporate sponsorship model that dominates web sites.

    I'm calling this a "sponsorpool", for lack of a better name, and I'm going to be working on it over the summer. (I'm quitting my "day job" to work on some side projects for at least a few months.) For the prototype, I'm using PayPal to handle payments. (I'm faking the web interface with Curl.) If anyone's interested in more info, drop me a line and I'll update you when I've got something worth sharing.

  • If you can justify the $5 million per year Liberace was making or the multi-million dollar pile of cash Micheal Jackson has made I might change my mind.

    Easy.

    People voluntarily paid this money in exchange for something they thought was worth at least that much. Or, I take it, you know better uses for other people's money -- right?

    Besides, what do you mean by "justify"? Do you mean that there is some accounting-ledger-in-the-sky thingy into which one can look to find out exactly what one deserves?

    "Er... you deserve $113.45, a dented '79 Oldsmobile and a kick in the ass. Now git!"


    Kaa
  • Actuallly, the castrati opera singers were fantastically wealthy and famous, but they paid a terrible price for their fame. (If you don't already know what a castrati is... try not to think about it.)

    Wagner was considered quite a cult superstar in his day, and some people traveled all over Europe to hear his stuff performed.

    I think the rise of the celebrity to the masses can probably be mapped to coincide with the rise of the middle class... a large group of people with enough money and leasure time to obsess over their favorite performer.

  • Actually, that might not be a bad business model for writers. The simple fact is there is hardly any money to be made by novelists. Most authors do it more or less as a hobby and have a day job as well. An author typically only recieves pennies for each copy of a novel sold.

    The weathly writers such as Stephen King and Tom Clancy (and to some extent, William Gibson) made the vast majority of their money through a different application of IP -- selling the movie rights to the novels. Having the novels free but retaining the movie rights would probably work just as well if not better than the current system
  • Justification: Liberace and Micheal Jackson both did something people wanted, therefore the people paid them money to do it.

    This money didn't just magically appear out of thin air and drop into their laps. People gave it to them (through various methods). Just like you pay a plumber or a electrician to do work for you the same goes for entertainers. They are doing work for you so you pay them to do it. If you don't like them then you either don't pay them to begin with (references) or you don't pay them to do it again (poor work) or you even get your money back (really bad work).

  • by Effugas ( 2378 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @05:29AM (#1008416) Homepage
    Bottom line, there are too many lawyers trained in Intellectual Property law for IP to disappear. It would take the concerted will of government to overturn or ignore IP law, and the bottom line is there's just too much lobbyist money for that to ever happen.

    Gibson is underestimating the degree to which MP3's have been allowed to prosper, so as to force the hands of the courts, the houses, the lobbyists, and the competitors. He should know just how devious corporate behavior can be; the back story to most of his multinational conglomerates would probably look like the TimeWarnerAOL agglomerations of today at this point in his timeline.

    I'd say more, but I've got some work to take care of. More later, hopefully.

    Yours Truly,

    Dan Kaminsky
    DoxPara Research
    http://www.doxpara.com
  • That rationale can apply to some things, but not others.

    Patents protect and enable the "i got here first" syndrome. I think that this entire forum is in agreeement that the patent system is due for a drastic overhaul ASAP, so there's no need to continue with that argument.

    Copyrights, however, are much different than patents. I find it highly improbably that anyone else in the world could have thought up Mickey Mouse than Walt Disney. Or that anyone else could have created the Middle Earth other than Tolkien. The list can go on and on. Those were very specific ideas and products. That's all copyright is meant to protect. A simple idea is not copyrightable, which is why copyrights really don't stand to harm invention or innovation.

    Likewise, music should be covered by copyright. Copyrights don't prevent anyone from picking up a guitar and rolling their own music. It's absurd to think that they ever would actually prevent true forward progress. All they do is ensure that the owner of a finished piece of work get's first consideration when that work actually earns money.
  • by ObligatoryUserName ( 126027 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @05:29AM (#1008420) Journal
    Musicians might have to go back to making money via performance, teaching, and patronage by the wealthy! Oh no! That system would never produce any good music, would it?
  • you cannot quote someone anymore, due to the lack of intellectual property, and the "ownership" of the written or spoken word, the quote symbol (") will no longer be allowed. Only loose references to someone who might have *used* that phrase or *borrowed" those diary entries from a famous historical figure can be used.

    Besides, I just patented "the use of punctuation marks to indicate a direct quote"; feel free to use double quote marks (or any other punctuation mark), just be prepaired to pay a royalty to me...

  • Speaking of historical figures...

    Just think if the lending library did not yet exist; if the only way to read books was to go and buy them.

    Now suppose that Benjamin Franklin was alive today and just now proposed the idea that large buildings be constructed with taxpayer dollars and more of those tax dollars be used to purchase books and magazines (copyrighted material) so that the public can come anytime and read these materials freely.

    The print publishers would FLY INTO A RAGE and call Franklin every dirty name they could think of from "thief" to "crook" to, yes, even "pirate" who is "opposed to people profitting from their hard work" and "taking the food out of baby's mouths bacause writers won't be able to support their families anymore", and how all publications and writing will end because there's no money in it anymore.

    Of course, today, Franklin would have proposed that libraries included software, video, and audio, and indeed, all copyrighted works. Today, many public libraries today do lend VHS and CDs. And it wasn't just for the purpose of education and betterment of the public. Most books were an entertainment medium in the 18th century as much as movies are today. So don't isolate Franklin's idea as having only altruistic motives.

    Who would say that closing all libraries would be a GOOD idea? Very few I'll wager. Why should it be any different when it comes to CDs/movies/software than it is with books/mags?

    And oh yes, despite the existance of libraries, (gasp!) people still make money and can even (choke!) earn a living as writers and publishers. Well imagine that. Free access to copyrighted books and magazines didn't kill the industry after all. In fact, it expanded it. Just like VHS rentals home video sales resulted in Hollywood making more money today from home video sales than it ever did or ever will from theatrical ticket sales (despite the Great VCR lawsuit against Sony's Betamax).

    Ever rent a movie, video game, book, or magazine. Then you too are as much a pirate and thief as you label others to be. Libraries even install photocopy machines at taxpayer expense. What's all that about? I see no harm here.

  • Personally, I don't see this as ever really stifling IP. But if it does, the free-market has a natural counter for it. People will simply stop producing ideas. No one (read much less people) will enter a field where the prospects of earning a decent living are substantially lower than in other fields.

    Eventually, the shortage of new ideas will add value to the ones that are there, and mechanisms will come in place to protect IP again. Even open source programmers need to eat. Intellectual Property is the basis for innovation, and whatever it takes, society will keep innovation coming. The market will demand it.

  • Umm... You know that Amedeus was a work of fiction, right?

    I seem to recall Beethoven once turning down an invitation to a prince's court. When asked about it, he said "there are a hundred princes out there, but only one Beethoven!"

  • Can someone define "Intellectual Property" for me? I've always been a bit shaky on the definition.

    ___
    A requirement of creativity is that it contributes
    to change. Creativity keeps the creator alive.
  • But the large congolmerates have a stake in the production of music.

    So did patrons. They weren't sponsoring arts out of the goodness of their hearts. If you had a Mozart or a Haydn working for you, it was like owning the Dallas Cowboys in the 90's... bragging rights among other rich bastards, plus a nice return on your investment.

  • So how does Puff Daddy get away with it?

    He doesn't. He either 1) Pays a fee. 2) Uses IP that his label owns. or 3) Settles the lawsuit afterwards.

  • Yes, I see similarities, but only because your second half is completely wrong.

    A quick definition of theft...
    taking someone else' PROPERTY without their permission

    A quick definition of Copyright infringement....
    interfering with someone else' government-granted MONOPOLY without their permission
  • *very* few musicians ever reach the amount of income you're talking about.
    Are you telling me that if I sell 20 Million albums, I shouldn't make any money from that?!
    I'm sure the pile o' cash Jackson had was from advances; IIRC, his last couple albums pretty much tanked.

    We could hold the same argument for actors: is Tom Cruise 'worth' US$20 Million a picture? His acting is OK, but if his movies bring in a lot of cash at the box office, based on his 'Star Power', then the money paid is 'worth' it, right?

    Pope

    Freedom is Slavery! Ignorance is Strength! Monopolies offer Choice!
  • Classical composers used to write variations on each others work all the time. It was considered a very valuable learning tool. Beethoven and Dvorak both stole the "Ode to Joy" melody note-for-note from the public domain. Yet if I were to quote a Beatles refrain in a pop song of my own, I would face a lawsuit.

    AFAIK, stealing a riff or a few chords is unlikely to put you in court. BTW, IMO, there's a difference between performing another artists work and simply copying it. IMO, the former should be allowed if you don't claim it as your own work -- because re-interpreting is defensible as a creative act. So is plagiarising a riff. However, electronic copying certainly is not.

    BTW, scatterbrain wrote a whole song consisting of plagiarised riffs. Frank Zappa also stole other people's riffs ( largely for satirical purposes )

  • In other words, if I write a song, and it is recorded, I no longer have control over the spread of said song, and my song must stand on it's own value.

    It's a nit-pick, but I think that statement mischaracterizes Jefferson's words. Jefferson was saying that there is no natural property right inherent to the creation of work.

    What the post omits is Jefferson's statement that there is an artificial property right created by men. Jefferson even seems resigned to the concept as an inheritence from British law. That he considers the right artificial does not automatically mean the right has no merit. Again, it's inclusion in the text of the Constitution implies the framers thought it was a good idea.

    Where the original post is dead-on is in pointing out that this is the same debate we face today.

    Now to pick on myself -- it was poor word choice for me to characterize the Bill of Rights as an affirmation rather than an enumeration. The Ninth Amendment actually refers to, "The enumeration of rights...." The whole text of the Ninth, however, makes it clear that the framers believed there were more natural rights than could possibly be enumerated.

  • Mozart died broke.

