Katherine Mangu-Ward | June 10, 2008
A fantastic, subtle essay at Cato Unbound on copyright from Rasmus Fleischer, Swedish historian and impresario of sharing site The Pirate Bay. If you're like me, you really don't know what to think about copyright law. It's obviously broken, but is there anything about it that can be salvaged for the digital realm?
Fleischer reconfigures the issue thusly:
The real dispute is not between proponents and opponents of copyright as a whole. It is between believers and non-believers. Believers in copyright keep dreaming about building a digital simulation of a 20th-century copyright economy, based on scarcity and with distinct limits between broadcasting and unit sales. I don't believe such a stabilization will ever occur, but I fear that this vision of copyright utopia is triggering an escalation of technology regulations running out of control and ruining civil liberties. Accepting a laissez-faire attitude regarding software development and communication infrastructure can prevent such an escalation.
One more reason the believers can't ever win: Remember that old bit of jargon, the sneakernet? You're part of the sneakernet (a subset of the darknet[PDF]) when you store stuff on a CD or a flash drive and then put it in your pocket and walk it over to a friend. Portable storage capacity is booming, which leads to this question, from Swedish filesharing researcher Daniel Johansson: "When music fans can say, 'I have all the music from 1950-2010, do you want a copy?', [something they will probably be able to do in a scant few years] what kind of business models will be viable in such a reality?"
It's dense, but worth it. Read the whole thing.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
It's obviously broken, but is there anything about it that
can be salvaged for the digital realm?
NO. And even if there is, it shouldn't be. Copyright is an
abomination undermining property law. Scrap the whole thing.
Accepting a laissez-faire attitude regarding software
development and communication infrastructure can prevent such an
escalation.
Without forcing me to read the WFA, can anyone pull the bits about
how content creators will feed themselves?
There may be (at least) three economic models here:
(1) Software (possible revenue streams from free software include
upgrades/servicing, perhaps).
(2) Music (possible revenue streams from music include live
performances).
(3) Writing (beats the hell out of me. If a writer can't charge per
copy/publication rights, what does he charge for?)
(2) Music (possible revenue streams from music include live
performances).
Don't know what the future holds, but the current spike in fuel
prices makes for a double whammy for musicians in the
digital/copyrightless world.
(3) Writing (beats the hell out of me. If a writer can't charge per copy/publication rights, what does he charge for?)
Ask the writers at the Baen
Free Library. Most bookworms I know (myself included) will pay
extra for a physical book; there's one possible revenue
stream.
R C Dean
I haven't RTFA, but see any business that doesn't operate under the
copyrite paradigm. The world does not suffer for lack of fashion
designers despite the fact that Sears can put their designs on the
rack two weeks after they're unveiled and not pay a penny for them.
Nor was there a dearth of books or music prior to the government
granted monopoly we call copyright. As for software, open source
exists already, if we shitcanned copyright, it would get a thousand
times better.
We already have access to more film, music, text and images
than we can possibly incorporate into our lives. Retreating from
this paradigm of abundance to the old paradigm of scarcity is
simply not an alternative. Adding more "content" will strictly
speaking produce no value - whether culturally or
economically.
I think this is closely related to RC Dean's comment:
Without forcing me to read the WFA, can anyone pull the bits
about how content creators will feed themselves?
The answer is that they won't. There will be a dramatic crash in
the number of creators supporting themselves by producing
content.
Creators face two severe challenges from the digital media
era, and only one of them is piracy. The other one is excessive
supply.
It has become amazingly inexpensive to create and distribute
digital content. More content is being created than at any time in
the past.
Also, digital content tends to live forever. Records, VHS tapes and
books used to disappear into attics and landfills, churning
limiting the total amount of content available to be consumed at
any moment in time. Digital stuff simply gets stored and indexed
and is always available. Some of the value of hard-copy copyrighted
content was the value of finding that content; it was
easier to just buy a new copy of a book than scrounge around trying
to find a used one or trying to get a friend to lend it to you. In
the digital era all old content is instantly available if you can
type its name and hit the search button.
I'm a copyright "believer" but I don't see any way to maintain the
old system where there was enough money in content creation to
maintain a large number of marginal writers and musicians. That's
just over.
I think the revenue model is that the coyright holder charges
for uses prominent enough that they can be tracked. Hollywood movie
soundtrack. Television ad. Satellite radio station (there is only
one now I gather). Internet radio stations having large numbers of
listeners. FM station having a certain amount of power. Syndicated
radio or tv show. Sales through Internet distributors that do a
certain threshold amount of business.
KMW quotes this guy on the futility of drawing "distinct limits
between broadcasting and unit sales" for coyright law purposes.
Hogwash! It is easy to draw these limits reasonably well if you are
willing to make less favorable rules for the rich companies (with a
strong profit motive) than the kid who walks around with a
flashdrive in his pocket (and no real profit motive).
I gather from KMW's comments generally that she is sort of a
shoeshine gal for the moneyed class, which is why she sees futility
where there is none.
Look at it this way: for years there has been rough justice in who
pays state sales tax and who does not, based on who is really in
business and who is a casual seller. By law and practice, copyright
law can and should do a similar thing.
Book owners for now still like buying books, but I could believe
it will disappear.
Music, on the other hand, I see a real problem for. Not all
musicians are bands or singers, some just write electronic music.
DJs can spin their own records, but its not the same.
I understand the analogy with fashion designers but it's not apt.
The design is imitated, but there is a second layer of product that
loses the brand name (which I don't think is valuable, but some do
which increases profit). There is no second layer of music for
something digitally distributed. It's all the first layer after a
song is recorded and uploaded.
Copyright does have its purpose no? If I write a book called Val's Great Adventures and begin disitributing it digitally and physically only to find that Warren, ripped of my book an is now selling it as Warren's Great Adventures, simply replacing Val with Warren, should I not have recourse under law? Yes its about damn time content creators and distributors caught up with the digital age, but scrap copyright all together?
We have always found a way to make money off of things - we always will. The music industry has a bunch of alternatives that they currently aren't using (with the possible exception of SONY.) The issue is that record labels and movie studios want the government to step in and make their suffering business models work well again, by force.
The answer is that they won't. There will be a dramatic
crash in the number of creators supporting themselves by producing
content.
What about the possibility that creation will return to a mode
where the creators are mostly non-profit? I'm not suggesting what
value this would have, but if my European history serves me
correctly, writers were horrified at the suggestion that one would
earn money from their writing. It was suggested that it would be
the 'ruin of all letters' or some such thing.
Might we create a model where it is almost impossible to make money
on resultant material from creative endeavor?
I've been on the fence regarding the concept of open file sharing
and zero copyright. Yet I don't like content providers locking me
out of the very content I agreed to purchase. I bought this cd,
goddamnit, I'm going to play it in my car, on my home stereo, on my
computer, in my MP3 player. So at the same time I'm very concerned
with the draconian response to digital copyrighting, hence I buy no
music online.
