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Topic ClosedInternet.. P2P.. A saviour or a killer?

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MikeEnRegalia View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 04 2006 at 17:51
Originally posted by Firepuck Firepuck wrote:

After the record companies handcuff P2P sharing they will go after e-Bay for royalties, then shut down second hand record stores, start bringing lawsuits against garage sales, then sue your neighbour for playing music without headphones on, because hey, he's sharing music illegally.

Mark my words!

Nonsense.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 04 2006 at 18:37
Internet and p2p - saviours - under the supposition that user ALSO buys original albums to the best of one's ability.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 04 2006 at 22:21
^ I'm not aware of many businesses that have been successful basing their revenue on a reliance of the "good faith" of the consumer. 
Pure Brilliance:
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 04 2006 at 22:38
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by Firepuck Firepuck wrote:

After the record companies handcuff P2P sharing they will go after e-Bay for royalties, then shut down second hand record stores, start bringing lawsuits against garage sales, then sue your neighbour for playing music without headphones on, because hey, he's sharing music illegally.

Mark my words!

Nonsense.


I'm sure he's being sarcastic, and its almost obvious.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 02:28
Originally posted by TheProgtologist TheProgtologist wrote:

My hats off to the topic creator Jesperz.

This has been one of the best threads I have seen in awhile.

Great discussion.Very informative too.




Well thank you Progtologist.. You are too kind.

But well, in a country like Singapore, Popular music is flooding all our CD stores.. I can't really exactly find some of my favourite prog artist here, Prog music is really rare... Getting a original CD is pretty difficult for me. Well there are some options...

Let say HMV, or Towers Record, I import a prog album from them, the original CD is somewhere around S$18 - 22, I'll got to pay twice the amount of money! It will be $40 over..

1 great real life experience was my 2 Liquid Tension Experiment albums. I asked about the price for importing them from HMV, guess what, both CDs will cost me S$90.. It seems more like a robbery to me.. In the end, I got it from Amazon.com though it is still pretty expensive.. $58 for 2 Cds.. Including shipping and delivering to my house doorsteps..

This kind of moment comes rarely as i am still a student.. I am still taking allowance from my parents and i am not earning... I need to "REALLY SAVE" for a month or 2 to get that amount of money... So what do you think? If in a long term situation, isn't it like i am going to stuck with 2 bloody albums for a year?

In a consumer point of view, maybe for a student, it is more practical to you know, enjoy a few pieces of albums. But for a music/media students like us, how are we going to afford so many albums or listening references when they are like costing a bomb? No doubt... We download them!

A free and easy way now for P2P systems right now. We get music without burning our pockets.. It is solely for educational purpose. Yet, Government made a rule stating that downloading music from P2P is illegal... Alright the man! Now what are we going to do?

Probably they will say, "OH! You can get music by buying from iTune!".. Yeah right.. Let say a normal CD is $20.. Inside this CD, there are 10 songs... that means 1 song probably cost about $2... Thats not the point... iTune is selling mp3's remember? meaning the quality is alot lower than a normal CD quality. with a normal bitrate of 128kb/sec, a 5 minute song originally CD quality will be 50mb, and mp3 will be 5mb.. Which means 10 times lower than the normal quality.. So, iTune should be selling the song for $0.20, not freaking $0.99! Who wants to pay a 10 times lower audio quality song for an expensive price? I doubt these mp3 doesn't worth this amount of price!

We share the files with our friends, and the song gets another listen.. If our richer friends like them, they buy the original CD. Isn't file-sharing a win-win situation? We let the Record companies song spread around, more ppl hear them and like them, more people will buy them. For us, we get ourselves educated with more music.. Isn't it? Now they are saying that we are sucking their blood because we have their songs without actually purchasing them. Now we even get fine for large amount of money if we are caught to own their songs without purchasing them.

So what are your point of views? Is the Record Companies sucking our bloods or are we sucking theirs? (LOL, it might sounds alittle too exaggerating!)





Edited by jesperz
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 02:52
Originally posted by Meddler Meddler wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by Firepuck Firepuck wrote:

After the record companies handcuff P2P sharing they will go after e-Bay for royalties, then shut down second hand record stores, start bringing lawsuits against garage sales, then sue your neighbour for playing music without headphones on, because hey, he's sharing music illegally.

Mark my words!

Nonsense.


