T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1288.1 | Perhaps we should have DAT registration ;-) | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | MIDI DJ | Mon Mar 28 1988 17:34 | 7 |
| > [Does this imply that GM should be prevented from selling cars
> because of the threat that someone might break a law in one? -mjt]
Not that I condone the effort to stop DAT, but I might ask MJT if
he is for the abolishment of gun control for the same reasons.
db
|
1288.2 | Control this, MoFo. | IOENG::JWILLIAMS | | Mon Mar 28 1988 19:11 | 25 |
|
Boycott all recorded material until unprotected DAT is released.
Refuse to buy LP, Cassette, or CD based media until such time as
they cease and desist holding up a brilliant new technology because
they're afraid of making only $299,000 salary.
This legal stuff is such a bummer, I think I'll make my own music
from now on.
AND, REMEMBER every CD purchase you make is going to be obsolete.
The sooner we all realize this, the sooner they'll be trying to
reinstate their cash flow.
In the interest of what's fair, I consider these guys as thiefs.
They are stealing technology. I mean, what ever gave them the notion
that they were expected to provide DAT format product for these
machines? If they can't stand DAT, then they shouldn't even consider
releasing DAT material. Just don't try to keep a potentially great
recorder out of my hands because I'm going to steal some hypothetical
material that no one is forcing you to produce.
This whole thing is so unconstitutional, I am surprised it's hasn't
been flung out of court a long time ago.
John.
|
1288.3 | Ahem... | JAWS::COTE | Silicon Fusion, Silly Confusion | Tue Mar 29 1988 10:50 | 74 |
|
RE: 1288.2 IOENG::JWILLIAMS
I'm not thrilled with the fact that the record companies have held
up the release of DAT either but let's try to keep the issue
focused on the arguments presented. Getting upset and slinging
half-baked allegations about imaginary agenda items only hurts the
cause and obfuscates the issues.
> -< Control this, MoFo. >-
Insulting them won't help and only decreases the credibility of the
insulter.
> Boycott all recorded material until unprotected DAT is released.
... and you'll immediately put 100s of 1000s of people out of work
as well as effectively suppressing further artistic development. Not
to mention the fact that the royalties for legitimate sales of product
will dry up.
> Refuse to buy LP, Cassette, or CD based media until such time as
> they cease and desist holding up a brilliant new technology because
> they're afraid of making only $299,000 salary.
Please cite your source for this statement. While financial considerations
*are* the major reason for the delay, I'd like to know why you think that
protecting record company exec's salaries is a contributor. Loss of
*royalties* has been the argument. Even if their salaries are the underlying
reason, they're smarter than to advance that as an argument. Doing so
would make them all too obviously self-serving, and as such would hardly
garner the support they seek.
> This legal stuff is such a bummer, I think I'll make my own music
> from now on.
...and if the legal issues are settled are you going to stop? What's
your point?
> AND, REMEMBER every CD purchase you make is going to be obsolete.
> The sooner we all realize this, the sooner they'll be trying to
> reinstate their cash flow.
DAT will obsolete CD's the same way tapes obsoleted records. In other
words, it won't. There is no reason the 2 formats can't co-exist.
> In the interest of what's fair, I consider these guys as thiefs [sic].
I suppose you can consider them anything you want.
> They are stealing technology. I mean, what ever gave them the notion
> that they were expected to provide DAT format product for these
> machines?
I've never heard this point as being one of their arguments. What they are
worried about is the ability of DAT to make pristine copies of any media
despite 'n' generations of dubbing.
> If they can't stand DAT, then they shouldn't even consider
> releasing DAT material. Just don't try to keep a potentially great
> recorder out of my hands because I'm going to steal some hypothetical
> material that no one is forcing you to produce.
You've got 2 strings running in parallel here, one of which isn't an
issue. Which one is your point?
> This whole thing is so unconstitutional, I am surprised it's hasn't
> been flung out of court a long time ago.
The constitutionality of the issue hasn't been decided.
Edd
|
1288.4 | Sorry 'bout the flames . . . | IOENG::JWILLIAMS | | Tue Mar 29 1988 14:04 | 40 |
| I don't want to get all bogged down with defending my attitude in
the last reply. The subject ticks me off a little, and if I offended
anyone here, I apologize.
Let me explain my point. The controversy over copy protection is
very similar to what is going on in the software domain. Manufacturers
introduce inferior quality product by using copy protection and
justify this by saying that piracy costs would be passed on to the
consumer. Using this argument, then, isn't it the consumer's choice
whether or not to pay an extra 20% or so for "intellectual" property
that isn't copy protected? There are several examples of products
that better quality and are not copy protected that sell for less
because there is little incentive for piracy.
