I ask what is the difference between asking to be paid for an MP3 and asking to be paid for a ticket to a concert. You respond "they are different. [good work, you just got 1 point on the rubric scale for the NC writing test] The band is not present and performing when you play the song on your ipod."Let's analyze this response, shall we?"They are different." Good, you say there's a difference. Surely your next sentence will illustrate, in some way, a difference between the two."The band is not present and performing when you play the song on your ipod." OK, this seems to be what you say is "different." For an MP3, the band is not present and performing. Because this is "different", then it must be the case that the band IS present and performing at a concert (which makes sense, or else it's not much of a live concert). Therefor, if we follow your logic, the band should be paid for a ticket to a concert, because they are present and performing. And, they should not be paid for an MP3, because they are not present and performing (otherwise it wouldn't be a "difference", right?). The thing that you say deserves payment is "being present and performing."Now, let's go a feeeeeeeew steps farther and put on our thinking caps and think about this response. A band should be paid for "being present and performing." In the process of creating an MP3, does the band ever need to be "present and performing"? Do you now see what I referred to as a "lack of logical reasoning"?]
9/19/2012 9:49:15 PM
screw some E-booksthose things cost just as much as the real thing, I've found
9/19/2012 9:52:07 PM
9/19/2012 10:06:18 PM
OK, the concert requires land rights. Why do the land rights matter in this context?And wait, they can DRM their digital files, because it's "their property"? What if they want to allow you use of that property, for a price? Should they not also be able to do that? Is such a request reasonable? And, if reasonable, should you be able to circumvent their reasonable request for payment for the use of their property?
9/19/2012 10:10:51 PM
Speaking of sluts...This is 40 songs, all mixed illegally, stolen against their will, and forced AS SLAVES to be a part of this song of vice and nefarious, indecent, wicked hooliganism. This is what the "don't copy that floppy" man warned us against. This is the tune of the apocalypse.Alphabeat - BoyfriendAlphabeat - FascinationBag Raiders - Shooting StarsBlack Eyed Peas - Gotta FeelingBritney Spears - ...Baby One More TimeCapsule - Can I Have A WordChromeo - Momma's BoyColdplay - Viva La VidaDaft Punk - AerodynamicDaft Punk - Around The WorldDeadmau5 - Raise Your Weapon (Madeon Remix)Deadmau5 - Right This SecondEllie Goulding - Starry EyedELO - Mr. Blue SkyGirls Aloud - BiologyGorillaz - DareGossip - Heavy Cross (Fred Falke Remix)Gwen Stefani - What You Waitin For (Jacques Lu Cont Mix)Housse de Racket - Oh YeahJustice - DVNOJustice - Phantom Part IIKaty Perry - One Of The BoysKe$ha - Take It OffKylie Minogue - WowLady Gaga - AlejandroLinkin Park - CrawlingMadonna - Hung UpMartin Solveig ft. Dragonette - Boys and GirlsMichael Jackson - Billie JeanNero - Me and YouOne Republic - All The Right Moves (Danger Remix)One-T - Magic KeyRatatat - ShempiSolange - I Decided (Freemasons Remix)Stardust - Music Sounds Better With YouThe Buggles - Video Killed The Radio StarThe Killers - Losing TouchThe Who - Baba O'Riley (SebastiAn Remix)Yelle - Que Veux Tu (Madeon Remix)
9/19/2012 10:14:07 PM
I too agree with the poster who said that copyright protection lasts too long; basically I'm with Lawrence Lessig.
9/19/2012 10:15:08 PM
9/19/2012 10:23:06 PM
Oh, absolutely, the ability to opt-out of copyright laws should certainly be there. Do you think it is not?
9/19/2012 10:29:10 PM
No one is arguing that you shouldn't be able to sell digital content, not in the slightest. Whether or not it's an experience or a lamppost shouldn't matter... unless it's prostitution, drugs, or one of the many other things we're not allowed to sell.It's just about whether or not the law should be an anti-copy measure.
9/19/2012 10:37:48 PM
Well, why shouldn't it be? Should the law be an anti-fraud measure? Should the law be an anti-counterfeit measure? Should the law be an anti-contract-violation measure? Why shouldn't there be some provision in the law to protect producers of content from unauthorized copying and distribution of their work without payment? What is fundamentally different about producing digital content from producing Fords that should protect one producer from loss of revenue due to unauthorized distribution and not the other?I can absolutely agree that our current copyright laws are a bit absurd (though more their current interpretation via the RIAA and MPAA), but what the hell is there to get people to pay for something if not the law?]
9/19/2012 10:41:22 PM
Well is this a utilitarian issue or an ethical issue? Someone can validly hold different viewpoints on these two.
9/19/2012 10:45:44 PM
On which count?I mean, from an ethical perspective, it's not ethical at all to simply take the product of a man's work without paying him, unless he gives that product out for free. From a utilitarian perspective, markets can't function at all if sellers of products don't have any way to enforce their desire to be paid for their product. I'm not sure that there is really any other way to frame it.]
