RIAA PR Efforts Examined 552
The Importance of writes "Yale's LawMeme has an interesting article pointing out that the RIAA is having some PR success with their anti-file sharing lawsuits. People being sued are not just angry with the RIAA, they are angry with Kazaa. The LawMeme article thinks this is bad news for innovation since Congress might be likely to pass a law making innovative software providers more liable for the copyright infringements of their customers in order to stop the public outcry over the RIAA lawsuits." And in other news, a P2P group is planning to pay off the RIAA for that 12-year-old's settlement, and the BBC has an article about another victim.
Hmmmm... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Hmmmm... (Score:5, Insightful)
GET REAL! Kazza should take some of the HEAT. (Score:2, Insightful)
Since the primary purpose of Kazaa is to tarde pirated music, it stands to reason that perhaps Kazaa should take some of the legal heat. And please, spare everyone the lame argument that Kazaa is "just" a generic file trading app. You know, I know, the world knows that these types of applications are used for ONE thing, trafficing in pirated music and other copyrighted ente
No, its also for legal uses. (Score:4, Informative)
Pehraps its commonly used for pirating, but its not the ONLY use..
You mis read my comment (Score:3, Interesting)
I realize there are some legal issues with downloading the same episodes i can record myself, but in a case like that, i really dont care what the law says.
I also dont think that if this exact case came up in court that it would be a problem.
( now if i was downloading DVD rips or something, then all bets are off. THAT is illegal )
Re:GET REAL! Kazza should take some of the HEAT. (Score:4, Funny)
PR What?!?! (Score:5, Funny)
WIthout the word negative in there?
Someone tell me hell froze over!
Re:PR What?!?! (Score:4, Funny)
DAMN MY FLOPPY DRIVE TO HELL!!!! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:DAMN MY FLOPPY DRIVE TO HELL!!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Umm... I think they are confused. (Score:4, Insightful)
"d-uh, me not know it be stealing.." (Score:5, Insightful)
Not a real quote from any person but the whole "I paid $29.95.." line is a crock. "I spent $29.95 on Kazaa and thought I could download thousands of dollars of CDs, movies, software and pr0n." Riiiight.. (Feigning) ignorance is not a defense. From http://www.kazaa.com/us/terms.htm [kazaa.com]
2 What You Can't Do Under This Licence
2.6 Transmit, access or communicate any data that infringes any patent, trademark, trade secret, copyright or other proprietary rights of any party;
When a person buys Kazaa they are entering into a legally binding agreement, if they choose not to read the fine print that's their problem, not Kazaa's or Sharman Networks.
Re:"d-uh, me not know it be stealing.." (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:"d-uh, me not know it be stealing.." (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't think you can say with certainty that a EULA is a "legally binding agreement."
Re:"d-uh, me not know it be stealing.." (Score:2)
While that is certainly true, it does not by any stretch follow that Sharman is indemnifying its users against the need to observe copyright law.
Re:"d-uh, me not know it be stealing.." (Score:2)
Just making an observation, of course; I fully believe that if somebody agrees to anything without reading it, they deserve the consequences.
Re:"d-uh, me not know it be stealing.." (Score:3, Funny)
# 2.6 Transmit, access or communicate any data that infringes any patent, trademark, trade secret, copyright or other proprietary rights of any party;
Isn't that just about everything on Kazaa?
P2P = Pirate To Pirate (Score:2)
FTP is different, it is used a lot for completely legit reasons, it just happens to be usable to pirate too. While the concepts are similar the end effectual uses are much different. If K
Re:"d-uh, me not know it be stealing.." (Score:3, Insightful)
I would submit that this is true in a strictly legal sense, and that
the whole P2P contraversy is an excellent counter-argument.