The anti-copyright movement is mostly people who don't want to pay for music, they want it free. It's all about getting something for nothing. Isn't that anti-capitolism?
Isn't that anti-capitolism?
Could be. It could also be human nature. Wanting to get something
for free is certainly nothing new. When we enshrine getting stuf
for free in the law, however, that's a different story.
There's a funny thing in human nature, though. It seems to me that
when getting something for free (copying music) takes very little
effort, we're inclined to quit referring to it as stealing.
TrickyVic,
Don't conflate those who see philosophical problems with the
current copyright regime with thieving.
Of course, libertarians are just Republicans who want to smoke pot,
so what do I know?
What's valuable is supplying a context where people can come
together to create meaning out of abundance.
I found this sentence to be so profound that it almost choked me
up.
I have also been a believer in copyrights, since I want to reward
the people that create the music that I love so much. So, I have
completely embraced the digital music scene by ripping my own huge
collection of CDs, and by subscribing to services like
Rhapsody.
But this abundance has a dark side. There's so much music to listen
to that I almost never have the experience of totally falling in
love with a particular recording like I used to. There's not enough
time...
So now I'm a 40-year-old guy going with my teenage nephews to the
Warped Tour because that is the context that gives meaning to some
of the music I like. They say I'm a pretty cool dude for 40.
Digital stuff simply gets stored and indexed and is always
available. Some of the value of hard-copy copyrighted content was
the value of finding that content; it was easier to just buy a new
copy of a book than scrounge around trying to find a used one or
trying to get a friend to lend it to you.
It was only easier to buy a new book if it was still in print. The
only books that stayed in print were the bigger authors.
In the digital era all old content is instantly available if
you can type its name and hit the search button.
This favors the marginal authors more than the big names. It also
favors niche artists, since their followers can find their work, no
matter how thinly spread the niche clients are.
I'm a copyright "believer" but I don't see any way to maintain
the old system where there was enough money in content creation to
maintain a large number of marginal writers and
musicians.
I see the new technology as spreading the wealth. Instead of a few
megasellers hyped by the major media, I think you'll have more
customers searching successfully for books and music from niches
they really enjoy.
As the cost of reproduction plummets so will price. That will both
make piracy less attractive and leave more of the proceeds for the
creative process.
Copyright will have to change, but all is not lost.
There will be a dramatic crash in the number of creators
supporting themselves by producing content.
Only a small percentage of creators have ever
supported themselves by creating content. I predict that the
long-tail part of the process will enable more creators to make
some portion of their income creatively.
I hope so, as I'm one of them.
They say I'm a pretty cool dude for 40.
I bet your mom said you were handsome when you were 13, too.
:-)
we're inclined to quit referring to it as
stealing.
I think this inclination is because nothing is being taken from
anyone. Copying digital stuff produces another copy. No stealing is
being done.
Interestingly, re: the capitalism question, if you properly define
capitalism as the people with capital controlling the means of
production then copying digitial media is a form of capitalism. My
CD burner is a means of production, I, not the state, control it.
:)
Only a small percentage of creators have ever supported
themselves by creating content.
I disagree with this. I think there are a large number of people
who support themselves with their content. I think maybe you meant
to write "a small percentage of creators have become extremely
welathy by creating content"?
That I could agree with.
So at the same time I'm very concerned with the draconian
response to digital copyrighting, hence I buy no music
online.
Buy from Amazon. No bullshit DRM involved.
Part of the solution to paying content providers is going to be
direct connection with users. Skip the distribution channel and
sell directly to the end user. You are much more likely to make
money relying on the generosity of your fan base when the money
goes directly to you than when it gets funneled through Sony
BMG.
"""Don't conflate those who see philosophical problems with the
current copyright regime with thieving."""
Is that saying you don't want something for nothing?
I do agree that the copyright system could be overhauled. I'm for
DRM if, and only if they can do it right, and I have seen a good
one yet. However, It's not pro-buisness to try to keep creators
from making money from their creations.
I bet your mom said you were handsome when you were 13,
too.
Yes. I believed my mother. But with the nephews, the fact that I
always buy the tickets might have something to do with it.
I found this sentence to be so profound that it almost
choked me up.
This quote sent my snark opportunity meter into the red zone.
Seriously, I almost blew a gasket restraining myself.
But you're a cool forty-year-old, so I'll let it slide.
"""I think this inclination is because nothing is being taken
from anyone. Copying digital stuff produces another copy. No
stealing is being done.""""
Not really true, you are taking the money the item would produce if
sold, albeit not exactly the same as stealing a CD from a store.
But if everybody copied, the creator couldn't make a living. You
can't discuss a better solution when it starts with fuck the
creators.
"""Don't conflate those who see philosophical problems with
the current copyright regime with thieving."""
Is that saying you don't want something for nothing?
Of course not. It's perfectly capitalist to want to minimize the
amount you pay for something. Why buy the cow, etc. But if you hear
a good joke, and tell it to your friends, you aren't thieving, even
if some comedian is making a living telling that joke, because you
aren't depriving him of something that's his.
Buy from Amazon. No bullshit DRM involved.
Very true. But if I want a DRM-free copy, I prefer to still buy the
CD in physical form. Most of the time you still get liner
notes.
But what I have really embraced is actually riddled with the
bullshit DRM: subscription music from Rhapsody. I love music, so
it's like having an all-you-can eat buffet. I don't have to think
about what to buy, I just listen to my heart's content.
When I want a DRM-free copy for use in my car, I put on my gray hat
and use one of the stream-ripping programs like Fleischer mentions
in the article to get MP3s that are all tagged up and ready to
go.
As an Open Source developer I've discovered that copyright does
serve one useful purposes It requires that your warranty disclaimer
remain attached to your software. It is an unfortunate fact that
our society is very litigious. A warranty disclaimer isn't proof
against lawsuit, but it's better than nothing.
Two other areas that Open Source developers say copyright is
useful:
Attribution: Copyright keeps your name attached to the software.
That's not a big deal in my mind, because pretending that you wrote
someone else's software is fraud, with or without copyright.
Enforced Sharing: The GPL (and other copyleft licenses) use
copyright to impose "sharing" requirements on third parties. I
disagree with this. GNU shouldn't be using copyright to impose
contractual terms on people. If you don't want people using your
software in ways you disapprove of, use a real contract! It's
highly hypocritical of them to deride software ownership at the
same time they are using copyrights to impose controls over their
software.
Elemenope, what the hell is wrong with you? Let the snark fly. That's why I come here.
"what kind of business models will be viable in such a reality?"