9/19/2012 10:53:44 PM
I mean, utilitarian would be to ask if we would be better as a society on the whole with copyright. Well, really, which amount of copyright would make GDP highest or something like that.In terms of the ethical part I agree there is are troubling ethics with copying something that someone doesn't want copied. But we post naked pictures on TWW that the person (and likely the taker) don't want posted. I see those two ethical questions as the same. If someone truly advocates the radical form of anti-copyright I've voiced here, the most righteous course of action is to simply avoid watching anything that the producer doesn't want freely copied. There's a lot of good that can come from that.
9/19/2012 11:00:32 PM
We may post nakey pics on here, but if any party involved in the picture so desires, they can use the law to remedy that, correct? Would you suggest they should not be able to do that?
9/19/2012 11:11:30 PM
9/19/2012 11:19:13 PM
9/19/2012 11:24:09 PM
9/19/2012 11:29:02 PM
so... if you don't agree with the business model, then it's more ethical to just take the product of someone's work without paying them? that sounds like a cop-out to rationalize what is, effectively and for lack of a better word, theft.]
9/19/2012 11:30:36 PM
9/20/2012 5:07:22 AM
Strike 2. Again, you are talking about businesses changing their model, this is not what the OP is about. If a music business figures out a model to give away its music for free and still make money, then great. The OP was talking about dismantling copyright law and forcing many content producers into new business models, because in effect, the government would be telling these companies that their products are now free to the people.It doesn't matter that there's no longer a music factory. If a business wants to no longer charge and force a different type of market, then fine. That is not what this thread is about. This thread is about the PEOPLE, not the businesses; and subsequently, obviously wanting the government to hand them something on a platter. I'm not against free stuff, such as music, which is what your post implies. I'm just saying that a company has the right to charge for its product (doesn't have to) and has the right to have that product protected from theft, which in this example would be in the form of copyright infringement.[Edited on September 20, 2012 at 7:13 AM. Reason : .]
9/20/2012 7:11:15 AM
9/20/2012 11:59:40 AM
Cael, you're using musical artists as your example, which is understandable because music is the art form most able to survive a destruction of the current industry. Music acts could still be profitable from live performances even if all publishers were bankrupted.However, please make your same case for big budget movies and video games, then I'll consider your argument.[Edited on September 20, 2012 at 1:50 PM. Reason : ]
9/20/2012 1:50:10 PM
^ Online games typically use servers that require a fee to play multiplayer right? Some have in game purchases for content and new levels. These things are possible to get without paying, but it's a lot harder to do when the games infrastructure is built into something online. The world is becoming decentralized giving more opportunities to the little guys, it could be in the future that there won't be any big movies as we know them today.
9/20/2012 2:51:46 PM
soapbox style walls of text ITT
9/20/2012 3:28:02 PM
A future full of free to play shovelware and low budget indie garbage.Plz god no
9/20/2012 5:11:33 PM
9/20/2012 5:51:54 PM
^ Right and those with the technical no how may still add the content, but it's a lot easier to pay $2 for a level than figure out how to hack it in yourself. My time is worth more than $2/hr.
9/20/2012 6:33:09 PM
the woman that made this animation taught at the place where I went to grad school
9/20/2012 7:37:18 PM
She also once gave a performance-art show in 2004and was on Springer 7 years earlier about wanting to join a suicide cult
9/20/2012 8:29:23 PM
yep...that sounds like the caliber of person my grad school would recruit
9/20/2012 8:32:25 PM
...so you went to Parsons at the New School: https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Nina_PaleyTBQH, until I learned she had a husband, I thout she was a lesbian
9/20/2012 8:40:03 PM
9/20/2012 8:50:37 PM
9/20/2012 9:00:48 PM
You asked the ridiculous question of what's the difference between asking to be paid for an mp3 and a concert ticket.The difference is, in one case you're asking to be paid for a piece of data. I did not claim that's an absurd thing to ask for. In the other case you're asking to be paid for a major live production. I did not claim that's more worthy of money than an mp3. That completely answers the question you originally asked. I chose to ignore your obvious slant and not participate in the argument you are so eager to get into. I was simply literally answering your super easy question.For the record, I get music via Spotify premium and attend at least a show per week.
9/20/2012 10:19:07 PM
Community, geographical boundaries, proximity to peers, life story potential? Pick one?Music used to be about the community pre modern recording industry. Quit dreaming in the 1990s. Its about the 1890s now.[Edited on September 20, 2012 at 11:39 PM. Reason : a]
9/20/2012 11:36:58 PM
It also wasn't able to be distributed in recorded form at all back in the 1890s
9/21/2012 9:01:15 AM
I don't think the real issue is copying. If we can just narrow down the discussion for a moment to the recording industry it's pretty simple. Copying is theft but why is this now such a big deal, copying has been going on since, at least, dual cassette decks. The problem is that "artists", or more likely the recording companies have seen revenues drop off during the past 10 years because you no longer have to buy entire CDs filled with shitty music for the one or two decent tracks. Now consumers have gained an edge and the record execs hate it. So they go after the pirates. Unfortunately I really feel unless you can actually prove that someone stole the song you shouldn't be able to go after them, as is usually the case that the theif (Michael Glapion) is not usually the owner of the access point.
