[old, but good]Illegal Art: Where intellectual "property" and free expression meet.http://www.creativecommons.org/http://www.publicknowledge.org/http://illegal-art.orghttp://www.stayfreemagazine.org/
12/17/2010 4:45:38 PM
Art, in any form, is a product of the human mind. Individuals can choose to keep their ideas private, or they can release those ideas, making them available for anyone to use. You could argue that without intellectual property, entertainment giants such as Disney, UMG, Viacom could not exist. I would argue that'd we'd be a lot better off without them, as we could finally be rid of corporate rap/rock/pop and god awful television.[Edited on December 18, 2010 at 10:43 AM. Reason : ]
12/18/2010 10:41:44 AM
Patents and copyrights have their place and are necessary in some ways to ensure that R&D costs are recouped and companies, inventors, authors, artists, musicians, etc. have protections for the product of their intellect. The real problem is not that these things exist, it is the length of time that such exclusivity is granted. Copyrights should not be indefinite.
12/18/2010 12:48:26 PM
12/18/2010 3:06:51 PM
12/18/2010 4:54:13 PM
Not nearly as much as the other things I mentioned, are you going to deny it?An album can be made by 3-4 people in a studio over a few weeks.
12/18/2010 5:06:25 PM
studio time is expensive, not to mention the time that goes into writing songs
12/18/2010 9:20:08 PM
12/19/2010 12:09:06 AM
It's not cost/labor intensive to type out the final version of a novel.
12/19/2010 2:29:09 AM
I'm still lolling about making an album being a quick easy thing
12/19/2010 1:53:39 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ilZshY6uUo
12/19/2010 2:08:44 PM
I'm not feeding the troll.
12/19/2010 2:18:51 PM
12/19/2010 2:23:11 PM
12/19/2010 2:27:21 PM
12/19/2010 3:17:33 PM
LOL
12/19/2010 4:31:35 PM
^^ gonna have to agree...Cost to make the Beatles albums <<<<<<< Cost to make Titanic
12/19/2010 4:47:35 PM
^^ In other words "no"nutsmackr = PWNT
12/19/2010 4:50:26 PM
Most musicians make a shitload more money touring than off of album sales. If you removed music copyrights it would hurt record labels more than musicians. Hell, with technology today you barely even need a studio to record anymore.[Edited on December 19, 2010 at 4:57 PM. Reason : asdfsdaf]
12/19/2010 4:57:03 PM
Yes, it costs less to make an album than a movie, but that doesn't mean music should be less protected by copyright laws. As for making more money off tours than albums, tell that to the likes of Scott Walker, Brian Wilson, and other musicians who don't tour. None of that changes the fact that studio time is expensive, songwriting and recording takes time and without the means of protecting those people's rights to recompense themselves for the time and effort it takes music will suffer. As an aside, for most bands touring is not a money making venture. The money still lies in the record sales.
12/19/2010 5:12:14 PM
why does this instance on touring keep coming up?
12/19/2010 5:25:04 PM
If you want to profit from making music, perform or release albums that are worth having a physical copy of. If I download a song, I haven't taken anything from that band. I'm listening, and if I like it enough, I'll see the band when they come to my area. I might even buy some merch. With the Internet, more music is being distributed and enjoyed than at any point in human history. The result is more vibrant local music scenes, with less money getting funneled into shitty pop music. Maybe, just maybe, people are capable of creating amazing art without the promise of mansions and expensive cars.
12/19/2010 5:27:29 PM
Who said anything about getting rich? The only thing I'm seeing is the artists right to be compensated for their work. As in, if you download their album and listen to it, you should have to compensate them. Otherwise you are engaging in theft. Whether or not the song sucks doesn't come into the equation.
12/19/2010 5:35:58 PM
No, it's not theft. If I download a song (that I wasn't going to buy anyway), who is harmed? How exactly are they harmed?
12/19/2010 7:19:49 PM
you took possession of their work without providing compensation. That is theft.[Edited on December 19, 2010 at 7:25 PM. Reason : .]