The DMCA, in its final form, runs to about 20,000 pages and is only
understood by copyright lawyers, it is therefore useful only to those
who are able to afford on-staff copyright lawyers (eg the *AA and
other media cartels) It reads pretty much like a multiparty business
negotiation contract, which is basically what it is, and it (as well
as a
Re:"d-uh, me not know it be stealing.." (Score:3, Insightful)
Just like "I paid emusic.com $10/month and thought I could download thousands of dollars of CD's"
Guess what...you can.
2 What You Can't Do Under This Licence
2.6 Transmit, access or communicate any data that infringes any patent, trademark, trade secret, copyright or other proprietary rights of any party;
8. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS [emusic.com]
8.2 Except as expressly provided herein, you are not gr
Fuck Kazza and the RIAA (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Fuck Kazza and the RIAA (Score:2)
The people who know about spyware are using Kazaa Lite anyway (I won't post a link as to not violate the DMCA).
Perhaps there will be a day when we don't have to fear unsigned applets and ActiveX....ha ha ha....
I don't see what's so hard to understand (Score:3, Interesting)
Just because it's intangible doesn't make that any less true.
Note for trolls and other knuckle draggers: I hate, with a passion I normally reserve for SCO, the RIAA. I think p2p is a great technology, and I feel that song sharing is the future of the music industry. However, at this time, they do not want their product taken without compensation. Given that it is THEIR product, that is their choice, not ours. A choice I feel will put them and their bussiness partners in the grave faster, but it's their choice none the less.
Re:I don't see what's so hard to understand (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I don't see what's so hard to understand (Score:2)
So then if a majority thinks that it is ok to steal, we shouldn't have any laws making it illegal?
Please tell us where you live so we can help releave you of your possessions.
Maybe he lives in Baghdad?
Re:I don't see what's so hard to understand (Score:4, Insightful)
Theft and copyright infrigment are different terms, legally and morally. Please talk about them separately so as to avoid confusion and arguments-to-emotion.
Software makers should be liable (Score:5, Insightful)
If someone sells you something and makes overgrand claims ("Stable" - Microsoft, "Access free music" - Kazaa) they should be elligible for at least actual damages, not only very limited liability.
If companies could make claims with impunity to sell you something and not fear the consequences we would see cars sold as "safe at 200 mph even if you have never driven before". The same thing should apply to software companies.
Obiously in cases of user stupidity this should be ajusted accordingly (so users cannot complain that their machine went wrong when they gave out root passwords and their IP address on IRC), but otherwise if you want to make a claim about your product you should be legally obliged to stand by it.
Re:Software makers should be liable (Score:3, Interesting)
MS should be held liable for Windows security bugs, but who will have
the $ and clout to win a lawsuit against MS if the DoJ couldn't sue
'em?
But then thinking further, I had a vision of a new virus that,
instead of trashing your hard drive, established your machine as a
Gnutella server, and made your whole HD visible.
I'd really love to see the defendents plead they didn't know their
files were visible then! Heck, I'd love to see what the
Re:Software makers should be liable (Score:2, Interesting)
If a daft woman who stuck a full cup of coffee between her legs, and drive off, spilling it all over the place, and they *successfully* sue mcDonalds because 'it was too hot', then anyone caught by the RIAAs can sue Kazaa because 'they made it too easy to steal'.
I'd be surprised if the RIAA didn't try this tactic themselves - "right Dave, we sue you, you sue Kazaa, win all their money closing them down, then we settle out of court for $5, ok?"
Re:Software makers should be liable (Score:4, Interesting)
First, the lawsuit was appealed and McDonalds won and then she appealed that decision and it was a big ordeal. I think the final payout to her was several hundred thousand.
Second, you cannot serve beverages over a certain temperature due to this. Unless the customer explicitely asks for it. McDonalds served her a beverage over that temperature, as was evident by the burns sustained from the coffee spilling.
She was asking for way too much money, but it was a valid lawsuit.
OT - Re:Software makers should be liable (Score:4, Insightful)
A Friend of mine, many years ago, was freewheeling down a hill on his pushbike, in the dark, when he hit a pothole, flew over the handlebars and hurt himself a little. His first reaction wasn't 'what a plonker I am, I should take more care where im going', but 'Im going to sue the council for not maintaining the roads properly'.