9/21/2012 9:21:29 AM
There are two main reasons for making a big deal out of widespread copying now rather than earlier (although there were fear campaigns like "home taping is killing music"): First, there is no generational loss with digital copies as there is with analog; second, it is much easier to spread copyrighted material around the Internet than to send bootlegs around.
9/21/2012 11:41:02 AM
1890shttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPKe9OfWs-M1990shttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FE_9CzLCbkYSo... When people can copy toothbrushes and cups in their home. http://www.thingiverse.com/http://www.makerbot.com/Is everyone going to rally to the aid of Procter & Gamble? Whatever will they do? HOW WILL THEY MAKE MONEY??? THERE IS NO INCENTIVE TO EVEN TRY!
9/21/2012 11:51:25 AM
Those specific examples are poor, because the cost of materials and energy by itself would make them uneconomical for 3D printing (as opposed to the industry standard injection-molding); also, much of P&G's product line consists of specific substances that cannot be obtained competitively by a typical consumer.Still, there will be litigation (and may already be such) against people distributing 3D models of copyrighted designs, and worse, distributing 3D models of objects for which they have not licenced the necessary patents (this goes far beyond specific designs and involves the actual functionality, so if you patented a hand-tool for stripping berries off a vine without damaging the vine, and anyone else made such a tool without licensing your patent, even if it used a different design, it would violate the patent...but fortunately patents are for actually limited times), and the hammer of the law will fall harder on the distributors than the end-users of the illegally distributed designs.
9/21/2012 12:02:36 PM
9/21/2012 12:19:07 PM
Meh, things are only going to get worse. Pretty soon you'll have to pay for a song every time you listen to it and DVDs will only play two or three times and then "expire"...video games too. This is the new entertainment industry business model.
9/21/2012 12:31:26 PM
Also, someone mentioned video games as an area where copyright is necessary. Take a look at the success of a game like League of Legends, or any other product on a "freemium" model. League of Legends is totally free, but you can pay if you want to unlock champions faster or get special skins that make you look different but don't actually alter game play. People will pay in cases where they don't necessarily have to.
9/21/2012 12:37:39 PM
^ So if I took league of legends, repackaged it on my own severs, and sold all that crap for 10% of what the company that developed it is charging, what then? Currently existing IP laws protect "freemium" software also, it doesn't exist in spite of them.New or Innovative marketing strategies doesn't mean copyright protection is unnecessary.Just because something does not exist as a physical object does not mean its just an "idea"[Edited on September 21, 2012 at 1:59 PM. Reason : ][Edited on September 21, 2012 at 2:01 PM. Reason : ]
9/21/2012 1:59:18 PM
^There's no fucking way you could do that with modern tech in a time efficient/cost effective way. It'd be cheaper to just do a wholesale copy from scratch. While you are out trying to copy the backend the original author is adding additional functionality and bug fixing leaving you forced to start over.But assuming we are 40 years in the future with sophisticated machine learning that can generate your servers more power to ya. Though with that power there are hundreds of other application that would be more lucrative.[Edited on September 21, 2012 at 5:03 PM. Reason : a]
9/21/2012 4:51:55 PM
Bullshit, even if you couldn't modify the game itself you can still rip out most of the code and assets. Start from scratch my ass.Piracy might not be as big of a problem as media industries claim, but without copyright protection there would be nothing protecting companies from each other, which would be incredibly destructive to both the industry and anyone who cares about quality content.[Edited on September 21, 2012 at 5:25 PM. Reason : ]
9/21/2012 5:25:26 PM
^I can see how that business plan conversation goes. We have all the assets for <Insert Modern Warfare Title or other big game>. We just need a team of 150 hot shit developers to implement it. Budget will be $50 million and take two years. Who the fuck is going to fund that business model? Who the fuck would want to work on a copy product?
9/24/2012 2:16:17 PM
9/24/2012 2:19:20 PM
^^ I have no idea where you get those numbers from. So I'll just bring up the point I've made before but has never been addressed.How do you feel about counterfeit money?[Edited on September 24, 2012 at 4:56 PM. Reason : ]
9/24/2012 4:56:41 PM
^It costs a lot of money and time, even if you have all the art to build a software product. Even if you start with a working copy, and have all the art and dev tools for the game(which is unlikely), it's going to cost a fortune in development costs to replicate it. Even if the counterfeit gets the game exactly right it's going to be out some time later, at which point the other studio has probably already built a superior product.To put it another way, if the bills were invalidated every 2 years and it took 2 years and $200 to make a $100 bill, then no it wouldn't be a problem.
9/24/2012 5:25:41 PM