Preventing the sale of DAT recorders on the grounds that it will
encourage piracy is clearly unconsitutional. It is in fact stealing
someone else's "intellectual" property in order to defend one's
own. How about the years spent developing the DAT technology, and
the massive investment that is prevented from seeing a return? If
the incorporate a copy protection scheme, how about the loss in
quality? How about the loss in reliability ( what happens if I attempt
to record my own music that doesn't happen to have enough activity
in the notch band )? This whole mentality is seriously flawed.
I am willing to bet that if they just get on with it, sales will
be fine, and the price will even go down. Pirating with DAT will
be less than what it is currently with cassettes ( Surely you've
seen those high speed "dub" decks? ). Now, it would be crazy to
suggest that piracy wouldn't happen without copy protection, it
would be equally crazy to say that it wouldn't happen with copy
protection ( the tradeoff appears to be quality vs. security ).
The level of piracy is going to vary much more directly with the
price of the product. Maybe they still haven't figured it out.
My main point is that they end up shooting themselves in the foot.
The honest consumer ends up with inferior quality, and the dishonest
consumer has only a minor obstacle. The artist and the consumer
both lose out because the material just isn't being heard.
John.
|
1288.5 | Hi Kids, It's Soapbox Time Again | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Tue Mar 29 1988 17:19 | 70 |
| re .1 - your analogy with gun control is flawed; automobiles must
be registered before they can be driven. All most gun control
proponents want is that guns be registered, specifically so that
obvious defectives not be allowed to purchase them (any more than
obvious defectives are allowed to drive); not that they be outlawed
in general. Furthermore, it should be obvious that guns are designed
to kill, while automobiles are designed to provide transportation.
And gun buffs, spare me the "target shooting" argument. You can
still shoot registered guns at targets. And when the Commies invade
America, they'll be more likely to confiscate our typewriters, copying
machines (and DAT recorders?) and PCs than our guns.
re the subject in general:
I'm glad the NBS report exposes copycode for the hack it is. I
believe the intellectual bankruptcy of the RIAA's position can be
most easily exposed by using some simple analogies with photocopying
technology. Copycode is like *requiring* (*by law*!) copying machines
and copyrighted documents to employ technology that makes it impossible
to copy such documents. While publishers (especially magazine
publishers; copying books is impractical with today's technology)
might relish such legislation, I'm sure copier manufacturers would
protest vigorously. Some proposals have been made for paper
that fluoresces under the illuminants used in copying machines,
and printing copyrighted works on such paper. So much for the fair
use provisions of the copyright law. One can also imagine a situation
where for economic reasons, untreated paper becomes increasingly
difficult to procure, rendering it difficult to copy one's own
works.
The "one copy" notion is a little more palatable, but I don't see
why I should be limited to making one copy of a tune for my own
use. (E.g., suppose I want to copy a tune onto two or three different
compilation tapes, one for partying, one for use in the car, etc.)
Then there's the tax on blank tape. That's like taxing blank copier
paper on the assumption that most copying deprives copyright owners
of their royalties. Right.
I'm a tad sympathetic to the concerns about piracy, but as always
the best way to deal with this problem is to vigorously enforce
existing laws. If the laws are unenforceable (i.e., if it's nickel
and dime copying by teenieboppers rather than wholesale bootlegging
by professional pirates that's depriving the artists of royalties,
which I find hard to accept), then they might as well be dropped.
Trying to apply a technological fix that penalizes legitimate users
of the technology in order to stop abuse by a few defectives is
bad law. We could solve the "gun problem" once and for all by requiring
that guns don't shoot. Or how about a tax on bullets that is used
to compensate shooting victims?
The record companies made the same arguments about cassettes. They
were wrong, and not only that, cassettes have turned out to be an
important prerecorded medium. The movie industry tried the same
thing to stop VCRs. What we have here is a powerful lobby looking
for free money. It's easier to take money from blank tape and recorder
buyers than it is to produce a good product at an attractive and
competitive price.
The record companies don't care about artist royalties; the blank
tape tax will go to megasellers like Michael Jackson and Bruce
Springsteen, people who are not exactly hurting for royalties and
are probably not being copied extensively. It's the low volume
artists who'll be screwed - they're too small to be noticed by
the accounting technology and they're more likely to be copied because
of limited distribution and availability.
len.
|
1288.6 | Thoughts from the Bench... | PASTA::PICKETT | David - Andante con Mojo | Tue Mar 29 1988 17:26 | 50 |
| > Preventing the sale of DAT recorders on the grounds that it will
>encourage piracy is clearly unconsitutional.