    Actually, no. Check out The Pauper Myth [classiccd.co.uk]

    A brief excerpt: Mozart was never poor. He and his wife moved in an expensive set in an expensive city. The loans that he asked from Puchberg in 1788 were so that he could maintain his standard of living, certainly not so that he could keep starvation at bay.
  • 200 million people each with a dollar have more economic power that any one individual could ever have.

    If this was true, Paul Allen could not have purchased the Portland Trail Blazers. 200 million of spending power is easy for a multi-billionaire.

    The masses have loads of liquid cash, and they spend it on entertainment at an astounding rate.

    Ah, but with patronage, you can have both. For example, more than half of the money that funds a typical major orchestra comes from private and government endowments, but then they charge admission for the general public as well. Without wealthy patrons (i.e., corporations, individuals, and the NEA), most of us could not afford to see a world-class orchestra perform, let alone go to concerts on a regular basis. They would have to charge hundreds of dollars per ticket, and sell out every show, just to break even.

  • This whole argument over IP law and technological revolution really has me in stitches. Only 190 years ago, big business was hanging Scottish Luddite protestors whose complaint was that the advent of a new technology (the weaving loom) was making their traditional life style redundant. That sort of makes the internet and big bandwidth the 'loom' of our generation.

    Isn't it great that this time we are putting the run on the big buisiness.
  • Basically they say they own an idea and you have to pay for thinking it.
  • War? We're at war?

    Well, if we're at war, I'd like to post some helpful hints for my fellow musicians:
    • An AK-47 fits perfectly in a Fender Strat guitar case.
    • Aim for the center of mass. Keep shooting until all movement ceases.
    • Orangina bottles make for great Molotovs.
    • Please keep the dressing room clean. Other bands have to use it, you know.
    • Duct tape, duct tape, duct tape.


    That is all.

    k.

    --
    "In spite of everything, I still believe that people
    are really good at heart." - Anne Frank
  • They're controlling what people want? How? Mind waves? Sure, they'd be thrilled if I would pony up money for the Backstreet Boys, N'Sync, or Brittany Spears... but I'm not. If you don't like the music being offered, don't buy it.

    Yes, the corporations are using advertising and such to push them but that doesn't mean that you have to buy the product. I've seen ads for tuna fish with cute talking fish and such. I haven't rushed out and bought it though (I hate tuna).

    I've said it once and I'll say it again. No one is holding a gun to your head and forcing you to buy something. You can even say that the saturation of the advertising is forcing people to buy it or want it but then you're just making a argument for a weak willed person who can't say no or make up their own minds just because it's thrust in their face on a regular basis.

    To sum up: People do what they want for their own self interest. They buy music because they want to (for whatever reason).

    And as a side thought why not try and make a go of a different mode of distrubition or just a new tack on the old model. Invest in some good recording equipment and a rack of CD burners and make the music you think people will like. Distribute it over the internet, go to concerts and sell it, talk to local record stores and get them to carry it, charge people a few cents a song to listen to it online or download it off your servers etc. If you have a good product then you will be rewarded for your efforts. Try and put into practice the alternate methods of distrubtion that you read about all the time. See if it really works. Be prepared for some of them to fail. You never know. One of them might work out unbelievably well and make you rich. You never know. In the end people will remember you for what you did not what you said.

  • > Communist Russia saw a LOT less technological improvement
    > than the US in the same time, Why?

    Well, in 1913 the U.S.A. produced, what, five? twenty? times more factory-manufactured goods than Russia did. This could not possibly be the fault of communism, as the Tsar was not a communist. The Bolshevik revolution in Russia took place in 1918, after four years of the First World War, at which point in time the U.S.A. was already the strongest industrial economy in the world, as compared with Russia, devastated by years of ground war, so the two countries were hardly starting from the same place.

    Then the Russians fought a civil war for some years, complete with invasions by several foreign expeditionary forces. The U.S.A. wasn't invaded by anybody circa 1920. The Russian civil war was followed by a general embargo through the twenties on the part of the developed capitalist nations, which severely hindered Russia's development. Nobody was embargoing the U.S.A. during the twenties. Despite these disadvantages, Soviet Russia had a greater rate of industrial growth during this period than the capitalist economies.

    Skipping over the Great Depression, when the capitalist economies, for all their free-market incentives, didn't do so well to say the least, we arrive at the forties. The citizens of U.S.A. fought a hard war and sacrificed their wealth and progress to the necessities of war. But the U.S.A. was never invaded, much less demolished end-to-end as was Russia, and in terms of human losses, we lost about eight hundred thousand men, where the Russians lost at least twenty million killed by the Nazi invasion.

    The catastrophe of World War II was followed immediately by the Cold War, where the Russians, who had no atomic bomb of their own, were threatened by an aggressive nuclear-armed adversary, the U.S.A., which not only possessed an arsenal of nuclear bombs but had previously used them against cities full of civilians. Keep in mind that between 1941 and 1945 the Germans had exterminated a third of the adult males in Russia; by 1948, the U.S.A. was rearming Germany. Any industrial effort that the Soviets might have devoted to building cars and TVs for its citizens was instead diverted to a decades-long crash program to counter the American atomic threat.

    Do you perhaps suspect that any of the above might have had more influence than your free-market ideological metaphysics on the relative technological inefficiency of Soviet Russia as compared with the U.S.A.?

    Yours WDK - WKiernan@concentric.net

  • You're right, they put approximately $20M into advertising; someone called the BWP an "ultimate experiment in mass marketing." Moreover, the $35,000 figure which everyone seems to know was obviously a part of this marketing campaign.

    Even though marketing types are constant subjects of laughs in software industry, don't underestimate them - some are VERY good at what they do - remember the BWP every time you say something like "marketing people are dumb."

    ... which, however, doesn't disqualify the statement "I hate marketing people" :)
  • No one will enter a field where they don't have a chance of making a good living? What about fast food workers? What about ditch diggers? What about sewer workers? All of these are low paying bad jobs yet they never lack for people to enter them.

    The people who are in these jobs do them because they can't get anything better. I'd hate to see a world where (a) musicians commanded as little respect as a sewer worker, and (b) where the only people who became musicians were those who were otherwise unemployable.

  • by SvnLyrBrto ( 62138 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @08:44AM (#1008475)
    >>Producing CDs costs them pennies yet the CD
    >>prices have stayed at $14-18 for the past few
    >>years.

    >This is, simply put, a load of cr*p.

    Well, it would take about $3-4K worth of consumer grade hardware & software (the most expensive part being the special printer to duplicate the artwork on the CD itself).

    You'd buy the raw materials (blank CD-Rs, jewel cases, glossy paper for the liner notes, etc) in bulk.

    Once everything was scanned in and set up properly, I'd be able to duplicate a copy, that the average joe couldn't easily tell from an original, every fifteen minutes at a cost of a $1 per.

    Bump my equipment budget up to $10K and I could do about 20/hour still at a cost of $1 per.

    And that's with CONSUMER equipment you can find advretised all over Computer Shopper, Macworld, or the like.

    The record companies have CD fab machinery that cost millions, and can spit out thousands of CDs an hour. Plus, they buy the raw materials in much greater bulk than is possible for me.

    I don't find it implausable AT ALL that the RIAA minions could produce CDs cheaper than myself by AT LEAST a factor of ten.

    john
  • Consider a practical function of record execs. They filter out the lesser talent and promote the greater talent.

    Or one could say that they filter out the less marketable and promote the more marketable.
  • And secondly, check out Schneier and Kelsey's Street Performer Protocol. This thing might actually work (although I still haven't heard of anyone using it yet).

    I wonder why no-one's using it ? The problem is that no one wants to buy vapourware, and noone wants to pay in advance. so a distributed payment system that says "pay first" is not going to work. Another problem is that most bands simply will not be able to get enough support for this model to work.

    I don't think this model is a complete waste though. Alternative radio stations already employ a similar model ( they are funded by subscriptions ) and they have some degree of success. But a radio station has the advantage that it can address a much larger audience than a band, and also, it gets free airtime to plug itself.

  • Yes, but ask yourself this question. Which one of these are you more proud to say:
    1) Well, I work the register at McDonalds for a living.
    2) Well, I program computers for a living.

    Money isn't everything, but it would be nice to keep more after taxes.

  • When they write about 12 songs to go on a CD, they probably love everyone of them and they would want everyone to have all of those 12 songs. Therefore they would probably get pissed off if people only want three of their songs.
    Nah. Every artist knows that some of their works will be loved and adored more than others. Every album has its singles and it deep cuts; books of poetry have good pieces and filler. The interesting thing it, the artist often can't tell which pieces will really work - I'm often surprised by which of my poems the audience seems to appreciate.
  • Basically, there's no such thing. I suspect that the term was coined by lawyers who wanted their jobs to sound sexier. This is probably why you're shaky on the definition; it's doublespeak.

    Generally it's meant though in reference to copyrighted works, patented inventions, trademarks, trade secrets and other forms of information.

    Personally, I think that it's a very bogus phrase, I find it offensive and I avoid using it whenever possible. It's like referring to blacks as 'temporarily ex-slaves' or Jews as 'unbelievers damned to hell.' It's very weighted towards a specific point of view that's wrong to begin with.
  • Mainstream (In canada?) what do you mean by that?
    Gibson is by no means a 'mainstream' celebrity in Canada.. at least, no more than he is in the rest of north america....

  • "While frightening to some, this new reality will not destroy all creation of wealth through inventiveness or artistry. People, including this techno-pirate who downloaded the film, will still go out to the theatre. People will still buy newspapers. They will still listen to commercial radio and television and still pay for CDs." People will not necessarily pay for CDs. People will go to the theatre for film, but for concerts-- some concerts are truly performances, whereas some concerts are impossible (industrial music is often better listened to studio-mixed than with some guy on a stage trying to do it in front of a crowd). Fewer and fewer people are buying newspapers, as news reported online is more up-to-the-minute and often more complex in its detail. These things will remain, of course but the difference is this: they will no longer be the source of major profits. Newspapers will have a harder time making the big buck. Artists and musicians will not be able to make their money in the same ways and the same quantities as they do now.
  • Producing CDs costs them pennies yet the CD prices have stayed at $14-18 for the past few years.