12/19/2010 7:24:23 PM
12/19/2010 7:31:07 PM
Just to note, "Thriller" costed $750k in 1982, in 2010 dollars that would be almost two million.I would hate to live in a world where that album was never made.
12/19/2010 7:52:35 PM
12/19/2010 7:58:18 PM
12/19/2010 8:15:09 PM
12/19/2010 9:04:50 PM
12/19/2010 9:07:45 PM
12/19/2010 9:20:21 PM
LOLI still have to laugh at $15 being too much to pay for an album one can listen to over and over again, but cover charges and ticket fees aren't too much.[Edited on December 19, 2010 at 9:37 PM. Reason : .]
12/19/2010 9:23:44 PM
12/19/2010 9:39:35 PM
12/19/2010 10:07:17 PM
12/19/2010 10:31:02 PM
12/19/2010 10:48:02 PM
12/19/2010 11:34:37 PM
12/19/2010 11:50:06 PM
12/20/2010 12:07:10 AM
^^You basically ignored half of that.The argument that they lost revenue is bogus if I was never going to buy anything to begin with. They can still sell as many copies as they would have had I never downloaded anything. Once again, "stealing cable" is not theft. Illegal? Yes. Immoral? IMO, yes. Theft? No. Find a new word.Data is not an item like a hat is an item. That is my point. Data is not physical. You cannot make a copy of a hat without material/thread/labor/etc. Data is 1s & 0s that can be copied/changed/deleted without any physical change.Most digital recordings are not exact identical copies. Differences in bitrate, codec, etc. By your statement, I'm fine to throw a movie into Handbrake and make a copy of it in a different resolution. It's not an exact copy so it's ok, right?You do bring up a very good point about albums leaking before they go on sale. Since this is sometimes done on purpose by the studio to drum up excitement, is it theft then? What if I don't get their copy but I get another copy that somebody else ripped and uploaded?My "stupid" stick question was in response to a stupid statement. Selling something to myself for free is a pretty retarded argument that doesn't begin to make sense. I decided to play along.Label provided ability to make the album? That's fine. What finite resources did they use that I stole? Water, soap, labor of physically washing my car or wear & tear on the machinery for physically washing my car are all things that you can steal. There is no water or soap used to make a digital copy. There is no labor involved in making a digital copy. I do not pay the owner of the car wash for having a good idea and then go home and wash my own car using my own soap & water. Car wash is a completely irrelevant analogy to digital media. I'm sorry that you can't understand the difference between the physical and the digital. The record label can make 1 master copy of an album. From that original copy, they can produce an infinite number of copies at (basically) no cost while using no resources. It is impossible to prevent them from the ability to make as many copies of their "product" as they wish. In my business, I can sell one of my customers a new sunroom, buy the materials, & go build it. The customer can then copy my sunroom using their own materials and tools. If this customer comes and takes one of my trucks and builds a sunroom using my materials & my tools, then they have stolen from me. I cannot reproduce the truck, tools, & materials that they have taken from me without resources. If they have their own materials, they don't need to pay me so that they can copy my room. This is me making a copy of the digital album. Should it be illegal? Sure. I have no problem with the artists & record labels making a profit. I'm in business and I understand that. That doesn't mean that it is theft. The damage to the company or artists is simply not the same. It's 2010 and we need to stop using ancient ideas with new technologies. Copyright law & patent law are two areas that are in need of severe reform. They're just too outdated to still be relevant in today's society. BTW, I forgot to add before that yes, I do usually delete what I don't like.*edit*^who says that they should have made the sales? You & them? If I had a choice of payment up front or nothing then they would get nothing. Thanks to the horrible people in the world, I have a choice of what I spend my money on. Once again, they are not losing sales. With me, they are potentially gaining sales. At minimum, they can sell just as many as they could have had I not downloaded a copy. As a plus, I would possibly purchase a copy if I enjoyed it. According to the cable company, you would be stealing cable. Are you actually stealing it? No. It hasn't gone anywhere. I will say that this example is slightly more appropriate because at least if you're splicing in to your neighbor's cable, there's a chance that you have degraded their signal and are taking away some of their enjoyment. If I download a digital copy, I take away nobody's enjoyment. What about patents? As I said above, patent law is in serious need of overhaul. I can't imagine anyone that follows patents at all would disagree. Perhaps you feel that people should be able to patent a vague idea and then profit off the hard work of others when someone makes a product that is vaguely related to your idea while completely ignoring the fact that you put little effort into the idea and basically didn't have any clue whatsoever as to how to make it actually work?If I paint the painting or if I push the button on my computer to make a copy of a song, I'm still producing something new that looks/sounds like the old one. In neither situation am I taking anything from anyone else nor am I depriving anyone of the ability to enjoy their investment/creation. You are correct in that you don't define theft by whether it would have been purchased or not. You define theft by loss. With digital media, there is no loss. You can debate that there is loss of profit but there is also profit created that would not have been there before. As I've already said, it's illegal but it is not theft. When someone steals my hat, I cannot do with it what I want. I've lost a physical item that costs money to replace AND I've lost potential profit. You want to put the same definition on digital media when it is plainly different.[Edited on December 20, 2010 at 12:56 AM. Reason : .]
