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Grex > Music2 > #279: Napster: Thieves or Coolness? |  |
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| 25 new of 206 responses total. |
anderyn
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response 40 of 206:
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Sep 8 19:05 UTC 2000 |
Definitely read the Atlantic Monthly article on this. It's online at the
Atlantic website, and it has some fascinating data and historical precedent
that I'd never heard before. Pirating of music is nothing new, just in a new
format.
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rcurl
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response 41 of 206:
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Sep 8 19:13 UTC 2000 |
You can listen to any CD in a record store before buying - to preview
it. I'd think record companies might allow this over the web, if it
is done once, and not recorded. (You can't make a copy of the CD in
a record store!). Then, ea could have sampled Captain Tractor, and
bought the CD because he wanted a copy. So, would you agree that it
would be OK if all downloaded music automatically expired after
one listening, and could not be saved or copied?
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krj
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response 42 of 206:
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Sep 8 19:18 UTC 2000 |
"You can listen to any CD in a record store before buying - to
preview it." Where???? The last CD shop in Michigan which I know
allowed unlimited previewing was CD Emporium in East Lansing, and
they closed a decade ago.
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ea
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response 43 of 206:
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Sep 8 19:24 UTC 2000 |
No. Using your logic, a person can spend a fair amount of time in the
record store, just listening to the same CD over and over. You can go
back the next day and still listen some more if you want to. (as long as
the manager doesn't kick you out) Yes, you have to spend time driving
to the store, but generally, that would not be nearly as long as it
takes to download a file.
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ea
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response 44 of 206:
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Sep 8 19:24 UTC 2000 |
(Ken slipped in)
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anderyn
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response 45 of 206:
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Sep 8 19:50 UTC 2000 |
I guess I've been spoiled by my T1 connection. When I've d'loaded music
before, from sites which WERE legal (mp3.com artist's sites, the virtual
filksing, and Dougie's, etc.), it's taken maybe five minutes when I've done
mass d'loads.
I think the mp3 site's idea is good -- at least the one I've used -- which
is to allow various artists to put songs on line so people can hear them, or
download them, and to sell DAM cd's by those artists for a small amount of
money. That way, they get exposure, and those people who LIKE their stuff will
buy it. At least, the honest ones. (I've gotten one DAM cd from there, from
a Welsh singer named Jodee James, and it's *very* excellent.)
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krj
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response 46 of 206:
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Sep 8 21:21 UTC 2000 |
I'm going to put my little copyright essay here. No slight intended to
willard's other excellent Napster item, it just seems to fit better
here now.
-------
Consider: Copyrights have no moral force in our culture.
The right to tangible property goes back to the roots of Western culture:
"Thou Shalt Not Steal" is in the Ten Commandments. And even a child
sees that if I take something from you, you don't have it any more, and
this is a wrong.
But copying is different. If I copy something from you, you still have
it. The Lord did not say, "Thou shalt not copy thy neighbors' scrolls."
Copyright has never been an "absolute" right, in the sense that
most property rights are absolute. (Let's wave off land-use regulations, OK?)
In the US, copyright law has balanced ownership incentives to
creators with access and "fair use" by the public, and the
scope of copyrights has been subject to adjustment through the years.
The Constitutional language which gives Congress control over copyright
law says that the purpose of copyright is public benefit -- *not* the
maximum profit to copyright holders.
Copyright is an economic regulation which only goes back a couple of
hundred years, and it was designed to regulate the behavior of businesses.
It's only worked this long because until now copying machines, in the
most general sense, were big expensive things which only businesses
could own, and business are (1) relatively limited in number, and (2)
cost-sensitive to things like civil lawsuits. So the civil court
system was sufficient to keep the businesses in line.
In the 20th century, the ownership of copying machines has spilled
down into the general population. And I had a flash of blinding
insight last night: so far, "Society" has refused to use the big
guns of copyright law against the public at large. As the public's
copying activity has expanded, copyrights have been rolled back.
Legally, the first step was with the VCR. In the Betamax case, the appeals
court held Sony liable for infringement; we came very close, as a society,
to banning the VCR. However, the Supreme Court made some new law
out of whole cloth: they arbitrarily decided to declare that
"timeshifting" a TV show was not an infringement; and then they ruled
that because the VCR had newly-declared non-infringing uses, it
could not be sued out of existence. Copyright rolled back
in the face of public copying activity.
Though audio copying came first -- the music industry got really
panicky in the heyday of cassette recorders,
with a campaign about how "Home Taping Is Killing
Music." -- the legal situation didn't resolve until later.
Widespread home cassette copying was tolerated for years -- I am unaware
of anyone ever being prosecuted for it..
Eventually in 1992, the Audio Home Recording Act
defined a clear legal zone for private users to
make copies without fear of being sued. Again, copyright was rolled back.