I suspect that it will look something like what Radiohead's been
doing. They've cut the middleman (the record company) out of the
process and started marketing their records directly to fans
instead. While this isn't without its drawbacks (they took a lot of
ribbing for their pricing idea on their first online release) they
apparently made a lot of money in album sales even with that scheme
and were able to keep most of the proceeds for themselves.
http://www.gigwise.com/news.asp?contentid=37720
Basically, it seems that the people copyright law protects the most
are the record companies...who are arguably the least important
people in the music industry. In the 50's and 60's artists needed
them to distribute their product (which they did while taking a
whopping cut). Now that we have the Internet and the ability to
market to fans the labels aren't nearly as important and the end
result of laxer copyright laws seems to be cheaper music and the
artists keeping more of the money they earn.
You can't discuss a better solution when it starts with fuck
the creators.
You cant discuss a better solution until people start properly
distinguishing between theft and copyright violation. Both can (and
maybe should be) criminal acts, but they arent the same thing, they
arent even like the same.
I will stick with "fuck the creators" until the creators stop using
the terms piracy and theft.
Copyright/Patents are an add on to natural law. The constitution
even makes it clear that it isnt "real" property, they are
especially creating these rules because they would be useful. Which
I think they are. But to treat copyright violations as a form of
theft is totally wrong.
Not really true, you are taking the money the item would
produce if sold, albeit not exactly the same as stealing a CD from
a store.
See, I think this is exactly wrong. If you download "Nasal Ned and
his Nasty Nosepickers" debut album, Ned is no worse off than he was
before you woke up this morning. He's been deprived of
nothing.
Affecting Ned's potential market (even negatively) is not a crime.
If it were, those Apple vs. PC ads would have gotten some folks
arrested.
Brandybuck:
Enforced Sharing: The GPL (and other copyleft licenses) use
copyright to impose "sharing" requirements on third parties. I
disagree with this. GNU shouldn't be using copyright to impose
contractual terms on people. If you don't want people using your
software in ways you disapprove of, use a real contract! It's
highly hypocritical of them to deride software ownership at the
same time they are using copyrights to impose controls over their
software.
I think you're missing the point of the GPL. Read up on "copyleft",
which is RMS's snarky response to copyright. IIRC, Stallman would
be perfectly happy to live in a world without copyright, i.e. one
in which releasing someone else's source code was not an illegal
act. Since he doesn't live in such a world, he twisted the
copyright system to create a subset of software for which closing
the source violates copyright. In essence, he's using the
proprietary software industry's noxious State-enforced rules
against them.
I release my own software under the GPL for the same reason, but
with an additional proviso that it can be copied without
restriction in any jurisdiction in which the notion of a
government-enforced copyright privilege does not exist.
Elemenope, what the hell is wrong with you? Let the snark
fly. That's why I come here.
That's good to hear, but I already hit my snark quota for the
day.
Without forcing me to read the WFA, can anyone pull the bits
about how content creators will feed themselves?
Smellisvision replaces Television!!
Ned is no worse off than he was before you woke up this
morning. He's been deprived of nothing.
But you could also say that if Ned is holding a concert, and you
don't buy a concert ticket but attend anyway because you climb in
through the bathroom window of the club, Ned has also not been
deprived of anything. He was going to perform anyway, and he's no
worse off than if you had stayed home.
The point is that you have secured something you have not earned or
paid for, and that Ned would not have chosen to give you for
free.
Maybe artists and their fetishists known as public school teachers will return to the scum-of-the-earth status they had prior to the 16th century.
I think there'll just be a lot less content creators in the future. DRM is dead--there is no protection that cannot be circumvented and there never will be. In a world with essentially zero scarcity, content is just worth a lot less than it used to be.
Fluffy,
The concert scenario is trespassing. Ned, as renter of the concert
hall, "owns" the building for the night.
Ned does not own the CD my friend purchased or the bits on my
computer. If I reorganize some bits (so that they match the bits on
the CD) thats my business, they are my bits. I havent taken any
bits from Ned.
It is still a copyright violation, but it isnt theft. Whether or
not copyright should exist or not is another matter.
The point is that you have secured something you have not
earned or paid for
Why isn't Ned performing on a "pay as you exit" basis?
Ned, as renter of the concert hall, "owns" the building for
the night.
No. The promoter rented the concert hall, and it was the promoter's
job to provide security so freeloaders couldn't get in. The
promoter is at fault, not a "trespasser".
[...]if Ned is holding a concert, and you don't buy a
concert ticket but attend anyway because you climb in through the
bathroom window of the club[...]
Ah, but the club is (I will assume) private property, and has right
of exclusion. If I enter the bathroom window, I'm trespassing. We
already have laws against that.
However, if the club is next door to a public park (or some
privately-owned space that I have access to), and I'm hanging out
there while Ned plays, I'm not harming him a whit by listening to
the music from outside.
The thing is, and this is what differentiates stealing from
copyright infringement, that music is simply data. It's
information, not an object you can take away from someone. You
can't own information, and it's idiocy to try and pass laws to
support the pretense that you can.
Jake,
The other obvious example is the bleachers on the roofs outside of
Wrigley. That pissed off the Cubs for years until they finally
worked out an agreement. I believe the homeowners now pay the Cubs
a cut in return for the Cubs not putting up a big ass wall.
The concert scenario is trespassing. Ned, as renter of the
concert hall, "owns" the building for the night.
This distinction doesn't matter.
The standard that was offered for why piracy isn't theft is that
Ned doesn't lose anything and isn't any worse off than he was
before. If you sneak into his concert, he also doesn't lose
anything and he also isn't worse off than he was before.
In fact, I think the concept of private real property could be
undermined just as neatly as some of you are seeking to undermine
intellectual property. If someone wanders onto your private estate
when you are out of the country, and hangs out in the woods for a
while, you haven't lost anything and you aren't any worse off than
you were before. So your private real property right shouldn't be
enforced, right?
Here's something I've always wondered.
Let's assume that downloading music via a file-sharing program is
stealing.
So say that you bought a CD that later became unplayable - is it
stealing to resort to a file sharing program to re-download the
music you already bought?
It's information, not an object you can take away from
someone.
Labor isn't an object, either. Can you steal labor?
If you promise to pay someone if they labor, and then you renege,
did you steal from that person?
If you sneak into someone's concert, I would assert that you are
stealing their labor because you are enjoying their labor without
paying for it, even though the laborer made it clear that only
paying customers could enjoy that labor. You're stealing it even if
Ned doesn't know you're there, even if Ned would have performed
anyway, and even if Ned made a lot of money from actual paying
customers while you snuck in.
And a recording of music, to me, is simply the labor of music
performance made tangible by technology. It's not "just data",
because if it was random data you wouldn't want it. You want it
because it's data that records a performance you want to enjoy. The
difference between random data and a recording of music is labor,
labor that you want to steal.
Fluffy,
The grass on my private estate is very sensative, walking on it
damages it. :)
The standard that was offered for why piracy isn't
theft
Piracy IS theft.
Copyright violation isnt theft.
If you promise to pay someone if they labor, and then you
renege, did you steal from that person?
Nope. But you did violate a contract. I have had cleints that didnt
pay, I couldnt send them to jail for theft, at best I could sue
them.
