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Music Media

Metallica Wants To Ban 335,435 Napster Users 474

charper writes: "News.com is reporting that a firm hired by Metallica has fingered more than 335,000 Napster users (who were allegedly) trading their music. They're seeking to have them banned from Napster. " Check out our original piece, and remember - you can always PayLars!
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Metallica Wants To Ban 335,435 Napster Users

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    When did Metallica get old and inflexible? the most annoying thing about this is that they're one of the few bands that could tell their record company what do do with itself, walk away, and then exploit the hell out of this new medium.
    Somebody needs to track them down on tour and just have a long conversation with 'em. And take a cluestick, just in case.

  • Please. As if it wasn't bad enough that Slashdot & co pandered to Kevin Mitnick's every need, now we have to hear about some poor little 31337 Napster users who broke the law and now have to pay for it.

    Since, we all "represent the Open Source movement", let me represent by saying that not all of us are die-hard anarchists, and some of us are actually in favor of law and order! Crazy, but true.

    What it comes down to is that these people ripped of Metallica, and now it's time to pay the piper. I have no sympathy for the subhuman zealots who think that they have a right to everything for free because they once installed a copy of Red Hat. That the Open Source Movement seemingly supports these hardened criminals is ludicrous. No wonder no one takes you seriously, you seem like a bunch of children screaming "Mine! Mine! All mine!". Most Open Source Advocates have never produced any art or IP contributions (and pro-Linux zealotry on Slashdot doesn't count), so how can you be expected to understand the issues? You commonly accuse the media of being biased, but consider yourselves free from prejudice. Get over yourselves.

    Free Software does not mean Free Music. Criminals go to jail. Plain and simple.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:36AM (#1097463)

    Despite what RMS and his followers might like us all to think, information does not want to be free - information doesn't really say a lot at all. The case of tools like Napster, Gnutella and son on is not anything like the case of software, and /.ers who blindly apply the same rules should sit down and think about the issue before spouting psuedo-socialist dogma.

    Music artists put a lot of time and effort into producing a work of art which they then allow the general public to enjoy. That is the important point here - they allow the public to listen to. As it is their work, they decide how they want people to obtain and use said work, and anyone that believes otherwise is just condoning theft in one of its many forms.

    Record companies are there to represent artists and to provide them with a range of services which they'd find difficult to get on their own - marketing, production, distribution and often nowadays, legal representation. Sure, they make money from doing this, but we live in a capitalist society where making money is how our economy functions.

    If an artist doesn't like how their music is being distributed then they have the right to stop this distribution, and in this case Metallica have chosen to exercise this right. And given that the creators of Napster have technically broken the law, they are being generous by merely asking them to block the users which have committed theft against Metallica. If anything, this action is a lot more soft than it could have been considering the sums of money which have been lost to the hordes of Napster pirates.

    So before everybody gets up in arms about this, remember, it's you that are in the wrong if you engage in theft at the cost of hard-working artists trying to make a living.

  • I wish I could. But guess what, some piece of shit stole the login "BOredAtWork" already. WHY the hell do people feel compelled to do this kinda thing?

    Fair warning to all, anything coming from my name during that chat is NOT me.

    Gotta go come up with a new account name..

    --

  • Um... you do realize that the napster servers redirect you to one of *many* servers, right?

    Check out the napigator server list [napigator.com]...

    :wq!

  • "It only takes 20 years for a Liberal to become a Conservative without changing one idea."

    ttyl
    Farerll
  • Does the agreement say WHEN? Read the 'contract'. Napster might be perfectly safe saying "OK! Our banning-person works 8 hour days, so give us a couple years for your 335 thousand." It's got to take some time to enter all that in. See in the usage agreement if it says anything about how quickly the bans are to be implemented. This is a lovely example of how the deranged, shrinkwrap, click-wrap UCITA usage agreement madness might actually work in our favor. That agreement is going to be pretty literally interpreted- don't think Metallica are going to be able to get interpreted as what it SHOULD mean, only what it literally means.
  • ROFL! Download my music [mp3.com] and I won't sue your ass! *hehehe* Buy my CD and I promise to let you listen to it- even make a copy for a friend if you like! *hehehehehehe*

    Oh, man, what _is_ this world coming to when the above isn't a joke? To think that "I promise not to sue my own fans" is a SELLING point O_O *rofl!*

    Yes! I promise not to sue you, and for an additional low low price of $5.99 I'll still not sue you, plus you can have a CD, plus I won't drive over and set fire to your house! (I don't have a car anyway :) ) oh my oh my :)

  • *g* well, four out of five ain't bad... mp3.com/ChrisJ [mp3.com]

    • Easy: point and click
    • High quality- 128K but NO skips or incompletes
    • Legal
    • Fast- you get the music immediately.
    What's the fifth? You paying a few bucks a song for a download. Sorry man- I sympathise, tho- if you _want_ to be compelled to pay a few bucks per download when my entire albums are only $6, how about going and impulsively buying all my albums? I am afraid I am not willing to coerce you into it, though :) I just wonder if you're really serious. Do you mean you will only pay people who _will_ coerce you, and how does this fit in with points 1 through 4? I know I'm sick and tired of the 'push media' ways of the old rotten industry. It's time for new rules, ones that follow your four points. It might be that the only place you ever find these points is in free music... and then it is up to your conscience to reward that, or to not reward it. The fate of the musician ends up being directly in your hands- I think that's a good place for it to be. I trust _people_ one hell of a lot more than I trust recording corporations...
  • This once again exposes the real problem with Napster, which is that it's a big central target which can be blocked, can be sued, and can be coerced into blocking users or groups of users.

    There are ways around some of that, of course, and it's terribly unlikely that all 335,435 IP addresses these guys supposedly identified will be trackable -- on the other hand, given the legal climate that exists around this stuff identifying the users isn't the RIAA's mission, just banning as many IP addresses as possible. Still, this is a big problem.

    All of which leads to the real solution, a distributed system like Gnutella. With no central server and no real way to track what any specific user is searching for, it's a much more private solution. Granted it takes more bandwidth, but it's impossible to shut down in this way.
  • Could never prove it. They'll just claim that an album is a single work of art. Then you'll have to prove that it isn't. You'd have to get access to internal communications and whatnot in order to show that the album contents are usually decided by business concerns rather than the artist having free reign to create a work independently of business concerns. Even then it might not be enough to convince a court that an album isn't a single work of art regardless of how or why it was created.

  • by Danse ( 1026 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @10:31AM (#1097478)

    You're right. There are people on the RIAA's side that firmly believe that they are right. They will also do everything in their power to see to it that their view of what is right is enforced on everyone.(as they've done for years and succeeded for the most part)

    Given that, I think my opinion is just as valid as their opinion. I firmly believe I'm right. I must also do everything in my power to make sure that my view is enforced. Otherwise I'm allowing the RIAA to decide what is right and wrong.

    You see the dilemma? If we're both convinced we're right, we end up with a fight. That's where we're at right now. The fight has been joined in the courts. Maybe it will be decided there, maybe not. I don't think the courts are where it will ultimately be decided. I think the fans are sick of getting screwed. They want to support the artists they like. They just don't like the current system where they have to get screwed over in order to support them.

    If the RIAA was so concerned about the artists, they wouldn't be making them sign their work over for 35-40 years, or now even forever [riaa.com]. If the RIAA was so concerned about the artists, they would have been devising new methods of distributing music that wouldn't require as much overhead cost so that the fans pay less and the artists get more. But, it all makes sense when you realize that the RIAA doesn't give a rat's ass about the artists as long as they can exploit them and keep raking in the cash.

  • And maybe they just paid for this music? Or maybe they wanted to hear the music *before* they buy it - not after? Or maybe they don't have this record in their local store? Seems that you just accused about 335000 people in a crime without any evidence, just because some greedy pop-idols want to pick on them (obviously, they got bored of other dull things like writing songs and performing - suing seems sooo much more fun for them!)
  • Most Open Source Advocates have never produced any art or IP contributions This alone is more than enough to identify the poster as a plain old flame-generator. No point in discussion with people ignoring facts and just sticking labels.
  • by root ( 1428 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @08:11AM (#1097483) Homepage
    Hush little surfer, don't say a word,
    and never mind that noise you heard,
    It's just the lawyers beneath your bed,
    You use napster so you'll soon be DEAD!!!!!

    Exit your rights!
    Enter armed knights!
    Taaaaake the cops hand.....
    off to your arraignment ladd!

    (Muhahahaha!)

  • This idea is how these MP3 pirates are currently justifying their actions (of course, being pirates, they're doing it without actually sending any money!). But it doesn't work.

    One of the reasons these artists have record companies behind them is to shield them from all the money involved - so that they just get a paycheck going into their bank at the end of the year/quarter/month/whatever. I can't honestly see a major act thinking it's really cool that they get 10,000 snail mails a month with $5 in the envelope. That would just drive you insane. You'd need a secretary, and an accountant, and people to open all the mail, and ... oh wait... all that infrastructure - might as well have a record label!

    Then you could potentially streamline it: build a web site that accepts payments... but wait, someone has to build the web site, pay for a Verisign certificate, market the site, pay for advertising, maintain the site, oh wait... all that infrastructure - might as well have some other company do all that, and they can take a percentage of the profits...

    You see, the infrastructure thats in place is there for a reason. It appeared for a reason. It may not be perfect, but stealing copyrighted materials isn't going to change that infrastructure.
  • Would you find it funny if I came to your house and stole your PC ?

    I wouldn't like you to steal my PC, but you can go ahead and make a copy. (You would have to get my permission to enter my house though).
    --
  • All they have proof of is that people have files on their computers with the same names as Metallica songs. I don't think that the name alone is copy protected. Unless they download an MP3 from each of the defendants or snoop it in transit, I think they have nothing but scare tactics.

    Then again I'd be happy if commercial artists crack down on digital copying as long as it doesn't affect the ability of independent bands to release their own MP3s under a more lenient distribution agreement. Perhaps it's time for a GPL for music, by which artists who care more about art than money can share their work with eachother and with their fans.
    --
  • It's not hard to get a list of people who trade Metallica mp3s? OK then, just how would you suggest doing that? Just off the top of my head, the closest I could come up with is doing a search for 'metallica' and writing down everyone who had it available for trade. Unfortunately, according to my experience with Napster, it is just as likely for metallica_unforgiven.mp3 to be command.com renamed as it is for it to be an actual mp3. This means that one would have to download all the Metallica mp3s available to test them to see if they actually are Metallica mp3s -- quite a boring task when you're testing over 300000 people.
  • The issue of digital audio extraction is covered to death in the cdparanoia FAQ (1 [xiph.org], 2 [xiph.org]). Basically, it's pretty hard but it's not as impossible as you make it out to be.