    This is, simply put, a load of cr*p. A record companies operating costs greatly exceed the cost of printing the CDs. The record companies are public, so you can go check on them, and if you actually have some facts, post them. It's funny how unable / unwilling the freeloaders and their sympathisers are to come up with any hard data on the operating costs of the record industry when the pertinent information is publically available. Instead, there are a lot of whining noises about music being "too expensive". In the absence of any evidence to substantiate the argument, I guess this is a confession that you guys are cheap freeloaders.

    Good for them if they can make money via the internet. But let them decide whether or not they want to take that route.

  • The death of intellectual property? Please, don't make me laugh. I haven't read the article but I doubt it's saying anything worth the time it'd take me to read it.

    The net is not going to really change anything fundamental long-term, it'll just change the arena that it's done in and the tools that'll be used. At the moment the net is just going through a transitional phase where people, companies and governments are still trying to determine what it is and what should be done about or with it. Sooner or later, and it'll probably be sooner, the way the net will integrate into people's lives will become apparent and it'll be business as usual.

    All the current rampant law-breaking and theivery is serving to do is get the net regulated faster than it would have been anyway. And it's giving both corporations and governments a great excuse for flexing their muscles in the international, rather than national, arenas. Instead of being able to pass laws in their own jurisdictions, the net is giving countries like the US an opportunity to push it's laws, and hence itself, into other countries. Truly, a globalists dream - the American hegemony extending itself into every country in the world.

    No, intellectual property won't die thanks to the net. Unfortunately, I doubt the same could be said about freedom.


    ---
    Jon E. Erikson
  • Actually, the Internet opens the possibility of direct patronage by the masses, not just the wealthy. In the long run, a model where creators are supported by the fans kicking in a few bucks for the support of the artist, even though the individual works are available for free might not only be viable, but produce a better living for the rank-and-file creators than the current system where the super-stars reap almost all the rewards.
  • Apparently Jefferson wrote:
    That ideas should freely spread from one to another over the globe, for the moral and mutual instruction of man, and improvement of his condition, seems to have been peculiarly and benevolently designed by nature, when she made them, like fire, expansible over all space, without lessening their density in any point

    Which brings an interesting idea indeed. If I'm at a gig and somone asks me for a light from my cigarette I've never known anyone even TRY to impose the restriction that I can't use that cigarette to then light another in turn. Perhaps if we make second-line relighting illegal and allow people (me!) to charge for First Generation lighting up we could build up a whole industry, protect it by laws, and this industry could then fund political sellouts to keep these laws for them! We'd make MILLIONS for the country.

    It's genius I tell you, I'm off to meet with my local MP and bribe^h^h^h^h^h^h convince him to get such a law passed immediately. I'll be in control of ALL the cigarette lighting in this country before anyone even knows what's going on. Bahahahaha.

    Don't forget, Pirate Lighting up is KILLING cigarretes, phone the Federation Against Cigarette Light Theft today!

    Pre........
  • The obscenity of how rich you can become twanging a guitar or tweaking a computer to make sound may well come to it's deserved end.

    I work in the music industry and the distribution of wealth within it is a constant source of irk.

    If you can justify the $5 million per year Liberace was making or the multi-million dollar pile of cash Micheal Jackson has made I might change my mind.

    The global market certainly makes it great to hit big and I don't doubt the hard work that goes into the music business but it is greatly overvalued due to the costs of reproduction and the size of the market.

    They will die with a shout not a whimper but die they shall.

    Hopefully the cult of celebrity will start to die with it but we've got a long way to go.


    .oO0Oo.
  • . Artists and musicians will not be able to make their money in the same ways and the same quantities as they do now.

    It's the recording companies with their draconian contracts who will not be able to make money using their standard parasitic and price-fixing practices. Producing CDs costs them pennies yet the CD prices have stayed at $14-18 for the past few years. I'd venture to say that as the years have progressed, producing CDs has gotten cheaper with further advancement and use of its technology while the prices have increased, (I remember when CDs first came out averaging $5-8). And where is all of that extra money going? I doubt that the musicians are seeing any of it.

    Actually, I think that artists and musicians will be able to make better money via the internet than they have been able to in the long run because they will not be as dependent on radio play and record company marketing.

    - tokengeekgrrl
    "The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions

  • As much as I disagree with how both the American and international IP systems are organized, I can understand how artists might like to maintain some control over their works. I mean, look at how great works of art and music have been used to peddle all sorts of junk on TV. Or how protest songs of the 60's are used to promote happiness-through-consumption now. I'd hate to create something only to have it used a few years later to sell breakfast cereal.
  • by DonkPunch ( 30957 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @07:55AM (#1008530) Homepage Journal
    I disagree a little with your interpretation of Jefferson's words.

    What he is really saying is that the protection of ideas is a recent social creation. Ideas are not "naturally" anyone's property. He is questioning the need for such an artificial protection, but stops short of actually condemning it.

    Remember that the writers of the Constitution were very concerned with the idea of natural rights. Natural rights are inherently part of being a human being. They are not "granted" -- you get them just for being born. Jefferson is saying he believes what we know today as IP is not a natural right.

    The Bill of Rights reflects this philosophy. It is an AFFIRMATION of rights, not an ENUMERATION of rights.

    The Consitution DOES provide for IP protection in Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 -- "To promote the progress of science and useful arts by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries." Had Jefferson and the other Constitutional framers been opposed to these artificial restrictions, this clause would certainly not exist. This is NOT a contradiction, Jefferson is merely expressing his reservations in this letter.

    Nevertheless, he clearly believes it to be an artificial right. The U.S. would do well to review its IP law in this light. Perhaps we are concentrating too much on "securing... exclusive rights" and not enough on promoting "the progress of science and useful arts."

    The concept of IP protection may not be fundamentally broken. It may just need some tuning.

    (Side note -- a Jefferson quote did not spark a Second Amendment debate on Slashdot? What are the odds?)
  • Diane claims:
    This will change. The Blair Witch Project (made for US$35,000 by amateurs and unexpectedly grossing US$150-million) is an example.

    The Blair Witch Project is only an example of how a relatively cheap to create movie made lots of money because lots of money was put into its advertising. Based on the inundation of commercials for the BWP I am sure that much more than a mere $35,000 dollars were put into the advertising.

    In the day of the Internet the adage still holds true:

    It takes $$$$$$ to make $$$$$$$$$$!!

  • Who would mod down TJ? ;-)

  • by dadop ( 86028 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @05:41AM (#1008534)
    For a recent, interesting handling of IP issues, see http://www.nap.edu/books/0309064996/html/ [nap.edu].

  • No one (read much less people) will enter a field where the prospects of earning a decent living are substantially lower than in other fields.

    I think you're overestimating musicians' prospects of earning a decent living as it is. Most musicians I know (all that I know personally) work full-time jobs to pay their bills. The money they make actually creating and playing music doesn't nearly cover the costs. For them the opportunity to create and play music for other people is the incentive in itself. The possibility of making money is just a side effect. In fact they seem more worried that getting a contract with a big label will be detrimental to their music than they are about not making money.

    They truly love creating and performing more than anything.

    numb

  • Look at music as an example.
    Hypothetically speaking..
    if music piracy (for free, not for-profit) bankrupts the music industry as it is now.. and artists can no longer make money off recording albums... then certainly, many artists will not make music anymore, and many new ones will choose different professions, as there will be no chance for them to make money. And then, society will be without the music it wants.. so what will happen?
    Simply... *something* will work itself out so those who want (demand) can get what they want (supply) from those who can produce the goods. IN other words.....
    is the music industry as it is doomed? Certainly.
    Is it the end of music? Not on your life.
  • by Sloppy ( 14984 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @07:08AM (#1008539) Homepage Journal

    Eventually, the shortage of new ideas will add value to the ones that are there, and mechanisms will come in place to protect IP again.

    I disagree here. Creators do not necessarily need to be "protected" in order to be compensated. First of all, there are some people who conscientiously want creators to be compensated, and they will buy (direct from the creators, if possible) even when they could get it for free. Granted, this is a small population, but then again, they would be somewhat powerful, since their preferences would have a bearing on what actually gets created. Selection may not be quite as rewarding as "real" creation, but it nevertheless feels good to exercise that power.

    And secondly, check out Schneier and Kelsey's Street Performer Protocol [counterpane.com]. This thing might actually work (although I still haven't heard of anyone using it yet). Atlas has no reason to shrug if he can get pre-paid for his work. And it doesn't even need IP's "protection".

    Maybe there will be a first wave of many creators bailing out. They'll be the ones that the market decides aren't worth paying for. I'm not 100% sure that will be such a tragic loss. If this hurts the media giants who push and promote all that crap, I'm not going to shed any tears, because they weren't the prime movers anyway. Sell that Sony stock.


    ---
  • I was actually disappointed by the article because it doesn't look forward. If IP law is stuck in the 1800s, how did people become billionaires in the twentieth century? And, based on this past history, who's to say that new forms of separating people from their money won't be found by the recording industry greedheads?

    I wouldn't be surprised to see Napster and every other site offering entertainment content get so wrapped up in litigation that their great-grandchildren are indentured workers. I can see sites avoiding any possibility of being wrapped up in this controversy resulting in MP3 dying except for personal use on personally owned CDs.

    Personally, I would like to see the levelling of the playing field that the article mentions - I think it would be a real change in society and one for the better, but I wouldn't count on it.

    myke
  • Most bands only get 25 - 35 per CD that is sold.

    Proof please?

    The other $15 - $20 goes to the store, distributor, record label, etc.

    Proof please?

    With the exception of the handful of mega-bands like U2 & Pearl Jam, most bands make the bulk of their money from playing live.

    Proof please?