I guess you can always find a reason why it is someone else's fault (or liability...), never your own.
I just hate that self-serving attitude. Sorry for this OT post.
Even if... (Score:5, Insightful)
How in the hell does that affect any intelligent innovative software provider (who makes software that can infringe on copyright), who after the napster case, realized that basing their company in america is a Bad Idea TM?
Or is it just another death knell for american software developers?
Bollocks. (Score:5, Insightful)
Last time I looked, Kazaa's got notices all over the place that tells you not to pirate stuff with it.
p2p tools are just that: tools. Remember,
p2p programs don't infringe copyright.
people infringe copyright.
Re:Bollocks. (Score:2)
you not to pirate stuff with it.
Correct. IIRC the girl's mother didn't go directly to Kazaa's
website, she got it from a 3rd-party website who 'sold' her Kazaa for
$30. So technically, Kazaa is not at fault here, its the 3rd-party
website that the family should sue. (Is it still even up?)
Didn't we learn anything from Napster? (Score:5, Insightful)
After the RIAA sues a few thousand people, and the tide turns against swapping, it will slow again.
But the fact of the matter is that the RIAA members need to come up with a new business model. File sharing will always be around in some fashion, and the technology will just get more and more complex - making it easier to do truely anonymous swapping.
It's been said a million times on here already - the RIAA is just like SCO - they need to adopt a new business model if they're going to survive. Litigation alone won't support them forever.
Re:Didn't we learn anything from Napster? (Score:3, Insightful)
The RIAA has been selling albums for years. Just because people want to download (FOR FREE) music now doesn't mean that if they change to an online distribution method (ala iTunes) that they are going to make the same amounts of money.
Personally I am impressed w/iTunes' success, but I don't think that there is any possible way that it will reach the numbers that Kazaa had (FOR FREE). I know the RIAA knows t
If this is coming down to a PR war... (Score:5, Insightful)
Good luck to RIAA in overcoming that massive PR blunder.
Re:If this is coming down to a PR war... (Score:2)
No, I do believe they care, and I'm sure that, had they known she was a 12-year old girl, they would have only issued 260 lawsuits. This is a PR nightmare for them, since most people see no difference between RIAA and the companies that RIAA represents; to most they are simply "the music industry".
Now we have people talking about file sharing that never cared before, and a lot of them are reaching the same conclusion: that something smells fishy with the
Re:If this is coming down to a PR war... (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, it's cases like this that really expose the absurdity of the RIAA trying to equate "intellectual property" with real property and claim billions of dollars in "losses". They can't rationally suggest that this 12 year old kid would have plopped down anywhere near the multi-thousand dollar retail cost of all that music if she hadn't been able to get it free via P2P.
Angry with Kazaa? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Angry with Kazaa? (Score:2)
Re:Angry with Kazaa? (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's start with the McDonald's coffee case, shall we. Rather than propagate popular myth about the case, why don't you first check here [google.ca].
Next, the "filesharing is illegal" mantra. File sharing isn't illegal, sharing copyrighted works for which you don't have the copyright-holder's permission is illegal (except in places like Canada where certain types of sharing are legal thanks to the CD levies).
So, let's assume you actually meant to say "sharing copyrighted material is illegal" -- so what? There seems to be a certain percetage of people who cannot see a difference between "killing people is illegal" and "jaywalking is illegal". Yes, both actions are probably illegal, but they can hardly be lumped into the same category.
Most "filesharers" know what they do is illegal. However most also would say that what they are doing is more like jaywalking as opposed to murder.
More info on 12yr old girl (Score:5, Informative)
At least the P2P United group stepped in, offering to pay the fine.
Saying "We don't condone copyright infringement, but it's time for the RIAA's winged monkeys to fly back to the castle and leave the Munchkins alone."