    On a low quality CD-ROM drive (in other words, 99% of the drives out on the market), there is no way to control precisely from what point an audio packet is read. One consequence is that two different attempts at audio extraction will almost certainly start from different offsets, resulting in two audio extractions that differ by a shift of bits. If this shift is accounted for, the two extractions should be exactly the same.

    Note that positioning inaccuracies in the middle of reading a track can be corrected, simply by comparing the result with the previous read and scanning for any overlap of data. This process is known as "jitter correction." However, there is no way to correct inaccuracies at the start of a read, since there is no previous data to compare against.

    Different drives have different statistical distributions of offsets, which explains the differences that you report when comparing copies extracted with different drives. Again, up to shifting, the two copies should be the same. If they aren't, at least one of the drives is defective.

    It's very true that two wildly different copies can sound exactly the same to human ears, but on any half-decent CD-ROM hardware every extracted copy of a track should be identical except for the offsets mentioned above.


  • 1) What's the substantial difference between Napster and old-media cassette tape copying?


    Scale. Giving a tape to a friend is one thing; you typically know the recipient, and it costs you time and money to prepare the tape, so you can only do it in small quantities. Putting MP3s on Napster is another; then anyone in the world can search for them and download them. That and a cable modem can allow you to distribute your favourite CDs to thousands of strangers automatically. I'd say there's a big difference between that and making a tape for a friend.


    4) Does Metallica or Electra Records have any plans in the works to offer music online? Do they have any ideas to offer the Internet Generation other than a Luddite-like prohibitionist stance?


    They're working on SDMI and such. (And wasn't it Universal Music, not Elektra (a Warner label)? I believe Universal actually have their own encrypted downloadable format.)
  • Metallica aren't goth; they're more hessian/bogan with a touch of 90s grunge for the marketability. You must have gotten them confused with Guns'n'Roses or someone.
  • Owning a CD is no defense; well, it wasn't in the mp3.com case anyway. Fair use does not apply under the DMCA, because it's a law bought by the copyright cartels.
  • Maybe that's the reason for the delay in introducing DVD-Audio; they're trying to work out how to include UCITA-compliant click-wrap licenses with audio DVDs.
  • Maybe Metallica is just disappointed. They monitor napster for a period of time, and find out that the total number of people who wanted to listen to their songs (for FREE, no less) was about 300K - and that includes people who get songs they don't really care about listening to just so they have them (think people who collect warez).

    So they're lashing out at Napster to ease their own pain at being a band that nobody really listens to anymore. Oh the torment of growing old!
    1. Is the list of alleged offenders published somewhere?
    2. Is there evidence of copyright violations available -- or is Metallica just serving reams and reams of names?
    3. If I have a file listed as "Enter-Sandman.mp3", did Metallica's agents download it to ensure that this is, in fact, a copyright violation and not a mislabelled 'Billy and the Boingers' track? (Would such a download by a private individual constitute a copyright violation -- ie, can Metallica suspend copyright in regards to their own agents? What would their publisher think! Are their agents listed in the list of violators?)
    4. How does Metallica's agents intend to prove that the MP3 listed at one moment in time was an intentional action, and not an accidental sharing of a private MP3?
    5. What is the appeal process if Metallica's agents have erroniously included your username as an offender?
    6. Is the mere act of offering for copy a piece of music a copyright violation -- or is the act of violation the copying? When someone sneaks a video camera into the movie theater, it is the person making the copy who is guilty, not the theater for advertising and displaying the movie!


    Just asking.
    --

  • Sure, you can login with a new user name - that's not going to be a problem. But Napster will have to delete your account and then recreate a new one. Multiply this by 335000 and it starts being a little bit of a hassle.

    Multiply that number again when/if other bands join, and soon there will be significant load and administrative hassles for Napster.

    Metallica's little trip is not aimed at the users IMHO, it is aimed at harassing Napster. The more work and trouble they can cause Napster the better.

  • Let me use an analogy:

    If I have legitamately bought Win2k and create a backup of it (in case my CD is damaged) and I place this backup on Napster (where it is publiclly accessible), i am pretty certain no law court is going to hesitate to determine that you are infringing copyright.

    I'm no lawyer, but I think the crux of the matter is that you are allowing material to be traded in a public manner and that is where you would get in trouble.

  • > Bad faith for sure
    Yes I will agree with you on that point.

    Metallica needs to get with the Internet age, as do the rest of the millionaires whining about their intellectual property being pirated."

    This kind of attitude worries me - since when is it a crime to be rich?!? Just because someone has something that you don't, doesn't mean that you can help yourself to what they have either directly or indirectly.

    I suspect a lot of people who are arguing that this is not copyright infringement are simply into self-denial. Basically, they like their free music and want to keep it.

    I've heard the argument that they didn't get it free, they wouldn't have bought it in the first place and I will conceede that this argument has some merit.

    However, I would argue that there is a significant amount of music which is traded which will never be bought as a result of entire albumns being available for downloads.

    Truth is, a lot of those people already probably spend a bunch of their hard earned money on Metallica music already, not to mention t-shirts, concerts, and jimmy hats.

    And I would say that there is a lot more that don't.

    I have lived in a Uni hall of residence where MP3 trading was widespread and epidemic and I can assure you that people where downloading entire albums rather than buying. In fact the common overheard comment was, 'Who needs to buy CDs now when you can get them free off the Internet'.

    I don't know what the solution is and I'm not offering one. Nor am I saying that what Metallica has done is right.

    BUT, to defend the trafficing of MP3s using your arguments simply doesn't hold any water IMHO.

  • by dustpuppy ( 5260 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:37AM (#1097503)
    Irrespective of whose 'side' you support, you have to admire the 'street smart' fighting of Metallica.

    Basically, they have 'attacked' Napster using Napsters own policy, that is, they will eject any user who infringes copyright.

    By submitting 335,000 names, Metallica has accomplised two things:

    • potentially scared users who thought they were anonymous
    • created an administrative hassle for Napster
    No doubt Metallica can afford to keep the NetPD firm indefinitely fingering each Napster user and submitting their name to Napster. If this is the case, Napster is going to be bogged down removing accounts ... and what if other artists join in ... soon Napster will be perpetually creating and removing accounts at an alarming rate.

    And on a secondary note, if Metallica wanted to directly sue copyright infringers, can the NetPD firm supply enough info to confirm the computer from which it came and hence could Metallica sue an individual based on monitored Napster use? If so, this would be incredibly damaging to the user base of Napster as I am pretty certain that many users would shy away if they thought there was the remotest possibility that they could be sued.

    Just my 2c worth at midnight :)

  • You don't know what you are talking about....

    This is from Steve Albini, the recording engineer (don't ever call him a producer) for The Pixies, The Wedding Present, and Bush, who paid his bills for years. Steve has a sliding pay scale, he will record good poor bands for no more than joe schmoe studio (in his own state of the art studio) and charge major labels bank to record crap like Bush.

    He isn't a fan of the record industry, but he shows insight as to how much things really cost. Also the artists aren't makeing any money.

    Some of Your Friends are Already This Fucked
    by Steve Albini
    from The Baffler issue #5

    Whenever I talk to a band who are about to sign with a major label, I always
    end up thinking of them in a particular context. I imagine a trench, about
    four feet wide and five feet deep, maybe sixty yards long, filled with
    runny, decaying shit. I imagine these people, some of them good friends,
    some of them barely acquaintances, at one end of this trench. I also imagine
    a faceless industry lackey at the other end, holding a fountain pen and a
    contract waiting to be signed.

    Nobody can see what's printed on the contract. It's too far away, and
    besides, the shit stench is making everybody's eyes water. The lackey shouts
    to everybody that the first one to swim the trench gets to sign the
    contract. Everybody dives in the trench and they struggle furiously to get
    to the other end. Two people arrive simultaneously and begin wrestling
    furiously, clawing each other and dunking each other under the shit.
    Eventually, one of them capitulates, and there's only one contestant left.
    He reaches for the pen, but the Lackey says, "Actually, I think you need
    a little more development. Swim it again, please. Backstroke."

    And he does, of course.


    A&R Scouts

    Every major label involved in the hunt for new bands now has on staff a
    high-profile point man, an "A&R" rep who can present a comfortable face to
    any prospective band. The initials stand for "Artist and Repertoire,"
    because historically, the A&R staff would select artists to record music
    that they had also selected, out of an available pool of each. This is
    still the case, though not openly.

    These guys are universally young [about the same age as the bands being
    wooed], and nowadays they always have some obvious underground rock
    credibility flag they can wave. Lyle Preslar, former guitarist for Minor
    Threat, is one of them. Terry Tolkin, former NY independent booking agent
    and assistant manager at Touch and Go is one of them. Al Smith, former
    soundman at CBGB is one of them. Mike Gitter, former editor of XXX fanzine
    and contributor to Rip, Kerrang and other lowbrow rags is one of them. Many
    of the annoying turds who used to staff college radio stations are in their
    ranks as well.

    There are several reasons A&R scouts are always young. The explanation
    usually copped-to is that the scout will be "hip" to the current musical
    "scene." A more important reason is that the bands will intuitively trust
    someone they think is a peer, and who speaks fondly of the same formative
    rock and roll experiences.

    The A&R person is the first person to make contact with the band, and as
    such is the first person to promise them the moon. Who better to promise
    them the moon than an idealistic young Turk who expects to be calling the
    shots in a few years, and who has had no previous experience with a big
    record company. Hell, he's as naive as the band he's duping. When he tells
    them no one will interfere in their creative process, he probably even
    believes it.

    When he sits down with the band for the first time, over a plate of angel
    hair pasta, he can tell them with all sincerity that when they sign with
    company X, they're really signing with him and he's on their side. Remember
    that great, gig I saw you at in '85? Didn't we have a blast.

    By now all rock bands are wise enough to be suspicious of music industry
    scum. There is a pervasive caricature in popular culture of a portly, middle
    aged ex-hipster talking a mile-a-minute, using outdated jargon and calling
    everybody "baby." After meeting "their" A&R guy, the band will say to
    themselves and everyone else, "He's not like a record company guy at all!
    He's like one of us." And they will be right. That's one of the reasons he
    was hired.

    These A&R guys are not allowed to write contracts. What they do is present
    the band with a letter of intent, or "deal memo," which loosely states some
    terms, and affirms that the band will sign with the label once a contract
    has been agreed on.

