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Re: Record labels want to kill P2P but not YouTube
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The RIAA pursuing their selfish interests have expanded copyright laws above and beyond what they should ever be, and in doing so have no claim to sympathy when people are 'stealing' from them items which by all rights should have entered the public domain long long ago. |
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Re: Record labels want to kill P2P but not YouTube
I believe wholeheartedly that IP laws should be
1. Federal (not subject to state interpretations, as today's communication allows instant transport across stare (and country) borders. 2. Changed, as many are either ambiguous leading to wide interpretations, or unfair. And there are "rights" to IP...of a sort... As an author, it falls within my "rights" to the possession and distribution "rights" of my material, regardless of the specificities of any one certain law. I do agree with many sentiments here. I just also agree that IP laws NEED to exist.
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"War is nothing but a continuation of politics with the admixture of other means"
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Re: Record labels want to kill P2P but not YouTube
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Yes, the little green fist up there is a symbol of Earth First! No, I'm not an eco-terrorist, nor do I agree with eco-terrorism...I just thought it looked cool. |
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Re: Record labels want to kill P2P but not YouTube
Its only a grey zone because the internet is relatively new. As we become more and more adapted to it, our laws will become more specific with regard to the internet and more specificaly protect the IP of those using digital means to distribute their media. Everything will clear up with time.
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Re: Record labels want to kill P2P but not YouTube
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If a neocon whines about big government wealth redistribution, just ask him what he thinks about the portion of that big government that sends aid to Israel.
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Re: Record labels want to kill P2P but not YouTube
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You are incorrect.
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That is not correct. It is not about taking the purchased product from the consumer; rather it is about taking the product from its ‘inventor’, and the result of such a theft on society. Read on. Basically, by ‘copying’ the car, or the song, you have made it such that the recipient of the copy does not have to purchase one from the person who created the product. That effectively takes money out of the hands of the person who put out the effort to create the desired product. It is not as straight forward as stuffing a CD in your pants, or hotwiring a car on the dealers’ lot, but imagine you wrote a hit song, and looked forward to putting your kids through college with the profit from the sales. Next thing you know, some guy on the street has a table full of copies he burned at home, and is selling them for a bit less than they cost in the store. Yours don’t move, and the royalty check never comes in the mail, while the pirate has a pocket full of cash he earned selling your song. That’s theft. Furthermore, even if it is just given away, passed from kid to kid, the author never gets his compensation. The consumers get to enjoy the tune, but never pay. Thus, the creative mind is not rewarded, and fails to create. It is forced to do other jobs to put food on the table, and the next great creation, be it a song, or water powered automobile, never comes to light. This example of how profits in the market benefits man and mankind is applicable to all forms of creativity, or production. Be it the next organic farming innovation, the next ‘Google’, or the next prescription drug, if we remove the profit incentive, the effort needed to move the idea from concept to useful product will not happen. Reject socialism, embrace the free market and capitalism. Chester |
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it is not grey at all.
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You may play your copy for friends, but you may not charge them, or give them duplicates. Profit is reserved for the people, be they artists or athletes, who put out the effort to make the product desirable. What technology has changed is the ability to make quality duplicates easily. No longer do we need a room full of Monks, nor do we have to listen to poor quality tape recordings. As an aside, that may be why “You Tube” is being left alone – from my limited experience, none of the samples on the site are anything I’d replay to many times. If I liked it, I’d go buy a better version. Chester Last edited by ChesterDillon; 11-14-2006 at 08:51 AM. Reason: clarity |
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Re: Record labels want to kill P2P but not YouTube
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So, to continue the train of thought you've shared above, it would make sense, then, that you would have no problem with someone tapping into your phone or cable lines to use a service that you pay for... Steve |
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Re: You are incorrect.
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If a neocon whines about big government wealth redistribution, just ask him what he thinks about the portion of that big government that sends aid to Israel.
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Re: Record labels want to kill P2P but not YouTube
I don't see the connection.
__________________
If a neocon whines about big government wealth redistribution, just ask him what he thinks about the portion of that big government that sends aid to Israel.
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