Fluffy,
If anyone here was arguing that trespassing and theft were the same
thing, you'd have an excellent point.
But we aren't.
The club issue is one of trespassing, not theft. The "private
estate" issue is also one of trespassing, not theft. Theft and
trespassing are different... as are theft and copyright
infringement!
in return for the Cubs not putting up a big ass
wall.
The Cubs can't put up a big ass wall because the building is
landmarked so the city won't let them.
When property rights battle property rights...
O'er the horizon is a world where musicians will have to get
real jobs. Those who can survive based on live performances, i.e.,
getting paid for services rendered, will do well. Those who have a
weak audience will no longer be able to rely on fake scarcity to
pay the bills.
I welcome a culling of the herd. 90% of all musicians are
completely worthless. They aren't good musicians, and nearest I can
tell, the only product they have to sell is that they are young and
sexy. Why are we using copyright law to prop this garbage up? Is
there some Constitutional imperative that forces Congress to
subsidize the hip and buff?
if it was random data you wouldn't want it.
From a discussion this last weekend - assuming an infinite universe
(bad assumption) somewhere within the entropy of the universe is a
random series of bits that exactly corresponds to the video of the
Lucy Liu-Drew Barrymore-Cameron Diaz lesbian threesome that was
(probably) never filmed while on the set of Charlie's Angels.
I might be interested in that random data.
There will be plenty of content creators. Why? I'll explain. Did
anyone watch the South Park where the internet phenomenons
from YouTube were waiting in line to collect their "Internet
money", but hadn't figured out how yet?
YouTube makes money through ads that pay for page hits, etc. You
might put up "Chocolate Rain" and get 8 million hits, but that only
makes money for YouTube, not for you.
Someone smart (like me, but less lazy) will create a competitor for
YouTube that pays the uploader of content a (small) percentage of
the ad page hit revenue (this could have cutoffs like no percentage
for less than 1000 hits, etc.). For most people this would be
vanishingly small. But if you are a hit, the payoff could be quite
lucrative.
This would pull tons of people to your site away from YouTube;
because if they are otherwise the same, but a surprise hit on your
site will actually pay off, they want their upload to be on
your--and only your--website.
You will also get even more content as people make stuff just on
the hope that it is a surprise hit, because there is a financial
possibility.
Jake,
Thanks for carrying the torch. It's nice to have company. Being too
free-market for libertarians can get real lonely.
If you sneak into his concert, he also doesn't lose anything
and he also isn't worse off than he was before.
Patently false. You are taking up physical space. You're putting
wear and tear on the facilities. You're crowding other people,
obscuring their view. If the concert is sold out, then you are
putting the occupancy over legal capacity. This is obvious and
utterly distinct from copying information. You're not even
trying.
Epsi,
mp3.com used to run like that before it was bought out. Could get a
lot of good music that way for free, and I think advertising paid
for the pay per listen or download the artist got.
I thought of that yesterday, as well.
I thought of it the day before you thought of it. Whatever day that
happens to be.
Patently false. You are taking up physical space. You're
putting wear and tear on the facilities. You're crowding other
people, obscuring their view. If the concert is sold out, then you
are putting the occupancy over legal capacity. This is obvious and
utterly distinct from copying information. You're not even
trying.
None of which has any effect on Ned's total take from the concert,
which is all that is relevant to the analogy here.
The pro-theft forces say that stealing music isn't theft because
nothing Ned physically possesses has been taken.
If you sneak into his concert, you also haven't physically taken
anything of Ned's. You didn't buy a ticket, but if you stayed home
you also would not have bought a ticket. Ned is out the amount of a
ticket you did not buy - but the pro-theft forces think you can't
consider the impact of money not spent because something was
obtained for free. If we can't consider the fact that you enjoy
possessing Ned's album without paying it theft, then we can't
consider the fact that you enjoyed listening to his concert without
paying for it theft, either.
And it's not "just trespassing". It's theft of services. It's
trespassing if I sneak through the window in the middle of the
night when the place is empty. If I do it during a concert, it's
theft. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theft_of_services
"mp3.com used to run like that before it was bought
out."
MP3.com was essentially sued out of existence by Universal Music
Group. The eventual buyer got some code and a domain name, but
anything that made MP3.com innovative was stopped by Judge Jed
Jackoff.
I thought of it the day before you thought of it. Whatever
day that happens to be.
haha
I didn't mean for it to come out like that, but I really just meant
I had the same thought.
If we can't consider the fact that you enjoy possessing
Ned's album without paying it theft, then we can't consider the
fact that you enjoyed listening to his concert without paying for
it theft, either.
I accept your apology.
/colbert
Seriously, though, I take it that you consider me listening to the
concert from the park next door to be theft, then?
"If you sneak into his concert, you also haven't physically
taken anything of Ned's."
And your crime would be against the property owner. Let's nip this
"theft of services" garbage in the bud. Has anybody ever been
prosecuted or convicted for such a stunt? "Theft of Services" is a
the charge when you steal cable, or disable the utility meter, or
even hop the turnstile on the subway.
Regardless of whatever you may think of sneaking into a concert, it
has absolutely nothing to do with copyright because there are no
copies being made. But more importantly, the services are rendered
to the owner of the establishment who pays for them, not to the
patrons who go to the show.
If you send digital music to a friend as copies, you're
stealing.
If you send digital music to a friend and then delete your copies,
and then when the friend is done listening to the music sends it
back to you and deletes their copies it is not stealing.
However, you can have the good exist in 2 places at the same time
and will almost never be listened to in 2 places at the same time.
If you set up your computer so that it could stream your music
collection to anybody who has the password (your friends), and the
song is never listened to by 2 people at the same time.... what
then?
Seriously, though, I take it that you consider me listening
to the concert from the park next door to be theft,
then?
No, because Ned is setting his music loose for you to hear
it.
If I scatter pennies in a public park and you come by later and
pick them up, it's not stealing. If I scatter pennies in my back
yard, and you come into my yard and take them, it's stealing.
Now, you could counterargue that music broadcast over the airwaves
is being similarly set free, and you would have a strong case. I
think the bizarre set of laws that surround broadcasting and
copyright are fundamentally illogical, so it's hard to reconcile
them with anything sensible.
I just got my dander up here at the notion that piracy isn't
theft.
And Warren, even if no gatecrasher case in history has ever been
prosecuted as a theft, it's only because no one ever saw the need.
It's clearly theft of services as that variety of theft is defined.
For example, New York penal law states that a person is guilty of
theft of services when:
9. With intent to avoid payment of the lawful charge for admission to any theatre or concert hall, or with intent to avoid payment of the lawful charge for admission to or use of a chair lift, gondola, rope-tow or similar mechanical device utilized in assisting skiers in transportation to a point of ski arrival or departure, he obtains or attempts to obtain such admission without payment of the lawful charge therefor.
http://law.onecle.com/new-york/penal/PEN0165.15_165.15.html
I guess what I'm trying to ask is - are those who scream "THEFT!" at every turn really just pissed off that it's easier to share music with others than it used to be?
