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Finnforest
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Joined: February 03 2007
Location: The Heartland
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Points: 16913
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 12:37 |
I can live with that I suppose
I'll let Martin and Wilcey (for Nick) argue the case for whether the musician is "being impacted negatively."
No hard feelings I hope.
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Teaflax
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 26 2005
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Points: 1225
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 12:31 |
Okay, fair enough, Finnforest. But railing against something that you feel is terribly wrong even though it doesn't impact negatively on the very people on whose behalf you're being angry just feels kind of pointless.
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Finnforest
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Joined: February 03 2007
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 12:16 |
Sorry Stoney, i know you find it objectionable, but I don't believe in sugarcoating the term, because that just enables those folks who wish to believe what they are doing is not wrong. I won't be a part of that.
I don't use the word to "end arguments", that's unfair. You guys can add another 80 pages to the thread if you like.
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stonebeard
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Joined: May 27 2005
Location: NE Indiana
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Points: 28057
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 12:07 |
Snow Dog wrote:
stonebeard wrote:
Wilcey wrote:
No Stonie, I think the past has proved that people get upset when you say you download thier stuff because you think it's ok in your circumstances, (ie poor or something)
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And I think that point is still a somewhat meaningful one, if not the best option. I listen to--and buy, now that I have a decent job--a LOT of music. I could not do that and only listen to what I buy, but the only difference that would make is my lack of music. The artists I'm not already buying from still wouldn't get any profit. But we already "acknowledge" my side of the argument, which I'm well capable of admitting is neither black nor white, but everyone's mind is made up about the matter. "Downloading kills artists." All new information has to be put through that mental filter first.
There are other esoteric reasons why I do indeed think it might be a much better reason not to download, but apparently all that anyone likes to throw around is "Thief!" so I don't feel welcome even trying to help out "the other side." |
Not a thief...a borrower. |
I don't really think it's totally out of the question to call a downloader a theif (though I do argue that semantically it's not the same), but I object to it because it's thought-terminating, and it's a convenient way to "end" an argument without considering alternatives.
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Finnforest
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Joined: February 03 2007
Location: The Heartland
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Points: 16913
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 12:07 |
Now whose putting words in other's mouths?
Never said "shut down the Internet." I said, follow the law. Very simple.
It doesn't matter what you think of their business model. That's their problem. If you're concerned about it, get a job as a consultant with them.
All you (and anyone) needs to do is pay for licensed products at the rate set by the seller. End of story.
The fact that people will continue not to do that doesn't mean the system is wrong, only that people are exploiting others for gain.
Edited by Finnforest - October 01 2009 at 12:10
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Teaflax
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 26 2005
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Points: 1225
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 12:01 |
Finnforest wrote:
Excellent! Then all is well in the world Tea |
Well, no, because you're still on the side of "Let's shut down the internet just in case someone gets a free ride". I don't think that using improper terminology and supporting punitive measures to help maintain an outdated business model is a good idea. Especially not when it is done in the name of the poor artists, when it has been proven over and over again that downloading does not hurt artists on the whole. And not least when Shawn's single attempt to point to an actual fact to support his argument was just shot down in flames. And no one else in this thread has been able to back up the contention that downloading actually hurts artists as a group. All that's been offered is anecdotal evidence, a tragically myopic view of morals being more important than pragmatism and just plain lies. And lest it be missed in the reading again: I don't support what I call immoral downloading - simply taking everything for free just because it's there - but I have absolutely no problem with those who do pay for what they enjoy.
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Snow Dog
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Joined: March 23 2005
Location: Caerdydd
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Points: 32995
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 11:57 |
stonebeard wrote:
Wilcey wrote:
No Stonie, I think the past has proved that people get upset when you say you download thier stuff because you think it's ok in your circumstances, (ie poor or something)
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And I think that point is still a somewhat meaningful one, if not the best option. I listen to--and buy, now that I have a decent job--a LOT of music. I could not do that and only listen to what I buy, but the only difference that would make is my lack of music. The artists I'm not already buying from still wouldn't get any profit. But we already "acknowledge" my side of the argument, which I'm well capable of admitting is neither black nor white, but everyone's mind is made up about the matter. "Downloading kills artists." All new information has to be put through that mental filter first.
There are other esoteric reasons why I do indeed think it might be a much better reason not to download, but apparently all that anyone likes to throw around is "Thief!" so I don't feel welcome even trying to help out "the other side." |
Not a thief...a borrower.
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Finnforest
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 11:43 |
Excellent! Then all is well in the world Tea
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stonebeard
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Joined: May 27 2005
Location: NE Indiana
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Points: 28057
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 11:34 |
Wilcey wrote:
No Stonie, I think the past has proved that people get upset when you say you download thier stuff because you think it's ok in your circumstances, (ie poor or something)
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And I think that point is still a somewhat meaningful one, if not the best option. I listen to--and buy, now that I have a decent job--a LOT of music. I could not do that and only listen to what I buy, but the only difference that would make is my lack of music. The artists I'm not already buying from still wouldn't get any profit. But we already "acknowledge" my side of the argument, which I'm well capable of admitting is neither black nor white, but everyone's mind is made up about the matter. "Downloading kills artists." All new information has to be put through that mental filter first.