Seems to me they are using shock and awe. The girls mother, when confronted with the charge, instantly agreed to settle the action.
Re:More info on 12yr old girl (Score:2)
traction with p2p=porn, also (Score:5, Insightful)
A lot of talk radio hosts have been railing against the porn threat, and p2p for making it worse. I heard Diane Feinstein on the radio yesterday talking about the threat to our kids.
Meanwhile, these are some lyrics from a current hit song by lil kim and 50 cent. It's a nice song about a rapper's penis, called "magic stick":
[...]
I'm a freak to the core
Get a dose once, you gon' want some more
My tongue touch ya girl, ya toes bound to curl
This exclusive shit I don't share with the world
I have you up early in the mornin, moanin
[...]
Lil' Kim not a whore
But I sex a nigga so good, he gotta tell his boys
When it, come to sex don't test my skills
Cause my head game have you HEAD over heels
Give a nigga the chills, have him pay my bills
Buy matchin Lambo's with the same color wheels
I'm in the crib givin niggaz deep throat
uhg (Score:4, Interesting)
I think it's great the p2p community can stand with each other and donate to help those who are targeted but that's not what it's going to take in the end.
Given that most of our political leaders will not stand up to any of the privacy issues or heavy handed tactice given that most are bankrolled by entertainment and media companies it comes down to the end user being the empowered one to stop this nonsense. Is copyright infringement illegal? Yes. Does the resolutions need to be carried out this way in a 'I have more money than you so I will squash you over time in a legal system so you may as well just give me your life savings now' method ?? NO.
Unfortunately until consumers cease buying CD's completely to send a message - the RIAA will use file sharing as the cop out everytime for CD sales declining. The reality is if they updated their 10yr old business model they know full and well their usefullness would be at an end in the digital age. they are nothing more than a middle man and a bankroll sometimes and direct distribution would make them cease to exist
If only I were cuter... (Score:3, Funny)
$2000 Raised, done and done (Score:3, Informative)
The sister site of HardOCP [hardocp.com]
Very cool of them to do this. The 12yo might come out the better for being sued.
Re:$2000 Raised, done and done (Score:2)
Even for those who belive that downloading copyrighted songs is wrong an illegal you can't possibly agree with the tactics of the RIAA.
Re:$2000 Raised, done and done (Score:3, Funny)
When the RIAA gets what they want, ... (Score:3, Interesting)
I recognize that it is unthinkable to them that they might have anything to do with the sales declines. Unthinkable!
Priorities? (Score:3, Insightful)
Idiots. (Score:5, Insightful)
And gun makers liable for murders? And car makers liable for car accidents? And Slashdot liable for trolls?
software makers responsable (Score:2)
techtv Music Wars (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, but until P2P becomes profitable... (Score:2, Insightful)
What I don't understand is why they simply don't offer a file-sharing license as an option with an ISP signup. You pay a nominal fee (say $10-$20), billed with your recurring monthly charge for internet access, and in return you get to legally access and use these files. I would assume that this would squash any arguements concerning "s
Some thoughts... (Score:2, Insightful)
Wanna make somebody think they're being sued? (Score:2)
Uploading copyrighted music is illegal (Score:5, Insightful)
What if I own the copyright to the "uploaded copyrighted music"? Is it still illegal, Mr. Anonymous Spokesman For The Industry?
Hidden in his verbal sewage is the sinister and arrogant assumption that the general public is not capable of producing and copyrighting works themselves--that they are capable of only passive consumption.
This is the "industry" attitude, and it is basically accepted as truth to the reporters.
the power of sharing (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm exhausted by the duality: the people who (allegedly) most believe in file sharing seem to deny its power. And those who least understand it also don't see the power of file sharing. So long as this mindset is prevalent, the RIAA and its ilk will continue to own the media.