I honestly don't know how the current struggle will turn out.
Congress gave the copyright industry and the courts a Great Big Gun
to use against the public in the Digital Millenium Copyright Act.
$1000 worth of illicit copies is now a felony
charge; by the standards of the law before 1995, this is draconian.
It's so draconian that the law has hardly been used yet. Of the
guesstimated 20 million Napster users, most must have $1000 worth
of illicit songs, and so they would be slam-dunk prosecutions
under the law. But the number of prosecutions under this
section of the DCMA is one: one poor student at the U. Oregon who
had MP3 files on his web site. And that prosecution was two years ago.
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gull
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response 47 of 206:
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Sep 8 22:03 UTC 2000 |
The RIAA has some interesting interpretations of copyright law. For
example, if I dub a CD onto tape to keep in the car, they're forced to
consider that legal by the home recording act. If I dub the CD onto a CD-R
data blank for the same use, it's illegal. If I dub it onto a CD-R audio
blank, suddenly it's legal. The only difference between audio and data
blanks is the price and the fact that the audio blanks have a serial number
identifying them as audio blanks.
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krj
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response 48 of 206:
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Sep 8 22:23 UTC 2000 |
((I'm sorry, it was the No Electronic Theft Act which set a felony
charge for non-commercial copyright infringements of $1000, not the
DMCA. I keep getting those two mixed up.))
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krj
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response 49 of 206:
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Sep 8 22:37 UTC 2000 |
gull in resp:47 :: that's not an "interpretation" of the law, that
*is* the law. A CD-R audio blank costs more because of the royalty
paid on it, and in exchange for that royalty the user is immunized
for copyright violation involving the recording put onto that disc.
Trying to separate out computer data from audio data in the AHRA
gets contorted and wacky.
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gull
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response 50 of 206:
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Sep 9 01:59 UTC 2000 |
Re #49: Yeah. What gets me is that putting audio on a data blank is
apparently *always* an act of piracy, even if it'd otherwise be considered
fair home use.
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scott
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response 51 of 206:
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Sep 9 02:24 UTC 2000 |
...such as backing up expensive music CDs in case they get stolen/lost/damaged
on a trip? That's what I've been doing, anyway.
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rcurl
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response 52 of 206:
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Sep 9 05:24 UTC 2000 |
Re #46: Ken apparently has a set of "absolute" laws that he follows,
while he facily ignores human laws. That is mighty convenient, to make
your own arbitrary laws. Thieves really love that theory. All of his
smoke and mirrors about "tangible" (property) and "intangible" (ideas,
concepts, inventions, compositions) are a lot of hypocracy and
demagogery. In all of human history, what is right and wrong; what
is ethical and not ethical; have been decided by humans adopting laws
in one form or another. So called "property rights" are a human construct
adopted millenia ago, and which are now a serious problem as humans
become more crowded on the globe. Copyright laws are a human construct
adopted centuries ago, because prior to then there was little value to
individuals of their thoughts and inventions, as they could not be
defended. So "property rights" are fading, and "copyrights" are becoming
more important, as we shift from a culture of stuff to a culture of
ideas and information.
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krj
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response 53 of 206:
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Sep 9 06:08 UTC 2000 |
After four attempts to compose a response to Rane, I think I shall just
quit for now. I could not have imagined a more non-sequiturish
response to my essay; I can only suggest that Rane is a copyright
fundamentalist who has never owned a tape recorder or a VCR.
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krj
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response 54 of 206:
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Sep 9 06:21 UTC 2000 |
((I'm also quite peeved that Rane has decided to attack my own personal
ethics, which he knows nothing about, based solely on my arguments
and social observations in resp:46. Rane, with regard to the topic
currently under discussion: I have *never* downloaded an unauthorized
piece of music from the net. You'll have to explain to me the
"hypocrisy and demagogery" in my essay. Line by line, please.))
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beeswing
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response 55 of 206:
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Sep 9 06:27 UTC 2000 |
I am Napstering as I type. Was able to download a song I had not heard
in ages, and now I want to go out and get the CD. (Tanita Tikaram).
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md
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response 56 of 206:
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Sep 9 11:38 UTC 2000 |
I'm a little surprised no one has brought up all the laws that people
have deliberately broken, such as the apartheid laws in South Africa,
the various laws pertaining to fugitive slaves in this country, laws
that kept the Jews under in Nazi Germany, debtor laws in England, anti-
abortion laws in the US, and so on and on and on. Would Rane sneer
that it was "mighty convenient" that the heroic men and women who broke
these laws were "making their own arbitrary laws"?
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krj
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response 57 of 206:
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Sep 9 14:35 UTC 2000 |
Well, I was hoping not to go into the subject of just and unjust laws,
and I was *really* hoping not to bring up Nazi Germany.
