Comments on: File swapping vs. Hollywood
Movie studios and record labels find unlikely bedfellows in Supreme Court fight against file swapping.
Movie studios and record labels find unlikely bedfellows in Supreme Court fight against file swapping.
November 29, 2009 1:19 PM PST
November 29, 2009 12:33 PM PST
November 28, 2009 3:56 PM PST
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If they get what they wanted, the radio, the tape, the CD, mp3?s, digital music, the VCR, and even TIVO would not exist because at one point ALL of these devices were seen as illegitimate.
The question of new releases:
Well, this isn't about new releases. It's about control and about keeping the "status quoe". Otherwise, Hollywood would not allow new releases on the net (and they do) and 30 year old tv seies shows on dvd would not still be $25 a disk (and some are).
Alot of companies make recording devices and the internet is the ultimate communications tool. Alot of money is being made and spent on "convergeance" bringing the television, the radio, the internet, and the telephone together into ONE device. This cannot be done without some kind of content. Whatever that content may be.
These judges, the RIAA, and the MPAA must excersise extreme caution here. This has the power to lay ALL our most treasured technologies to complete waste.....WORLD WIDE. If America is to remain in the status as a "super power", it MUST maintain technological superiority. This fight has the ability to completely destroy the superiority.
As I see it....
This is about greed, power, and control. All by groups of people that refuse to "use" this technology (perhaps due to fear) for the benifit of all man kind.
Also, the way things are now more people are hearing artist's they never heard before, which could help instead of hender the sell of music.
- DOES ANY OF THIS REALLY MATTER?
- by stephenmeyer January 27, 2005 2:31 AM PST
- Does any of this really matter?
- Like this Reply to this comment
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- I completely agree, but......
- by Prndll January 27, 2005 4:05 AM PST
- We're talking about people that are not interested in "co-existing". These people want dominance. This whole thing is a struggle for power and control. They have plenty of money and plenty of clout and are using them both.
- Like this
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(15 Comments)No matter what the courts say, the fact is that anything that can be done digitally can be undone. Hence, all efforts on the part of the RIAA, the MPAA, and any related organizations will all prove fruitless because the Pandora's box (the Internet) has been open far too long and there's no eradicating the technology that exists that allows people to download.
If there is ANY tech person out there that is reading this that can state that there will someday be a technology to prevent downloading, by all means please tell me. But every single tech person I've interviewed for the last five years has told me that no matter what will be created to stop these practices, all efforts will be temporal and undone by other tech people who know how to get around whatever "speedbumps" are placed out here in cyberspace.
Even if it were possible to shutdown every website around the world that offered film and music content, that would onlty create a host of Intranets and User groups that would continue to download anyway.
Whether it's Grokster, or any of the dozens (hundreds?) of other file-sharing websites out there that have music and film content on them, the issue should now be for the film and music industries to create new online revenue models ASAP because whether they like it or not the Internet is not going away, and neither is file-sharing/downloading. It's going to continue...and instead of wasting precious time on lawsuits and trying to find a "magic bullet" to solve the problem, the film and music industries need to realize they will have to co-exist in this new world.
If the industry thinks that thought unthinkable...then I suggest they look at iTunes and the revenue and sales Mr. Jobs and company expect to gross this year.
Online digital music sales are way up. According to the IFPI (International Federation of the Phonographic Industry), the number of legitimate online music sites rose to 230 last year, compared to 50 the year before. The catalog of music available online also doubled, to 1 million songs. The international trade organization also says that individuals in the U.S. and Europe legally downloaded over 200 million tracks last year, up from approximately 20 million in 2003. That amounts to online sales of about $330 million, or about six times 2003's take. (http://www.ifpi.org/site-content/library/digital-music-report-2005.pdf)
It's time for the film industry to realize they can reap the same rewards if they stop wasting time. Who knows...maybe Steve Jobs already has iFilms in the works.
Steve Meyer
President - Smart Marketing
Publisher - DISC&DAT - A New Media Newsletter
Las Vegas, NV 89141
E-mail: stephennmeyer@earthlink.net