  • sarcasm()
    {
    You are so right. After all, nobody ever produced any creative works prior to the invention of the IP concept. I seem to remember hearing something about a "Renaissance", but that was before America even existed, so it can't have been all that important.
    }
  • Since someone else posted the ideas of Thomas Jefferson, I thought that some people might find the views of John Stuart Mill, the author of On Liberty, interesting. In the following quote, he is mostly concerned with patents, but considers copyright to be analogous in that it is a monopoly that is granted by the state.

    From Principles of Political Economy, book V, chapter 10:

    The condemnation of monopolies ought not to extend to patents, by which the originator of an improved process is allowed to enjoy, for a limited period, the exclusive privilege of using his own improvement. This is not making the commodity dear for his benefit, but merely postponing a part of the increased cheapness which the public owe to the inventor, in order to compensate and reward him for the service. That he ought to be both compensated and rewarded for it, will not be denied, and also that if all were at once allowed to avail themselves of his ingenuity, without having shared the labours or the expenses which he had to incur in bringing his idea into a practical shape, either such expenses and labours would be undergone by nobody except very opulent and very public-spirited persons, or the state must put a value on the service rendered by an inventor, and make him a pecuniary grant. This has been done in some instances, and may be done without inconvenience in cases of very conspicuous public benefit; but in general an exclusive privilege, of temporary duration, is preferable; because it leaves nothing to any one's discretion; because the reward conferred by it depends upon the invention's being found useful, and the greater the usefulness the greater the reward; and because it is paid by the very persons to whom the service is rendered, the consumers of the commodity.

    So decisive, indeed, are these considerations, that if the system of patents were abandoned for that of rewards by the state, the best shape which these could assume would be that of a small temporary tax, imposed for the inventor's benefit, on all persons making use of the invention. To this, however, or to any other system which would vest in the state the power of deciding whether an inventor should derive any pecuniary advantage from the public benefit which he confers, the objections are evidently stronger and more fundamental than the strongest which can possibly be urged against patents.

    It is generally admitted that the present Patent Laws need much improvement; but in this case, as well as in the closely analogous one of Copyright, it would be a gross immorality in the law to set everybody free to use a person's work without his consent, and without giving him an equivalent. I have seen with real alarm several recent attempts, in quarters carrying some authority, to impugn the principle of patents altogether; attempts which, if practically successful, would enthrone free stealing under the prostituted name of free trade, and make the men of brains, still more than at present, the needy retainers and dependents of the men of money-bags.

  • Taxes rape the hell out of you when you go from minimum to a 'real' salary.

    If you're in the US, that's not really true. $6- per hour is about 12K if you're full time, and the tax would be next to nothing ( less than 1K). The marginal tax rate at 12K is still low , and probably doesn't jump much by 30K. You should be taking home about double the money you earned at MacDs.

  • I still find this dubious. It's quite easy to duplicate a book these days, but hardly anyone does it. It's easier to buy the book, because you get a nicer copy of the book than a photocopy provides you, and it's not prohibitively expensive.

    But a CD-R copy of a CD is virtually identical, and a MP3 copy of a CD is good enough for most people.

  • by pen ( 7191 )
    There's an editorial at osOpinion, titled Why Copyrights Should be Abolished [osopinion.com]. Read it -- it's pretty interesting.

    Some of it is a bit far-fetched, but the idea is certainly interesting. The most important part of the editorial is that it explains the reason copyright was put together in the first place. The major reason that copyrights were created is so that there would be more music for the people to enjoy. The fact that this allows artists and corporations to profit from it is only a side effect.

    --

  • But both the CD-R and the .MP3 are a pain in the ass to get, one because the download time is huge unless you're on a T1, and the other because finding the files is tricky (all I ever find is dead links, and after an hour I give up. Obviously I'm doing something wrong, or I don't know the right places to go, but still...).

    Anyway, I'd pay for the convenience of getting the real thing. But I wouldn't pay the unreasonable amounts companies are asking now ($3.99 for one song?).
  • by Kaa ( 21510 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @05:47AM (#1008565) Homepage
    Can someone define "Intellectual Property" for me? I've always been a bit shaky on the definition.

    VERY briefly:

    Intellectual property is (like any property) a bundle of rights relating to information -- you know, non-physical, intangible stuff. This bundle of rights is different from the rights you have in physical property. An example of difference is copyright's fair use exceptions. The reason for the difference is that "if I give you an apple, I lost an apple, but if I give you an idea, both of us have the idea". In other words, information use is non-exclusionary: you can use information simultaneously with other people.

    There are currently three forms of IP:

    (1) Patents (which used to cover only devices, but now seem to cover anything at all). A patent gives you an exclusive right to make (and license, sell, etc.) the patented device. Patents expire after a period of time (17 years?) and the information passes into public domain.

    (2) Trademarks (which cover names -- words, images, and now even scents -- used to identify business products). "Coca-cola" or the Nike's whoosh logo is a trademark. Trademarks, I think, never expire.

    (3) Copyright (which covers any information). This, of course, is the interesting part. Copyright gives the copyright holder a bunch of rights, the most important of which is the right to restrict making copies of the copyrighted information. Copyright originated as the means to protect authors from unscrupulous publishers but since, let us say, changed its character quite a bit. Copyright expires after some ungodly amount of time (in the US thank the Sonny Bono bill for that).

    HTH

    Kaa
  • From the RIAA site (again)..

    For example, the most significant cost of a CD today is the marketing and promotion of that music. To learn more about why CDs are a great value -- check out Cost of a CD. [riaa.com]

    The promotion costs also include stuff like music videos, worldwide distrubution, schmoozing radio execs, etc. The whole flap with the FTC was about the RIAA building promotion costs into the cost of the CD with their promotion agreements (i.e. We'll pay to promote it, and you can't lower the price to compete, all competition is through promotion).

    It's easier to make a dollar per product when the cost $15 per rather than $3 per. Keep the cost high and your can do the same with your margins. Oh, and use that monopoly power to squeeze, squeeze, squeeze.
    --
  • by w3woody ( 44457 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @09:13AM (#1008574) Homepage
    In other words, if I write a song, and it is recorded, I no longer have control over the spread of said song, and my song must stand on it's own value. If people like my song, and they like it a lot, then those people have the choice to make payment to me, not necessarily for the song itself, but as an encouragement to produce more songs.

    No. Re-read what Jefferson said:
    Society may give an exclusive right to the profits arising from [ideas], as an encouragement to men to pursue ideas which may produce utility,...

    This means society may give you the right to sell your song, and have people to buy your song (and thus have you profit from it) as an encouragement to you to write more songs. Of course people do not have to buy your song--but society may give you the exclusive right to profit: that is, society may give you the right to force other people not to sell your song, or otherwise distribute that song in a manner which prevents you from profiting from it. That is, Jefferson is describing the state of affairs that we currently "enjoy" today.

    However, it would be arrogant of me to assume that anything is owed me.

    No. What Jefferson is saying is that "rights" are things that arise out of a social compact: that your "inherent" right to possessions such as owning land or owning your clothes, or your right to profit exclusively from ideas you create (such as writings, music, inventions, etc) doesn't exist. "Rights" as such arise because we as a society agree to give eachother certain rights, such as the right to property (through enforcement of laws preventing theft) or rights to "intellectual property" (through enforcement of laws that prevent IP piracy). Other rights arise similarly: your right to life, for example, is only as good as our society's acknowledgement of laws against murder.

    Just because these rights are man-made and not God-given or inherent to nature doesn't mean you're arrogant in thinking that you should enjoy them--any more than you should feel arrogant in thinking that you have the right not to have some mad-man come over to your place with a baseball bat and turn your skull into red-colored tapioca pudding.

    How can I charge a price for something that no longer costs me anything? And how do I determine a price to charge another man for something that holds no value to him until it is given to him, especially when it may be of no value?

    A thing has no value if it costs nothing, either in time, space, or material goods to reproduce. Unfortunately, even ideas take some time, and if they are recorded, take space and material goods to reproduce. Further, any idea of merit probably took a master artist a non-trivial amount of time to create. Perhaps some artists feel the reward of creation is it's own payment--but most people live in the real world, and the time it took them to create their idea was time they don't have to spend to make money to put food on their table or a roof over their head.

    I'm always fascinated when people quote our Founding Fathers in order to justify things like erasing IP laws. Not only for the obvious reason that these people lived in a different time with different values--in a world where slavery was acceptable to many, where women were considered not to have an immortal soul and thus were no more spiritually valuable than a small dog, and in a world where only the landed arristocracy were given the vote.

    But also because our Founding Fathers had completely different ideas about what should--and should not--be included with our Federal Government. And it wasn't until around the early 1800's when the actual shape and form of our Federal Government was really established--it took almost a couple of generations for people to "get it right", so to speak. (I'm refering to a number of Supreme Court decisions which were used to "fine tune" the accepted interpretation of the Constitution.)

    While it is instructive to quote Jefferson, we're talking about a generation of people who were still trying to figure out if the Federal Government should be exclusively responsible for issuing currency, for heaven's sake! If they were still debating the idea of a central currency system (which wasn't even brought into being in it's current form until the early part of this century), then what makes you think their ideas about intellectual property rights would be any better formulated?
  • Indeed, it is likely that "arrogant" is too strong a word, but it is the only word I know of that properly conveys my point.

    The point that I believe Jefferson is trying to make is that the value of Intelectual Property cannot be quantified in the same way as Physical Property is.

    If I give my house to another person, I can no longer occupy that house, therefore it is within my rights to demand a payment, of the house's value to me.

    When I write a song, and give it to another person, I stand to lose absolutely nothing. The song is still with me, except that now that person has the song also. Therefore it is only fair that I demand payment, of the song's value to them, and unfortunately, only they are able to say what that value is. More unfortunately, they themselves cannot determine the value of that song to themselves, without recieving it first.

    That may sound a bit unfair, but consider the what road the alternative leads to.

    The reason that the Major Labels (in the case of music) have been able to profit for so long despite these facts, is because of the lack of technology, that did not allow copies to be inexpensively made, of decent quality. But with new technologies emerging constantly, one can assume that one day, you will be able to record everything that one hears, as perfectly as it was heard the first time. What then?