If you send digital music to a friend as copies, you're
stealing.
Nope. You are infringing upon copyrights.
I just got my dander up here at the notion that piracy isn't
theft.
piracy is theft. It involves eye patches and swords and shit.
copyright infringement isnt theft. I get apparently the same amount
pissed as you do. But Im right. They are completely different
crimes with different names.
Ok, please replace the word "stealing" with "doing something illegal" in most instances in my 3:56 post.
Fluffy,
Now, you could counterargue that music broadcast over the
airwaves is being similarly set free, and you would have a strong
case.
Okay, strong case.
Now, only slightly less strong is when I broadcast said music over
my stereo system. And, if it is plausibly okay for me to record
that, then I see no reason I cant intercept the broadcast somewhere
before it gets to my speakers, like while its still a digital
signal.
You will notice that back in the days of casettes, the record
companies didnt make a big deal about copying music. They didnt get
blank casette sales banned or highly taxed. However, once digital
media came about, suddenly copying became a big issue.
Reinmoose,
Ok, please replace the word "stealing" with "doing something
illegal" in most instances in my 3:56 post.
Much better. Now that we have agreed to terminology, we can discuss
the real question, "should it be illegal?"
"Theft of Services" is a the charge when you steal cable, or
disable the utility meter, or even hop the turnstile on the
subway.
Regardless of whatever you may think of sneaking into a concert, it
has absolutely nothing to do with copyright because there are no
copies being made.
There are people on this thread asserting that it's impossible for
a theft to occur unless a physical object is removed from one
person by another person.
That viewpoint is effectively debunked if there are categories of
theft which do not involve the physical loss of an object.
It's relevant to copyright because it involves finding a way to
enjoy the fruits of a creation or performance without paying the
fee to do so, and is therefore analogous to securing a copy of an
album without paying for it.
They didnt get blank casette sales banned or highly taxed.
No, but they did get a cut. It's just a matter of scale. The fact
that the whole world can make themselves a copy is the only
difference now, from the cassette days.
Folks, not trying to be a dick, but you are arguing over
something that is moot. Digital piracy cannot be stopped without
methods so severe that they are effectively impossible.
You can argue about the semantics of theft and piracy and copyright
if you want. But it's irrelevant. New paradigms will have to be
thought of to take into account the digital world, which allows
endless, effortless, full-quality reproduction of all media.
Now, only slightly less strong is when I broadcast said
music over my stereo system. And, if it is plausibly okay for me to
record that, then I see no reason I cant intercept the broadcast
somewhere before it gets to my speakers, like while its still a
digital signal.
I don't think you understand my beef with broadcasting rules and
copyright.
Essentially, broadcasters wanted a way to make money by giving away
copyrighted music for free, building an audience that way, and
selling ads.
So a regime was created where the broadcasters could give away
music, and pay a licensing fee.
My beef is that in so doing, they have tangled the rest of us up in
their copyright relationship to the original owner of the
music.
As others have pointed out, if Ned was playing his music on the
street corner for all to hear, he couldn't complain that I was
hearing it for free. But in order to provide broadcasters with a
way to make money, a bizarre system was put in place where the
broadcaster is in effect sending the music out into that same
public place, but somehow everyone is retaining the right to
complain that I'm hearing it for free [and recording it].
So I guess I would say that I wouldn't have a problem if you guys
were recording [in any medium] and exchanging music that has been
broadcast. If that makes it impossible to run a broadcasting
system, fuck 'em, I have no problem with that.
But if Ned is playing his music in private clubs and recording his
music and selling it with DRM, and you sneak in to hear his
concert, or copy his album and give it away, you stole from Ned.
Sorry.
I see what you're saying, Fluffy. Part of the problem is that we
are all using different meanings for "theft." In legal terms, theft
is exclusively the taking of another's property without that
person's consent with the intention of depriving them of that
property permanently. There has to be property (services don't
count) and a deprivation. That part is clear.
But "theft" and "stealing" have also come to generically refer to
any unauthorized expropriation. How many times have we heard
someone say, "he stole my idea!" The fact is that ideas are NOT
protectible, and therefore "stealing" or "theft" are impossible.
Yet people continue to use those terms.
"Theft of Services" is really a branch of fraud, not theft.
So, legally it is impossible for a theft to occur unless
there is a deprivation of property. Of course, if we're just using
the slang people use on the street, you have a point.
Have we established that "theft" and "copyright infringement"
are different?
Now on to the meat of my personal opinion about copyright and music
"piracy":
Once Ned sells a recording of his music, it's not his any
more. Everything else follows from that.
But if Ned is playing his music in private clubs and
recording his music and selling it with DRM, and you sneak in to
hear his concert, or copy his album and give it away, you stole
from Ned.
I dont necessarily disagree with you other than a certain use of
word. Is it really that hard to type "copyright infringed" instead
of "stole"?
"But if Ned is playing his music in private clubs and
recording his music and selling it with DRM, and you sneak in to
hear his concert, or copy his album and give it away, you stole
from Ned."
If Ned is such an idiot that he truly thinks somebody copying his
music is tantamount to armed bandits boarding a ship, kidnapping
the crew and taking the treasure, then Ned has problems worse than
copyright infringement.
I suspect Ned is smart enough to know that when people say "steal",
"theft" and "piracy" in relation to copyright issues, they are
conveying a value judgment, not an accurate assessment of the legal
status.
You can argue about the semantics of theft and piracy and
copyright if you want.
We want. We want so much.
But it's irrelevant. New paradigms will have to be thought of
to take into account the digital world, which allows endless,
effortless, full-quality reproduction of all media.
I think that's probably right. I'm just wondering if it will lead
to crash in the number of people who can devote themselves to
creating content, especially writers. I haven't seen any suggestion
above that strike me as being viable new economic models for our
Brave New World of Nobody Gets Paid for Nuthin'.
I tend to find that comparing copyright to real property presents a
lot of insights into both. People underestimate the artificiality
of real property rights - they are all created from whole cloth by
the sovereign, just as copyright is. They are, ultimately,
intangible rights - rights to exclude, rights to rent, etc. - just
as copyrights are.
I suspect Ned is smart enough to know that when people say
"steal", "theft" and "piracy" in relation to copyright issues, they
are conveying a value judgment, not an accurate assessment of the
legal status.
Maybe Ned is REALLY smart and realizes that all laws are value
judgments.
The only reason to strenuously argue that copyright infringement
isn't theft is if you're an infringer who doesn't like being called
a thief.
"Theft of Services" is really a branch of fraud, not
theft.
Sorry, but since it includes the word "theft" in it, that means I
can employ the word "theft", and it's legally correct. It doesn't
matter what the English common law history of the concept of theft
is. It now applies to services because someone applied it.