    The spookiest thing about this harmless sounding little "memo," is that it
    is, for all legal purposes, a binding document. That is, once the band sign
    it, they are under obligation to conclude a deal with the label. If the
    label presents them with a contract that the band don't want to sign, all
    the label has to do is wait. There are a hundred other bands willing to
    sign the exact same contract, so the label is in a position of strength.

    These letters never have any term of expiration, so the band remain bound
    by the deal memo until a contract is signed, no matter how long that takes.
    The band cannot sign to another label or even put out its own material
    unless they are released from their agreement, which never happens. Make
    no mistake about it: once a band has signed a letter of intent, they will
    either eventually sign a contract that suits the label or they will be
    destroyed.

    One of my favorite bands was held hostage for the better part of two years
    by a slick young "He's not like a label guy at all,' A&R rep, on the basis
    of such a deal memo. He had failed to come through on any of his promises
    (something he did with similar effect to another well-known band), and so
    the band wanted out. Another label expressed interest, but when the A&R
    man was asked to release the band, he said he would need money or points,
    or possibly both, before he would consider it.

    The new label was afraid the price would be too dear, and they said no
    thanks. On the cusp of making their signature album, an excellent band,
    humiliated, broke up from the stress and the many months of inactivity.


    There's This Band

    There's this band. They're pretty ordinary, but they're also pretty good,
    so they've attracted some attention. They're signed to a moderate-sized
    "independent" label owned by a distribution company, and they have another
    two albums owed to the label.

    They're a little ambitious. They'd like to get signed by a major label so
    they can have some security-you know, get some good equipment, tour in a
    proper tour bus-nothing fancy, just a little reward for all the hard work.

    To that end, they got a manager. He knows some of the label guys, and he
    can shop their next project to all the right people. He takes his cut,
    sure, but it's only 15%, and if he can get them signed then it's money well
    spent. Anyway, it doesn't cost them any thing if it doesn't work. 15% of
    nothing isn't much!

    One day an A&R scout calls them, says he's "been following them for a while
    now," and when their manager mentioned them to him, it just "clicked."
    Would they like to meet with him about the possibility of working out a
    deal with his label? Wow. Big Break time.

    They meet the guy, and y'know what-he's not what they expected from a label
    guy. He's young and dresses pretty much like the band does. He knows all
    their favorite bands. He's like one of them. He tells them he wants to go
    to bat for them, to try to get them everything they want. He says anything
    is possible with the right attitude. They conclude the evening by taking
    home a copy of a deal memo they wrote out and signed on the spot.

    The A&R guy was full of great ideas, even talked about using a name
    producer. Butch Vig is out of the question-he wants 100 g's and three
    points, but they can get Don Fleming for $30,000 plus three points. Even
    that's a little steep, so maybe they'll go with that guy who used to be in
    David Letterman's band. He only wants three points. Or they can have just
    anybody record it [like Warton Tiers, maybe-cost you 5 or 10 grand] and
    have Andy Wallace remix it for 4 grand a track plus 2 points. It was a lot
    to think about.

    Well, they like this guy and they trust him. Besides, they already signed
    the deal memo. He must have been serious about wanting them to sign. They
    break the news to their current label, and the label manager says he wants
    them to succeed, so they have his blessing. He will need to be compensated,
    of course, for the remaining albums left on their contract, but he'll work
    it out with the label himself. Sub Pop made millions from selling off
    Nirvana, and Twin Tone hasn't done bad either: 50 grand for the Babes and
    60 grand for the Poster Children-without having to sell a single additional
    record. It'll be something modest. The new label doesn't mind, so long as
    it's recoupable out of royalties.

    Well, they get the final contract, and it's not quite what they expected.
    They figure it's better to be safe than sorry and they turn it over to a
    lawyer-one who says he's experienced in entertainment law-and he hammers
    out a few bugs. They're still not sure about it, but the lawyer says he's
    seen a lot of contracts, and theirs is pretty good. They'll be getting a
    great royalty: 13% [less a 10% packaging deduction]. Wasn't it Buffalo Tom
    that were only getting 12% less 10? Whatever.

    The old label only wants 50 grand, and no points. Hell, Sub Pop got 3 points
    when they let Nirvana go. They're signed for four years, with options on
    each year, for a total of over a million dollars! That's a lot of money in
    any man's English. The first year's advance alone is $250,000. Just think
    about it, a quarter-million, just for being in a rock band!

    Their manager thinks it's a great deal, especially the large advance.
    Besides, he knows a publishing company that will take the band on if they
    get signed, and even give them an advance of 20 grand, so they'll be making
    that money too. The manager says publishing is pretty mysterious, and nobody
    really knows where all the money comes from, but the lawyer can look that
    contract over too. Hell, it's free money.

    Their booking agent is excited about the band signing to a major. He says
    they can maybe average $1,000 or $2,000 a night from now on. That's enough
    to justify a five week tour, and with tour support, they can use a proper
    crew, buy some good equipment and even get a tour bus! Buses are pretty
    expensive, but if you figure in the price of a hotel room for everybody in
    the band and crew, they're actually about the same cost. Some bands (like
    Therapy? and Sloan and Stereolab) use buses on their tours even when they're
    getting paid only a couple hundred bucks a night, and this tour should earn
    at least a grand or two every night. It'll be worth it. The band will be
    more comfortable and will play better.

    The agent says a band on a major label can get a merchandising company to
    pay them an advance on T-shirt sales! Ridiculous! There's a gold mine here!
    The lawyer should look over the merchandising contract, just to be safe.

    They get drunk at the signing party. Polaroids are taken and everybody
    looks thrilled. The label picked them up in a limo.

    They decided to go with the producer who used to be in Letterman's band.
    He had these technicians come in and tune the drums for them and tweak
    their amps and guitars. He had a guy bring in a slew of expensive old
    vintage microphones. Boy, were they "warm." He even had a guy come in and
    check the phase of all the equipment in the control room! Boy, was he
    professional. He used a bunch of equipment on them and by the end of it,
    they all agreed that it sounded very "punchy," yet "warm."

    All that hard work paid off. With the help of a video, the album went like
    hotcakes! They sold a quarter million copies!

    Here is the math that will explain just how fucked they are:

    These figures are representative of amounts that appear in record contracts
    daily. There's no need to skew the figures to make the scenario look bad,
    since real-life examples more than abound. Income is underlined, expenses
    are not.

    Advance: $250,000
    Manager's cut: $37,500
    Legal fees: $10,000

    Recording Budget: $150,000
    Producer's advance: $50,000
    Studio fee: $52,500
    Drum, Amp, Mic and Phase "Doctors": $3,000
    Recording tape: $8,000
    Equipment rental: $5,000
    Cartage and Transportation: $5,000
    Lodgings while in studio: $10,000
    Catering: $3,000
    Mastering: $10,000
    Tape copies, reference CDs, shipping tapes, misc. expenses: $2,000

    Video budget: $30,000
    Cameras: $8,000
    Crew: $5,000
    Processing and transfers: $3,000
    Offline: $2,000
    Online editing: $3,000
    Catering: $1,000
    Stage and construction: $3,000
    Copies, couriers, transportation: $2,000
    Director's fee: $3,000

    Album Artwork: $5,000
    Promotional photo shoot and duplication: $2,000

    Band fund: $15,000
    New fancy professional drum kit: $5,000
    New fancy professional guitars (2): $3,000
    New fancy professional guitar amp rigs (2): $4,000
    New fancy potato-shaped bass guitar: $1,000
    New fancy rack of lights bass amp: $1,000
    Rehearsal space rental: $500

    Big blowout party for their friends: $500

    Tour expense (5 weeks): $50,875
    Bus: $25,000
    Crew (3): $7,500
    Food and per diems: $7,875
    Fuel: $3,000
    Consumable supplies: $3,500
    Wardrobe: $1,000
    Promotion: $3,000

    Tour gross income: $50,000
    Agent s cut: $7,500
    Manager's cut: $7,500

    Merchandising advance: $20,000
    Manager's cut: $3,000
    Lawyer's fee: $1,000

    Publishing advance: $20,000
    Manager's cut: $3,000
    Lawyer's fee: $1,000

    Record sales: 250,000 @ $12 = $3,000,000 gross retail revenue Royalty (13%
    of 90% of retail): $351,000
    Less advance: $250,000
    Producer's points: (3% less $50,000 advance) $40,000
    Promotional budget: $25,000
    Recoupable buyout from previous label: $50,000
    Net royalty: (-$14,000)

    Record company income:
    Record wholesale price $6.50 x 250,000 = $1,625,000 gross income
    Artist Royalties: $351,000
    Deficit from royalties: $14,000
    Manufacturing, packaging and distribution @ $2.20 per record: $550,000
    Gross profit: $710,000

    The Balance Sheet: This is how much each player got paid at the end of the
    game.

    Record company: $710,000
    Producer: $90,000
    Manager: $51,000
    Studio: $52,500
    Previous label: $50,000
    Agent: $7,500
    Lawyer: $12,000
    Band member net income each: $4,031.25


    The band is now 1/4 of the way through its contract, has made the music
    industry more than 3 million dollars richer, but is in the hole $14,000 on
    royalties. The band members have each earned about 1/3 as much as they
    would working at a 7-11, but they got to ride in a tour bus for a month.

    The next album will be about the same, except that the record company will
    insist they spend more time and money on it. Since the previous one never
    "recouped," the band will have no leverage, and will oblige.

    The next tour will be about the same, except the merchandising advance will
    have already been paid, and the band, strangely enough, won't have earned
    any royalties from their t-shirts yet. Maybe the T-shirt guys have figured
    out how to count money like record company guys.

    Some of your friends are probably already this fucked.

    (c) 1999 [indiecentre]

  • by rho ( 6063 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @07:00AM (#1097510) Journal

    Lessee -- I record a free-form monologue about how I first encountered Metallica (a bootleg tape of a concert that had "Hit The Lights" on it), how even over the much abused and much played crappy tape, that had made its way all the way from the West Coast to backwoods Mississippi, I could still make out the music and how much it affected me.

    I tell about how I enjoyed the tape (that I made a copy of but unfortunately don't have anymore), and since then have bought every Metallica albumn up to S&M -- some of them TWICE, once on tape, once on CD. I tell about how Metallica's music helped me through some tough times in high school (tough to be a nerd in redneck land). I'll complain about how Jason got screwed in the "...And Justice For All" mix. I'll relate a quote from Lars who said, once, that "..more than any other band, we're like Rush".