    Do you really want to allow Government (I'm sure that not only would they desire the job, but several individuals would scream for it to be done) to screen everything that you hear, to determine whether or not you have the right to hear it, or should be billed for it? And if you refuse to pay, will they be allowed to erase it? And do you really trust anyone other than yourself to determine what you can legitimately remember and what you can't?

    I for one don't.

    -Tommy

  • Actually, the Internet opens the possibility of direct patronage by the masses, not just the wealthy.

    From an artist's persective, patronage of the wealthy is better, for the obvious reason that they have more money.

    Larry Ellison can probably find more money in his sofa than I have in my bank account, so artists will obviously benifit more from winning his enthusiasm than mine.

    A good example of modern patronage is the way corporations tend to buy paintings and sculptures to decorate their offices with.

  • by Kaa ( 21510 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @05:50AM (#1008584) Homepage
    Bottom line, there are too many lawyers trained in Intellectual Property law for IP to disappear. It would take the concerted will of government to overturn or ignore IP law, and the bottom line is there's just too much lobbyist money for that to ever happen.

    It has been pointed out (by RMS? I'm not sure) that we are now entering the period of War on Copying. Just as the US had Prohibition (War on Alcohol) and is now engaging in just as futile War on Drugs, the next, information-age folly of the US government is going to be War on Copyright Infringement (aka theft, theft, you hear? It's theft, THEFT, THEFT!!!!).


    Kaa
  • nitpickin'...just this part....

    Of course people do not have to buy your song--but society may give you the exclusive right to profit: that is, society may give you the right to force other people not to sell your song,

    up to here, I'm all for your statement, but this part...

    or otherwise distribute that song in a manner which prevents you from profiting from it.

    ..is where I think you are off. (if I am interpreting your tone correctly) I don't think sharing or trading prevents the ability to profit. If you are granted exclusive permission to profit from something, how does a larger exposure and use of that something prevent your ability to profit from it? Especially if that something is a thing of beauty made to be appreciated.
    --
  • A good example of modern patronage is the way corporations tend to buy paintings and sculptures to decorate their offices with.

    Judging by what I've seen in corporate offices, patronage by corporations is NOT the way to make good art.

    Kaa
  • by tringstad ( 168599 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @05:54AM (#1008593)
    From the immortal words of one of our founding fathers, who said it better than I possibly can.

    In a letter [let.rug.nl] to Isaac McPherson, on August 13th, 1813, Thomas Jefferson writes:
    ...
    It has been pretended by some, (and in England especially,) that inventors have a natural and exclusive right to their inventions, and not merely for their own lives, but inheritable to their heirs. But while it is a moot question whether the origin of any kind of property is derived from nature at all, it would be singular to admit a natural and even an hereditary right to inventors. It is agreed by those who have seriously considered the subject, that no individual has, of natural right, a separate property in an acre of land, for instance. By an universal law, indeed, whatever, whether fixed or movable, belongs to all men equally and in common, is the property for the moment of him who occupies it; but when he relinquishes the occupation, the property goes with it. Stable ownership is the gift of social law, and is given late in the progress of society. It would be curious then, if an idea, the fugitive fermentation of an individual brain, could, of natural right, be claimed in exclusive and stable property. If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of every one, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it. Its peculiar character, too, is that no one possesses the less, because every other possesses the whole of it. He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me. That ideas should freely spread from one to another over the globe, for the moral and mutual instruction of man, and improvement of his condition, seems to have been peculiarly and benevolently designed by nature, when she made them, like fire, expansible over all space, without lessening their density in any point, and like the air in which we breathe, move, and have our physical being, incapable of confinement or exclusive appropriation. Inventions then cannot, in nature, be a subject of property. Society may give an exclusive right to the profits arising from them, as an encouragement to men to pursue ideas which may produce utility, but this may or may not be done, according to the will and convenience of the society, without claim or complaint from any body. Accordingly, it is a fact, as far as I am informed, that England was, until wecopied her, the only country on earth which ever, by a general law, gave a legal right to the exclusive use of an idea. In some other countries it is sometimes done, in a great case, and by a special and personal act, but, generally speaking, other nations have thought that these monopolies produce more embarrassment than advantage to society; and it may be observed that the nations which refuse monopolies of invention, are as fruitful as England in new and useful devices.
    ...

    In other words, if I write a song, and it is recorded, I no longer have control over the spread of said song, and my song must stand on it's own value. If people like my song, and they like it a lot, then those people have the choice to make payment to me, not necessarily for the song itself, but as an encouragement to produce more songs.

    However, it would be arrogant of me to assume that anything is owed me. How can I charge a price for something that no longer costs me anything? And how do I determine a price to charge another man for something that holds no value to him until it is given to him, especially when it may be of no value?

    This stands as well in the concept of Patents on Ideas vs. Inventions (The implementation of Ideas), which was the original subject of this letter.

    That we are revisiting problems that existed 200 years ago, is proof that the man who holds no value in history is doomed to repeat it.

    -Tommy

  • Hmmm. So movies and music will be free in the future, countering recent history. Great.

    But why just music? Doesn't the net simplify the distribution of all (artistic) media?

    I've been holding out paying twenty-odd dollars for Gibson's latest novel, "All Tomorrow's Parties." (I'm a poor grad student, you see.) Perhaps I'll see if ol' Bill's latest and greatest is available out there gratis. Perhaps that'll wipe the smirk off his face.
  • With all this debate on whether weakening of IP is a Good Thing(TM), whether recordable music becoming free is a Good Thing(TM), whether musicans should perform their works for a living is a Good Thing(TM), I wonder why there isn't more discussion of what this means to software development. After all, most of us on slashdot work with software on one level or another

    IMHO, the end of recordable music is as an extreme future as the end of commerical, mass-marketed software. I just don't see piracy killing off CDs; just as I don't see piracy killing off commerical software. But it seems that a good number of people (include Mr. Gibson) thinks that recordable music is becoming non-profitable. What keeps software from going that route? The software industry accounts for lost sales from piracy in prices it sets, and (more importantly), it actively goes after large piracy rings whenever possible. Seems okay to me; seems okay to a lot of people on slashdot; why isn't it okay for the music industry to do the same?

    That point aside, what would happen if it became no longer profitable to sell commerical software? It seems to me few people (outside of the FSF) would argue that *all* software companies should start giving away software for free and start building custom software on a customer by customer basis. (I don't know what the FSF's stance on custom software systems are. I assume they're more concerned with mass-marketed software.) However, it seems a good number of people would like to see musicans stop selling mass-marketed recordings and stick to live preformances to eek out a living. I don't think neither the computer software industry nor the music industry would last long under these conditions; the cost vs. profit ratio is too high for custom products to support these mammount industries.

    As a programmer, would I care if I worked on a commerical product or a custom one? No. As a musican, would I care if I made money through selling recordings of my music or playing live? No. (I would die of shock that someone would pay me to play for them and not to stop playing.) As someone would wants a career in computer programming, would I care that the number of jobs in the industry shrank because commerical software become unprofitable to make? Absolutely. And I bet musicans feel the same way about their industry. There's only so much code one can write and so many people able to pay for whole systems, and there's only so music one can play and venues that will pay to hear them.

    George Lee

  • Actually, Shannon was one of the sodomites.

    Was he? Good company for Turing, I suppose ;-)

    Yours Truly,

    Dan Kaminsky
    DoxPara Research
    http://www.doxpara.com
  • Myself and people I know are actually discovering different music and media online instead of what the mainstream spoonfeeds us. And we're willing to get our free sample and then go out and order the CD or movie. Their concerns seem to be primarily is that they can't figure out how to put us back in their marketing scheme.

    What we are seeing right now could just be a global tape trading community. Surely there is a way to treat it as such without treading on too many legal toes. Either that or we're all just going to hell with everyone who has ever videotaped B5.:)
  • by Hard_Code ( 49548 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @09:20AM (#1008607)
    Ok, so whose going to print this on some tshirts and sell them?

    BTW, I also disagree with your interpretation. A song is a lot more than an idea. Perhaps an IDEA for a song can't be protected, but I think a song can. When you make music you put physical and unique individual effort into it, and also bear an economic burden. I think this serves to make a recording a bit more "concrete" than just an abstract idea. After all, people don't go about just thinking up ideas for songs and selling those ideas. They sell the music that they took effort to play.
  • There are a lot of artists not making any money now. And there are a lot that do make money, but aren't exactly artists.
    --
  • The article's title is misleading, what the author is really trying to discuss is the 'death' of the music and movie industries.

    From what I read, they are saying that since many pirated CD's and movies are now available on the internet that this ease of transference will drop all moral barriers to the collection of 'stolen' property. This is the same argument that the movie industry made when the VCR came out.

    I personally don't feel this is true, pirated software has *always* been readily available to well-informed computer users, but somehow, software manufacturers still manage to make healthy profits. This new medium will change the way 'recordable media' is distributed, paid for, and the end profiter. But it will not eliminate 'intellectual property' rights. Pirates have always existed in the music industry since tape decks came out, and the music industry is still there.

    Why? Because if you can't make money at it, few people will do it.
  • An AK-47 fits perfectly in a Fender Strat guitar case.

    It does - how did you know that? :)

    Aim for the center of mass. Keep shooting until all movement ceases.

    As someone who has fired more than just a few rounds through an AK, I prefer aiming a little lower - somewhere around the knees. Then you can rely on the recoil to take the next few rounds up and into the body.

    Sheesh, in Africa we have these discussions all the time :)

  • by zeet ( 70981 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @08:15AM (#1008618)
    Sometimes this can work. If you are curious about a profession that demonstrates exactly what happens when technology passes you up, look at the history of typesetting. Try here [slip.net] for some detail on this.
  • I like the $1 a song bit. That's good. However, i don't think the artist would agree to it. When they write about 12 songs to go on a CD, they probably love everyone of them and they would want everyone to have all of those 12 songs. Therefore they would probably get pissed off if people only want three of their songs.