RC Dean,
The problem is possibly semantic in nature. I say that I bought me
house. That means I can (within certain limits) do whatever I want
with it, including building an exact duplicate and giving it
away.
I say I bought a CD. That means I can (within certain limits) do
whatever I want with it, including building an exact duplicate and
giving it away. Oh wait, no, in this case, that falls within those
limits. Why?
I understand why. I even somewhat agree. It just points out the
huge, gaping difference between "real" property and "intellectual"
property. Yes, both are artificial, but IP is a whole magnitude
more artificial.
Fluffy,
Is that a "the law is always right" argument? Huh, dont expect that
here.
"""Of course not. It's perfectly capitalist to want to minimize
the amount you pay for something. Why buy the cow, etc. But if you
hear a good joke, and tell it to your friends, you aren't thieving,
even if some comedian is making a living telling that joke, because
you aren't depriving him of something that's his."""
I agree it is ok to attempt to minimize the amount you pay, that
assumes you are still paying something. $18 for a CD is too
high.
Sing somebody a song and you're not depriving the creator of
anything. Give away bootleg copies of a Chris Rock CD and you
are.
Musicians spend lots of money developing a song, rehearsal time
alone isn't cheap. The recording studio is more expensive. Even if
you do the recording yourself you must buy the gear. It costs money
to produce the sound regardless of the format the song becomes, CD
or file. The songwriter recoups (maybe, maybe not) by selling units
of the song. People offering replication of the writers units at no
charge will interfere with the writers ability to make money.
"""Once Ned sells a recording of his music, it's not his any more.
Everything else follows from that."""
If Ned sells a CD, then that CD can be resold with no extra money
going to Ned. But we are talking about selling your CD collection.
We are talking about reproducing your collection, selling that, and
keeping your collection.
""""See, I think this is exactly wrong. If you download "Nasal Ned
and his Nasty Nosepickers" debut album, Ned is no worse off than he
was before you woke up this morning. He's been deprived of
nothing."""""
Ned was deprived of the money he would have made from the sale of
the product.
Is that a "the law is always right" argument? Huh, dont
expect that here.
Um, no.
Lamar is the one trying to go technical, by asserting that while
lowly people with no knowledge of the law might use their silly
street slang to call all sorts of things "theft", really smart and
informed people know that legally it can't be theft unless
an object is physically taken.
And if he wants to argue from the law or the history of the law,
I'll just point out that the law contains a type of theft that
doesn't involve the physical removal of an object. And that if it
contains one such example, it can contain more.
The only reason to strenuously argue that copyright
infringement isn't theft is if you're an infringer who doesn't like
being called a thief.
Okay, you're just being a total dick now. You know, I've never
tried any illegal drug -- not cocaine, not heroin, not even
marijuana -- yet I "strenuously argue" that it shouldn't be a crime
all the fucking time. Why should it be any different with
copyright? (For the record, I also oppose racism, sexism, and
homophobia, which apparently means I secretly wish I was a lesbian
black woman.)
But maybe I should just respond with an equally baseless claim that
the only reason someone would strenuously argue that somebody owns
stuff even after they've sold it or given it away must be
because they're a fascist monopolist rent-seeker who doesn't like
being called that.
Now can we seriously talk about the issues, or is it just gonna be
ad hominems from here on out?
"Maybe Ned is REALLY smart and realizes that all laws are
value judgments."
Yes, and aside from wholesale bootlegging, or high dollar
infringement, copyright violations have always been civil matters,
which is the lowest offense we have. Stealing, theft and piracy, by
contrast, are all crimes (and some are felonies). While all laws
may be value judgments, NED recognizes that civil infractions carry
much less moral condemnation than crimes and felonies....and this
is the very reason that Fluffy and his ilk want to use the names of
crimes and felonies. They use exaggerated but legal-sounding terms
to display their disgust with infringers.
"The only reason to strenuously argue that copyright
infringement isn't theft is if you're an infringer who doesn't like
being called a thief."
You mean to say that anti-copyright folks have no legitimate beef
with the attempt to frame copyright issues as criminal in nature?
Seriously. You don't think calling copyright infringement (which is
not sexy, but it IS the name of the act) something like "piracy" is
an attempt to strengthen copyright laws and thereby take away
rights previously held?
Ned was deprived of the money he would have made from the
sale of the product.
I'd say that this argument fails for the same reason it fails if
used as an argument to support banning used bookstores on behalf of
publishers, or to support banning automobiles for the benefit of
buggy-whip manufacturers.
"Lamar is the one trying to go technical, by asserting that
while lowly people with no knowledge of the law might use their
silly street slang to call all sorts of things "theft", really
smart and informed people know that legally it can't be theft
unless an object is physically taken."
Whoa, that really wasn't what I was getting at. The fact is that
theft has a legal definition, and that legal definition does not
encompass copyright infringement.
You seem to think that "theft of services", which includes the word
"theft" is the same as theft. Quite simply, you are confusing a
legal term with the same term used in a statute. While a statute is
a law, politicians tend to create the names of their laws for shock
effect rather than compatibility with existing legal definitions.
See, for example, the Patriot Act. Since it has the word "patriot"
in it, it must be patriotic for me to bug your telephone
calls.
I didn't mean to say that "slang" is incorrect. I just think that
when we're talking about the legal status of copyright laws, we
should be using words that pertain to the world of copyright, not
ones that the RIAA wishes were in the copyright world.
I think you're missing the point of the GPL.
No, I get the point of the GPL perfectly. That others may be using
the GPL for pragmatic purposes does not negate the fact that
Stallman and the FSF designed the GPL to be an instrument of their
socialist ideology. Stallman has advocated taxing software to
support Free Software developers, and has proposed replacing
copyright laws with a form of copyleft. Given the opportunity to
impose the GPL on all software, I have no doubt that the FSF would
stomp all over our freedoms.
The four freedoms of the FSF cannot be guaranteed
in a world without copyright or other form of coercive IP
enforcement. Without the copyright of the GPL, nothing is stopping
me from hording software. Nothing is preventing me from
distributing binaries without source. Nothing is stopping me from
slapping a NDA on top of the software. It is the coercive state
behind copyright that enables Stallman's "social hack" to
operate.
If the FSF really wanted free software, they would have used the
BSD or MIT license. Who cares if someone "exploits" the software?
It's *information* and can't be damage or destroyed.
I should note that the term "piracy" has been around for a long, long time in connection with copyright infringement. It appears to have come from lawyers trying to scare copyright owners into buying their services. Here. The argument isn't necessarily an historical argument. It's just an attempt to stop bogus framing of the issue. It's like people who call abortion murder. You know they have their mind made up, but no matter how often they call it murder, it just doesn't make it so.
Whatever happened to the micropayment model?
The idea was to price access to a copyrighted work so low (small
fractions of a penny, perhaps) that nobody would think twice about
access, but to charge that pittance for EVERY access (every time
you played a song or a portion of a song, for instance, or brought
up a picture or a printed page for display). Eventually, "long
tail" effects might result in a tidy compensation even for the most
"marginal" content creator.
