Ned, you said something about trade secrets: Just FYI, and I think it's quite importnat: The difference between a trade secret and a patent is that if you register a patent, you must publish the plans or whatever for what you're making, but nobody else is allowed to duplicate the product, while with a trade secret you don't publish the plans but anyone can reverse engineer and duplicate your product. It's a neat arrangement actually.
Anyway, it just seems to me that the way the "art industry" has gone is quite disgusting... I'm all for art providing livelyhood, but:
1) The copyright laws seem to be better at protecting the publisher than the artist,
2) It just seems ridiculous to be illegal for me to memorise a passage from a book and, say, teach it to other people - which is analogous to sharing files from CDs,
3) Transferring and selling copyright, provided that we define copyright by the affirmation of authorship and the author's right over his work to corporations or even other people is just plain weird and,
4) Art has survived through millenia without copyright laws and media corp and quite frankly has been a lot more, well, artish than the stuff that's coming out today and in general art will bloody well survive my downloading some music. Quite frankly, I don't really think that the artists whose music I'm downloading would mind the least. Hey, I just sent an email to a musician a few days ago asking for permission to play a composition of hers I found and liked on a CD. I got back an email saying go ahead It was so nice.
Anyway, as a musician (at least aspiring) I can tell you right now that despite the fact that I'd be happy to sell CDs, I wouldn't mind the least that you rip and share and record and whatever every damn bloody thing on that hypothetical CD. And quite frankly, any artist who doesn't think so isn't doing it for the art but for the money, and I'm of the firm opinion that that's not art and the bastard can go **** himself for all I care. Nobody has a natural right to earn money for being a talented person and artists will do their art anyway whether they have a day job or no. I know that I'm not planning on living off my music despite the fact that it's the most important thing in my life. If I'm lucky, I'll be able to earn some money from concerts (I already have, but it was frankly pitiful ). I'm with those who think that concerts, merchandising, charity are the best ways for musicians to earn money.
In short:
*Despite the fact that in a perfect world every artist would get rewarded for his efforts, I don't think that draconian laws enforced by media corporations is exactly the best way to create a perfect world.
*A true artist's aim is not to be a millionaire. And those who view THAT as their aim have enough venues in the world of entertainment despite all of us filesharers determined efforts.
*Kill the leeching media corporations. They have no right to exist, they're interfering. They aren't even needed anymore to spread the work of the artist, something that really was a working justification before the advent of file-sharing and the internet in general.
If I've forgotten anything I assure you that I'll remember it and post it later.
Oh, and if this is an argument about ethics, then why is 95% of it argument about legal fiction?
Anyway, it just seems to me that the way the "art industry" has gone is quite disgusting... I'm all for art providing livelyhood, but:
1) The copyright laws seem to be better at protecting the publisher than the artist,
2) It just seems ridiculous to be illegal for me to memorise a passage from a book and, say, teach it to other people - which is analogous to sharing files from CDs,
3) Transferring and selling copyright, provided that we define copyright by the affirmation of authorship and the author's right over his work to corporations or even other people is just plain weird and,
4) Art has survived through millenia without copyright laws and media corp and quite frankly has been a lot more, well, artish than the stuff that's coming out today and in general art will bloody well survive my downloading some music. Quite frankly, I don't really think that the artists whose music I'm downloading would mind the least. Hey, I just sent an email to a musician a few days ago asking for permission to play a composition of hers I found and liked on a CD. I got back an email saying go ahead It was so nice.
Anyway, as a musician (at least aspiring) I can tell you right now that despite the fact that I'd be happy to sell CDs, I wouldn't mind the least that you rip and share and record and whatever every damn bloody thing on that hypothetical CD. And quite frankly, any artist who doesn't think so isn't doing it for the art but for the money, and I'm of the firm opinion that that's not art and the bastard can go **** himself for all I care. Nobody has a natural right to earn money for being a talented person and artists will do their art anyway whether they have a day job or no. I know that I'm not planning on living off my music despite the fact that it's the most important thing in my life. If I'm lucky, I'll be able to earn some money from concerts (I already have, but it was frankly pitiful ). I'm with those who think that concerts, merchandising, charity are the best ways for musicians to earn money.
In short:
*Despite the fact that in a perfect world every artist would get rewarded for his efforts, I don't think that draconian laws enforced by media corporations is exactly the best way to create a perfect world.
*A true artist's aim is not to be a millionaire. And those who view THAT as their aim have enough venues in the world of entertainment despite all of us filesharers determined efforts.
*Kill the leeching media corporations. They have no right to exist, they're interfering. They aren't even needed anymore to spread the work of the artist, something that really was a working justification before the advent of file-sharing and the internet in general.
If I've forgotten anything I assure you that I'll remember it and post it later.
Oh, and if this is an argument about ethics, then why is 95% of it argument about legal fiction?
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