But on reflection, Rane's response to my essay puzzles me even more,
because while his hostile response to me extols the virtues of law,
a good deal of my essay documents how copyright laws have been curbed,
under Congress and under the Supreme Court, in response to the
technological changes of the last 50 years.
I do suspect that Rane is sticking to some absolutist point of view
on copyright, though, rather than a legal one. In the other Napster
item, resp:550,22 , Rane says about taping music from the radio,
"Honest people would not do it." Legally however, Congress granted
full permission for this in the Audio Home Recording Act, to the
best of my non-lawyerly understanding.
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rcurl
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response 58 of 206:
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Sep 9 16:02 UTC 2000 |
I said nothing about Ken's ethics in #52: I was only responding to his
"absolutist" stance, that ethics of "property rights" somehow have an
origin other than humans at some time deciding predominantly that that
was useful (to them). The "hypocrisy and demagogery" lie in using an
absolutist stance for which there is no evidence to further his arguments.
(But I'll settle for it being just one of the two... 8^}).
I think md gets a little carried away in #56 in making a comparison
between copyright laws, and laws that intimidate, oppress, or make
criminal, basic human rights. Is copying of copyrighted material a "basic
human right"? Laws concerning *property*, tangible or intellectual, are
the proper sphere for debate and amendment. There are no *absolutely
correct laws* in all matters of property, but only laws arrived at by
disputation and democratic processes. Society is in jeopardy when laws
arrived at by these processes are ignored or violated, when there are
means to redress errors in laws by said processes.
How many here that think nothing of violating laws on copyright - whatever
they may be - also drive through stop signs without stopping?
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jerryr
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response 59 of 206:
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Sep 9 17:35 UTC 2000 |
seems to me many folks only obey the laws they like.
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rcurl
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response 60 of 206:
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Sep 9 18:38 UTC 2000 |
Yes - they tend to obey the laws they think *others* should obey - but
probably not very consistently. (I bet almost all drivers that run
red lights get furious when someone else runs a red light and almost
hits them.)
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md
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response 61 of 206:
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Sep 9 18:45 UTC 2000 |
Tell us about these "basic human rights" of yours, Rane, the ones that
override the law. Who sez?
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gull
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response 62 of 206:
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Sep 9 20:09 UTC 2000 |
I have mixed feelings about intellectual property law. I think people who
create intellectual property are certainly entitled to some sort of
protection. However, that doesn't seem to be how such laws are usually used
today. Instead they're used as weapons by corporations, to hoard ideas and
stifle competition. Take the recent "Disney Amendment" to copyright law.
It does the creator of an idea no good to have his copyright stay in effect
75 years after his death, and I doubt many people are producing more
material because they know the protection will extend that long. It does
help corporations, though.
It particularly galls me that even after a company has made a decision to
take an item out of print, it's still illegal to copy it. This is pure
hoarding. Ideally companies would release such items to the public domain,
but they rarely do. (Some Borland software being an exception.) This is
one case where copying is illegal, but I don't feel it's immoral.
"Look and feel" copyrights are another really hazy area. Where would we be
today if someone had copyrighted the look and feel of the "steering wheel
and pedals" interface to cars? :>
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krj
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response 63 of 206:
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Sep 9 21:34 UTC 2000 |
In resp:58 Rane writes:
> I think md gets a little carried away in #56 in making a comparison
> between copyright laws, and laws that intimidate, oppress, or make
> criminal, basic human rights.
You might not feel that way if you'd followed the long-running battle
between the Church of Scientology and its critics on the net.
A debate with a Scientologist runs something like this:
critic: "Scientologists believe we are infested with the spirits of
murdered space aliens."
Scientologist: "This is simply untrue. Scientology is an advanced
philosophy devoted to benefitting humans, blah blah blah."
critic: "Here, I will prove it. Here is a document in which Scientology's
founder lays out the belief in murdered space aliens"
And at this point Scientology responds with legal action for the critic
violating the copyright on the Secret Space Scriptures. Side effects
of these legal actions have included raids by armed federal marshals
on critics' homes and the seizures of their computers and papers
(happened at least three times, courts seem to have decided not to allow
that any more) and the bankruptcy of the critics.
The right to freely exchange information and engage in robust public
debate might trump copyright laws. John Hockenberry had a great essay
on msnbc.com in which he concluded that the defense of the current
copyright system would require "a Stalinist-style licensing system
for the transfer of information."
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mcnally
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response 64 of 206:
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Sep 9 23:22 UTC 2000 |
re #54, 57: If you're genuinely puzzled by Rane's response, I think you
can better understand it by considering it a "Serdar Argic"-like reaction
to your mention of the Ten Commandments..
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