No, it isn't. Like it or not, there are laws which are designed
to prevent certain legal acts which could lead to illegal activity.
Case 1:
Encryption of data is routine when communicating over leased channels.
There are no restrictions on encryption complexity within the US.
When you communicate over international boarders, however, the law
says that thou shall not encrypt using a key length greater than
32 bits. This renders DES useless for international traffic. The
government is assuming that, if unregulated, we would be smuggling
national secrets out of the country faster than the NSA could de-crypt
them. The government is assuming that, if givern the opportunity, the
people would break the law.
Case 2:
Posession of a gun silencer is against the law in the US. In England
it is legal for hunting purposes. The US Government is assuming
the the silencer will be use to kill people, not to make the local
rifle range quiet. We are denied access to these devices because
the government feels it will encourage illegal activity.
Case 3:
The sale of Waterpipes or 'Bongs' is illegal in some states, because
the local government feels that they will encourage the use of illegal
narcotics. Again, the government is assuming the worst within its
people. Leave us not forget that it is possible to smoke tobacco
with these things.
All these laws have stood the test of constitutionality. The law
books are loaded with examples of the doctrine: 'If given the
opportunity the common person will break the law'. A legal person
could fill in more details, my fiancee does the law work, I just
listen.
The legal issues are important to address. I feel we have a right
to a good home studio. The government may ban the sale of DATs,
and tell you, "If you want it bad enough, go shell out 60-100K dollars
(or whatever they cost) for a SONY PCM-16xx professional digital
recorder"
I'd be amazed if RIAA lets DAT live. Where can you buy a double
VCR deck in the US?? The answer is 'anywhere' in most other countries
around the world.
dp
|
1288.7 | 3" CDs and the rising sun | SRFSUP::MORRIS | Pretty maids all in a row | Tue Mar 29 1988 17:34 | 24 |
|
I agree with len that the low volume artists are the ones who are
going to get banged. If I desperately need a copy of "Thriller",
I can go to the store. If I need a copy of "The Raisins", I am
going to have to either special order a copy, or bum one off of
my friend.
DAT tapes will still probably get eaten by car DATdecks, but CDs
will stay around longer than taxes.
A new question arises since the media manufactures are now coming
out with a 3" CD. I don't know if it is a single, or what. I also
don't know if it will fit in my machine.
>>> And when the Commies invade
>>> America, they'll be more likely to confiscate our typewriters, copying
>>> machines (and DAT recorders?) and PCs than our guns.
It won't be the Commies, it will be the Japanese. Remember that
when you're playing your Roland through your SPX90 and recording
it on your Sony DAT deck.
Ashley in Smogland
|
1288.8 | 3" CD's aren't anything major. | ROLLIN::BAILEY | Steph (stef') Bailey | Tue Mar 29 1988 18:21 | 7 |
| The 3" CDs will play in ordinary players, with the use of a plastic
ring that snaps on the out side. Reminds me of those big-hole 45s.
Zappa has 3" CD currently availible.
I don't know what the maximum capacity is.
Steph
|
1288.9 | Logistics | IOENG::JWILLIAMS | | Tue Mar 29 1988 18:23 | 22 |
| The constitutionality of keeping DAT's off the market is not the
question, nor the main issue. It is the matter of DAT providing
the means to violate the "artist's" rights. You can't have it both
ways, you either violate the rights of the people who have developed
DAT, or you allow the rights of artists to be potentially violated
to some extent. My main contention is that the artist has little
to lose from DAT, that any perceived cost is passed on to the consumer
anyway, and I expect the price would actually go down.
The only ones who stand to lose something are the ones in power,
and that is what this whole mess is actually about. If I were an
artist, my priorities would be:
1) Have a copy of my material.
2) Pay for it.
For the people in power, it is the other way around. The two are
not mutually exclusive, it is only a matter of priority. The record
executives have little to lose, either, since: " The cost is passed
on to the consumer ".
John.
|
1288.10 | We've touched on one of my hot buttons | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The height of MIDIocrity | Thu Jun 02 1988 18:17 | 55 |
| re: .5
> re .1 - your analogy with gun control is flawed;
I don't see how.