    I'll talk about the first time I heard about James's accident. I'll talk about how Metallica came back to Canada to finish the concert that James got hurt in, after Guns & Roses' Axl pitched a hissy-fit and walked off after 30 minutes.

    I'll mention that Metallica's strength has always been their connection with their fans: how Jason tirelessly signs autographs, how the band once let people record their concerts, how hard-working the band has always been.

    I'll say all this, and mention that Metallica, in their unique position of NOT being a slave to the record industry, who in fact seem to have always been in the position of leaders, have turned into followers (slaves, if you will), of a corporate mentality that denegrates their past efforts. I'll talk about how Metallica could be remembered, years after the band is no more, as the group that led the way, changing how musicians interact with their fans forever. I'll sadly mention that now, Metallica will most likely be remembered not for how much they cared and respected their fans, but how they attacked them.

    I'll record this monologue and rip it to an MP3. I'll save multiple copies of it with the band's song titles, and put them up on Napster. With any luck, one of the band members will hear it, and know how disappointed I am with them, and how sad I will be because I will not listen to them anymore. And, since it's not their music, they can't ask me to take it down -- they can only ask that I change the titles. But that would be fine. I'd do that, and distribute the MP3 far and wide - hopefully, any potential fan would hear it first and then decide that Metallica isn't the band for them.

  • First of all, this is exactly what Napster asked for. They said that they would ban specific users that have been fingered by the copyright owners, and that's exactly what Metallica's lawyers did. They just did it on a large scale.

    Second, please remember that Metallica and Dr. Dre are only misguided artists. They have been brainwashed by the suits to think that all these evil hackers (media definition) are stealing their hard-earned money. These particular artists were picked to cover the most bases, because they seem to have (had) a lot of fans. I don't like either one much (and not because of this), but I know that a lot of people do like at least one of them.

    --

  • Metallica's action is the latest development in what appears to be a campaign aimed at dissuading people from using Napster by adding an element of risk.

    Two words: Forbidden Apple.

  • Note: This post free of Metallica puns.

    Although its probably been asked before, exactly HOW do you prove its pirated music? Lets assume they sniff my activity and see that I am downloading a file thats "pirated". So they come to my house and try to bust me. As soon as I see the cops coming up, I grab my roommate's copy of the record.
    Them: "We're here to bust you. You downloaded illegal music." (looks at HD)
    Me: Nope, just ripped it myself, bought the CD with cash so there's no record.

    OK, so maybe they have irrefutable proof I downloaded it from someone. I can't claim I ripped it. Maybe *he* ripped it, and sent me a copy - after all, we're both legitimate owners of the CD and there's no law against that (is there?). Don't you, at some point, have to find EVERY SINGLE PERSON who uses Napster, look at their CD collection, and then figure out who's actually stealing, and who (like me, often) is downloading because I'm too lazy to waste CPU ripping CD's?
  • ... if they can afford to alienate 335,435 fans.

    Seriously, I doubt it. Not being a Metallica fan (I don't think I'd recognize a single one of the releases), I could care less if their music is banned from Napster. I just wonder how the heck they think they're going to benefit from this.

    The only person who stands to really gain from this is the lawyer (also representing Dr. Dre, another musical has-been).
    --

  • I have an idea, how about everyone who uses napster renaming ONE MP3 file to include the phrase "Not by Metallica" or "Sans Metallica" or some other such phrase. Let their investigators try to week through all of the additional hits that they'd encounter by searching through results that include every Napster user.

    LK
  • I'd be happy to see more artists and record companies follow the traditional bounds of the law and go after those who are actually committing copyright infringement. Why? Because then they won't be using their $$$ to sue common carriers, whom I feel should be protected under the law. As far as I can tell, Napster has acted within the law thus far by removing users who have acted illegally. So if this latest action takes the heat off of Napster and puts it onto those who are really illegally copying mp3s, so much the better.

    Sure it's a pain for Napster to check their logs 335000 times and boot that many users (only if they really were trading Metallica, of course), but on the other hand it's a pain for record companies to come up with the lists in the first time. I'd much rather the record companies have to do the normal amount of work to track down copyright violations (just like they would have to do for copied movies, cassette tapes, etc.) as opposed to them just suing the heck out of mp3.com, napster, Diamond, and so forth.

    Note that I'm ignoring the issue of whether the current copyright law is right or not (I think it is, mostly) - that's not the issue. The issue is that I'd much rather the RIAA & co. act within our current legal framework, because when they are tempted to extend the law instead (the DMCA, for example) we tend to lose rights in order to make their jobs easier. And our overall rights to fair use and reverse engineering are more important than the rights of 335000 people to (allegedly) trade unauthorized Metallica.

  • Um...I hate to break it to you, but Gnutella tells you the IP of where something's hosted, too. Presumably someone who wanted to could write a Gnutella search script that returns the IPs along with the search results, or even looks up the IPs. Granted, there's no central music server registry they could force to eject the user, but they could still contact the user's ISP to find out just who's using that IP address at the time, and then have the ISP eject the user. Or they could even take legal action against the user based on that evidence.

    I hate to say it, but I agree with the emusic CEO who was interviewed by Wired News a couple weeks back who predicted it. Doesn't anyone remember the rampant lawsuits against warez sites of a decade or so ago? Anyone remember Kevin Mitnick ? Whether you think you're not doing anything wrong to download the stuff is irrelevant--the law says you are.
    --

  • Its nice to see that metallica really appreciates their fans. Point: Yeah, what wonderful fans. Ripping Metallica CDs and making them available to anyone for free download. Gee, I'm sure they'll really miss fans like that. Counterpoint: F**k you, you and Metallica are working for the man! Back when Metallica was cool, before they sold out, they used to send thank you letters to people who got caught shoplifting their CDs! I'll never pay for their music again now that they're making me jump through more hoops to steal it. Point: Now that's an ... interesting policy. No, really. Counterpoint: Yeah, dude! Fight the man! Cheers,ZicoKnows@hotmail.com Cheers,ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
  • You assume they have the foresight required to see the music revolution. They do not, otherwise they would probably be pursuing different means of dealing with the mp3 phenomenon.
  • the most annoying thing about this is that they're one of the few bands that could tell their record company what do do with itself, walk away, and then exploit the hell out of this new medium.

    I'm not so sure about that. Back in the 80s when they still played heavy metal and attracted fans by the virtue of their music, this would have indeed worked.

    But now that they've given up on metal and shifted to the cheeze market, I think they need the old media to keep them in the public eye in order to get sales. Very few people are serendipitously "discovering" Metallica these days and saying "Whoa, this is so cool!" and most of their old fans from the 80s have turned away in disgust. Metallica's sales are now almost entirely push-driven, and I think that makes the new media useless to them.

    So I'm not so sure their strategy of suppressing MP3s is a bad thing. Metallica's name can confuse people because of their glorious past, so wipe away the confusion by asking yourself this: What would Brittney Spears do?


    ---
  • Ah, but I suspect that Napster will get tired of shuting down 300,000 accounts/week much faser than 300,000 users will get tired of setting them up again.

    Even if it takes 5 times as long to set up an account as it does to find one and shut it down, Napster will be putting in 60,000 times as much effort as any of the users it is acting against. I know which side I'd bet on...

    Cheers,

    Tim
  • This is a chnace to really talk to Metallica and not though some pr, media induced, marketing and legal BS.

    You haven't been to any celebrity chats yet, have you?

    You won't get to talk to Metallica. Metallica probably won't even be typing on a keyboard. Your questions will be filtered (in advance this time!) through moderators, and Metallica will give their answers, which someone else will type.

    It's like a press release.

  • Additionally Napster should put in place filters that block files based on artist/title strings at the request of the copyright holders.

    That would not be good. What if the band The The told Napster to ban every song with the word The in its filename?

  • by seebs ( 15766 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @06:55AM (#1097544) Homepage
    One thing you should probably be aware of is that owning a CD almost certainly allows you to make personal-use MP3's of it, but:

    1. It probably doesn't allow you to download other MP3's without "buying" them.
    2. It certainly doesn't allow you to offer those MP3's to others, in the general case.

    Distribution is magic in copyright law. It is *NOT*, in the eyes of the law, the same thing to do something yourself as it is to have someone do it for you in cases of infringement.

    If you want the law changed, great, I certainly won't be the one to try to stop you.

    But, under the current law, the people trading MP3's are wrong, and the bands are right. Make your own MP3's from your own CD's.

    It's always amazing how quickly slashdot can polarize on an issue. Gosh, sure is easy to hate those people who have something I want and aren't giving it to me cheap enough.
  • How do you know they broke the law? Did you go check to make sure they didn't own a copy of the album that they were dl'ing clips of? IMO, if you own the album, you should be allowed to dl/rip the tracks. Of course, Napster has no way of determining ownership status of a track.

    My.MP3.com tries to do this, but it can easily be spoofed (Hey buddy, let me borrow a copy of 'foo' for a minute or two...). Of course, they lost in court when they tried to enforce a verification procedure.

    Of course, I agree with the sentiment that people who break the law should pay, but I seriously doubt that there is a precedent where someone was sent to jail for copyright infringement. I mean, come on!!! Let's reserve jails for those who are a menace to society at large (killers, rapists, etc.) Besides, do you really want ~$35k of tax money to go to supporting each person who is jailed for such (relatively) minor offense? I don't.
  • Let's see... I have about 80-100 CDs I like to listen to. I really don't want to haul that much music around with me when I go to work. I don't have enough space on my desk, nor would my employers really like that much music laying around. Also, when I leave home, I'm not awake enough to decide what I want to listen to, and that's not a decision I should have to make in the first place.

    What do I do? Either take a few CDs at a time to work and rip them while I'm working, or download them. Since I own the discs, downloading them should fall under fair use.

    I'm not deluding myself about the people who use Napster. I accept (I don't know since I've never used it) that most people use it expressly for the purposes of pirating music. However, in this country you are innocent until proven guilty. The 'burden of proof' should fall to the prosecution. Logistically, it can fairly easily be proven that you have done something. It is nearly impossible to prove you *haven't* done something. Until those lawyers can prove that you don't own the CD, you are innocent, and should not be affected by their demands.

    As for jail, I was responding to the original poster who proposed sending them all to jail, since they clearly broke the law... hah!