In theory, everyone would embrace the micropayment mechanism
because 1) it would not be onerous; and 2) without it, content
creators would have little incentive (other than scratching their
own itches and exorcising their own demons) to create. This was a
win-win.
To make micropayments work, what we needed was a way to stamp every
piece of digital content with a code that identified the rights
holder -- or, more properly, an account "bucket," to which
royalties would be deposited, and from which money could be
withdrawn only by the current rights-holder. And of course, we
needed a mechanism to transfer micropayments securely and
anonymously from those who digitally accessed a work to the
respective rights-holder accounts.
There are a few other under-the-hood details that would need to be
worked out (for instance, what should micropayments be for various
kinds of access, in order to make the scheme roughly "revenue
neutral" in comparison what we have now), but it would seem to me
that such tidying up and subsequent development and promotion of a
polished micropayments model could easily have happened in the
20-30 years since I first heard of the concept. What the hell
happened? Did they stow the how-to-manual for micropayments with
the blueprints for the flying car we were supposed to have by
now?
...This is the very reason that Fluffy and his ilk want to
use the names of crimes and felonies. They use exaggerated but
legal-sounding terms to display their disgust with
infringers.
You see, I think it's exactly the reverse.
I actually think that violating a copyright is theft, so
I'm calling it theft. You, on the other hand, are responding with
"bogus framing" arguments asserting that since in the history of
the English common law theft referred to objects, it can't possibly
be theft because there's no physical object involved. And I'm
trying to poke holes in that claim even on its own terms, because
I'm trying to engage you on your own terms - namely, the way the
law has treated different instances of people finding ways to
obtain things without paying for them.
So to my mind, you're trying to use the fact that historically
physical objects were all it was possible to steal to hide the
activity of stealing by giving it a less-serious sounding name.
Quite simply, you are confusing a legal term with the same
term used in a statute.
By the way, this is a complete non sequitur, and I don't care what
they taught you about it in law school.
Copyright infringement is copyright infringement not
theft.
Copyright infringement may cause financial damage to the owner of
the copyright or maybe not. It depends upon the nature of the
creative work being copied, and the nature of the
infringement.
The biggest problem with current copyright laws are not that
copyright exists, but that copyright holders can sue for
statutory damages that have no relationship to any
real financial damages caused by the copyright infringement.
Whatever happened to the micropayment model?
We're *still* not technologically capable of such a scheme. And I
don't care how onerous it isn't, I'm not comfortable with the
existence of the gargantuan agency that would be needed to keep
track of all this.
Something that's important to Fluffy's argument is this notion
that the concert-goers have entered into a contract--by buying a
ticket-- with the promoter or the artist which states that the only
people permitted to hear the music, from within the venue, are
people who have paid to do so. To sneak in through the bathroom
window and listen to the music from within the venue would be a
breach of contract because the artist is only performing under the
assumption that everyone listening has paid. You're essentially
scamming the artist without their knowledge.
As far as the people in the park next door; it becomes the
responsibilty of the club to sufficiently soundproof their club so
that artist don't feel like their being ripped off when they play
there, and subsequently don't book their again...but the people in
the park have done nothing wrong.
But, none of this has anything to do with copyright per se...
I prefer to still buy the CD in physical form. Most of the
time you still get liner notes.
But what I have really embraced is actually riddled with the
bullshit DRM: subscription music from Rhapsody. I love music, so
it's like having an all-you-can eat buffet. I don't have to think
about what to buy, I just listen to my heart's content.
I try to combine the two when possible. If there's a band I like
that has a new CD coming out, or if I don't have their current CD,
but I know they're coming in concert soon, I'll listen to the new
stuff on Rhapsody, then I'll buy their CD at the show.
A couple of caveats: This is a lot easier to do in Chicago, where
pretty much every band makes a tour stop when they're on the road.
Second, it helps to like a lot of bands that play venues that hold
150 to 1,100 people or so. Part of the fun is that when you buy the
CD from the band, often you're LITERALLY buying the CD from the
band. But Rhapsody is a great tool for discovering new stuff before
spending $15 on their CD. And I'll listen to a bunch of stuff on
Rhapsody that I really don't care about owning. Emusic is a nice
way to pick up stuff for pretty cheap as well, with no DRM
restrictions (I got 40 songs per month for $10).
Whatever happened to the micropayment model?
This outfit is doing it: lala.com
I don't think it's micro enough, but at least the idea isn't
completely gone.
TrickyVic said:
Ned was deprived of the money he would have made from the
sale of the product.
This assumes that the particular downloader would have been willing
to pay Ned's chosen price for the album, which is not necessarily
the case. But putting that aside, how far are you willing to go to
prevent that sort of deprivation?
Negative reviews of Ned's product might also cause someone who
would otherwise have purchased the product not to buy it. Should we
take steps to prevent negative reviews?
If I buy Ned's CD and decide that it sucks, so I sell my CD
(without keeping a copy or any such shenanigans), and a customer
who would have been perfectly willing to pay $18 for the new copy
of Ned's CD instead pays $5 for my used copy, then Ned has been
deprived of the money he would have made from the sale of the
product. Should we take steps to prevent this deprivation?
Where do you draw the line and how do you justify that choice?
I say that I bought me house. That means I can (within
certain limits) do whatever I want with it, including building an
exact duplicate and giving it away.
Let's say, for purposes of the hypothetical, that your contract
with the architect states that he owns the design. In that case,
the design is not your intellectual property, and you may not build
another, identical house and give it away.
Just like the information on a music CD is not your intellectual
property, and you may not make a copy and give it away.
I say I bought a CD. That means I can (within certain limits)
do whatever I want with it, including building an exact duplicate
and giving it away. Oh wait, no, in this case, that falls within
those limits. Why?
Because, while you own the physical CD, you don't own the
information on the CD, that's why. Just like, even though you own
the house, you don't own the design for the house (in my
hypothetical).
You can sell your house, and you can sell your CD. But, when you
have agreed not to, you can't sell the intellectual property
encoded/embodied in those objects.
I emotionally agree with Fluffy. That being said;
1) This is a huge difference between pre-digital copies and
post-digital copies. When all we had was pen and paper, copies may
have been perfect, content-wise, but they were distinctly
different, execution-wise. When all we had were cassettes, people
would pay for the album because it was higher quality and had
bigger artwork, etc. A digital transfer with the digitized artwork
is indistinguishable from the official product, and the incentive
to purchase the official product has been removed, because you've
already got a perfect copy. The copying concept is the same, but
the copies have gotten so good that there is no more carrot to
dangle in front of copiers-who-might-turn-into-purchasers.
This is why "it's okay to sit outside a venue and listen to a
concert while it is 'theft' to sneak in without paying" because the
value of the ticket includes visuals and higher quality audio. The
artist has no control over those who don't mind the lesser
experience, but they provide something of value to those who want
to get up close and personal, and anyone who obtains that premium
experience by subjagating the value exchange is "stealing" from the
artist.
