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Re: Web giants unite against Digital Britain copyright plan
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Re: Web giants unite against Digital Britain copyright plan
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Re: Web giants unite against Digital Britain copyright plan
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It's a fine balance, but if you hold small amounts of stock, and order in what you can guarantee to sell, or if you own your stock then your liabilities are more easily tied up in your business than if you don't own the stock - Zavvi didn't own the items in the shops because they hadn't paid EUK for them, hence when EUK went into liquidation, they caused a payment on the assets held by the likes of Zavvi, who since they had little they owned and didn't own the stock could either send the stock back, in which case they had no income, or go through themselves. It's simple economics, and has little to do with illegal downloading. People have and always will pirate copyrighted material, and a lot of those who do will end up buying it. |
Re: Web giants unite against Digital Britain copyright plan
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Most recent figures in relation to local independent dealers suggest an ongoing decline in that sector. From the Guardian, April 2009: Over a quarter of the UK's independent music stores went out of business last year, according to the Entertainment Retailers Association. In the record store heyday of the 1980s there were 2,200 stores; by 1994 there were 1,200. Today only 305 remain. The shops, and their dwindling number of committed owners, are, however, refusing to go quietly. This Saturday, more than 50 independent record shops from across the UK, and thousands more worldwide, will team up with top independent labels for Record Store Day. Quote:
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Yes, people will always pirate copyrighted material where there is a reasonable opportunity for them to do so. That does not make doing so right, even if they do go out and "end up buying it". |
Re: Web giants unite against Digital Britain copyright plan
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This business model you quote where every illegal download is a lost sale became obsolete when cassette tapes became popular. Before downloading became an option, people were always making tapes for their mates. Quoting your own source here, the heydays of the record shops were in the 80s. Pirating copyrighted materials was rife in the 80s, and it seems record shops did quite well back then. The only thing that has changed is that it has become a lot easier to get hold of pirated material. Oh, and for the 'record': no I do not condone the widespread pirating of copyrighted material. I reckon 98% of my music collection has been paid for. In fact, hardly anything of it is downloaded at all. It's all hardcopy CDs and LPs. |
Re: Web giants unite against Digital Britain copyright plan
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As I said in my earlier post to Mick "I highlighted the practice (business model) I don't believe that I've said anywhere that I supported it." Quote:
If anything the advent and subsequent popularity of the cassette further increased the profits of the music industry, "simple economics" as nffc would put it. Quote:
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(Incidentally, bakc in the 80s Holland introduced a levy on blank media to recoup some of the lost sales, which I thought was a really good idea) Quote:
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Spotify, whilst good, still needs to prove its worth from a musicians point of view. Whilst the potential is ENORMOUS the revenue streams generated are of little or no consequence and that needs to change. Currently those organizations charged with negotiating and collecting such things are not keen to progress the debate because they have realized that their doing so is the equivalent of turkeys voting for Christmas. I'd be happy to elaborate further by pm should you wish to do so. |
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(I have a mint copy of CRE012. I wonder how much that's worth) :) |
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