I have tens of thousands of MP3s and APEs. Many I downloaded from usenet, many I made myself. But nearly all the MP3s I have of RIAA controlled music are recordings I already bought. And while I absolutely love to share music, and freqently do, you're not going to find any Hollywood (or Nashville) label stuff on anything I distribute. Not because I value the RIAA, but because I so despise the RIAA there is simply no way I am going to take part in advertising for them.
File sharers desperately need to understand this. Every time you share Pink, or Madonna, or Linkin Park, you are advertising for them. Why would you risk being sued just to give even more hype to Millionaires? Would you rob a gas station to buy CDs?
Re:the power of sharing (Score:3, Insightful)
I had to rant (Score:2)
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=11493
For the famously sarcasm impared here, this is meant as a joke, I hope you find some humor in it.
-Charlie
If it enables a crime then ... (Score:3, Insightful)
She shouldn't have settled. (Score:3, Insightful)
OTOH, it nice to see people and companies rallying behind this girl to cover the settlement - it shows who the real good guys are in this.
ex post facto? (Score:3, Insightful)
Has anyone noticed that these people are whining about Kazaa after a thorough working over by the RIAA?
"We are willing to wipe the slate clean... give you a fresh start, in exchange for certain... cooperation in bringing a known copyright terrorist to justice."
I love it... (Score:4, Interesting)
It's the resurgence of the "play dumb" defense (Score:3, Interesting)
Filesharing cant be stopped whitout the users. (Score:5, Insightful)
The only way to stop filesharing is to gain the trust and liking of the buyers so that they pay out of free will. RIAA has taken the opposite route wich already have proven itself futile. One can only watch sadly when they destroy great technology for no good.
Swamp out the RIAA (Score:4, Interesting)
Anyway, whether my theory is right or not, I propose that we offer massive amounts of non-RIAA, legal-to-download music on PHP. I mean massive amounts - thousands and thousands of song, gigabytes and gigabytes worth - saturate P2P with it. Not just stuff you like personally but all kinds of stuff that potentially someone might like. And of course it would all be perfectly legal.
If everyone were to donate spare disk and bandwidth they're not using anyway, it might make a difference. Start a movement to swamp out RIAA songs. The independent artists will only benefit from it and thank us in the end.
If you agree with this theory, what are some good sources of freely-downloadable music you would recommend?
Unauthorized file sharing approximates Theft (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, I'm going to be the first one to tell you that copyright terms are too long under current law. Life plus 75 years in no way meets any reasonable definition of limited. But, I'll also be the first to say that copyright is a good thing and a lot better than the way things were before copyright. In the days before copyright, you used to have to get permission from the gov't (usually a minister of the autocratic ruler in your country) to print your own works, and even if you secured this permission there was no guarantee that some cut-rate printer in Holland wouldn't just pirate your work anyway. In fact, many letters from authors in the Renaissance up to the 18th and 19th centuries bemoan the appearance of unauthorized editions of their works, not so much for the loss of revenue, but for the omissions, errors, and changes that often appeared in them.
Copyright can benefit the little guy against the big guy. As authors of free software, it is the only legal leg that we have to stand on against people or corporations who abuse our code.
If you think your file trading is an innocent act of civil disobedience or that you're sticking it to the man and large corporations, think again. You're helping to undermine respect for copyright, and your rationalizations make it easier for people to "steal" other copyrighted works, such as free software.
Trading music without permission is akin to some company sticking GPL'd code in their proprietary product and selling it without source code. I'm sure most of you would call that act "theft."
I'm not saying that all P2P is illegal. I see how it can have many legal uses beyond sharing the latest drivel from the RIAA, and this is the real reason that I think P2P has them running scared. They realize that if they don't paint P2P in a dirty light, if they don't clamp down on people sharing unauthorized stuff (the bulk of the use right now), people will use it to distribute their own original material. Artists will bypass the RIAA gatekeeper and go directly to their fans. The RIAA will not be able to milk that cow for any money, and they will not be the arbiter of what is fashionable in music. In essence, P2P can destroy the mass market for music and turn the music industry into a boutique industry with a market more like a bazaar. (To me, that's a good thing. To the folks at the RIAA, that's economic murder.)