2) In the digital/perfect-copy world, digital recordings are not
sold, they are licensed. Ergo, someone who passes an unauthorized
copy of a digital recording to another is breaking the licensing
agreement, not "stealing the product", which has come to be
represented as the physical medai the content is distributed on.
You are buying the physical CD media to enjoy the convenience,
reliability and precise replication offered by that particular
distribution method, but you are only licensing the content burned
onto it for your personal use. If you are a broadcaster, then you
are subject to additional regulations regarding the continuing
"sharing" of that licensed content.
If you are a file-sharer, then you are dealing strictly with the
content, not the distribution media, so the content becomes the
only product in the equation, and your crime becomes defined as
"theft" of that product.
I think "theft" occurs when something of value is taken from
someone without an agreement. Yammer about what's been codified all
you want, but if music has value, then "taking" it without an
agreement that is amenable to both parties constitutes
"theft".
It is also a copyright violation, a licensing violation and bad
karma, to boot.
"Also, digital content tends to live forever. Records, VHS tapes
and books used to disappear into attics and landfills, churning
limiting the total amount of content available to be consumed at
any moment in time. Digital stuff simply gets stored and indexed
and is always available."
If I hand you an 8" floppy or a 9-track tape will you be able read
it? Media obsolescence does exist in the digital world.
"I actually think that violating a copyright is
theft"
Yeah, well I actually think monkeys are pachyderms, but
what I wish-wish-wish were true doesn't change the underlying
definitions of the words. Like I said, just because pro-lifers call
abortion murder doesn't make it so.
Whatever happened to the micropayment model?
You can't get the cost low enough, because there is still a
transaction cost to deal with. Pulling out my credit card, entering
in the number, flipping it over for the CRC nubmer, etc., is a real
cost to me. It might not be monetary, but it is a cost in time and
privacy. There's also the trust problem.
A better model is a subscription model. I would much rather pay $5
a year to someone I trust, then a tenth cent per play to various
random artists.
Pulling out my credit card, entering in the number, flipping
it over for the CRC nubmer, etc., is a real cost to me. It might
not be monetary, but it is a cost in time and privacy.
Hoping not to use your words in any way you did not intend,
Brandybuck, but this is a great example of the thinking that goes
into the definition of "theft" with regard to copyright
violations.
Pulling out a credit card, etc. didn't actually cost you
anything ... unless you give value to your time ... which
is of course just as valuable as anyone else's time ... like that
performing artist ... so availing oneself of their time without
compensating them for that, regardless of how many other people are
in attendance, would constitute "theft".
Just maybe it is that musicians,writers and the like, have to accept the inevitable and understand that their jobs may go the way of many other redundant jobs/industries due to technology and change,they may go kicking and screaming but at the end of the day it will only be a matter of "Adapt or perish".
Metacafe pays content providers who cross a certain threshold of
popularity.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metacafe
In response to my question about whatever happened to
micropayments, Rhywun wrote
"We're *still* not technologically capable of {implementing a
micropayment model}. And I don't care how onerous it isn't, I'm not
comfortable with the existence of the gargantuan agency that would
be needed to keep track of all this."
In the sense that all the various pieces of hardware and software
that would need to participate in making micropayments work well
enough not being in place and/or coordinated with each other, I
agree that we lack the technological CAPABILITY. But as far as I
have studied the concept, there is no theoretical or serious
practical OBSTACLE to realizing that capability, as there was at
one time (before fast internet, wifi, and PayPal-like
organizations, say).
Are you uncomfortable with national banks and/or international
credit card companies? These don't look as if they are going away
anytime soon, and I don't think the copyright organization has to
be even as big as one of them. You're basically talking about one
bank with numbered accounts for rights-holders on the one hand, and
another bank to maintain outflowing accounts for content consumers
on the other, plus a number of content access systems that know how
to tell the consumer bank to send a micropayment to the creator
bank.
Part of publishing a work under copyright would be to establish a
creator account (which would in turn give you a number, with which
your content could be stamped). This would legally be part of the
official copyright "notice." Access or copying via various methods
would cause the associated apparatus to send an automatic
micropayment from your consumer account to the creator account
indicated in the copyright notice. One of the "details," to which I
alluded in my last posting, includes finding ways to determine when
the rightful copyright notice has been omitted from a work (and/or
preventing or detecting the appending of a bogus one).
Telling access/copy systems which consumer account to use to pay
for content could be handled in a number of ways. For instance, you
could "charge up" a device, or a payment card/chip that would be
inserted into a device, with digital cash. Or you could set it up
with automatic payment account information. Or any number of other
approaches.
Maybe the consumer bank would simply tote up your content usage and
bills you (or automatically deducts from some other account) when
your content spending reaches a pre-set threshhold. This kind of
arrangement would be very close to the subscription model that
Brandybuck likes, except that you would deal with a "Publisher's
Clearing House" instead of individual publishers.
I'm aware of the trust issues, but I think that a two-bank system
that handles all transactions automatically (no need to pull out
your card and put in your info for every transaction) would address
concerns of convenience and privacy.
Anyway, it is obvious that we don't have such a thing today
(although I will look into lala -- thanks Russ2000), but the point
of my original comment was to wonder aloud WHY NOT, after all this
time since the basic idea was floated. If a completely automatic,
electronic transaction to shuffle a few mills or a penny or two
between banks is still too expensive to be practical, I'd be
interested in seeing the related economic analysis.
Pulling out a credit card, etc. didn't actually cost you anything ... unless you give value to your time ...
But it DID cost me! It cost me time. You may regard that as being
irrelevant, but it is a real cost to me. And it is real cost in
economic terms. It's why I'm not going to pay one cent to read a
Reason article. But I might buy a $5 yearly subscription. Even if
it was a tenth of a cent, I still wouldn't do it. Hell, I won't
even register to read an article on a site that requires
registration, because it is costly to me. Even without the credit
card.
Transaction costs are a part of the total price a consumer pays.
Saying that it is only time does not make this less so.
I'm thinking as far as revenue streams for intellectual media
might work something like this. First (maybe few) books, albums ect
you do for free you release on the internet maybe you make money
for 'official use' (eg if your song is bought for a movie
soundtrack or your book is turned into a film).
Then if you strike it rich on the internet as in you have fans then
you have a little meter on your website that says how much money
you need to be 'donated' before you release new
music/literature.
So say its around the time for Radiohead to release a new album.
Radiohead has enough fans who would pay for there work and they're
very famous so lets say there 'meter' is at 2 million dollars. But
another less popular band/writer but one with a following knows
they can't set a 2mil limit so there's is set there limit at 50 000
dollars for example.
My friends I just discovered the solution and its a better system
because now your books and music aren't subject to an editor or
music company. And of course still most won't become profitable at
all but everyone will have an equal chance.
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245