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SilverSurfer1

join:2007-08-19

reply to Nightfall

Re: Anyone ever heard of Poor Talent and Overhype and OverPriced

said by Nightfall:

2 wrongs don't make a right. The rampant copyright infringement going on is not the answer. A boycott of the product is.
Which is a beautiful theory, but this is the market we're talking about, and, the market has ways of correcting itself. We are seing that consumers will choose convenience and risk alleged copyright infringment if necessary in order to satisfy demand. Boycotting never resolves anything. Companies laugh at boycotts. There is no leverage whatSOever over them to change their outdated business model.


Nightfall
My Goal Is To Deny Yours
Premium,MVM
join:2001-08-03
Grand Rapids, MI
Reviews:
·Site5.com
·Comcast
·Callcentric

said by SilverSurfer1:

said by Nightfall:

2 wrongs don't make a right. The rampant copyright infringement going on is not the answer. A boycott of the product is.
Which is a beautiful theory, but this is the market we're talking about, and, the market has ways of correcting itself. We are seing that consumers will choose convenience and risk alleged copyright infringment if necessary in order to satisfy demand. Boycotting never resolves anything. Companies laugh at boycotts. There is no leverage whatSOever over them to change their outdated business model.
Thats because the boycotts are done half assed. If the product is that crappy, then it should be easy to boycott it. Instead, we have a bunch of two faced liars who say the music on the radio is nothing but crap....but they freely share files anyway.

Customers choose convenience and a free product, and its a easy choice to make. In my opinion, not the right choice, but thats just what I believe.


mbnt

join:2002-06-22
Clifton, NJ

Bono, like the rest of the music industry, is smoking way too much craCk to notice anything real and substantial.
--
“Unless you've seen KISS live, you don't understand the band.” —Paul Stanley, KISS. (2003).


SilverSurfer1

join:2007-08-19

reply to Nightfall

said by Nightfall:

Customers choose convenience [...]
I would agree with you on this count because it is about convenience, a demand the record companies have been ignoring since 1999. As to your allegations of two faced liars saying one thing and doing something completely different, I would also add freedom from DRM. The P2P clients are just filling consumer demands -convenience + DRM-free music- two items the RIAA has chosen and continues to ignore to its own financial peril.


Nightfall
My Goal Is To Deny Yours
Premium,MVM
join:2001-08-03
Grand Rapids, MI
Reviews:
·Site5.com
·Comcast
·Callcentric

1 edit

said by SilverSurfer1:

said by Nightfall:

Customers choose convenience [...]
I would agree with you on this count because it is about convenience, a demand the record companies have been ignoring since 1999. As to your allegations of two faced liars saying one thing and doing something completely different, I would also add freedom from DRM. The P2P clients are just filling consumer demands -convenience + DRM-free music- two items the RIAA has chosen and continues to ignore to its own financial peril.
DRM really has very little do with it. In a recent study as to why people pirate, over 70% said it was about saving money. Convenience is a bigger factor than DRM at least in my mind.

You are right though, the RIAA has chosen and continues to ignore customer demands. Imagine what would have happened if they would have embraced Shawn Fanning and Napster. What if they made Napster a pay service, charged everyone .25 cents a song (no DRM and various bitrates to choose from) for the entire RIAA catalog with no DRM. IMHO, music copyright infringement wouldn't be a big issue. Instead, they fought it tooth and nail.

SilverSurfer1

join:2007-08-19

said by Nightfall:

Imagine what would have happened if they would have embraced Shawn Fanning and Napster. What if they made Napster a pay service, charged everyone .25 cents a song (no DRM and various bitrates to choose from) for the entire RIAA catalog with no DRM. IMHO, music copyright infringement wouldn't be a big issue. Instead, they fought it tooth and nail.
Absolutely. The RIAA not only missed that gravy train, but derailed it permanently.

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