I'm sure he's being sarcastic, and its almost obvious.

I hope so ... but I heard that kind of reasoning from many people, and some of them weren't joking at all. To me these "reasons" for doing ilegal filesharing are ridiculous:

  • "I wouldn't have bought the album anyway, so my listening to the stolen files created no financial damage".

    That's wrong. It's not only not true, but even if one would really not have bought a single album if file sharing was technically impossible, it would still be wrong to do it. File sharing is stealing, and the above statement is the same as saying "I wouldn't have had the money to buy it anyway" when caught shoplifting. If the item was important enough to you to take the risk of stealing it, it must have some value to you. Another analogy is "I didn't like the movie anyway" when caught watching a movie without having a valid ticket.
     
  • "It's a good thing to steal the albums, because the artists don't earn anything from the sales anyway, and - in some Robin Hood like fashion - we must fight against the evil music industry which is exploiting the artists"

    That's a misguided and dangerous attitude. If you think that - go ahead, but don't complain when they sue the hell out of you.
     
  • "I don't use legal alternatives which employ DRM - it is limiting my use of the audio too much"

    Ok, you can't burn it to disc (at least the subscription based songs), some services provide only streaming, so you can't even save it to disk. But isn't the true purpose of these services to enable you to listen to the music? Looking back at my P2P "career" a couple of years ago, I see that 90% of the albums that I downloaded (and I downloaded A LOT) didn't make it into my collection in the end. Why even waste a CD-R on them? For $10/month you can listen to all tracks that are available on Napster - and that is a really good deal.

 

 



Edited by MikeEnRegalia
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 07:01
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

  • Looking back at my P2P "career" a couple of years ago, I see that 90% of the albums that I downloaded (and I downloaded A LOT) didn't make it into my collection in the end. Why even waste a CD-R on them? For $10/month you can listen to all tracks that are available on Napster - and that is a really good deal.

 

From your posts i would not have believed you ever had a p2p "career" .

The problem with Napster is that it's only available in: Usa,UK,Canada and Germany at the moment.
I mailed them and they told me they are working on broadening there coverage but it takes time.

I will check out Yahoo music next. In the meantime i'm interested in what you think of a site as
allofmp3.com. Here you can buy albums for 1-2 $ the album or subsribe for 14$ a month. A friend of mine is using this site.

There are some doubts about legality here though. There are lots of people on the Internet
including the site itself claiming that it's legal using a lot of disclaimers in their statements so i don't think they are totally sure.






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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 07:29
Originally posted by Dirk Dirk wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

  • Looking back at my P2P "career" a couple of years ago, I see that 90% of the albums that I downloaded (and I downloaded A LOT) didn't make it into my collection in the end. Why even waste a CD-R on them? For $10/month you can listen to all tracks that are available on Napster - and that is a really good deal.

 

From your posts i would not have believed you ever had a p2p "career" .

That was until a couple of years ago, when it was not "definitely illegal" to download mp3s.

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

The problem with Napster is that it's only available in: Usa,UK,Canada and Germany at the moment.
I mailed them and they told me they are working on broadening there coverage but it takes time.

Yes, that's a big problem. It's mostly licencing issues, because licencing deals are only valid for single countries. In Germany we only have Napster and staytuned.de, and I really hope that this year Yahoo will join in.

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

I will check out Yahoo music next. In the meantime i'm interested in what you think of a site as
allofmp3.com. Here you can buy albums for 1-2 $ the album or subsribe for 14$ a month. A friend of mine is using this site.

There are some doubts about legality here though. There are lots of people on the Internet
including the site itself claiming that it's legal using a lot of disclaimers in their statements so i don't think they are totally sure.


It's not legal. The problem is that this website only has permission to sell the files to Russians (more exactly: In Russia), and even that is questionable, since the big record companies generally don't allow online music downloads without DRM.

You can buy mp3s at websites like these, and the risk is certainly smaller than when using P2P, but:

  • Problems might arise later because legal authorities will most likely not accept allofmp3.com receipts as proof that you purchased some files
  • The money you pay them most likely doesn't benefit the artist at all, not even in the small amount that they earn through regular album sales.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 07:38
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

It's not legal. The problem is that this website only has permission to sell the files to Russians (more exactly: In Russia), and even that is questionable, since the big record companies generally don't allow online music downloads without DRM.