There are other esoteric reasons why I do indeed think it might be a much better reason not to download, but apparently all that anyone likes to throw around is "Thief!" so I don't feel welcome even trying to help out "the other side."
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Teaflax
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 26 2005
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Points: 1225
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 11:16 |
Dear Finnforest. Where have I said that I download anything illegal at all? Where have I said that it is justified to enjoy the fruits of others labors without paying for it? In fact, I believe I have explicitly stated the exact opposite several times. Fancy that.
So, you just proved my point there. Nice work.
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Finnforest
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 10:08 |
my "priorities and sermonizing" oh that's rich. I'll bow out of your mass justification session Teaflax so you can decide for the music industry just how you choose to take their products from them and how much they should be able to charge, because of course, in this one industry, you guys have decided its up to you, not them. There's nothing more to say.
Claude, ditto, there's no point in going any further.
Cheers.
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Windhawk
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Joined: December 28 2006
Location: Norway
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Points: 11401
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 09:54 |
In terms of sales it seems IQ was a bad example. That other circumstances has seen to it that the profits didn't match the sales is another aspect; although related to the overall problem.
But as an example of how downloading negatively affects sales of physical CDs it turned out to be a bummer I would say.
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Websites I work with:
http://www.progressor.net http://www.houseofprog.com
My profile on Mixcloud: https://www.mixcloud.com/haukevind/
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Teaflax
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 26 2005
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Points: 1225
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 09:39 |
BigBoss wrote:
The band did not make more money on this release.
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Goal post moving, irresponsive reply, lack of substance. Fifteen yard penalty, repeat third down.
Edited by Teaflax - October 01 2009 at 09:40
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BigBoss
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Joined: May 16 2005
Location: United States
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Points: 320
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 08:43 |
I'm really not going to get in to the weeds with you on what happened with the release because you won't understand it as there is a lot that has to do with the SPV insolvency. The band did not make more money on this release.
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Best Regards,
Shawn Gordon
President
ProgRock Records
www.progrockrecords.com
www.mindawn.com
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Teaflax
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Joined: June 26 2005
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Points: 1225
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 08:07 |
Mike and Pete of IQ have now confirmed that Frequency is indeed their best seller ever in just under 6 months, in large part due to the CD/DVD special edition (meaning that the regular CD may well have sold less, making Shawn's statement true in a sense, but not when looking at the whole picture).
So, again, you were saying?
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Teaflax
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Joined: June 26 2005
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Points: 1225
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 08:02 |
It's all good and well to be able to pat yourself on the back for not being a "thief", but the problem is that it doesn't address the issues on any sort of pragmatic level where you can work out a solution that actually helps the artists (that's what the "banging your head against the wall" line is all about, Finnforest).
Blithely ignoring or casually dismissing any facts that don't agree with your preconceived view is sadly very common, but it seems to become even more of a personal imperative when your views on the issue are so emotionally charged that you cannot even take in the information or the conclusions they lead to.
The issue here is that when you want to control the internet in order to maintain an outdated business model, you're also on the side of those who would like to control the internet for far more sinister purposes. You can feel that it's theft all you like, but it's not a constructive standpoint, because it doesn't really offer any solutions apart from scorn, derision and heavy-handed sermonizing
Instilling moral behavior and educating those who actually do feel that everything should be free for the taking is important, but studies do show that they are in the minority and that most people still want to pay artists they enjoy. Giving them ways to do that, ways that they can feel are fair and equitable to both them and the creators, is the only way to make any kind of serious dent in illegal file-sharing, short of closing down the internet (either by limiting upload privileges to a very few authorized sources or by turning it into a highly monitored system that would have made the Stasi drool).
If your distaste for what you call thievery is so important to you that you're willing to sacrifice the greatest information technology innovation in human history just to make sure that someone, somewhere isn't freeloading (pun not intended), then I think your priorities are seriously off.
Edited by Teaflax - October 01 2009 at 08:03
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debrewguy
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Joined: April 30 2007
Location: Canada
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 06:42 |
again, the point is missed - the past ten years' solutions to this problem have proven to be ineffective in stopping illegal downloads. CD sales have decreased even further. And illegal downloads are not the major reason why this has happened. That most would deny this means zilch to the real world.
To say that the excuses used by the thieves are self serving is nice, but that accomplishes ???
It is simply time for musicians to look honestly at what is out there and plan accordingly.