    I don't think this is a concern for most artists. After all, they sell singles on CD...

    Jon
  • I'm assuming the 90 years Gibson is referring to is the time between the beginning widespread use of the phonograph and the current day. (There were things like player pianos and music boxes for at many years before the phonograph, but they were expensive and/or limited.) So, really his 90 year window begins with the start of recorded music, and he's only saying that it's not going to be possible to make money off music soon.

    I still find this dubious. It's quite easy to duplicate a book these days, but hardly anyone does it. It's easier to buy the book, because you get a nicer copy of the book than a photocopy provides you, and it's not prohibitively expensive.

    What I'm hoping will happen is that the various companies will realise that if they provide a legal outlet that's cheap and easier to use than finding the .MP3 out on the web (_I_ can't seem to find anything!), people will just use the easy way and pay the cost (1$ a song sounds good). After all, the distribution costs will still be very small compared to shipping out CDs that in many cases will never sell.

    Of course, I still want the files in an open format I can keep and use on multiple devies, instead of some nasty limited proprietary format.

    Jon
  • -- ...and if you actually have some facts, post them.

    Fine. Excerpted from West's Encyclopedia of American Law:

    Record companies also use complex contractual formulas to determine royalty payments to their artists. Companies typically offer seemingly large royalty percentages to artists. Various clauses in the recording agreements then are used to reduce the royalty percentages, reduce the number of units on which royalties are paid, and delay payment for many months. Although a few small record companies have made some effort to simplify the structure of recording agreements, the major record companies and their smaller affiliates have uniformly fought to maintain the more complex, formula-based agreements....

    A separate copyright exists in each legally recorded version of a song. Therefore, when a musician records a song after receiving the appropriate license from the owner of the song's copyright, that musician owns a separate copyright in the recorded version of the song. Normally, recording contracts require that a musician record songs---even songs otherwise owned by the musician---as works for hire. The copyrights to such recordings, called the masters, automatically become the property of the record company.

    I also used to be an Audio Producer. I have booked studio time to record musicians and voice talent, managed post-production from DAT to various formats for distribution, including mastering my own demo tape, so I fully understand what the costs are and what they are not.

    -- Instead, there are a lot of whining noises about music being "too expensive".

    Whoops - that's not what I was saying at all. Please allow me to try again.

    The internet as a music distribution medium makes it feasible for a band to manage their own recording and distribution without having to sign all of their rights away to a record company label. I have no problems paying for music and do so regularly. I confess that I am and always will be more of a music geek than a computer geek.

    As a result of said musicgeekness, I would prefer to buy from a musical artist directly and cut out the middleman of big record companies so that my money is supporting that artist. Major record companies support their profits and interests at the expense of artists and consumers. They are parasitic like contract agencies, making money off of other people's real work, totally unconcerned with anyone else's welfare but their own.

    My apologies for not articulating it clearly the first time. I hope this makes more sense.

    - tokengeekgrrl
    "The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions

  • For every Mozart who fritters his paltry allowance away, there were hundreds of Ernests, Henris, and Jacobs, who shovelled shit because they couldn't get a patron.

    Unlike today, when for every Lars there are thousands of garage band drummers who work as dishwashers and gas station attendants because they can't get a record contract.

  • On the other hand, works created by those in it for the money is typically inferior to those created by people in it because of a love of the art.
  • The explosion in intellectual works over the past century has been because of strong IP law.

    No, the explosion of the Bee Gees and Britany Spears has been because of strong IP law. It has also been a hinderance to certain types of artistic progress.

    Classical composers used to write variations on each others work all the time. It was considered a very valuable learning tool. Beethoven and Dvorak both stole the "Ode to Joy" melody note-for-note from the public domain. Yet if I were to quote a Beatles refrain in a pop song of my own, I would face a lawsuit.

    IP law is not all that good for artists or for art. It is very good for people and companies who re-sell artistic works, because it creates an artificial shortage of creative beauty.

  • The article talks a lot about actors, musicians, cultural icons becoming rich as a 20th century phenomenon, and it is completely right. This century, there has been this great boom of expectations to become rich by being an icon. Never before in history have people associated fast cars or the easy life with such people. In fact, I think we're foolish to make these people rich. Look at the salaries of movie stars, baseball players, rock musicians. They are all very high. You pay $11 to go see a mvie (at least where I live) which will gross in the hundreds of millions, but only cost in the tens of millions to make... if you think about it, they could spread the weath, and reduce the cost of your ticket.

    Now what's been the point of that little rant? Not much, other than to say that most industries are lagging behind the times, especially cultural ones. In these times of the net, we expect things to be very cheap, if not free. These cultural icons have got to figure out how to get on the 'net to stay alive. Now, they might take a bit of a pay hit, but if that bothers them, well they can relax with the thought that I'm a starving student, while they make millions.

    Now if industries don't figure out how to get online, they're going to go the way of the dodo. Darwinism is still applicable to modern society, just on a smaller time span. If you don't evolve, you're extinct.

    Another problem we have in our society is the laws. Governements just can't seem to keep up with the 'net either. This is a problem because now we need to do a rewrite of entire sections of our lawbooks. Why? It's the same problem that we've had for years with software piracy: the laws aren't equipped to deal with the 'net.

    Take the Sherman Act for example. It was barely able to deal with M$, and that's not even over yet. At least they had a tangible product. Can it deal with the next monopoly that's totally online? Can our other laws deal well with net problems such as hacking, fraud, etc? No. They can't. And this is going to be a serious problem in the next ten years as more and more of our world becomes hi-tech, and the rest doesn't.

    This is the one and only train leaving for the high-tech world. You had better get on.
  • You would have a good point if making music, or any other creatively inspired work, were as easy as you make it sound. To quote:

    Sorry, I was not trying to belittle the time and effort that many creative musicians put into making there music, I was just trying to keep the discussion simple. However, my views are still the same.

    As a studio musician, I know something of the costs it takes to produce an album, with or without any kind of backing. Cost of renting studio time (which for an album runs anywhere from $1000 to over a $1 million for a decent studio and enough time to record and work), instruments (which are damn pricey), audio equipment (musicians have their favorite mics, cables, adapters, effects pedals) and not to mention the media such as ADAT which is used at the studio to capture the music.
    Do I have an explicit right to make money off of my investment and effort? No.
    Do I have a right to prevent others from stealing my creation and profiting off of my investment and effort? Yes.

    Yes, you do, unfortunately the simple fact is that the only reliable method that you have to do this, is to not release it at all. It may not seem right, it may not even be right (altough I think that further down the line, we as a society will see that the free sharing of information is best for society as a whole), but it is a fact.

    The government has nothing to do with this issue - bringing it up is nothing but a red herring.

    A little extreme? Maybe, but not quite a red herring. I was just trying to point out that government involvement on a VERY detailed level, is the only way to enforce your copyrights. And it is the level of this involvement that is detrimental to us all.

    IP copyright issues are disturbingly similar to patents - if anyone can simply use and enjoy my work without any form of mandatory reinbursement that I can set, then my incentive for creating work is destroyed.

    There was a time, long ago, when there were no copyright laws. Strangely though, we have some incredibly beutiful music, and famous musicians from those time periods. Bards like Shakespere, Classical Composers like Beethoven, Mozart, Rachmoninav, and because they were good they were hired by the rich to perfom and occasionally commisioned to compose new music for a living. Strangely enough, I do not believe that their motives were of a monetarial nature, and although their works were used and even "stolen" by other performers, they were not driven to living on the streets, because they were able to demand a higher price for their performances, being the original artists.

    Musicians are caught between a rock and greed with internet distribution - on mp3.com, for instance, how many thousands of bands exist that haven't made more than $5 for every band that makes a decent living?

    How many of them are good is more the question. How many of the bands on mp3.com deserve $5? And who decides whether they do or not?

    The alternative to that is to become popular (which in 99% of cases takes a recording label's marketing power) and then watch as millions of people simply make a "loaned" copy from a friend and "forget" to pay for the music. And if you're popular without a nice, fat contract for recording and touring, then God help you, because until you do there really isn't any other source of income when free copies of your material is all over Napster and Gnutella except for local gigs (which pay for meals, and that's about it).

    This is the part that you will probably disagree with, regardless of what I say, but I hope you will at least consider my words, harsh as they may be. Although it may not agree with you, popular music is popular for a reason. Yes, the Major Labels do play a part in that popularity, but for the most part, their popularity is based on the fact that they are good. Take the Major Labels out of the picture, and you will lose what Bias is left.

    The voluntary "pay for download and support" system is completely bunk. Two reasons:
    Think about how many times a day you listen to music and think, "Wow, this really touched me, I think I'll go look up the artist and give them financial support!" Heh. Just thinking about basic human nature makes me laugh at that thought.
    The other reason? Why pay for something when you can get it for free? Let's take the example of mIRC, a program that's used by millions and has the same voluntary pay-for-support deal. For all the people that have downloaded it, the number of people that have actually paid is a tiny percentage. It's not like mIRC isn't a useful program - it's just basic human nature again. And unlike programmers, who could use mIRC to land a nice cushy corporate job, musicians are pretty much SOL in the "other jobs" department. They write and play music, and, well, uh, they write and play music. And do a lot of waiting tables on the side.

    As far as people paying for the music because they like the artist, maybe the problem is more that there is no decent accepted method to pay those artist. $20 is too much, and of that very little is getting to the artist. If the cost is reasonable, people will pay it. Let's take WinAMP as an example (I realize it's not music, but that there are no good musical examples is part of the point I am making). WinAMP was distibuted as Freeware origianlly. Eventually, they began distributing it as Shareware, but fully functional. People had absolutely nothing to gain frm registering WinAMP. Nothing. I know this because I registered my copy, back when it was around version 2.04, and I got nothing for doing so, nor did I expect too, I just didn't want to see development of a product I liked cease to exist. A lot of other people did the same. Did the gang from Nullsoft go out of business or get driven to the streets? No. They're still pushing out software, and still distributing it freely, and still getting paid. BTW, if Mirc is doing so bad, why are there new releases of that still coming out as well?