You can buy mp3s at websites like these, and the risk is certainly smaller than when using P2P, but:

  • Problems might arise later because legal authorities will most likely not accept allofmp3.com receipts as proof that you purchased some files
  • The money you pay them most likely doesn't benefit the artist at all, not even in the small amount that they earn through regular album sales.

You're probably right, the whole thing feels fishy.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 09:23
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by Meddler Meddler wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by Firepuck Firepuck wrote:

After the record companies handcuff P2P sharing they will go after e-Bay for royalties, then shut down second hand record stores, start bringing lawsuits against garage sales, then sue your neighbour for playing music without headphones on, because hey, he's sharing music illegally.

Mark my words!

Nonsense.


I'm sure he's being sarcastic, and its almost obvious.

I hope so ... but I heard that kind of reasoning from many people, and some of them weren't joking at all. To me these "reasons" for doing ilegal filesharing are ridiculous:

  • "I wouldn't have bought the album anyway, so my listening to the stolen files created no financial damage".

    That's wrong. It's not only not true, but even if one would really not have bought a single album if file sharing was technically impossible, it would still be wrong to do it. File sharing is stealing, and the above statement is the same as saying "I wouldn't have had the money to buy it anyway" when caught shoplifting. If the item was important enough to you to take the risk of stealing it, it must have some value to you. Another analogy is "I didn't like the movie anyway" when caught watching a movie without having a valid ticket.
     
  • "It's a good thing to steal the albums, because the artists don't earn anything from the sales anyway, and - in some Robin Hood like fashion - we must fight against the evil music industry which is exploiting the artists"

    That's a misguided and dangerous attitude. If you think that - go ahead, but don't complain when they sue the hell out of you.
     
  • "I don't use legal alternatives which employ DRM - it is limiting my use of the audio too much"

    Ok, you can't burn it to disc (at least the subscription based songs), some services provide only streaming, so you can't even save it to disk. But isn't the true purpose of these services to enable you to listen to the music? Looking back at my P2P "career" a couple of years ago, I see that 90% of the albums that I downloaded (and I downloaded A LOT) didn't make it into my collection in the end. Why even waste a CD-R on them? For $10/month you can listen to all tracks that are available on Napster - and that is a really good deal.

 

 

Hi Mike,

Yes, I was being sarcastic - I should have made that clear in my post. As I previously said:

"I hadn't bought a progressive rock CD in at least 15 years (still listen to my old vinyl) until I came upon this site and my interest in exploring the 'prog scene' exploded.

Do I use P2P - yes.

But in the last year and a half (since finding this site) I've also spent 100 times more on CD's than I did in the decade before finding this site."

And here in Canada (at least today) P2P is legal - the moral issue is another matter I will not comment on here. Bottom line is that my (illegal?) downloading has led to me purchasing many, many CD's I would never have know of, let alone bought.

The day P2P becomes illegal in Canada is the day I stop using it. Enough said on that topic, but I have a new topic to discuss!!!

 

Several developments have occurred in the industry that I really like and will hopefully stem the tide of illegal P2P downloading.

My brother asked me last week if I had ever heard of a group called IQ, and thanks to this site the answer was yes. He is a big Yes and Genesis fan and came across this group and started listening to MIDI files on their website - and on the weekend he bought his first IQ CD.

Other groups have music available for download on their websites - a perennial favourite of mine is Steve Hackett. His site has fully 30 songs available for download.

This site - OMG - you could download music for days (I know!) and fill CD after CD. I've made several various CD's with music just from this site.

Internet radio - a great boon for us progheads. Much has been said about the difficulty in finding music, just tune in and don't worry about it.

Internet video - love watching prog video (ie. google video, U tube).

 

In reality - I never need buy another CD. There is more music available legally on the internet than one could possible ever listen to.

Comments?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 10:09
Originally posted by Firepuck Firepuck wrote:

And here in Canada (at least today) P2P is legal - the moral issue is another matter I will not comment on here. Bottom line is that my (illegal?) downloading has led to me purchasing many, many CD's I would never have know of, let alone bought.

The day P2P becomes illegal in Canada is the day I stop using it. Enough said on that topic, but I have a new topic to discuss!!!

I read some articles that said that P2P downloading is legal ... but on most P2P platforms you can only download when you also permit uploading, and that is still illegal.