My point is that if you argue that you can't regulate cars or DAT
for their potential illegal uses, I don't see how you can argue
that guns can be regulated.
Would you support regulating DAT in the way that cars and guns
are regulated?
> I'm a tad sympathetic to the concerns about piracy, but as always
> the best way to deal with this problem is to vigorously enforce
> existing laws. If the laws are unenforceable (i.e., if it's nickel
> and dime copying by teenieboppers rather than wholesale bootlegging
> by professional pirates that's depriving the artists of royalties,
Len, you've got it exactly reversed. According to what I've read,
the lost revenue from professional bootleggers doesn't amount even
to nickels and dimes. It's pennies at most. They already
have ways to make high quality tape copies and NO copy protection
scheme is gonna stop them and the RIAA knows that.
What I've read has said that the major loss comes from the casual
pirating that nearly ALL of us do: borrowing albums from friends
and taping them. Compare the number of so-"borrowed" recordings you
have seen with the number of "bootleg" copies you might imagine there
to be. Is it even close?
If I came to your house, how many of these types of pirated recordings
would I find compared with the number of professional bootlegs?
And let's not forget the context here. The context is fear of the
ability to make CD-quality copies. Have you seen many "bootleg"
CDs? I haven't seen any.
While I don't support the copycode method, I definitely do support the
idea of using regulation to protect artists royalties, which you've
clearly stated you do not.
My feeling is that artists already have too many things working against
them. It's already far too easy to steal their bread and butter, and
our society has seemingly casually condoned that. I am amazed at
the apathetic attitude exhibited even by non-professional musicians
such as Commusic and Music noters.
At least once a week I have to delete "clearing house" notes
in MUSIC that propose exchanges of recordings, sheet music, etc.
I believe that in art, you get what you pay for, and if you don't pay
for it, you don't get it.
db
|
1288.11 | open for inspection | PLDVAX::JANZEN | Tom LMO2/O23 296-5421 | Thu Jun 02 1988 18:32 | 9 |
| < Note 1288.10 by DREGS::BLICKSTEIN "The height of MIDIocrity" >
-< We've touched on one of my hot buttons >-
> If I came to your house, how many of these types of pirated recordings
> would I find compared with the number of professional bootlegs?
0 zero null none
of either
it's against the law
Tom
|
1288.12 | Cripes, I hate law. | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | Have crowbar, will travel | Thu Jun 02 1988 19:23 | 11 |
|
Likewise, there is nothing at my place that is outside of the
US Copyright statutes; "fair-use doctrine" jurisprudence included.
This is not to say that you won't find any copies of anything.
It _is_ to say that such copies are either issue of the copyright
holder, or a legitimate copy made under fair-use doctrine provisions
in the copyright law.
If we want to argue about fair-use-doctrine, etc. that's another
matter altogether. (and one not-very-germane to this NOTESfile)
|
1288.13 | Grumph. | OS2::LICHTENBERG | Mitch Lichtenberg | Thu Jun 02 1988 22:46 | 19 |
|
Same here. Anything you see on tape in my collection has a
corresponding CD on the shelf somewhere... but the tape may
not have been from *that* CD. Sure, I have made copies of discs
I didn't own, but shortly after that (usually within a week) I either
had the CD or erased the tape. (with the prices of CD's, it's a
good idea to listen to what you're getting before you buy it.
Musicians are entitled to their royalties, but I'd like the chance
to decide *before* I buy if I like the quality of their product...)
To change the subject a little: The PC industry is starting to
get 'hot' about DATs for data storage. Would DATs make good media
to store samples or sequences? The way the media talks about it,
you'd think CD roms were in trouble... but I didn't think DATs had
the random access features CD's have...
/Mitch.
|
1288.14 | Let's not deny the obvious | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The height of MIDIocrity | Fri Jun 03 1988 10:06 | 15 |
| Look I know that there are angels among us. You are also unlikely to
find any pirated tapes in my collection either. I say unlikely
because I will make copies from friends to evaluate whether the
record is worth buying for me, but if it's not I recycle the tape.
But can any of you claim that you don't know anyone who does this?
Can any of you claim that based on what you've seen, private pirating
is "nickel and dimes" compared to professional pirating? That is,
you've seen far more professional bootleg copies than personal
copies.