    Online distribution is not the end of the music industry as we know it - it is the end of the music profession as we know it. We're going to end up with 10-20 superpopular, hypermarketed acts that really have nothing to do with creative talent, and then there's going to be a sharp dropoff to the thousands of garage bands with the talent who don't have the capital to produce a great album, don't ever make the scene, and don't make a dime. The price of commercialization.

    The price of commercialization is what we're paying now, and the 10-20 superpop bands you describe are the ones in heavy rotation on your radio now. With the dawn of free music, what you're more likely going to see, is an increase in the quality of music, and bands or individuals that rival the quality of classical music long gone, with modern sounds. No doubt bands like this exist now, and have conflicting morals with the likes of the Major Labels, and as such the Labels have no use for them. Instead, with the Labels out of the way, music will be come more spread by use of the internet, more popular by word of mouth, and musicians well paid for performances by the origianl artist, and commisioned to write music for what ever purposes. It will return to the way it was, but better.

    But that's just my opinion.

    -Tommy

  • I would, in fact, have to pay the sheet music publisher. And I am happy to pay for artistic effort. What sticks in everyone's craw is paying for the PR, the marketing, the coke up the A&R girl's nose, the law suits, etc etc. My point was that if we were paying .$ instead of $$$ then there would be a lot less incentive to pirate. It is not a conceptual argument anymore - it is happening, just as the printing press made the circulation of writing much cheaper and broader.
  • It is easy to take a part of a sentence, out of context, and twist it to mean whatever you want, but if I may repost the section of which we speak, with a little more detail, Jefferson wrote:

    Society may give an exclusive right to the profits arising from them, as an encouragement to men to pursue ideas which may produce utility, but this may or may not be done, according to the will and convenience of the society, without claim or complaint from any body. Accordingly, it is a fact, as far as I am informed, that England was, until wecopied her, the only country on earth which ever, by a general law, gave a legal right to the exclusive use of an idea. In some other countries it is sometimes done, in a great case, and by a special and personal act, but, generally speaking, other nations have thought that these monopolies produce more embarrassment than advantage to society; and it may be observed that the nations which refuse monopolies of invention, are as fruitful as England in new and useful devices.

    Additionally, you stated:

    This means society may give you the right to sell your song, and have people to buy your song (and thus have you profit from it) as an encouragement to you to write more songs.

    And true, Jefferson was speaking that society may grant you such privilege, however, it seems obvious to me that he disdains of such privileges. As you were quick to point out later, society may grant a lot of rights, such as the right to own another man in the case of Slavery. This does not make society correct or moral, it just makes the point that society has power.

    The only other thing in your post that I feel compelled to comment on is this, where you wrote:

    A thing has no value if it costs nothing, either in time, space, or material goods to reproduce. Unfortunately, even ideas take some time, and if they are recorded, take space and material goods to reproduce. Further, any idea of merit probably took a master artist a non-trivial amount of time to create. Perhaps some artists feel the reward of creation is it's own payment--but most people live in the real world, and the time it took them to create their idea was time they don't have to spend to make money to put food on their table or a roof over their head.

    Value is a relative thing, and just because you hold value in something whether it be tangible or not, does not mean I hold that same value for it. And yes, it would be arrogant of you to assume that it does. What's more, I cannot be held responsible for your time and efforts, unless I have had some direct impact on them, but when you spend your time to write a song, that I did not ask you to write, did not want you to write, and did not enjoy when you were finished writing, I do not feel compelled to reimburse you for your time. It was a choice that you have made to spend doing as you wished, and any loss of income, or inability to support your family that results from such actions, are your responsibility, not mine.

    -Tommy

  • I think this is the article you asked my opinion on? If not, here is my opinion anyhow. Take it with a grain of salt, and let me apologize for the length of this post in advance.

    I agree, except on the software part. Books, magazines, music, movie etc help people learn (besides entertain), and apply the ideas they learn as they like, without charges. I think of most software as a tool. I don't expect to be able to borrow it out of the library and keep a copy forever, the same way I don't expect to borrow a bulldozer and keep it forever.

    The perception of Software as a tool is one that the Software Industry has been pushing for a very long time now. The truth is Knowledge in general is a tool. Software is just a different method of recording a set of instructions. The computer interpretting those instructions is the tool.

    An odd example: If I wrote a flowchart to show the way that _I_ made a peanut butter and jelly sandwich (I did this once as a kid!), and attempted to sue all the kids in the world who told their parents they wanted theirs made the same way(with potato chips in them!), everyone would agree that I was nuts. What if I had actually thought of this first (I admit I pirated the idea from the little girl next to me), and had actually patented it? You'd still think I was nuts, and anyone who wanted to put potato chips on their PB&J would continue to do so anyway.

    Ok, fine, I lost that lawsuit. I'm gonna go sue the Producers of the movie that popularized my idea without giving me my royalties, and the authors of the 1000 or so cookbooks, that rudely took my flowchart and made recipes out of it.

    Still think it's absurd? Yeah, because it is.
    Even if I legitimately thought of the idea first.
    Even if I was legitimately the first to do it.
    Even if I had spent 100 hours of my own time, and bought 500 loaves of bread and 50 jars of PB&J, most people would think I was nuts to demand payment of them, just because they built their sandwiches the same way.

    You could use similar logic to argue against letting people borrow books, magazines, etc, but I think there's a difference. Software, like MS Word doesn't help you learn. You don't really need MS Word. There's nothing you can do with MS Word that you can basically do without it.

    But there is still a way to profit off of it, without directly selling it. If you (as a company) spend time to develop a product, then nobody is going to know that product better than you, and generally they are going to come to you for training and support for that product. Additionally, when that product doesn't do exactly what they want, but damn close, they're going to pay you money to figure out how to make that product do what they want. They may even pay you money to teach them how to make that product do what they want. Example: OpenNMS [opennms.org].

    Another possibility is that you develop software that absolutely kick ass, everybody loves it, and you give it away for free, under a fully functional, but request (not demand) payment, "If you want to see it get better, send me money so I can keep making it". See WinAMP [winamp.com].

    Or best of all, do it because it's what you love to do, and because you believe it should be done, and because you want to contribute to the world you live in. Package it with cool and unique but cheap stuff (Stickers), sell T-Shirts, and give recognition to the individuals or companies that support your efforts. I bought a copy of OpenBSD [openbsd.org] just to have a CD with a Pufferfish on it.

    Books contain ideas that you can't expect to get on your own. I'm at a loss to explain it better. One way to look at is that books impart knowledge, and software and equipment are facilitators.

    As I said computers are the tool, software just the instructions to make them work. If anybody should be funding software development, it's the computer manufacturers who are selling you a tool, and making you buy the manual from someone else.

    It did actually used to be this way, I might add, before M$. Apple computers came with Apple's OSs on them(and still do). Mainframes with Unix. IBMs with IBM-DOS. However, once people started buying M$ to replace the installed OSs, the computer manufacturers eventually began selling computers without OSs. Do you think they removed the cost associated with the development of the software?

    With those books, you can obtain the knowledge to build the software and equipment you think you need.

    We as a society should be supporting the growth of that society, not reinventing the wheel, if it has already been done, the knowledge that you need to do it again should be freely available, I think that software falls into the category of this Knowledge. Building equipment, a physical undertaking is different.

    Also, I think software in libraries is a good idea if the idea is for trial use, use the software until you return it. Pay for it afterwards.

    Why pay for it afterwards? You haven't cost anybody any money by not paying for it. Instead, pay a company to better it, something they may not be able to do without the necessary funding.

    Open Source is nice, but there's a lot of other nice software we wouldn't have because it takes too much time and skill to produce for free.

    Free is relative. If computer manufacturers or corporations were paying to have it developed to begin with (for the purposes of their own profits), then it would already be paid for.

    Copy machines in libraries is a good point though, and has significance to the software industry. Even though you can copy an entire book in the library, people still buy books. Though, sometimes it is just as expensive to photocopy a book, not to mention it's time consuming.

    Indeed, I would buy a copy of an Operating System from the company that created it, if that cost was fair, and they were only profitting minorly from the cost of distribution.

    Lasty, I should mention I'm a bit of a hypocrite because I use some pirated software. Almost all the software I use often (once a month or more), I buy, if it's not free that is. I'm not sure if this is good or bad, but, for instance, I don't want to pay $100+ bucks for MS Word, when I use it rarely to view and lightly edit a Word file someone sent me in an email. Also, I have no stolen software that I would buy to use if I wasn't able to steal it.

    Excactly the point of this whole diatribe. Software is not priced fairly. Value is a relative thing, and one thing may have many different values to many different people. Perhaps if the software industry were to open it's eyes and see this, and build a more morally correct business model, then we wouldn't have the problems that we face now.

    -Tommy

  • And what about the songwriter? Alvin can write a damn good song, but he can't sing or dance or operate the sound board. Bert takes Alvin's song for free and makes a million on his worldwide tour. Alvin gets nothing.

    But, you say, Bert would certainly hire Alvin to keep writing his songs. True, except that Chuck already hired Alvin for 5$ an hour. Bert "stole" the song off of Alvin' and Chuck's demo release. Bert knows that he doesn't have to hire Alvin, he only needs to copy his stuff.

    So Alvin and Chuck end up working at McDonalds to feed their family all because of some stupid philosophy that selling songs is evil.
  • Yep, provide more services and get more back, that's definitely a good business model.

    Yes, don't allow your distibutors to compete on price, and roll your increasing marketing costs into the price. Sounds like a great business model...too bad it is ILLEGAL. [ftc.gov]

    did it occur to you that retail market, and depending on the country, import/export taxes and middleman fees kick the price up a few notches ?