Originally posted by Firepuck Firepuck wrote:

Several developments have occurred in the industry that I really like and will hopefully stem the tide of illegal P2P downloading.

My brother asked me last week if I had ever heard of a group called IQ, and thanks to this site the answer was yes. He is a big Yes and Genesis fan and came across this group and started listening to MIDI files on their website - and on the weekend he bought his first IQ CD.

Other groups have music available for download on their websites - a perennial favourite of mine is Steve Hackett. His site has fully 30 songs available for download.

On my website I built a list of websites which offer free audio tracks - I think it also includes Steve Hackett's website. Have a look at www.ratingfreak.com -> Music Database -> Websites.

Originally posted by Firepuck Firepuck wrote:

This site - OMG - you could download music for days (I know!) and fill CD after CD. I've made several various CD's with music just from this site.

Internet radio - a great boon for us progheads. Much has been said about the difficulty in finding music, just tune in and don't worry about it.

Internet video - love watching prog video (ie. google video, U tube).

 

In reality - I never need buy another CD. There is more music available legally on the internet than one could possible ever listen to.

Comments?

It still makes sense to buy CDs if it benefits the artists. You can do so at www.emusic.com, www.mindawn.com and www.cdbaby.com ...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 10:11
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:



  • "I wouldn't have bought the album anyway, so my listening to the
    stolen files created no financial damage".
    That's wrong. It's not only
    not true, but even if one would really not have bought a single album if
    file sharing was technically impossible, it would still be wrong to do it.
    File sharing is stealing, and the above statement is the same as saying "I
    wouldn't have had the money to buy it anyway" when caught shoplifting.
    If the item was important enough to you to take the risk of stealing it, it
    must have some value to you. Another analogy is "I didn't like the movie
    anyway" when caught watching a movie without having a valid ticket. 


Thats wrong. The shoplifting analogy does not apply because if you steal
say a pair of shoes it actually cost a company money to make them
whereas an illegal copy of music itself does not cost anything to make.

so if one would have not bought the music anyway and they then
download it there is no financial benefit or detriment to the company.

is thst clear?

Edited by the man machine
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 10:22
Originally posted by the man machine the man machine wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:



"I wouldn't have bought the album anyway, so my listening to the
stolen files created no financial damage".
That's wrong. It's not only
not true, but even if one would really not have bought a single album if
file sharing was technically impossible, it would still be wrong to do it.
File sharing is stealing, and the above statement is the same as saying "I
wouldn't have had the money to buy it anyway" when caught shoplifting.
If the item was important enough to you to take the risk of stealing it, it
must have some value to you. Another analogy is "I didn't like the movie
anyway" when caught watching a movie without having a valid ticket. 



Thats wrong. The shoplifting analogy does not apply because if you steal
say a pair of shoes it actually cost a company money to make them
whereas an illegal copy of music itself does not cost anything to make.

so if one would have not bought the music anyway and they then
download it there is no financial benefit or detriment to the company.

is thst clear?

Right - and wrong. The shoplifting analogy is correct - in legal terms. I know what you're saying, but this is a case of having your cake and eating it too ... or picking the raisins. A mp3 file represents a value - something which people would like to have. The person (or company) which created the file wants people to pay if they want to listen to it - or even get a copy of their own. Making a copy without paying is indeed like stealing. The damage is not the "missing" file, but the money that the owners of the file demand. So essentially each file you download and listen to creates a damage of $1/EUR 1/whatever price they put on it.

So what I'm trying to say is that you can't say that something is worthless ("taking it away creates no damage") and on the other hand you really want to have it so much that you risk criminal prosecution when downloading it. Either it represents a value - then you have to pay for it, or it doesn't - then you don't need it.



Edited by MikeEnRegalia
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 10:34
can you truely give something like an mp3 a value?

if you have 1 song and then duplicate it 1000 times on your hard
drive do you have the worth of 1000 songs?

i would not asign the act of listening a song as being what you are paying
for. i beleive as with most products you are paying for the product not the
right to use it (in this case listen).

your opinion on what constitutes the value in a product
differs from mine. so i guess it is right and wrong then.