See, that's my point.
db
|
1288.15 | you're the only one here | PLDVAX::JANZEN | Tom LMO2/O23 296-5421 | Fri Jun 03 1988 10:10 | 22 |
| >< Note 1288.14 by DREGS::BLICKSTEIN "The height of MIDIocrity" >
> -< Let's not deny the obvious >-
>
> Look I know that there are angels among us. You are also unlikely to
> find any pirated tapes in my collection either. I say unlikely
> because I will make copies from friends to evaluate whether the
> record is worth buying for me, but if it's not I recycle the tape.
>
> But can any of you claim that you don't know anyone who does this?
You're the only person I know who does this.
>
> Can any of you claim that based on what you've seen, private pirating
> is "nickel and dimes" compared to professional pirating? That is,
> you've seen far more professional bootleg copies than personal
> copies.
>
> See, that's my point.
>
> db
>
Tom
|
1288.16 | No Tom, I am not the only one, I am sure | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The height of MIDIocrity | Fri Jun 03 1988 10:24 | 20 |
| Tom,
> You're the only one here
If you're concluding this from this note, I might question your
sample as being biased.
Who is gonna say "yeah, I pirate tapes" after such admonition?
If you want evidence of how widespread it is, I suggest you look
in the old version of MUSIC at the tape tax note. People were willing
to admit it there before the fallacies of such excuses as "well, I
wasn't going to buy it anyway" were demonstrated.
Or if you like, I will forward to you every note I delete that proposes
an exchange that proposes an exchange that violates copyright laws.
Don't stick your head in the sand.
db
|
1288.17 | In fact, it is YOU who may be alone | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The height of MIDIocrity | Fri Jun 03 1988 10:25 | 6 |
| Also Tom,
Probably anyone in here who's played in a cover band has violated
copyright laws.
db
|
1288.18 | It's only a movie... It's only a movie | NIFTY::VINSEL | she took my bowling ball too | Fri Jun 03 1988 10:36 | 5 |
| How about if we just calm down abit. I think Dave's point is valid. I
happen to aproach the issue from a different point of view, so I
disagree with him, but lets cut him a little slack.
pcv
|
1288.19 | OK, I'll 'fess up. | MENTOR::REG | Endorphins are MY recreational drugs | Fri Jun 03 1988 11:08 | 24 |
| re .10 OK, I'm guilty as charged. I don't really know what
makes me do it. It may be some combination of:-
a) Insensitivity, since I've never tried to earn a living from
music.
b) Resentment at the recording companies' profits.
c) What I observe to be common practice, especially since the advent
of tape cassettes, of course the double decks with the double speed
Dupe'ing FEATURE actually encourage me.
d) I like to share music I like with people I like. If someone
hears a CD that I have and comments on it favorably, my first
reaction is, "I'll make you a tape if you like ?", vs "It
only cost me $xx.yy at Lechmere's, they had a whole bunch of
'em last week."
None of this is defensible, I'm thinking about changing my ways.
I would guess I am in a majority, as db says, and this is where
the fears are founded. For this kind of "casual abuse" copying
I doubt that copycodes and such would be effective, cassette quality
is plenty good enough, especially for the transient pop stuff.
Reg
|
1288.20 | Sorry, I Disagree | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Fri Jun 03 1988 11:56 | 67 |
| Well, my goodness.
re .10 re .5 re .1: Your analogy with gun control remains flawed.
I have no problems registering my DAT recorder. It seems a singularly
futile gesture. A proper analogy would be for *you* to call for,
rather than just registration and licensing of guns, a tax on guns
and ammunition, to be used to compensate the victims of violent crime,
and the development of technologies that would prevent guns from being
fired at people, except perhaps by professionals (e.g., police officers).
So, yes, I suppose I could tolerate DAT recorders regulated the same
ways cars and guns are regulated (i.e., registration of ownership
and licensing for use), although we do it for cars and guns because
of the possibility of accidental (as well as deliberate) destruction
of life and property, not because of the possible denial of royalties.
It's a little hard for me to imagine the Copyright Police banging
on my door and demanding to see my recording license, though...
(Recording blocks set up after the release of new records with
spot checks at major private residences?)
I'm also not likely to kill or maim anybody with a DAT recorder,
even if I'm stupid enough to throw it at them, or if I operate it
while intoxicated. I'm also not likely to walk into a bank and
hand the teller a note saying "Give me all your cash, this recorder
is loaded and ready to deny to you royalties".