  • joke_mode(on);
    flame(on);

    Does anyone have a pirated MP3 of Lars Ulrich's press conference they'd like to share? :)

    Explanation of above joke: All a millionaire like Lars Ulrich accomplishes by bitching and whining about people sharing his music, is that more people are likely to rip him off more than ever before. He'd be smart to shut his mouth instead of trying to protect the record industry.

    joke_mode(off);
    I'll stop using Napster when the music industry stops charging me $18 for a 35 minutes of music just so they can make another $14,000,000.00 fish-eye-lens / helicopter / humvee / shiny space suit Puffy Combs video.

    flame(off);

    Bowie J. Poag
  • No matter what your opinion of Metallica is, the fact is that these users are engaged is piracy, which is, by all accounts, illegal. No amount of loudmouthing is going to change that. Whether or not you consider Metallica's music worth listening - whether you even consider it "music" at all - is irrelevant. They have a right to get paid for their work.

    It may be true that they are alienating their fans; it may be true that they are not seeing the "brave new world", powered by the Internet where information "wants to be free". For all those who call upon this so-called revolution, let me ask you: Do you really think that this music-swapping, without anyone paying for it, could go on like this ? Do you really believe that there wasn't going to be an artist who would pick up the sword and - rightly so - proclaim: You are thieves. ?

    The impact of MP3s on CD sales (whether the sales will decrease or increase) is, in this case, also irrelevant. The distribution channels of music may be different in the future and the copyrights may be more lenient; changes may be in air. Nevertheless, we would be creating a double economy and fully accepting piracy if we allowed Napster to go on like this under the current jurisdiction.

  • I'm all for Metallica crushing Napster. The fact is that people who are trading MP3s illegally should expect to get their heads bashed.
    Regardless of whether or not you think music is overpriced, your only right as a consumer is "don't buy the damn thing". Not "steal it if it feels right".
  • > They are just going to tell Napster to get rid of these people.

    If they know the actual names of people who are pirating their music, and fail to take those people to court, couldn't a case be made that they are not exercising "due diligence" in protecting their copyrights?

    I have been wondering about this since last month, when we had the report that the RIAA had given Napster the names of 50 transgressors.

    --
  • I have no idea how Napster's database works, but unless they were completely clueless when they set it up, it should be trivially easy for them to write a script that takes the list of offenders, extracts the account names, and closes those accounts. Much less trouble than the work of gathering all the names was for the other party.

    I suppose it would be more difficult if they got the names on paper rather than electronically, but a decent OCR scanner should take care of that, too.

    Of course, validation is an issue. If the game is to overload the other party with annoying work, Napster can kick the list back and request formal validation for each name on the list. That's a lot of work, and if Metallica/RIAA certifies the list without actually doing that work, they may open themselves to lawsuits from users whose accounts were closed under false certification.

    --
  • > That's a lot of work, and if Metallica/RIAA certifies the list without actually doing that work, they may open themselves to lawsuits from users whose accounts were closed under false certification.

    Inspired by my own .sig, a notable "Make Money Fast!!!" scheme has just occured to me.

    --
  • by mindstrm ( 20013 )
    Remember.. it doesn't say 'sue' 335000 napster users, it says 'ban' them, and if you all remember napster's usage policy.. they say they will ban people if they are made aware of copyright infringement. Metallica is doing just that. Napster hides behind a usage agreement that says that napster is only to be used for legal purposes, and if it is being used for illegal purposes, that they should be informed and the users will be banned. Metallica is simply doing EXACTLY THAT.

    They are probably trying to demonstrate that napster had no intention of obeying it's own usage agreement, and that they can't deal with the complaints.
  • Common sense goes a long way. That, plus the DMCA makes napster OBLIGATED to do their part. Remember, they are in the middle of a court case. Part of their defense will be that they offer to remove people who are using napster for illegal purposes. In other words.. they don't need to be sued.. they just need to be made aware of the problem, and they'll fix it.
    Metallica is making them aware of the problem. Now.. will they fix it right away? Who knows.. it's not relevant at this point. Metallica doesn't care.. they are just making a point to help the RIAA in their case, I would bet.
  • by Misha ( 21355 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:27AM (#1097564) Homepage
    Dear Napster user!

    You may have already won! All you need to do is to be in the first 1,000 of 335,000 to turn off your Napster, and you will be qualified for the semifinals in a raffle to win a signed Metallica CD, together with a trip to the capital of the United States where you will appear in front of a government commitee on the issues of copyrighted music piracy.

    But hurry! You must respond promptly in order to qualify, or your entry will be viewed as inadmissible evidence in the criminal case of music copyrightrights infringement.

    Sincerely,
    RIAA Legal Team
    representing the interests of Metallica.




  • I don't mean to start a flame war, but...

    I'm not into thrash metal and therefore wouldn't ever have bought or downloaded any Metallica. The saddest part of this is that my boycott of this particular band won't have significant effect. :(

    Actually, a friend of mine told me just Saturday about their latest album which he said was backed up by some symphony orchestra. I'm not necessarily a classical music fan either, but, based on the moderating influence of a lot of pieces in the symphony I was thinking of giving it a listen... oh well.

    For those of us to whom it applies, vote with your feet. Boycott those who don't recognize that the earth is round , mp3s are here to stay, and a new distribution model is fait accompli. They can only hurt their regular channel sales with their current mindset and lawsuits. I only wish I was going to be near a machine tonight at 5 pm for the chat to tell them what I think... Of course, there will probably be plenty of people there to express my opinion for me. :)

    I particularly liked another post that suggested sending the $15 check directly to the band based on mp3 downloads of the album. Enough of those would get their attention.

    Even if it's a band I like, my future purchase of their material will end if they pull a stunt like this.

    Good thing I don't like rap either. :)

    Russ
  • Have you ever been in a internet chat room, with a guest, and tried to ask a well thought out lucid question. Well let me tell you, its rather impossible. With the slashdot interviews, each person is allowed to spend thier time writting out their questions, and then the best questions get moderated up (theoretically). The end result, is a set of fairly good questions, directed towards the guest rather than a stream of nonsense. In no way am I implying that the slashdot audience is better, but the method for interviewing is in my opinion better.
  • I am curious to know whether or not NetPD downloaded and listened (in their ENTIRETY) to all the Metallica songs they deemed as copyright offenses as distributed by the target 335,000 Napster users.

    Let's say that each of the Napster "copyright violators" had only 1 Metallica song they were distributing - the minimum for being a violator. My best guess is that the average Metallica song is probably around 4 minutes long. In order to determine that the files named "Metallica-AndJusticeForAll.mp3" really were Metallica bootlegs (and not just Backstreet Boys jams mislabeled) they would have had listened to 22333.33 hours of music ((335,000 songs * 4 minutes) / 60 minutes). At constant rate with no breaks and no sleep for 1 person that would be 930.55 days (22333.33 hours / 24 hours) worth of some serious headbanging. That was probably divided up into a team of people, let's say 4. So that would be 5583.33 hours each (22333.33 hours / 4 people) coming to 232.64 days concurrently (930.55 days / 4 people).

    I'm sure all this wasn't free. NetPD probably isn't *that* dumb and since their customers are lawyers they probably billed out at over $100/hour. For the sake of the argument, let's say it was $100/hour. That means it cost the lawyers (4 headbangers banging away for 5583.33 hours each at $100/hour) a grand total of $2,233,333.33!

    P.S. Please check my math. Too much Metallica has rotted my brain - just like mom said it would!

    -the spoony fork

  • If I recall correctly, Napster said that they would ban users if the violated artists would attest under pains of perjury that certain people were trading in the copyrighted material.

    My question is, is having a song called "Metallica - One.mp3" on my machine proof enough? I mean, a name is an arbitrary thing. I can legally name every file on my computer microsoft.txt without violating any laws!

    So when they (Metallica, et al) submit these names, did they just list whoever had something with the word "Metallica" in their index or do they have to prove (again, under pains of perjury) that this was an actual Metallica song?

    My .02
    Quux26
  • Oh, I see, you're using "pirate" in the incorrect and prejudicial sense of "one who makes an unauthorized copy". How in the world the same term should apply to copying as to murder, rape, and theft on the high seas is beyond me.

    The correct term is "copyright infringement", and yes, it's actually a crime. You're taking an original creation someone else made and redistribute it without permission. The sad thing is that most people assume an attitude like yours, and think that copyright infringement is "no big deal". Quite obvious that you haven't produced much valuable Intellectual Property of your own - otherwise you might respect other's copyright a bit more.

    But considering that CD sales are up, it's hard to even argue that potential profits were lost

    So if I'm now making a thousand dollars per month, instead of ten thousand dollars per month, I shouldn't be whining?

    Whatever, forget it - I'm starting to accept the reality that a lot of posters here make nonsensical comments for the benefit of OPEN SOURCE, INFORMATION WANTS TO BE FREE, and the like. I think I'm going to go now to rat on a few IRC mp3 leeches to the RIAA just to piss you zealots off.

    Go get your free Palm V (25 referrals needed only!)

  • You are so blind. When RIAA doesnt meet profit margins, they use this "horrible piracy" as a scapegoat.

    Your logic seems to say that just because RIAA makes bad excuses for not making enough money, it's ok for us to pirate. Sure smart guy.

    I don't see how that's a justification for people infringing on other's copyright.

    Go get your free Palm V (25 referrals needed only!)

  • We're all criminals already, so why is someone who wants to make a copy of a song for his mom going to be stopped at the thought that he's breaking the law?

    Oh, please prove to me how many Napster users are sharing their files out for their mom.

    Next time I do my speeding on the highway, I'll remind the cop that I already failed to count the 20 dollars I got from my grandma for income tax, and he should give me a break. I'm going to go steal a piece of candy, got caught, and rob a bank later, only to be excused because I was a criminal already, no need for reminding me.

    I hate SDMI just like anyone else, but certainly crying anarchy and stealing music isn't the best way to solve the problem.

    Go get your free Palm V (25 referrals needed only!)

  • I guess I shouldn't even be responding to a flamebait like you, but I'm looking for a place to vent my bad mood.

    1) anarchist trite.

    2) no. If you have intellectual property, you should have the right to do whatever you want with it. Just because some /. zealot doesn't agree with it doesn't mean he can trample all over your IP.

    3) but certainly some shouting moron in all caps is definitely one.

    4) typical swearing dumbass.

    5) stop shouting, it's rude. And you're insulting Mr. Slippery to consider your post even remotely similar to his. At least his showed that it wasn't written by a moron.

    Moderate at will,

    Go get your free Palm V (25 referrals needed only!)

  • [i think the word you wanted there was "tripe"... and your point 1 is a completly unsupported assertion. anarchist? yea, leaning that way... but tripe? support your position or go away... and do you actually think that an action is wrong simply because its a crime? gee zus key riest...]

