Quote:
Originally Posted by Skie
The "little" artists are also the ones who stand to gain the most from their stuff being "stolen". A larger audience is the best kind of springboard to make it big. And then be signed by a major label who loan you £2million which your music never makes back thanks to magical accounting practices so you are always paying off that debt.
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whos stealing what?
we back to using wrong words again?
---------- Post added at 05:53 ---------- Previous post was at 05:50 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Maggy J
Actually I do get that point.BUT it is still taking without permission the intellectual property of another person whether they be struggling or not.I understand you don't want to pay the fat cats.However the artist STILL wants to be paid for their work..Or why the blooming heck should they fecking bother to even write,produce,hire a studio and go to all all the expense of producing their product.
You can hide behind all the semantics,complaints about high powered music producers asking too much and copyright lasting until the 100th generation as much as you like what you are advocating is just plain wrong.
It's no better than shoplifting.Yes lets not give it the romantic appellation of piracy. Let's just call it digital shoplifting.
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The point is you was using a point which probably has little affect on how well they do. Torrents and the like probably help the small artists as its free publicity and distribution which in turn will help them fill up tour events.
Some new bands who have decided to remove the publishers from the loop actually give away their music and live of donations and tour events.
One of the big rappers from the USA even said to the media he doesnt care about piracy it spreads his music.
In my view its wrong by law (to share) but I dont see a major moral issue with it. A far bigger moral issue is how the record industry go about their business.
What is evident tho is those defending the record industry have to resort to use words like "stealing" theft" which arent applicable and then pretend its the artists been affected when its actually not. Then the RIAA start claiming every download is a lost sale, the whole thing has no credibility. The fact is piracy has always existed, its part of the business, and it will never go away, cant deal with it? then leave the business, its life. It isn tsomething that was born with the internet, I used to pirate the entire top 40 every week in the 80s. Remember these are the same guys that said the VHS recorder would kill the tv/movie industry.