And I for one *DO NOT* copy recordings I do not own, and I do not
copy my recordings for friends, except in the very few cases where
the material in question was no longer available. I have no qualms
about the latter, as I cannot deny royalties to anyone by copying
material that can't be bought. I do in fact say, "you can buy it
at Thus and Such for $SoMany.95". And sometimes people grumble
"f**king moralist". I treat software the same way - when I gave
the guys at EUW a copy of the MRB-500 librarian so they could check
it on their Super Jupiter, I explicitly warned them "If you use
this for anything other than testing the interaction with the Jupiter,
which you are doing as my dealer, then you have bootlegged this
software". Their response: "You're a real professional, aren't
you."
Finally, the proposed mechanisms for doling out royalties from either
at DAT recorder tax, a tape tax, or registration fees (a tax) will
not have the effect you desire. It will result in money going to
the most popular artists, which may have only the most tenuous
relationship to those whose material is being bootlegged.
The argument that it is one off copying that is "killing" the recording
industry comes from, guess where, the recording industry. Of course
they're going to argue this. Who's going to bother to try to prove
otherwise. But you take the wind out of your own sails by saying
that professional bootleggers can make copies no matter what protection
scheme is developed. Why would they bother if there wasn't more
than "pennies" in it? And yes, I've seen and heard about far more
"professional" bootlegs than I have "borrowed" copies. Maybe I
don't hang around with enough teenieboppers, but it's getting
increasingly difficult at my age.
My attitude is not apathetic. I just don't want to be charged for
other people's lack of ethics. I already am by the IRS - I pay
all my taxes, and I am routinely characterized as a fool. So be
it. And I especially don't want to have new technology hobbled
or denied to me because of somebody else's (the recording industry
and bootleggers) greed. If kids can make CD quality copies
cheaper than they can buy them, why can't the recording industry?
len.
|
1288.21 | | IAMOK::CROWLEY | ere lies David St. 'ubbins, and why not! | Fri Jun 03 1988 12:08 | 21 |
|
I agree with db. I know tons of people who trade albums to
tape them. I don't do this myself, if I want an artist work,
I'd rather spend a couple of bucks extra and get the album
instead of buying a blank tape and copying it.
On the other hand, I have a small collection of bootleg records
(no flames please) and seeing how hard these have been to find,
I can't see how they can have as big an impact as the millions
of 'home pirates' out there. As a matter of fact, of all the
people I know who tape albums, I'm the only one I know who
collects bootlegs. Just in my circle of friends, alot more
royalty money has been lost from constant home taping than
from my occasional purchase of a bootleg record (not that I'm
trying to justify it, I know its wrong, but hey, I'm not an angel
either!!)
Ralph
|
1288.22 | DAT and CD - together | FREKE::LEIGH | | Fri Jun 03 1988 13:10 | 17 |
|
Sure I want to copy CDs -- my CDs to play in my car where I don't want to
put an expensive CD player to get jostled to you know where on New England
back roads.
I wonder how much illegal copying of CDs onto DAT will hurt the recording
industry. I would much prefer forking out money for a CD than a DAT
to play, as a tape is much easier detroyed, doesn't have random access,
'shuffle play', etc. etc. etc. Plus, the future holds great things for
CDs with video clips on them, data, etc. in the currently reserved
unused space on a CD.
DAT and CD should go hand in hand, not one or the other.
Chad
|
1288.23 | Michael Jackson tapes in Kuala Lumpur? | SALSA::MOELLER | Some dissembling required. | Fri Jun 03 1988 13:52 | 9 |
| re Dave, len..
>And yes, I've seen and heard about far more
>"professional" bootlegs than I have "borrowed" copies.
Hey, if it's really a 'pro' bootleg, i.e. clean audio, well-reproduced
cover, etc., HOW DO YOU KNOW ??? Home tapers are an easy target...
the hand-lettered covers are a dead giveaway.
karl
|
1288.24 | Spreading the Good Word | ORION::LAQUERRE | | Fri Jun 03 1988 14:03 | 21 |
|
I'd like to make one point. Aren't there actually some advantages
for the artists when people share and copy albums or CDs. I mean,
for instance, I once copied an album off the radio and fell in love
with the band. Since then, I have bought two albums by that band.
If I hadn't made the original copy, I probably wouldn't have known
about the band and they wouldn't have received *any* money from
me.
Same goes for books. Imagine a friend of yours is talking about a book
she read and she says, "Here, why don't you borrow it and read it?" Are
you stealing money from the author by not buying it yourself. I say no,
because if you like it, there's a good chance you'll probably buy the
next book put out by that author and tell other people how good a book
it was. It's kind of like free advertising, I suppose.
Isn't that a valid use of copying: to spread the good word about
an artist? Or is *my* argument flawed?
