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#11
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, I would say the reason is fidelity.When you record off the TV or radio or stuff a book on a copier, you are making an inferior copy. When you download music and burn it to a CD, the 'product' you produce is potentially every bit as good as what is manufactured by the recording industry. Print out the CD jacket and the potential for someone to sell pirated music that send no royalties to the artist become much greater. That's the recording industry's main argument in going after the file-sharing services, that their best chance to stop people from selling coutnerfeit CDs and DVDs is to stop the file sharing of copywrited material.
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I have lived, Sir, a long time, and the longer I live, the more convinced I am of this truth–that God governs the affairs of men. --Benjamin Franklin |
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#12
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However, I must point out that you are not making an irrelevant argument. I am not trying to justify file sharing, nor am I trying to explain how it is morally right. I am merely attempting to show the, important differnces between file sharing and stealing whilst showing the similarities between file sharing and recording television etc. You are arguing that stealing from the television is okay because you are not disadvantaging the television companies whilst stealing from artists is not because they cannot make money in the same way. This is a moral question and not a question of legality. For the record, I view free music downloads as wrong. I just do not think it should be illegal since I can see a more productive alternative and because I do not believe it is stealing. Quote:
This is actually substantially more of a loss in quality than that of say recording a television programme onto a DVD. However, again, such an argument actually undermines the opposing position. It states that the only reason why file sharing is counted as stealing whilst other methods of sharing information aren't, is because big businesses stand to lose more from the former rather than the latter. So in other words, economic might is forcing such a definition. Take away such a pressure and it would not necessarily be so.
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Last edited by Fluffy; 06-28-2005 at 01:30 PM. |
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#13
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Saw11_2000=Tired. |
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#14
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This still does not show why file sharing is stealing.
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#15
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I look at the whole file sharing topic like this. If you go into a shop and buy a cd, then you have bought that music and with it the right to copy it for your own personal use i.e. to an MP3 player etc. If you lend the cd to a friend then its still your property, your friend will give it back to you. But if you copy a cd, then you will physically have something that you haven't paid for, but is the same as from a shop. Would you walk into a shop, buy a cd, take it home and copy it, then take the original back to the shop and get your money back? No, because you probably recognise that as stealing. The same therefore must be true for copies of friends cds and file sharing. Its taking something you haven't paid for, without the permission of the publishers.
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Artificial Life on your PC |
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#16
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The way I view file sharing, it only helps the artist. If I hear a good song on the radio, I find out what artist sings the song, and then go download some of his or her songs. If I like the songs, I go and buy the album, if I don't like the other songs, I look for it on napster (which is now legal and costs 99 cents a song). I also feel that file sharing hurts the big artists more than it hurts the up and coming artists. With the up and coming artists, they have a medium where they can distribute their music to anyone who wants to listen for free. This could boost attendance at concerts and also help boost cd sales. It's just too bad I am in the minority when it comes to music file sharing. I think the best way you can tell if you are actually stealing or not is by asking yourself one simple question. "Would I buy this artist's cd if I wasn't able to download it?" If the answer is yes, then I feel you are stealing.
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#17
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From the Magazine | Notebook
Mortal Enemies No More By DAVID E. THIGPEN SUBSCRIBE TO TIMEPosted Sunday, Jul. 03, 2005 After the Supreme Court ruled in MGM v. Grokster that file-sharing services can be sued for promoting illegal downloads, Mashboxx, a start-up run by Grokster's ex-president, partnered with Sony BMG Music Entertainment, whose CEO Andrew Lack, below, spoke with TIME. Is the Grokster ruling a cause for celebration? This is very good news. The court found that balance we were looking for with respect to tech vs. content. And it upheld a very simple thought: Thou shalt not steal, even on the Internet. Will this discourage innovation? That's a sham, a fraud by radical techies who developed file sharing, so all it is is a front for stealing. At the end of the day, they built their house of cards on our back. If file sharers are your mortal enemies, why is Mashboxx different? They don't want to see our content stolen. For one thing, they are employing filtering technology [to prevent theft of songs]. So your former enemy is now your ally? My guess is that the industry at large is headed in that direction. We've turned a page. How big a boon is this ruling? Now we can expend our energies on how to distribute music. Will we have to chase illegal file services in the Seychelles and God knows where else? Yes. But most people will move to a more normal pattern of buying music. It's a long war, and this was an important battle to win. --By David E. Thigpen From the Jul. 11, 2005 issue of TIME magazine ![]()
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My life is an open book; if you don't like the read, put me back on the shelf ....................
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#18
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Last time I checked, people sing because they love singing. An earlier time I checked, people played the guitar to have fun and because they love to play it. Although music is a profession, it is an expression (real music that is, not like the stuff we all accidentally see on TV), and getting people to listen, let alone be willing to pay for your expressions is a blessing all on its own. When was the last time somebody picked up a guitar and said "I want to play like the guy from blink 182 and make millions of dollars by only playing 7 different chords per album?" The answer is never. Music goes (or should go) much deeper than monetary value, and whoever is mad that somebody "stole" their music doesn't deserve a penny, because they are in the music business for all the wrong reasons. If people love your music, they will support you regardless. If you are blessed with doing what you love, and make a living out of it and being happy, then what right do you have to complain? The people who complain are the untalented ones who just love money, and I do not understand how they can live with themselves.
So to finish this post, the people who make music for the music do not care about making money, and the ones that do care about the money, care about sharing. So I guess file sharing is technically stealing, but for all those mainstream artists, why should you get mad if somebody steals 2 grains of sand from your beach, while others (like Dream Theater for example, who are possibly the most talented band ever) do not care if someone steals a plank of wood from their shack? The answer is simple. It depends on how much you love money. Besides, around 98% (i am ball parking this statistic) of North Americans do not own a ferarri or things along those lines and get by fine, yet that 2% complain.
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Great ppl do great things Mediocre ppl talk about great things and small people talk about other ppl |
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#19
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I am a seeder King Pin for torrents. Hundreds of Gigabytes of music, movies, games, and other... stuff
![]() I think "stealing" is the wrong term, but it is definately immoral. You are freely distributing intellectual property/data that would otherwise cost money. Therefore, cutting these organisations profits. On the other hand, I do it anyway. What more can I say. I'm not afraid to admit I break the rules, no justification required.
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"If knowledge is power, then a God am I" - The Riddler |
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#20
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Is file sharing copyright infringement? Of course.
Is file sharing stealing? Not by a long shot. The recording industry needs to adapt. The cheapest I've been able to find music downloads is 99 cents per song. To download a full CD - an average of 13 songs - would cost $12.87. So, for $12.87, I provide the disc, the case, the equipment with which to record the CD, and receive no sleeve, lyrics, album art, or any of the bonuses commonly found on today's CD's (such as DVD extras or special internet content). By comparison, going to the store and buying a CD with the case, sleeve, lyrics, album art, and bonuses would only (usually) cost about $10. By legally downloading and recording your own CDs, you are saving the recording industry a whole bunch of money. However, they charge you more to do so. So, at this point, legal music downloads are complete rip-offs. When the industry wises up and offers full, legally-downloadable albums for 5 or 6 bucks, I will be more than happy to pay for them. Until then, I will continue downloading music illegally without feeling the least bit of guilt.
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Nothing real can be threatened. Nothing unreal exists. Herein lies the peace of God. |