    Go look up the dictionary for "trite", instead of twisting my posts because you can't understand the word.

    oh, but it does. thats the problem with "intellectual property." anyone can just trample all over (most of) it! (i make an exception for true well-kept trade secrets, etc...) here's a USEFUL definition of property for ya to chew on: "your property is whatever you can prevent other people from using." you don't have to like it, but really, its a situational given. if you disagree, state your reasoning.]

    Here's a clue for you - just because you can definite the word "property", it doesn't mean that intellectual property means the same thing, but with intellectual ideas. Copyright laws in America (and most of the countries) give creators of intellectual property rights to do whatever they want with their creations. According to your twisted definition, I can trample all over GPL if I want.



    Go get your free Palm V (25 referrals needed only!)

  • They said, "We stopped kicking ass a long time ago, but we're still taking names."
    --

  • over at Salon [salon.com]

    The crew have rejected it twice, so I'll burn more karma.
    --
    To Hilary Rosen. A Retort.

    This is a quick dissection of your recent interview with Salon.com. [salon.com] Please respond if you have a moment.

    Your quotes are in italics, questions are in bold, my comments are in plain text.

    While ultimately I don't think litigation is the right business strategy over the long term,

    Would that be 20 years long term? It will take at least that long for a generation to forget.

    I do think that Napster is guilty of copyright infringement, and we will have both a favorable court decision and some precedents set for companies that try and commercialize file sharing.

    Why is sharing so bad? And I am shocked that you didn't say "commercialize file pirating." Some would call that a Fruedian slip.

    There is certainly a lot of intrigue in the notion of file sharing -- for community reasons and for marketing reasons and for putting like people with like-minded interests together.

    Nice, it even sounds good coming from you.

    Clearly I understand all that.

    For some reason I don't believe you.

    But those issues really should be divorced from the very unique and specific issue, Does a company have a right to create a system that is so deliberately designed to take other people's work?

    Why do we need another divorce? This country needs healing. It needs the power of community. I lost you after "does a company have a right..."

    It's interesting in court -- the Napster lawyer tried to make the argument that file-sharing services like Napster actually bring the Internet back to its original purpose and history, which was when university researchers would share their research with their colleagues around the world.

    Perish the thought. Please tell me, again, why this is a bad thing for anyone?

    That was a very valuable and exciting thing that happened, but there's a principal difference between that activity and what businesses like Napster are engaged in -- it was those professors' works that they themselves were sharing!

    Again with the sharing? This is the word we're talking about right? "a : to partake of, use, experience, occupy, or enjoy with others b : to have in common" That's the bad word?

    As a practical matter going forward, lawsuits get a lot of headlines and they raise a lot of passion -- I understand that.

    Not yet you don't. I still have three friends that haven't heard about you yet.

    But ultimately the future of music on the Internet is not going to be about legalities and litigation, it's going to be about how are we bringing music to fans -- new music,

    Yes, it is. But I don't think you know what "we" means yet.

    established artists -- what are the new business models that people are adopting and how do you make all the new opportunities win-win.

    BY SHARING THE MUSIC. YOU HAVE A FREE RESOURCE. USE IT! I can explain this philosophy in great detail if you like. Click that "user info" button and look for a conversation (still ongoing) with Eric the .5b

    I don't think anybody has illusions about controlling all transmissions online.

    I do (think some have illusions, not have them myself).

    The question is, How do you compete if services available to give it away without regard to the creators are allowed to flourish with such customer-service-friendly tools?

    If you ask the wrong question, the answer doesn't matter. Remove the words "without regard to the creators" and you are on the right track. The Net is like that, it doesn't really make sense in most traditional terms.

    Gnutella is a little harder to use than Napster, but there also ways to enforce against Gnutella users that you don't have with Napster.

    Hehe, that would be funny to watch. I don't think you want to try and fight that battle.

    Are Napster and online distribution of music causing the record industry to rethink or change its business models?

    It doesn't necessarily change -- it expands. I personally believe people will want to buy CDs for a long time to come, [agreed] but I also believe they want to have subscriptions, kiosks in stores and airports, digital downloads ...

    I don't, but then again I'm one of your core customers. At least I used to be.

    I believe the expansion is where the conflict and the opportunity arrives. It behooves technology innovators to help develop those concepts in partnership with the music community. It's not accurate to say that the record industry says no.

    What is it accurate to say? The record industry says "go for it, we have good lawyers and lots of money?"

    There's no question that the industry has been slow to the marketplace, but it's too simplistic to say that the slowness or speed is out of some fear.

    Simplicity sells technology. Just something I've noticed. I see fear in all your actions. Most creatures that are panicing don't notice it themselves, but again, those are just my observations.

    It's more accurate to say that these are very complex transitions with a lot of interests and players involved -- artists and publishers and distributors and retailers and technology partners. There are a whole host of changes, and new structures that have to be created to move into these worlds.

    That's the big problems. There are so many players involved. We need two players. Artists and Fans. Which one are you? We don't need new structures either. We have the Net. It's a new structure, how much of it have you guys built? How much have you tried to destroy? Can you see why we (I) don't like you (plural)?

    It's not necessarily what people always want to hear, but I do believe that it is complex.

    You just keep on digging into the unnecessy complexities of the business models you have created. I'll be listening to some music.

    It's not whether or not somebody is killing CD sales this week -- it's whether music has value, and is perceived to have value in and of itself by fans, and by technology companies and venture capitalists who are investing in new businesses and have to pay for everything from their server space to their telephone lines to their lunchboxes.

    Simplify, simplify. How many venture capitalists do you know that would give money to a company that starts out with the idea "First, we sue everyone with a different business model..." (step three: Profit!)

    Paying for the content they are using is not an unreasonable request. I think it's a value quotient, not necessarily a piracy fear, that is also important to consider.

    You should search this site. I'm sure somebody will give you a clue as to the nature of supply, demand, and value quotients on the Internet. "Not necessarily a piracy fear", I thought you guys weren't scared?

    It goes back to the earlier issue that whether or not the record companies and artists are making money selling CDs is irrelevant to Napster; they are building a business on the backs of artists.

    And your business would be built where?

    Just because [artists] are making money elsewhere doesn't mean Napster has the right to do this. It's a self-serving argument for Napster.

    *COUGH*

    No one is arguing Chicken Little here;

    Sometimes you should listen to a little pen^H^H^Hchicken. The sky has indeed fallen.

    what we are saying is that if that geometric [try exponential] progression is such that music has less and less value, ultimately you do get to a scenario where it's hard for the legitimate businesses to compete. No one says we're there, but it doesn't take a rocket scientist to see where we're going.

    No it doesn't. Have you ever seen a fifty-year-old rocket crash into the ground? Be patient. Shouldn't be too long now.

    It's an artists issue. Cynics say the record industry doesn't like that model because it takes them out of the equation. But it's not true -- artists like it when they have a record that's so successful that they get to stay home for a few months rather than go on tour.

    Do artists also like works for hire? Here's a link from your page. [riaa.com] And here's a link about where you paid to get the law changed. [livedaily.com] And here's one to a quick rundown on how artists fare with your current business model. [arancidamoeba.com]

    You are limiting the artists' choices. And secondly, a significant part of the meaning of the music is creating the demand for the work.

    i.e. Marketing. Yea we've heard of it. I don't remember that in my music appreciation class in college though. Must'a skipped that day after a ragin' Rage show.

    And creating that demand for the music and the artist is very much a marketing and promotional function the record company does. The costs associated with that have to be absorbed somewhere.

    Yes, they do. And we, the fans, would be more than happy to do it. Just let us copy, digitally, our music files (that we bought and paid for) and allow us to take care of that marketing part for you. We'll tell our friends what sucks. And what kicks ass. MP3 is about as good as quality as radio, if you haven't noticed. CD's sound better. They still travel better. They look good on coffee tables. We're not going to stop buying CD (unless you quit fretting and bring us DVD-AUDIO, and yes, it will get broken)

    Things will evolve and the industry has always given away music for free, but it's really inappropriate that the only ways that artists should be able to make money off their craft is touring, if in fact people are enjoying their music anyway.

    Remember we are paying for that promotion and distrubution so you don't have to. You can take all that money you save and give it straight to the artists. And why don't you give their copyrights back after you stop promoting them? That doesn't seem fair to me, but then again I didn't lobby to have copyright extended [asu.edu] for an additional 20 years after death.

    Not to mention the whole crop of artists that don't have the ability to tour.

    I'm sure studio musicians will still have skills that are useful to somebody. Perhaps they can teach in schools after the sudden revival in the public's taste for live music? I mean, MP3 is great, CDs are better, but you can't beat the real thing. Don't forget that.

    What was your reaction when you heard that Napster was sponsoring the Limp Bizkit tour?

    I thought Napster must be desperate to have to pay $2 million to get someone to support them.

    I think you might have wanted to think about this one for a second or two. Exactly how much did you guys spend last year on Congress? [opensecrets.org] What's the annual promotion budget for New York?

    I didn't think it was a thoughtful statement about the long-term economics of the record industry -- it was an anti-establishment, rock 'n' roll publicity thing for them to do.

    Yes, and...? You 'member Elvis shaking them hips don'cha? What an anti-establishment, rock n' rock thing for him to do.

    There's no question that the multitude of artists who have spoken out against Napster far outweigh this kind of publicity stunt, but I hope that their fans realize that these artists actually care about their work, and care about their art, and care about their ability to keep making it.

    No question, eh? No question? Now would that be artists as in "signed, sealed, and delivered on the dotted line" or artists as in "a person skilled in one of the fine arts." I don't remeber seeing that national statistics poll, I must've been asleep at the wheel.

    I think if Napster has ideas for alternative business models, they haven't said them yet.

    Since when did "put music in the hands of fans" become an alternative business model. What is radio supposed to be? What's MTV for again?

    I don't think it's my place to do that. If people are creating businesses that use other people's work like that, it behooves them to come up with some other scenario at the outset that does the right thing. Where they go from here is the subject of obviously complicated scenarios.

    Obviously complicated scenaries, i.e. lawsuits. You've got that part of the business plan down pat. Keep the course.

    There are mutual responsibilities, but obviously as this case is in litigation, suffice it to say that Napster has never come up with a scenario. And I don't think anybody in the record industry has any indication that that is a viable option.

    The record industry? What's a record? Oh, you mean those big plastic CD's? I remember seeing one of those when I was five (and music never sounded so good, analog is a good way to preserve quality, hint, hint) Of course you don't see it as a viable option, that's the problem.