Peter
|
1288.25 | oh, you're SO altruistic! | COUGAR::JANZEN | Tom LMO2/O23 296-5421 | Fri Jun 03 1988 14:07 | 10 |
| The Copyright Law is not the BorrowRight Law. Borrowing books isn't
covered, as far as my habits are concerned. However, no one who
wants to keep their books loans them out.
In my own practice, I take the law to mean that I , TOm, may record
off the radio with my tape on my deck from my radio to listen to
with my ears. That's no problem for me. Maybe I misinterpret.
I agree that
publicity is publicity and plublicity helps sales.
But why put yourself at legal risk to publicize Warner Bros?
Tom
|
1288.26 | Analogesic | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The height of MIDIocrity | Fri Jun 03 1988 16:42 | 56 |
| re: .20
> A proper analogy would be for *you* to call for,
> rather than just registration and licensing of guns, a tax on guns
> and ammunition, to be used to compensate the victims of violent crime,
> and the development of technologies that would prevent guns from being
> fired at people, except perhaps by professionals (e.g., police officers).
OK, have it your way.
An analogy that almost exactly fits your description is mandated
emission control requirements in cars. The analogy seems perfect.
o Both are technologies that were invented to prevent socially
undesirable events (pollution and pirating)
o Both increase cost
o Both degrade performance
o Both are ineffective at preventing someone from deliberately
by-passing them.
> although we do it for cars and guns because
> of the possibility of accidental (as well as deliberate) destruction
> of life and property, not because of the possible denial of royalties.
The "possible denialty of royalties" might have more impact if
described as "theft". You might feel it was a little more deserved
if it kept people from robbing your pay on the way back from the bank.
If you were to lobby for such a device a device, I wonder how you'd
react to a counter argument that you make enough money already.
>The argument that it is one off copying that is "killing" the recording
> industry comes from, guess where, the recording industry. Of course
> they're going to argue this.
This is a damned if you aren't, damned if you are argument.
> But you take the wind out of your own sails by saying
> that professional bootleggers can make copies no matter what protection
> scheme is developed. Why would they bother if there wasn't more
> than "pennies" in it?
As I've said, copycode was not intended to stop professional
bootleggers and thus it clearly doesn't take the wind out of any sail
that the recording industry ever hoisted.
>And yes, I've seen and heard about far more
> "professional" bootlegs than I have "borrowed" copies.
Based on my experience, I would call this highly unusual.
db
|
1288.27 | This is a disagreement, not a fight | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The height of MIDIocrity | Fri Jun 03 1988 16:47 | 14 |
| BTW, I appreciate the "let's calm down" sentiment expressed, but it is
my impression that we are simply having a rational discussion. I have
NOT sensed that anyone is angry at me, and I am certainly not angry at
anyone who has participated.
I think as long as we continue along these lines, the discussion will
valuable, educational, and interesting. Exchanges of differing views
always are.
Although issues surrounding DAT are of course extremely important to
Commusic noters, this may not be appropriate for this conference.
If the moderator so thinks, we should move this to MUSIC.
db
|
1288.28 | Red or black? | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | The height of MIDIocrity | Fri Jun 03 1988 16:56 | 14 |
| re: .24
Peter,
Without doubt, pirating can have advantages as you've noted.
Personally, I would suspect that the general opinion of the recording
industry is that the revenue gained from it pales in comparison with
the revenue lost. And frankly, that seems intuitive to me no one
will ever be able to back that up with real data.
So I think the answer is, yes there are some benefits, but they are
overshadowed by the disadvantages.
db
|
1288.29 | solving the wrong part of the problem | CNTROL::GEORGE | | Fri Jun 03 1988 19:41 | 35 |
| There are four flavors of copying, each with a different degree
(as I see it) of moral culpability.
"I own it, but made a tape for the car" is straight fair use.
Party tapes or compilations belong here, and demos for your
cover band are pretty close.
"I borrowed it from a friend" is technically illegal. There is
some room for rationalization, however. "Out of print" seems
OK to me. "Testing an unfamiliar group" is almost OK. Like a
previous reply, if I like it I *ALWAYS* buy the record or CD
because they simply sound better than a tape. "Tapes are only
$3 and you can fit an album on each side!!" is pure, simple theft.
"A Clash bootleg from Chicago '78" is OK to a point. The artist
*SHOULD* get royalties (and many bootleg companies provide them).
The record companies can squawk, but I feel no pity. Anybody who
spends $25 for a bad pressing of a walkman recording surely already
owns everything the record company has deigned to supply by that artist.