Besides, it's ASCAP and BMI that usually look out for artists' royalties. Shouldn't they be the ones pursuing these "criminals" and not the RIAA?
Just some thoughts that were interrupted by the phone.--Don't you just hate it when someone calls you on your lunch break?
Kazaa, RIAA, and human perception. (Score:3, Interesting)
The RIAA has some definite legal grounds and concerns that I can sympathize with, and as much as many teenagers and college students feel or wished we lived in a social commune where one can share anything, we don't and music and art does need to be paid for. Also remember the old argument that sharing music is promoting the band, to go see them in concert or buy t-shirts etc... The labels don't get any of that action, which is probably one more reason why they're in a bigger uproar. I am not a big fan of huge corporations but this slices fairly equally between big and small, It may even hurt the smaller labels more.
And when it comes down to it the law says its illegal, so if you want to gripe then go change that particular law.
Yet the RIAA feels it needs to go on a witch-hunt, and as much as I feel bad for the recent 12 year old that got nailed for 2k (many thanks to the P2P United for paying their bill), last I checked the law is supposed to be blind and impartial, and not take any special cases so whether it's a 12 year old girl or a 24 year old college student the law is the law. Though the PR from this latest case has raised some interesting issues.
Much of this is still the fault for the RIAA in its lack of foresight and greed in not jumping on the bandwagon and working with organizations like Napster and KaZaa to create licensing deals, its not like radio has been doing it for years.
The fact that the blame is turning to KaZaa, is in my mind silly, and very dangerous, it sets legal precedence that could be very damaging. Which has been stated in many different ways within these posts so I am not going to go further into it.
What I see here is the real issue; common non-computer savvy people need to be educated on some basic principles. Here at slashdot we can argue about who is right and who is wrong, most of understand the implications of the technology. The people that need the education are the public at large, and not necessarily by big groups like P2P United, or the opposite group the RIAA. What needs to be taught to the public is how the system works, why it is ludicrous to blame KaZaa, because blaming KaZaa is akin to blaming the architect of a house for copyright violations because some person can go into a house and copy cd's without being seen by the public. Hence since the house can hide the identity and be a facilitator for the transaction to take place, the architect that build the house should then bare legal responsibility. Data will always be data and if we can't exchange that of which we own the right to for free in any means we feel appropriate we then have some serious constitutional issues to deal with.
I truly believe if you can tell someone how the system works and make the appropriate analogies so they understand the basic principals they will come to the same conclusion. That if you going to outlaw or put the responsibility of the law on the software developer then you are then going to have to do that across the board for all software. If someone makes a counterfeit bill in Photoshop than adobe is help partially responsible, if some one makes lewd and illegal comments on an instant message then it's the people who wrote the instant messenger responsibility that the action took place.
If we leave it to the newspapers to educate the populace it will simply be yet another political race that is poorly understood by the majority yet the majority will be called to vote on the subject.
Kazaa ad: false, deceptive, and misleading (Score:3, Interesting)
There's absolutely no indication that the company is offering a service which, if purchased, could lead to civil and criminal prosecution. The California attorney general should go after them for this.
Re:Imagine if copyright were abolished. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Microsoft without copyright? (Score:2)
As it stands, this is not the case, demonstrating that your premise and conclusions are flawed.
Re:Microsoft without copyright? (Score:2, Interesting)
-uso.
Re:Imagine if copyright were abolished. (Score:4, Funny)
Survey says: Not this century!
What if you're wrong? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What if you're wrong? (Score:2)
Yeah, that would be great. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:5, Insightful)
To be honest, I think the music industry would be better off if people who only record albums for the money were to stop. A lot less Backstreet Boys and a lot more art.
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:2)
The same cannot be said of corporate rock/pop.