    The business models that MP3.com have put forward are interesting business models. The issue with MP3.com is simply of them not seeking licenses prior to the launching of their system.

    So you mean in addition to buying your CD, I have to get some ethereal "license" to listen to it? We are talking about my.mp3.com, right? Try and stay on-topic, that's what the lawsuit is about. That, and bankruptcy.

    I do get a particular laugh out of technology entrepreneurs who try and say that the record industry has screwed artists over the years. But what is it, now it's their turn?

    Oh, we're doing the screwing all right. But the artists have had enough, if you catch my drift. I get a particular laugh too, haw-hah!

    We have gone through an interesting shift here. The RIAA is a trade organization that was never a public entity or necessarily had any public profile. So it's quite a different role for us to all of a sudden respond not just to the music community but to the public itself.

    The Internet exposes dark organizations. Have you heard about Echelon? Area51? There's some pictures around here somewhere... Unfortunately the power has shifted. You no longer are dealing with someone coming to you for a resource only you control. Now you have to deal with us, and we control the resources.

    But I've learned a lot: A lot of people don't know what record companies do and what they bring to the equation -- helping to develop the talent and create the demand. That's been interesting.

    Oh, just wait. This party is just getting started. Most of the players aren't even here yet. We live in interesting times, indeed.

    When you go to buy a Chevy, you generally know something about General Motors being a decent company.

    Define decent for me. I do not think it means what you think it means. (Not a knock on GM, just a question about your example)

    When you want to buy a Bruce Springsteen record, you don't think much about Sony Music; that's been deliberate by these companies over the years. As a result, a lot of other people have painted on that blank canvas. If we could do that over, maybe we'd do that differently. But maybe not.

    A painting on a black canvas. What an apt metaphor. No wonder it's taken so long to see it clearly.

    I cheerfully await a response. I fervently hope that this crosses your desk at some time in the future. I've been harsh, perhaps unnecessarily so, but I hope you can get around my sarcasm and cynicism and see what I have for you here. Don't be afraid to by cynical in response. A little laugh might do us all good at this point. Let's get a conversation going and maybe we can save you some litigation costs.

    Thanks,

    Roy M. Taylor

    a.k.a Wah on /.

    --
  • This is kind of like Microsoft's Open License program, just for music.

    MS's Open License is a marketing ploy to confuse end users about the term "Open"

    Product use rights

    There are two use rights that are common to all Microsoft Open License customers in addition to rights granted under specific product end-user license agreements (EULAs).

    that is to say, "In addition to the rights taken away by EULA.."

    Oh, and those new "rights"

    Open License grants the right to use different product language versions. Customers must have an initial language version that is the same price or higher than the desired language version.

    Wow, I feel so empowered.

    Open License grants downgrade rights for all Microsoft products. Downgrade rights allow users to run any prior version of a product for which they have received license confirmations, instead of running the version they acquired.

    Woohoo! I am allowed to use old unsupported software at the new price. yaaah!

    Did you see this? [gpo.gov]

    Oh, and it's about control of money, IMHO.

    --
  • by Raleel ( 30913 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:44AM (#1097596)
    Someone suggested it on here in a previos napster discussion, and it just made so much sense to me...send the money directly to the band. Cut and paste freely.

    Dear Metallica,
    I heard a great song of yours because of Napster. I loved it. I loved another song you wrote that I heard off of Napster. So, since I loved it so much, I decided to download the entire CD. I thought to myself, "Gee, this is great music, it's worth the $15". So I sent you the money. Since I did not buy it from a record store and I did not have the address for your Record Label handy, I thought I would send it to you. Your music is a commodity, regardless of whether I get it from Napster or from a record store, but I wanted to show my appreciation for the people who actually make the music, not the people who throw up advertisements everywhere.

    Again, thank you for the music, and here is the money I might have spent on a CD.

    Sincerely,
    An anonymous Napster-using Fan
  • Hmm... And I thought I had filtering problems.

    I guess the guys of metallica aren't smart enough to realize that users can simply re-register with a new username?

    sigh...
  • Rights are no less social constructs than laws and have no more or less fundamental of a basis than the general consensus of a body of people that "Hey! No one should be able to stop someone from doing that." Perspectives on "rights" differ from culture to culture as much as morality and is purely subjective. I could always claim that it's my right to kill people that annoy me.

    So, while we're talking about rights, what about copyrights? You know, the right to control what happens with the fruit of your own labor. Your contention that his conflict with those laws is a "morally positive action", but what about his contention with the right of the makers of that music to demand compensation for listening to it? Your "morally positive action" may be another person heinous crushing of their rights.
  • by Valdrax ( 32670 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @06:29AM (#1097617)
    ...I prefer downloading the MP3's I wanna play on my computer, iso ripping them myself. So what,
    that's my right... sue me.


    Actually, no it's not your "right."

    U.S. law only allows you to make your own copies of your own albums for your own personal use and archival purposes. It is not your right to redistribute those copies to other people or take someone else's copies just because you also own an original. The law's pretty specific in that respect. The good old "delete these files after 24 hrs. if you don't own the original" argument for game ROMs was always an urban myth. Even if you do own it, you can't download it because it's not a copy of the item you own, even though, bit-for-bit, they are identical.

    Of course, the RIAA is trying to take that away too with the AHRA, which prohibits making perfect digital copies of music. This piece of legislation got pushed through over DAT recorders and is still being challenged in courts, AFAIK. Personally, I hope it dies hard. It makes no sense to allow us to copy things for "archival purposes" only in degradeable formats.

    If I name my "FreeSong" by "Free Cool band"
    Unforgiven_Metallica.mp3. How will they know?


    Now you're just guilty of a different kind of copyright infringement.

    If you do it the other way around, then nobody will download them because they don't know they're actually Metallica, and you've become unimportant to the RIAA compared to the more blatant traders. This is only good for trading between friends who know what you actually have, but Napster is an inefficient model for that compared to just setting up an FTP server with user logins. Seems pointless to me unless you're playing a malicious joke on Napster users.

    "This isn't Barry Manilow? What is this crap??"
  • So when they (Metallica, et al) submit these names, did they just list whoever had something with the word "Metallica" in their index or do they have to prove (again, under pains of perjury) that this was an actual Metallica song?

    Regardless of if they did or not, if the people in question *aren't* trading ilegally, then that would be one hell of a class action libel suit to bring!
    --
  • IIRC you can be under 18 years of age and still use napster. What about all those people who are 18 that like to download public domain music? There is a lot of great stuff that I wouldn't have been able to get if a CC# was needed, since I caved in 4 months ago and got a Visa (just for EverQuest).
  • by iCEBaLM ( 34905 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @04:15PM (#1097626)
    I went there, being the naive internet luser I apparently am, thinking some good was going to come out of it, boy was I wrong.

    Let me tell you what I experienced:

    1. All the questions the moderator asked were strangely written by PEOPLE WHO WERN'T THERE.

    2. All the questions, except the second one, I think, were truely weak, as if written entirely by lawyers to solicit the kind of answers they wanted to be heard.

    3. The band never saw any of the public chat going on.

    4. My very thought out question about me buying S&M because I heard an mp3 off of it, and that the RIAA posted a 12.3% 90 billion dollar sales increase last year, was not asked.

    5. The thing didn't even last a full hour.

    6. Metallica thinks that Napster is apparently providing the content and not the users. Lars said a few times they wanted "napster to take us off their lists".

    7. Metallica apparently has a gripe about napster sponsoring Limp Bizkit (they said it was wrong that this large company was paying Limp Bizkit to perform, and not the kids). Even though I don't like Limp Bizkit, isn't this what all record labels do? And don't other bands take on sponsors?

    8. Lars says "it isn't about the money" on one line, but says "napster is a middle man cutting us out" on another. Which is it?

    9. Metallica wants the government to police the internet, they want congress to bring out new laws against this, and they think what they're doing is for the good of all artists, they clearly stated their goal, to put Napster out of business.

    In conclusion, I belive this "live chat" was one hell of a fabrication, kudos to Yahoo for duping alot of people into showing up and wasting their time so we can hear uninformed idiots (Metallica) rant.

    -- iCEBaLM
  • It's easy for Metallica to prove a case by case basis. (i.e. This is no scare tactic) Metallica would simply show the Napster people a screenshot showing people with Metallica Mp3's and then say that they have not given permission for their music to be in mp3 format. Then Napster is required to block everyone who uses the Metallica Mp3's or at least everyone who came up when Metallica did a search and their name came up.

    Duh - it's easy to prove a case by case basis. Yes, usage of Napster does not demonstrate copyright infringment, but if used IMPROPERLY (piracy) it might be illegal (at least in the courts - i.e. it's okay to own a gun, most of the time however it's not okay to use the gun to kill a person. - While the gun company is not responsible - the police still take the gun away. So look at it this way - Napster is not responsible for the illegal trading of mp3's, but the Fed's can still confiscate the program if it is being used in that way.)

    Understand? - Honestly though, Napster probably will lose in the courts. If the tabacco industry loses for not doing enough to prevent people from smoking - even when they made the choice to smoke (recent florida court case) Napster will lose also - eventually.

    Hotline and like programs have not gotten sued by the industry because they actually have a group that goes and looks for pirated software (for Hotline it's known as the infamous Sadwyw Bot and Room 22). Because they take SOME preventave action they are left alone. Correct me if I'm wrong - but Napster takes NONE. That is why they will lose...

    This post is not troll, flamebait or like - it is simply my opinion. Also if you're responding to this post please don't pick it apart when you reply - because combined Ideas make sense, split up anyone can criticize them.
    Thanx.
  • You say that killing trees will do almost nothing. This makes you rather ignorant. If you want to live life wearing an oxygen mask, go ahead, lumber those trees. Not only will Carbon Monoxide (a gas which humans don't take too well to) increase, but oxygen will decrease. To enlighten your ignorance, this is due to the fact that trees breath carbon monoxide and expel oxygen. Without trees and forage, humans are as good as extinct.

    Two mistakes:

    First, plant life consumes carbon dioxide, not carbon monoxide.

    Second, recent estimates say that 90% of the world's oxygen is produced by life in the world's oceans. Even if this estimate is extremely high, all the figures put out by environmentalist extremist groups is still inaccurate. Coming down on plastics, I can accept. Cutting down trees is bad, I agree - leave the wildlife habitats alone, and the wildlife won't be wandering through our cities. However, claiming that cutting down the rainforest will suffocate us all to death is a little extreme.