Grateful Dead tapes are a well known, hopelessly non-commercial, example.
"Counterfeits" aren't much of a problem in the US (although I recall
something with ELO and Heart albums), but the third-world is *SWIMMING*
in them. Several Southeast-Asian and African countries have no
copyright laws and a LARGE fraction of the tapes in these areas are
fakes. I assume (not sure) the same is true of the eastern bloc.
Now look back over the list while thinking about DAT and copyguard.
You can't make car tapes (fair use). Sample-borrowing would survive,
but you're stuck with cassette. Since DAT decks and tapes are FAR
more than $3, the boombox thieves won't even care. Bootlegs won't
be affected at all. Counterfeiters customers' can't afford DAT.
So the honest (fair use) or almost-honest folks are affected. Boombox
thieves, (nice) bootleggers and counterfeiters aren't touched. Some law.
|
1288.30 | Will the real Perry Mason please stand up? | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | I will give you bodies beyond your wildest imaginings. | Mon Jun 06 1988 12:10 | 48 |
|
"I borrowed it from a friend" _is_ technically legal.
Fair Use Doctrine (as interpreted by various courts) implies that if
you manage to legally get your hands on something, you may copy it for
your own personal use. You can't sell or publically display your copy,
but you have the right to own and use that copy for your personal use
forever.
The "FBI WARNING" on VCR tapes, etc. is vacuous as long as you aren't
in the business of making and selling bootlegs or running a video movie
theatre (pay entry). It's quite legal to rent a tape for your Saturday
evening _private_ video party (not paid entry). You note that the
warnings do NOT tell you the law, they just have a badge and the
words FBI in big block letters, and then refer you to some obtuse
part of the copyright law. It's not to their advantage to tell
you your rights under that law.
(Consider: why do libraries have photocopy machines? Even the Library
of Congress, an integral part of the U.S. Copyright System, has coin-op
copiers available. Ask your local library what limit they put on their
photocopying. It's unusually simple for legalese: "We don't copy for
other than personal use. You can't sell our copies, and we won't make
copies for you if we think you're going to sell them.")
Re: Cover Bands: Cover bands can play anything they want: BUT they
cannot charge admission to see their covers performed! So, technically
cover bands cannot play covers in a venue that charges a cover charge!
:-) (but see BMI and ASCAP for permission to publically perform or
display such works, also "legal" fake books that include fee performance
licenses for all the works in the book). Again, the difference is
between private use and public sale. Fair Use allows one and disallows
the other.
Cover Demo Tapes: again, as long as they aren't performed in public
for fee, nor sold, they are fair use. Buying sheet music carries an
implied license to play said music privately. It's definitely private
if you don't admit the public and don't charge a fee (it doesn't matter
if it's live performance, sequenced, or taped). SELLING your cover
demo tape is on very shaky ground.
Plays and other live theatrical works: This is where it gets weird.
There's some question as to whether a play can be performed in public
for free admission. I recollect that it can, but I don't recall
it well enough to be sure.
Disclaimer: I'm not a lawyer, but I play one in notesfiles. :-)
|
1288.31 | Burn your library cardss!!! | TIGER::JANZEN | Tom LMO2/O23 296-5421 | Mon Jun 06 1988 12:23 | 10 |
| according to my copy of post-1976 law This Business of Music,
(cf. index under "performance fee"), although the old law allowed
non-profit no-charge performances of all types, the 1976 law allows
only church services and in-class teaching to perform protected
stuff without a fee.
If you can't borrow things, libraries will have to be closed.
Now that's something publishers could get into!
;-)
Tom
|
1288.32 | Where can I sack out???? | CTHULU::YERAZUNIS | I will give you bodies beyond your wildest imaginings. | Mon Jun 06 1988 13:49 | 10 |
| How recent is your copy?
Some other stuff changed in '84 (new copyright law- AGAIN!)
(what a mess!)
I guess it's pretty clear that the lawyers are the ones who make
the laws... :-%
-Bill
|
1288.33 | cover police | NAC::SCHUCHARD | Privileged Initials | Tue Jun 21 1988 18:30 | 12 |
|
once upon a time, ascap and bmi collected their fee's from the
club owner and never from the performer. Cover bands are not exactly
a phenom of the 60's. The only case i can think of where a cover
band MAY be liable is a "concert"...
And thanx len - every spring as i get my wife to sign old 1040,
and get called (in usually less polite terms) fool, that there's
another one out there...
bs
|