12/20/2010 12:39:01 AM
12/20/2010 1:59:37 AM
First, I'm not advocating abolishing copyrights. I'm advocating overhaul. There's a pretty big difference there. The current system doesn't work for many reasons.Unless I'm missing something, they are making money now. I call that compensation. Did I say that all digital media should be free somewhere? I don't understand how your question has any relevance to this at all. It's as if you think that by correctly identifying illegal downloads as something other than theft that suddenly nobody is going to go to the theater or buy DVDs/iTunes/etc. anymore. I've said repeatedly that it may be immoral and should probably be illegal to download digital media. That does not mean it's theft though.Look, calling illegal downloads theft is just incorrect. It does not fit the definition. It's like calling all deaths murder or labeling all assaults as attempted murder. Just because the end result is the same does not mean that the action is the same. According to the RIAA and all of you that call people thieves, they ARE the same. If you can't understand the difference between me stealing your car and me making an illegal copy of your song then I'm completely astounded that you were accepted at NCSU or any other university. Hell, the penalty for getting caught sharing that illegal copy is worse than getting caught with your car. That's absolutely ridiculous.[Edited on December 20, 2010 at 8:40 AM. Reason : .]
12/20/2010 8:37:43 AM
There are several people like indy and d357r0y3r who think copyright law shouldn't exist. If you're not one of them fine, my question still stands for them.[Edited on December 20, 2010 at 9:36 AM. Reason : ]
12/20/2010 9:34:24 AM
12/20/2010 9:47:20 AM
I have varying thoughts about different forms of intellectual property protection, but I want to emphasize...I think people should have the right to live without copyright, or intellectual property laws altogether. If you understand the nature of these laws, you understand that they are not universal. They exist to facilitate certain markets. Don't care? Fine, live without those markets. We don't allow a market for prostitution, and that's a market we actively have to suppress. Digital media is a market we actively have to create. It should be a civil matter for any sovereign nation-state.This is not how it's treated. The effort to develop global standards for regulation that supports the global digital media market shows that many politicians think that protection for intellectual property is totally how it should be.
12/20/2010 11:04:34 AM
Lots of thought experiments in this threadSuppose you're sucking the fat, throbbing cock of the recording industry.Information should be free
12/20/2010 11:39:53 AM
12/20/2010 11:55:48 AM
pretty much all media; movies, games, music, and tv, have been going downhill in terms of originality and quality as of late. i'm all for cutting out the profits involved and cut all the people* who are in it for the money out of the system; so they'll quit cluttering the cultural landscape with shit they came up with following a focus-group analysis.*this includes not only producers, marketers, businessmen, etc but even creatives. if a lack of monetary payback is what's keeping you from exploring your passion then it isn't that much of a passion and frankly i'm not interested in anything you produced with payback in mind[Edited on December 20, 2010 at 1:58 PM. Reason : .]
12/20/2010 1:54:42 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qcOdNc_seyMthere's a link to a funny person, who I don't find especially funny, making a point relevant to this thread
12/20/2010 2:16:06 PM