Oh, btw, this past year as a household we spent money renting DVDs, buying a video game console and games, getting a cellphone (monthly payments, eh), buying a new DVD player, along with switching to a more expensive satellite TV package. On top of that, I've purchased a dozen local releases, and regularly pick up used CDs & LPs at Spin-It. New music purchases included about 10 downloads (half of which were Marillion, god bless their value priced offerings). Another 5 were current releases. As neither my wife or I have gotten major pay raises, can you guess how that might affect what I spend on music ?
And to think that just 5 years ago, I would get at least 20-25 new releases, along with a dozen or so back catalogue items (brand new, not used) a year, along with another 20 from second hand stores. And if a music freak like me has changed their spending habits like that, do you all think it's possible that others have too ? Again, feel free to live with the easy answers - berating a behaviour that is illegal, yet has shown no signs of being affected by the legal sanctions pursued, disallowing studies that state that criminal actions such as downloads do not impact CD sales as much as is claimed, completely ignoring many media commentators pointing out additional and alternatives entertainment options available to consumers, avoiding any discussion of how an increase of musical acts and the subsequent releases by all these acts just ends up making for smaller pieces of pie for ALL musicians, added to the reality that a perfect storm of cultural & financial forces made for a commercial golden age that had never been seen in the music industry nor will ever be seen again, and a stubborn resolve to seeing that music is & will be delivered in a different manner that most prefer, compounded by the simple abundance of music so that most now (already) have more than they will ever be able to listen to, all forces that contribute to a market that does not respond to simple declarations of legalities and sympathies.
If another ten years of this merry go round is the choice, go ahead, you know the results so far ...
There are a number of things that my parents' generation had, have, and will have that I will never enjoy. My bellyaching will not change that. But there are many things that my parents never got, and will not be able to fully enjoy. Neither situation is perfect, and neither changes because either doesn't like it. But you still gotta live, eh ...
And so I expect ye go on for another ten years ... (for those who cannot spotify the new reality nor accept the work now required to get paid for their work )
Edited by debrewguy - October 01 2009 at 06:50
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"Here I am talking to some of the smartest people in the world and I didn't even notice,” Lieutenant Columbo, episode The Bye-Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case.
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Finnforest
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 05:45 |
Thanks Jim. It's just laughable that people expend so much energy trying to make this right. They'll whine about how the record companies have ripped them off for years.....news flash.....lots of businesses have been ripping you off for years. You don't get to take from them in person or on computer, because it is wrong. The only difference here is that the crime can be committed in ones own home, with the comfort of knowing that others do it too. As if that makes it right.
So these guys can type another 40,000 words about how old fashioned we are, or how we're "banging our head against the wall," (love that one....they're the ones banging heads here with huge diatribes trying to justify illegal acts) .....they just can't change the inconvenient fact that they are stealing, however they choose to dress that act up in friendlier terms to subconsciously ease collective guilt
This "debate" is over before it ever started, and they know it, if they were being honest.
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Jim Garten
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Joined: February 02 2004
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 02:05 |
I had to quote this:
Finnforest wrote:
There are two issues being criss-crossed here for the convenience of the download-is-ok viewpoint. The first issue is artist adaptibility and that some bands are able to soldier on while Martin is not. This is a fair point to raise and it's great news. If some bands can adapt and continue, enjoy the indepence, and prosper in the paradigm that exists in 20 years, that's fantastic, and more power to them .
But that is a completely separate issue from whether one entitles themselves to break existing laws, because they feel they should get to do as they please, and they have the capability. Because the new breed of artist is able to "make it" doesn't strengthen the case of the thief one bit. They have still broken the law and it is wrong any way you slice it.
If you think the laws are a joke, and you wish to break them because it's easy to do, that's your decision. But you can't cleanse the immorality of it by pointing to some musicians who are prospering. They are reacting to a climate created by the thieves, not the other way around. That they have been successful is great news but it changes nothing about the "right and wrong" of taking something without paying. And there has been nothing posted so far that makes taking-without-permission into a clean act. And there won't be.
Last, I'm buying Martin's cd to thank him for having the courage to tell it like it is. Hope it's good stuff, I've never heard his work. |
Excellent post, FF, excellent
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Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Wilcey
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Posted: October 01 2009 at 02:02 |
No Stonie, I think the past has proved that people get upset when you say you download thier stuff because you think it's ok in your circumstances, (ie poor or something)
I think this current debate isn't just about illegal downloading being right or wrong, it's a commentary on what Martin has had to say, on his experience and on the facts that were a matter of his everyday business life (whether those facts are chosen to be believed or not) I have a feeling some of what he's had to say will make some people uncomfortable, but it'll also make some people feel defensive, and some people just plain sad.
Here in the UK the Musicians Union did a study, 98% of paid musicians earn less than the average wage. 92% earn less than national minimum wage. I should imagine, on welfare benefits, Martin's total income is pretty much similar to a lot of musicians we discuss here on PA. So, the "I download because I can't afford all the music I want" argument doesn't stack up does it? It's the poor stealing from the poor, and that is a lack of empathy of such magnitude it's almost anarchy and of course the result is heartbreakingly sad.
Wx
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