Edited by the man machine
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 10:38
the small risk that is posed by downloading illegally is far outweighed by
being able to have music without spending all of my money on it.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 10:39
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by Firepuck Firepuck wrote:

And here in Canada (at least today) P2P is legal - the moral issue is another matter I will not comment on here. Bottom line is that my (illegal?) downloading has led to me purchasing many, many CD's I would never have know of, let alone bought.

The day P2P becomes illegal in Canada is the day I stop using it. Enough said on that topic, but I have a new topic to discuss!!!

I read some articles that said that P2P downloading is legal ... but on most P2P platforms you can only download when you also permit uploading, and that is still illegal.

Hi Mike, as I have mentioned before - not in Canada... (yet)

According to the Federal Court, in a decision issued by Justice von Finckenstein on March 31, 2004, neither downloading a song for personal use nor merely making that file available to others to download from your computer (without some more active sharing activity) amounts to infringement under Canadian copyright law. The court ruled that "the mere fact of placing a copy on a shared directory in a computer where that copy can be accessed via a P2P service does not amount to distribution" or "authorization of the reproduction of sound recordings" under the Copyright Act. However, this decision has been appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal, so the issue remains in legal limbo.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 10:39

Originally posted by the man machine the man machine wrote:

can you truely give something like an mp3 a value?

if you have 1 song and then duplicate it 1000 times on your hard
drive do you have the worth of 1000 songs?

No. But if you give it to 1000 people. I'm sure that any musician who made a (mp3) track and sold it on his/her website would strongly agree that it has a value.

Originally posted by the man machine the man machine wrote:



i would not asign the act of listening a song as being what you are paying
for. i beleive as with most products you are paying for the product not the
right to use it (in this case listen).

You always buy the right to use music, and never the music itself. In case of the (legal) music downloads, you are not even permitted to sell these purchased files to somebody else. You are allowed to listen to it and to make copies for yourself in some fashion, but that's about it. When you buy a tangible CD, you can do more - but also not everything, for example you are not allowed to make money with it in any other way than selling it.

Originally posted by the man machine the man machine wrote:



so i guess as your opinion on what constitutes the value in a product
differs from mine. right and wrong it is then.

Yes, two different opinions. I'm just saying that judges and prosecutors will more likely agree with me here, and I'm sure that file sharers will more likely agree with you.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 10:40
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by Firepuck Firepuck wrote:

After the record companies handcuff P2P sharing they will go after e-Bay for royalties, then shut down second hand record stores, start bringing lawsuits against garage sales, then sue your neighbour for playing music without headphones on, because hey, he's sharing music illegally.

Mark my words!

Nonsense.

Actually in today's world there could be brainwashed people who would go that far...

 -- Ivan

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 10:42
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by Dirk Dirk wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

  • Looking back at my P2P "career" a couple of years ago, I see that 90% of the albums that I downloaded (and I downloaded A LOT) didn't make it into my collection in the end. Why even waste a CD-R on them? For $10/month you can listen to all tracks that are available on Napster - and that is a really good deal.

 

From your posts i would not have believed you ever had a p2p "career" .

That was until a couple of years ago, when it was not "definitely illegal" to download mp3s.

See, you did it too.

My activity, from a strictly legal standpoint, is above board. And as I have already stated, once this activity become illegal in Canada I will stop.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: April 05 2006 at 10:44
Originally posted by Firepuck Firepuck wrote:

Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

Originally posted by Firepuck Firepuck wrote:

And here in Canada (at least today) P2P is legal - the moral issue is another matter I will not comment on here. Bottom line is that my (illegal?) downloading has led to me purchasing many, many CD's I would never have know of, let alone bought.

The day P2P becomes illegal in Canada is the day I stop using it. Enough said on that topic, but I have a new topic to discuss!!!

I read some articles that said that P2P downloading is legal ... but on most P2P platforms you can only download when you also permit uploading, and that is still illegal.

Hi Mike, as I have mentioned before - not in Canada... (yet)

According to the Federal Court, in a decision issued by Justice von Finckenstein on March 31, 2004, neither downloading a song for personal use nor merely making that file available to others to download from your computer (without some more active sharing activity) amounts to infringement under Canadian copyright law. The court ruled that "the mere fact of placing a copy on a shared directory in a computer where that copy can be accessed via a P2P service does not amount to distribution" or "authorization of the reproduction of sound recordings" under the Copyright Act. However, this decision has been appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal, so the issue remains in legal limbo.

Sorry, I did not consider this legal limbo ...

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