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:2, Insightful)
Have you read the stuff amateur writers put out? 99.99% of it isn't worth the time it takes to read it, and probably of the stuff worth reading most wouldn't be worth paying for. There are professionals because to do something well you have to dedicate more time than a few hours on the weekend to it, and people have to eat.
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:2)
Infact, wasn't Spider Robinson just complaining about this very thing?
They are professionals because someone else made the judgement that money could be made off their work. "quality" has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with it.
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:2)
Much of what is taken for granted today didn't even exist in the earlier days of commercialized music.
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:2)
OK, I feel better now. So I shouln't get paid for programming or system administration. Your professors should be doing all of their efforts for the sake of pure education and research while in thier spare time they hunt and fish while their wives gathers food from the forest.
To correctly quote the often misquoted passage from the Bible:
The lov
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:2)
If by "professional artist" you mean someone like Britney Spears, I say good riddance. There was good music before copyright, and there will be good music after.
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, that would be great. (Score:2, Insightful)
Real musicians and artists don't create to "strike it rich". They create their art because they don't know how not to. Being able to live off of your music is nice, but it's not necessary. Philip Glass drove a taxi for years to support his composing habit. If Metallica would throw in the towel before driving taxi to support their band, well then, maybe we'd be better off without 'em.
Re:Imagine if copyright were abolished. (Score:3, Funny)
Honestly, the lack of real-world vision on this site is mind boggling sometimes.
Re:How about a GC to buy her legal copies? (Score:2)
Re:How about a GC to buy her legal copies? (Score:4, Interesting)
Yes, fill the RIAA's war chest some more!
How about showing the girl that there are plenty of great artists that allow some or all of their music to be traded freely? Educate her on how Britney Spears and her cohorts are manufactured by the same music industry that came after her, only to make money. Show her how artists like the ones she was probably downloading and sharing have come and gone, only to be replaced by some newer fad, and all to continue to fill the industry's already deep pockets.
Obviously I don't expect a 12 year old to understand all of that. Arguing over musical tastes with somebody is pointless. But the remedy to problems like this is not to buy more pop garbage, but rather to introduce people to alternatives to RIAA-backed crap.
Thank goodness for that! (Score:2)
I'm just glad it's safe.
Re:Harnessing the Power of Disruptive Technologies (Score:4, Informative)
This is a spammer, people, don't click the link, you give him money through that link.
Re:Harnessing the Power of Disruptive Technologies (Score:5, Interesting)
The "traditional" model of the Internet is "peer to peer". Your mailserver talks to my mailserver. Mine talks to yours.
POP came *after* sendmail. POP would be the "client server" approach. My computer says "hey, I am only on-line a little bit, so I need a bigger computer to do my mail for me". Mail used to be transferred over UUCP, and even there it was "peer to peer".
As larger companies got into the ISP business, they tried to impose a "client server" model. More like a "push content" model. The internet was NOT compuserve. In fact, compuserve (and their ilk) JOINED the internet. So the "peer to peer" model seemingly won...
But, many ISPs (like mine, rogers.com), have user agreements that read "you won't run servers at home". They would LOVE a push content model. As supported by my bandwidth (1.5mbps TO my computer 128kbps FROM my computer). If I can't run in a peer to peer way, how am I going to run my email domain, etc.? Right, buy that service from someone else -- even though I have purchased a sufficiently fast computer and a sufficiently large pipe.
The client server approach allows for a money grab. The traditional peer to peer approach gives more power to the users. Guess I'm going to be a traditionalist.
Ratboy.
The "email math problem" foolishness (Score:3, Insightful)
Even some large-ish groups, like Prometheus (for low-power FM), who don't have a mailing list per se, do send out mass mailings to people who have (really) signed up for them. They should not be penalized for the actions of o
Re:victim? VICTIM?! (Score:4, Insightful)
Exactly. Which is why the little girl is the victim and the RIAA is not.
Or are you saying that suing a 12-year-old and taking $2000 isn't stealing?