    Now you know how the record co's have been able to keep kicking that price up a few notches and remove the ability of the retailers to lower it. Of course everyone in the supply chain raises the price, duh. The $3 figure I pulled outta my ass, but I think you could make a living selling CDs for five. A buck to make, a buck to ship, a buck to promote and 2 for the artist. Of course, that's in an ideal world with consumers who know what they want (or have a simple means to sample every piece available.......!!!!!). In our world there are stupid enough people that have to pay more than the total price of the object for someone to tell them that they want it, and even stupider people who think this is a good thing.

    By their own admission the RIAA has deduced that the marketing is the most valuable part of a CD. I think it should be the music, but then again, I don't make $14billion/yr marketing music.

    --
  • The net is not going to really change anything fundamental long-term, it'll just change the arena that it's done in and the tools that'll be used.

    You don't understand. The danger to IP comes from the confluence of two factors:

    (1) A great deal of IP is digital and more and more (on a % basis) becomes digital. Computers make copying of information basically costless.

    (2) The net makes it very easy to distribute perfect copies of information to anybody and his goldfish.

    (1) + (2) = some very frightened copyright holders (see Bronfman's panic speech).

    Kaa
  • It's a nit-pick, but I think that statement mischaracterizes Jefferson's words. Jefferson was saying that there is no natural property right inherent to the creation of work.

    We shall have to agree to disagree here. I see your point, but I don't believe that my statement was incorrect.

    What the post omits is Jefferson's statement that there is an artificial property right created by men. Jefferson even seems resigned to the concept as an inheritence from British law. That he considers the right artificial does not automatically mean the right has no merit.

    Indeed, but omitted on purpose. I do not think it was Jeffersons intent to support that artificial property right, so much as to point out that it is in fact, 'artificial'. A right assumed by greedy men, who are concerned more with their own well being than that of their communities at large, and humankind as a whole.

    In fact, further prove your point, in the same letter Jefferson admits to paying the patent price on a grain elevator, though he thought it bogus, rather than to cause trouble, and approached the patent holder and his lawyers about it after the fact.

    Again, it's inclusion in the text of the Constitution implies the framers thought it was a good idea.

    Also, let us remember that Jefferson did not have final authority on what went in the constitution, and that not everything in the constitution is necessarily right, just because most of it is. Our founding fathers, admirable and wise though they were, were still human, and prone to such conclusion. The Constitution also allowed for Slavery until the addition of the 13th amendment in 1865.

    -Tommy

  • Hmmmm .. since that system managed to leave Mozart in a pauper's grave at the age of 33, he might not necessarily give you the ringing endorsement you seek. Lack of a system whereby musicians can own the fruits of their labours basically deprived us of the vision of a mature Mozart. Effectively, the abolition of copyright transforms musicians from owners of capital into pure labourers, which seems a pretty shabby way to treat the people who do far more to enrich our lives than computer programmers ever will.
  • I can't comment on Michael Jackson, so I'll stick with Liberace. Why was he making 5 million a year? Because his fans paid him that much! They wanted to!

    One of his best quotes (paraphrased), to a member of the audience "Do you like my outfit? I'm glad you do because you're paying for it."
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 12, 2000 @06:04AM (#1008678)
    If you take a look at the bent of the United States economy, and, to a lesser extent, the rest of the world, you'll find that our economy has become less and less dependent on production (a non-trivially replicated tangible item, like a car, or a phone) and has switched more towards "evaporative" services (psychotherapy, strippers, medicine) and more permanent services (code, music, other on-demand services you can keep hold of).

    Given that, if we got the economics fairy to wave a magic wand and make intellectual property and the associated income go *poof*, we'd find ourselves crippled economically.

    Do we really want to go back to the old assumption that you have to own a factory to have any money?

    And, before anyone starts complaining that "those rock stars don't need all that money," (or film stars, or Bill Gates, etc.), write down your salary on a piece of paper. Now imagine someone working at McDonald's finding out that you make that much (and some of you do!). I'm willing to bet that they think that you don't need all that money.

    Don't get comfortable thinking that you have the right to decide who gets to make money, because the same thing can happen to you.

  • by lamz ( 60321 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @06:05AM (#1008690) Homepage Journal
    "Bottom line, there are too many lawyers trained in Intellectual Property law for IP to disappear."

    There may be too many lawyers for Intellectual Property Law to disappear, but you're missing the point: Distributing copyrighted music over the internet is already illegal. All the existing laws have yet to dent the widespread practice of downloading MP3 files. Don't equate lawyers and law too closely with reality.

    "Gibson is underestimating the degree to which MP3's have been allowed to prosper, so as to force the hands of the courts, the houses, the lobbyists, and the competitors."

    I think you're overestimating the collective intelligence and cunning of the five remaining media corporations. Maybe you have read too many Gibson novels...

    Here is a key quote from the article:

    "This erosion of revenue will simply transform the cultural industries under attack. Musicians may have to put up with poor CD sales, but will make money through live appearances, endorsements or merchandising."

    Most bands only get 25 - 35 per CD that is sold. The other $15 - $20 goes to the store, distributor, record label, etc. With the exception of the handful of mega-bands like U2 & Pearl Jam, most bands make the bulk of their money from playing live. This means that if a band could get a few pennies for every song that is downloaded, they would be money ahead, and wouldn't have to compromise themselves artistically.

    Film-makers, given the inexpensive and powerful equipment readily available to them, could start putting out films the same way bands can record and release their own music. Think of local stage productions, which often use part-time, semi-pro actors and directors. That same group of people could put together a film and release it on a website like The New Venue. [newvenue.com]

    I think that music corporations should be thankful for the century or so that it was possible to make trillions of dollars off recorded music. Like tobacco farmers and land-mine manufacturers, they should start looking for a new line of work.

    Mike van Lammeren
  • by Protocull ( 187587 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @06:22AM (#1008722)
    I believe that the real issue here is not copyright, which is a fair and just concept, but the distribution of copyrighted material. At the moment, we pay far more for the distribution and packaging aspect of music, literature etc than we do for the actual content. Most artists get only a small percentage of the final selling price, and somehow we keep paying for books and music that are long out of copyright. Mozart, anyone? It's the publishers that make the money, not the artists.

    So when the ability to charge for distribution goes away - what remains? An obvious way for copyrighted material to be distributed is over the web, where popular artists can sell adverts to make up for lost revenue. If the selling price is low enough, ie the current 10% that the artist gets instead of the $$ that we pay, then far less pirating will happen. And if the content is available globally instead of in controlled areas (DVD, anyone?) then there is also less incentive to pirate.

    TV and radio have been making money from selling adverts for content for years, and it has so far been the way of the web. A little leakage from copying is probably inevitable, but if it serves to increase the popularity and recognition of the artist concerned, then that can only be an advantage. Remember the good ol' Grateful Dead - so much for home taping killing music.

    IP is more about plagiarism than copying. If the artist retains copyright then ripping off tunes or copying words will still be actionable, but the distribution issue should just go away.
  • by FJ!! ( 88703 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @06:15AM (#1008739) Homepage

    Mozart died broke.

    I truly wonder if, after having broken down the current reward structure for IP with our shiny toys, we can't come up with anything better than returning to a centuries old model. Did patronage give listeners more choices? I don't know.

    And about the whole "Let them play live!" thing, that throwback to ancient times really doesn't work for modern day artists that use the studio as their instrument. The more raves you have to play to make ends meet, the fewer time you have to make new creations. And lord help people whose main talent is not performing in any way, but composing, mixing, or producing. "William Orbit will now play 'Strange Cargo IV' for you. Please turn off all mobile phones." Right.

    We've got to do better than making art disposable and hope some rich guy picks up the trash. I am thinking that a connection between PayPal and Napster ("You have listened to this mp3 10 times. Click here to voluntarily pay 50 cents to the artist. Click here to add the original song to your custom mix CD for $1,-. Cancel and keep listening") might go a long way to making us honest again and keeping music afloat.

  • by way2slo ( 151122 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @06:29AM (#1008752) Journal
    We all know how that saying goes. [especially you ST:TNG fans] There is always a "golden era" of something where that particular item, culture, government, profession, or whatever was the best it ever was. But all things change and for whatever reason there is a decline. Back in the early part of the 20th century the steel industry was king. Now, how many cities have the "old steel mill" that takes up several blocks, that's completely rusted and falling appart, and is a terrible eye-sore surrounded by a chain-link fence. That's just one example. Perhaps we should all listen to the lyrics of our "The times they are a changing" MP3's by Bob Dylan a little more closely. I can even see the end of my own profession, Software Engineering. Some day, some where, somebody will create a computer, for lack of a better term, that will program it's self to do the job at hand. AI, quantum computing, or whatever it will use...it will completely replace us. Instead of having large teams working for years, this machine will do it in seconds on the fly.

    How do we [Software Engineers] fight change like that? Do we have the ACM hire a bunch of lawyers to form the Software Engineer Association of America [SEAA] and sue the pants off of the creaters of this machine? Do we hire lobbyists to push laws that restrict it's use so the SEAA can go "cease and desist" crazy? You can, but not me. It would be like you're on the Titanic and throwing rocks at the iceberg because you're mad that it ruined your ship. No thanks, I'll be busy finding something that will keep me afloat until a new ship comes along, thank you very much.

  • by MenTaLguY ( 5483 ) on Monday June 12, 2000 @06:35AM (#1008794) Homepage

    If I remember correctly, the Copyright on works published today will expire 96 years after publication, for corporate works and works published under a pseudonym. It's 120 years for works published by an individual.

    Of course, I wouldn't rely on copyrights expiring so soon -- copyright terms have been consistently retroactively extended several times over the past 30 years, and there's no sign of the trend stopping.

    The net effect of this has been that no copyrighted works have passed into the public domain since World War I (unless the copyright holder allowed the work into the public domain themselves). Compare this with the original copyright term of ... uh, what was it ... 14 years?

    When the institution of Copyright was created, you could reasonably expect contemporary writing and art to pass into the public domain within your lifetime. This allowed artists to draw on more or less contemporary work unhindered (all art is necessarily derivative). No longer.

    One could argue that this is one reason for the current stagnation of the arts...

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