I guess that cars ought to have stuff on them that automatically reports if someone is speeding (30 over the limit is a felony). The car is enabling the person's felony so the car company ought to report it right? What a ridiculous statement. The ISP should not be made to do anything.
Do people never tire of ludicrous analogies with cars? Cars don't record anything but milage. Car companies do not have access to those recordings. ISPs do have a lot of control over who uses their services, how they use it, and who they are when they misuse it. Should ISPs not have cooperated with the recent child porn investigations?
Nothing is lost. What has been stolen?
Opportunities to derive income from intellectual property are being stolen everyday. The point is not the individuals recording, or re-recording for their own use. The issue is the file sharing networks and the people who make a wide range of recordings available for others to download.
First; when you download an MP3, you don't steal anything, you copy it.
Again, the issue is the people making large libraries available to the general public, not the people making their own MP3s and sharing them among friends. There is a very large difference.
I'm against stealing music, but the RIAA think we live in Nazi Germany. The measures they want enforced are draconian. Fortunately, their chances of success in the long term are slim. They'd be better advised to join the internet revolution than to continue to stick their heads up their asses.
Draconian? It seems they are targeting the sources of the files, not the consumers. During prohibition, the police went after the sources of the booze, not those who drank (for the most part). Were they draconian?
Yes, they could do a number of things better, I am sure. However, the fact remains that the copy rights belong to them and the artists, not the people putting the libraries on line. It is up to the artists and their agents as to how their intellectual property will be used and distributed. It is up to them if they wish to go after people who illegally distribute their property on the internet.
First you have to explain why downloading a song from the internet is stealing anything. "Stealing" music would entail taking someone else's work and claiming it as your own, or trying to make money off of someone else's recording (what Albert Speer does).
Downloading a song for your own listening pleasure isn't stealing anything. It is no different than taping a song off the radio.
Downloading a song for your own listening pleasure isn't stealing anything. It is no different than taping a song off the radio.
That would be incorrect. Smoking pot is against the law. Not many cops will give you a serious problem over it though. Selling pot? That's another matter. Illegal distribution is almost always regarded as more serious than illegal use.
That is so in this case. The article is somewhat inflamatory. It says download in the opening paragraph, but later on the real issue is the people making the files available.
During a contentious court hearing in October, the judge lamented ambiguities in the copyright act, saying Congress "could have made this statute clearer." At the time, the music industry said a ruling in its favor could result in warnings to scare Internet pirates into taking their collections offline.
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The case arose from efforts by the recording association to track down a Verizon customer who was freely sharing copies of more than 600 songs by well-known artists.
This seems completely reasonable to me. I doubt they would have a problem with friends sharing MP3's among themselves (and if they did, no judge would listen to them). The problem for them is when you get file sharing networks and people undertaking wholesale distribution. The problem is when the theft of their 'products' becomes endemic. I'd be looking to the courts too.
Look at it this way. If such 'sharing' is not a problem, and if there is nothing wrong with violating intellectual property rights, where is the end of it? In some markets, computer software is not supported at all by the developers because theft of their products is so wide spread that the companies write those markets off. In those markets you can buy anything you want on CDs in the local markets, only it's all stolen and the police and courts will do nothing. So, what is the harm? Not much if just you use it. Plenty when distribution of the stolen products is accepted and everyone uses it.
And yes, I think theft is the wrong term btw. Bootlegging is probably a better term. How big a deal is it for a 16 year old to have a beer? How big a problem is it to make a habit of supplying 16 year olds with beer? See the difference?
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