kyrie
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« Reply #61 on: May 19, 2007, 06:22:15 PM » |
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This may have been pointed out already - I didn't feel like reading every reply - however:
There is one section in that little dialog (which reminds me a lot of old Philosophy and English classes so kudos to bumble on his choice of formats) that is completely false:
"You?re buying the objects that carry the music, not the music."
You are *not* buying the media the songs come on.
You are buying the songs.
How so?
For years the record industry has repeated, ad nauseum, that the reason there is no guarantee on the CDs and DVDs we purchase is because we are purchasing the *content* - not the media. This is why most labels wouldn't replace damaged media. It's why there is no warranty on CDs that, after a decade or two, due to shoddy manufacturing, have begun oxidizing after their sealant has withered away and are slowly becoming unplayable.
CDs and DVDs were marketed as an "indestructible" media - that's right from the horse's mouth (the horse being the recently deceased ex-MPAA chief Jack Valenti). Only, they obviously are not and are just as fragile as records were.
Which is why the copyright laws in almost every nation - before draconian measures like the DMCA were created by bought-off politicians living off campaign donations - allowed for users to make a backup.
Media shifting - the right to move copyrighted material that you have purchased from one format to another - is also part of copyright law in many nations.
No one buys the media. Without the content, the media is just a bright shiny disc that makes a lame frizbee. We pay for the content - we buy the content, no matter how badly the industry now wishes to claim otherwise (contradicting their own past statements). We do not "license" the content, which is the latest gimmick the RIAA likes to contend in their quest to further milk the cash cow they believe Joe Consumer is.
We pay for the content, and yes, we can transfer it.
*** /rant over
Aside from that... bfoot put together one of the most coherent looks at the copyright debate I've seen thus far. And his conclusion sums it up nicely (as it should):
People want their music (or movies, or TV shows).
But there's an addition that needs to be made:
People want their entertainment... in a quality format that is not restricted or forces them to jump through hoops to get it, and at a price that is fair for the product in question.
That means, no DRM, no "you must have an HDCP compatible TV," no rootkits (Sony), no defective discs (EMI), no price fixing, no bullshit.
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