    Off topic, I know, but environmentalists like the folks who've been swarming the whale hunts in Washington on jetskis, of all things, are too hypocritical to take.

    So, my summary:
    Environmentalists and their sympathisers blind themselves to the facts too often in the pursuit of saving cute and cudly animals.

    ------

  • Thank goodness for Tipper Gore [whitehouse.gov] and the PMRC [aol.com]! They saved me from getting sued! If I hadn't been shown the evils of the Devil's Music (aka "Rock and Roll") I'd be in court right now!

    darren


    Cthulhu for President! [cthulhu.org]
  • I thought this snippet of Metallica lyrics was appropriate to the situation, from Shortest Straw on the ... And Justice For All album.


    [...]
    Blacklisted
    With vertigo make you dead

    Shortest straw
    Challenge liberty
    Downed by law
    Live in infamy
    Rub you raw
    Witchhunt riding through
    Shortest straw
    The shortest straw has been pulled for you
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Alright, then the napster users were "copying without permission" instead of "stealing".
    Exactly. Once it's seen that this is not at all in the same category with theft, that it's nothing like stealing your TV or robbing a bank, maybe we can discuss it rationally.

    "He stole my guitar!" would be recognized as a legitimate complaint in almost any human civilization of the past 6000 years - it's a clear case of harm. But "He copied a {book, song, program} I made!" would draw blank looks and shrugs in many cultures, past and present; in fact, it might be seen as a positive act. (Note that I am distinguishing between honest copying and representing a copy as your own work.)

    Copyright is an artifact of the stage between oral tradition (where information has to be shared because that's the only way for data to survive) and digital tradition (where information will be shared because we're wired to want to do so and the cost of doing it is zero).

    Words and meanings change over time.
    True enough. But that doesn't mean that we should let one side of a debate redefine important terms to suit their arguments. Which is why the flap over "hacker/cracker" continues.

    Equating unauthorized copying with armed maritime robbery is inaccurate and prejudicial. So I will continue to insist on "unauthorized copying" instead of "piracy".

  • Also, you can't perform their material in public without paying royalties. Cover bands who pay their liscensing fees can tell you about that.
    My understanding is that royalties are only necessary if someone's making money. I can sit in the park (a public place) and play my guitar and pay no royalties, but when I play a Dylan song at the open mic down at Leadbetter's [netscape.com], Bob gets a cut of the bar's take via BMI or ASCAP. I've got no problem with that idea (though the actual execution gets whacky sometimes), and I think that copying should be handled similarly - unrestricted, but if you're making money off it, pay the artist their share.

    Incidently, that's another way that artists can make money when people copy their work - those copying it might play the song on the stereo at their bar, or learn and perform it, and cause perforance royalties to get paid. (Performance royalties are morally clearer and easier to enforce than copying restrictions.) This might apply less to MP3s than it does to guitar transcriptions like those at OLGA [olga.net]. OLGA also shows how ineffective these copyright enforcements are - when they were stomped, mirrors sprung up immediately.

  • "Happy mother's day! Here's a bouquet I stole from the flower shop!"
    But of course, if I steal flowers the shop no longer has them, whereas if I copy a song no one has any less than they had before.

    If somewhere in my net.travels I came across a Barry Manillow bootleg, you bet I'd copy it for my mom. (You thought Deadheads were serious fans? Forget it. You ain't seen nothing until you've encountered Manillow fandom. It's scary.) In fact, come to think of it, if I can get my CD burner set up in the next few days, maybe I'll do a search and if I find anything interesting I'll burn her a disc for Mother's Day.

    (Note to the copyright police: the above, of course, is strictly rhetorical fiction, so don't go raiding my mom's house looking for bootlegs.)

  • by Mr. Slippery ( 47854 ) <tms&infamous,net> on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @07:41AM (#1097647) Homepage
    Music artists put a lot of time and effort into producing a work of art which they then allow the general public to enjoy. That is the important point here - they allow the public to listen to.
    Oh, hogwash. Musicians have no right to prevent anyone from hearing their music. They are not graciously allowing other people to hear their music - in fact, any real artist would like every human being on the planet to hear their work.
    As it is their work, they decide how they want people to obtain and use said work,
    No. If Band X said that only brown-eyed blondes were allowed to obtain and use said work, we'd laugh at them.

    Even under today's copyright law, artists have no legal power to decide how people use and obtain their work, other than preventing unauthorized copies and collecting performance royalties. I can play recordings of their songs for my friends, I can perform their work in public or private, I can buy and sell used recordings.

    There's no natural right to control what other people do with your work. (Except perhaps the right to be prevent someone else from claiming to have created it.) Artists have only the artifical "intellectual property" legal rights granted to them by legislatures on behalf of "we the people". And "we the people" are deciding that granting an artificial right to prevent copying doesn't make sense anymore.

    and anyone that believes otherwise is just condoning theft in one of its many forms.
    Copying by its very nature is not and cannot be theft. Theft takes something away from the victim. If I make a copy, you still have the original.
    If anything, this action is a lot more soft than it could have been considering the sums of money which have been lost to the hordes of Napster pirates.
    Pirate? Where? I didn't know that the folks at Napster even had a boat.

    Oh, I see, you're using "pirate" in the incorrect and prejudicial sense of "one who makes an unauthorized copy". How in the world the same term should apply to copying as to murder, rape, and theft on the high seas is beyond me.

    So, anyway, you say that money has been lost from the artists to the folks at Napster? Did Napster come and rob their piggy banks? No? So if the musicians still have all the money they had before, how was money lost?

    The only think that might have been lost were potential profits. Well, guess what - potentials change. You don't have a moral right to stuff that you could have had if circumstances had been different.

    But considering that CD sales are up, it's hard to even argue that potential profits were lost.

  • Uh *duh*
    Goth != Metallica
    Read up on your music styles old person

    Er, duh, I said "Goths tend to follow." I didn't say they were Goth. If you have a hard time believing that, do a web search on goth and metallica and see the thousands of hits that come pouring out.

    Besides, it's not the point. "Reverand Manson" workships the dollar as much as the rest of them. It's all a show and goth's all take it far too seriously. It's just good music, he ain't a god.

  • or you could just go and trade on irc like everyone has been doing since the dawn of time.
  • Sure, they're going to have a hard time tracking down all of these users, and prosecuting ANY of them. I'm sure the number's inflated, but you don't really think that there are only 4000 users on Napster at any given time, right?

    There are many napster servers. You can easily prove this by logging on, submitting a search, not finding the song, re-connecting, and finding the song.

    If there are 8 napster servers, each with the 4000 users you've seen, we've got ~10% of the 333k users Metallica claims to be pursuing. Plus, we don't know how often users log in and out.. I don't think that 1/4 million users distributing Metallica IP on napster is impossible.

  • by TheTomcat ( 53158 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:25AM (#1097660) Homepage
    You mean I'm NOT supposed to type in my REAL email address?

    What about on IRC. It's still ok to put in my real name in the "Real Name" box, right?

    (-:
  • by Paranoid Diatribe ( 68959 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:26AM (#1097687)
    Okay, so they lock user Foo from logging in. Damn! Now I'll have to re-register the login Bar. Then Baz... etc.

    They could block IP's but that would seriously piss off a lot of people, probably to the point of a class-action suit against them.

    Lars must have thought of this one.
  • With an open subscription model you can't precent evil people from getting on the system even if you squash the account. A random ascii string can be generated for a username each time. Quite effective.
  • by GeekLife.com ( 84577 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:22AM (#1097732) Homepage
    They're having a chat today [artistdirect.com] specifically about the Napster shenanigans at 5pm PT (GMT -8). Show up 1/2 hour early to submit questions/comments.

    As the press release says "Hold nothing back: this is Metallica, after all. They can take it."
    -----
  • by wrenling ( 99679 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:26AM (#1097780)
    Its nice to see that metallica really appreciates their fans.

    There is a concert up in Dallas in a few weeks - several bands, including Metallica, are playing. I really wanted to go - I like some of the other headliners. But I will be damned before I let one penny of my money go to support Metallica ever again...

    As for anyone who is still making Metallica available through Napster - removed the MP3's. Don't distribute their music. Not because they
    are suing, but because they have proven themselves to be unworthy of their fans.

    Just my 2 cents...
  • by else...if ( 100943 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:25AM (#1097782)
    That sounds fair. If they did indeed trade Metallica music (and it's not hard to get a list of people who do), then this seems pretty fair, not to mention official Napster policy. No money, no greed, just prevent illegal trading.
  • Dear Bad Seed,

    Recently, it has come to our attention that you have been illegally trading certain digital representations of the music belonging to our client, Metallica. First, our position on the matter has always been clear: The Thing That Should Not Be. Your actions have put our clients in dire financial straights. According to Frank Metallica, "they're Bleeding Me dry". This is Sad But True. Our clients preferred recourse is apparently to Kill Em All, but in a less drug-induced stated they have relented to allow Merciful Fate in our dealings with offenders such as your self.

    In a Blitzkrieg investigation of the records obtained from Napster (herein known as Phantom Lord), we have clear indication that you were engage in this illegal activity. You may have tried to cover your tracks, but The Memory Remains. After a long Struggle Within, we have decided that while you will remain Unforgiven, we shall not Seek and Destroy Overkill.

    You are hereby banned from using Napster until further notified. You should consider your Napster logon Stone Dead Forever and realize any actions on your part should be considered Too Late Too Late.

    We seek only to protect the financial security belonging to Metallica - Nothing Else Matters

    Sincerely, FUD ( Master of Puppets)

  • by whovian ( 107062 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:53AM (#1097795)
    Please explain something. Usage of Napster per se does NOT demonstrate copyright infringement. Metallica would have to prove infringement on case-by-case basis to get Napster to switch off a given account. Metallica could probably take their case very far, but in retrospect it looks to me as if it all will have been a scare tactic.
  • by Thiarna ( 111890 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:33AM (#1097804)
    So, has anyone tried a suit against the record industry, (or some random represantative of them) accusing them of price fixing?
  • by br4dh4x0r ( 137273 ) on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:21AM (#1097847)
    I guess these 335,435 Napster users truly are...

    The Unforgiven.

    love,
    br4dh4x0r
  • by kz45 ( 175825 ) <kz45@blob.com> on Tuesday May 02, 2000 @05:28AM (#1097911)
    metallica is doing just what the slashdot community said they wanted.....going after the crooks, not napster. But don't worry, most people's opinions will be against Metallica.


    ----Freedom has no exceptions, but Slashdot does.

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