![]() |
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Its a bit strange really.........
p2p is not necessarily illegal Pubs are not necessarily illegal ntl can advertise on p2p as it alone is not necessarily breaking the law, the same as an ntl advert might for wahtever reason appear in a pub (leaftlet, tv, brochure, whatever) ntl cant stop illegal activity on p2p in the same way they can not prevent the dodgy bloke in the pub selling knocked off car stereos and Lacoste aftershave. |
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Quote:
If you download music and don't buy the CD, you are still denying the various people involved in the creation and manufacture of the album their money much the same as you would be if you stole the CD. Regarding NTL supporting Illegal P2P, they probably aren't. I suspect they bought some advertising space from whoever provides advertising for eDonkey (or whatever network), and NTL have no idea of where their adverts are going. Quote:
Quote:
Now, I have nothing against manufactured bands, as long as they are talented, and their music is good (for instance, one of my favourite bands, All Saints was created when the record company merged two groups - One with Melanie Blatt and Shaznay Lewis, and the other with the Appleton sisters), but there are too many now, and they all sound/look/act very similar to one another. I think it's causing people to get bored with music. The other problem (mainly with the singles market) is that people are not going to buy one or two singles at £3.99 each when they can get both of those, and 38 others for £15.99 on a compilation. Quote:
However, I do accept that there ARE people (and a lot of them) who don't give a fig about the quality of what they listen to, and just download stuff with no intention of purchasing a CD of it. One thing I would like to see, however, is the likes of Apple, Napster, OD2 (provide music services for various people including Microsoft, Wanadoo & HMV) reducing prices. While I can believe the prices paid are fair if you have a CD (with all it's associated costs), they should be reduced for downloaded tracks. Download companies don't have transport, warehousing and retail costs. Quote:
We still have problems with students pirating their development software and OSes. So, if students are happy to pirate something (and risk legal action from Microsoft) for something they get for free anyway... |
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Quote:
If I steal a CD then the retailer loses the cost of that CD and THAT is the difference, theft carries an associated loss, infringement doesn't (necesarily) It has nothing to do with semantics. |
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Quote:
|
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Quote:
Either way, whether it's theft or copyright infringement, it's still illegal. That's what I meant when I said you are arguing semantics. |
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
That's where all the anti-piracy statistics are skewed, you assume that I would have bought it had I not downloaded it.
I would be very suprised if that was the case for every mp3 that is downloaded. Besides this wasn't really about Piracy, or at least that wasn't what I intended when I posted the news initially. It was about NTL's alleged supporting of "illegal" downloads. |
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Quote:
|
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Maybe you could argue they were doing it and got caught, but it sounds like they were geniuinely not aware it was happening.
Quote:
Assuming their ad appears on thousands of sites, surely they cannot automatically know the content of each and every one? Still,it looks like they will stop it. |
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Quote:
|
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
The downloading of MP3s via P2P is just as illegal as a mate giving you a copy of a CD he/she has bought, for the simple reason that if you couldn't download it or get a copy from a friend you would have to pay a music retailer to obtain it.
The difficulty arises when music companies no longer produce a particular CD so that it is not commercially available. In those circumstances all the companies could claim is breach of copyright to which anyone accused can argue that they were quite prepared to pay but the CD was not commercially available. This defence does not apply to people who week in week out download the latest songs, which could be purchased because they are commercially available either on the internet or in local high street stores. |
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Quote:
If you read the article Paul Myers, who is the Chief Exec of wippit alledges that Quote:
|
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Quote:
Quote:
|
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Quote:
If a person rents a car and then goes out and uses it to deliberately run people over, does the public blame the driver for his/her improper and illegal use of the car or the car rental company who loaned that person the car in the first place. I think it's unreasonable to ask any company providing services to have such an intimate knowledge of their customers that they can identify with ease those who will abuse the service and those who will not. It's up to users to opt not to illegally use services provided, because if they don't the law may either stop the service or target illegal users as they have done in America. |
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Quote:
This site used to be NThellworld, and yet it seems that if NTL are critiscised (even jokingly as in this thread) then the NTL brigade whip round and defend them to the hilt totally blindly. |
Re: NTL amongst supporters of Illegal P2P?
Quote:
I dont believe record companies are really losing anything from mp3 downloads, in fact in a way I belive they are gaining. Im not going to spend money on an Album unless I like it, supposing I download a few mp3s I like I and many others are likely to invest in the album...........pure and simple its better quality and you get the full package. The only money they lose, is the money they waste on trying to stop mp3 downloads. They will NEVER stop Piracy in whatever form it exists, the people who dont buy genuine records now, will never buy records in the future, whether they download from the web or buy from the dodgy bloke in the white transit wrecker. All the record companies can do is make their product more attractive to the (in the main) law abiding mass market.........the obvious way to do this is make it cheaper, if this means the redundancies of a few fat cat directors who are jobsworths then good............maybe they will get a proper job! If they succeed in their battle against the illegal mp3..........I hope it backfires on them and some big record companies go under..........maybe then they will wake up and smell the coffee its the 21st century. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 22:29. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are © Cable Forum