Version: 2008
  • On CHOW: Why are shopping carts so hard to steer?

Comments on: Public radio: No Webcast changes for us for now

National Public Radio and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting say they expect no disruptions in their music streams thanks to a temporary agreement with the music industry over elevated fees set to kick in Sunday.

Add a Comment (Log in or register) (9 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
Internet radio fees
by baldguy61 July 14, 2007 9:10 AM PDT
What about the stations that have no music content? Why should they have to pay fees to the music industry? It appears to me that this is just one more example of how the US government is bound and determined to make US industry, in this case the internet radio industry, non-competitive. After all, if I want music, it is just as easy to tune to an offshore station, and they do not have to pay any royalties to these vultures at all.
Reply to this comment
Music
by paulsecic July 14, 2007 10:21 AM PDT
STOP BUYING IT. Listen to your local stations.
View all 2 replies
To Broadcast...or NOT to Broadcast
by `WarpKat July 14, 2007 10:53 AM PDT
One of the things that strikes me as odd is the fact that...streaming audio is a product of innovation of the internet. That 'innovation,' as we can see, is becoming stifled as more and more non-technological businesses (read: SoundExchange, internet marketers, Pfizer) try to take control of it and make the rules of what you can and can't do with it.

It's a sad period for the history of the internet when it used to be full of research, development, meaningful communications, and overall common sense.

Nowadays it's just a giant 'rent me' or 'buy me' space for zillions of billboards and I think I can liken this to any highway going into Las Vegas - the desert used to be a beautiful place until Wayne Newton and Carrot Top started popping up along the way.

Back to the topic at hand: SoundExchange has zero authority as far as I'm concerned to try and collect fees from public radio stations that do not broadcast any copyrighted material, even anything that is allowed by the original copyright holder. If I make an audio file that I want to post for free use on the internet, as long as the broadcaster is in agreement to cite the source, I have no problem letting it go. I don't want/require/need/desire SoundExchange going after money I'll never see.

That's like me trying to sell fruit on a public street corner and a guy in a silk suit telling me I need to pay a 'tax' to him and his boss or I risk losing more than just my business.

There are a few words to describe what is happening and they all imply organized crime mentality:

- Extortion.
- Racket.
- Blackmail.
- Swindle.
- Theft.
- Strong arm.
- Bleed.
- Intimidate.
- Muscle.

The sad part of this is that the United States Government, who is supposed to be for the people, by the people, is turning a blind eye to the people who just want to exercise their first amendment rights in the most inexpensive means possible.

If that's the case, then I want Hugo Chavez for president. At least you know where he stands.
Reply to this comment
whats the dirference
by CNET BITES July 14, 2007 2:31 PM PDT
between georgie boy and hugo. Both are criminalistic but-munchung ***** idiots. we know exactly where georgie boy stands, he stands directly on the us constitution and wants to stomp it into the dirt so it can never be legible again.
FM Radio Stations
by seidolce1960 July 15, 2007 5:49 AM PDT
Ann -- nice story. Do you remember the idea of Payola? Do FM
radio stations have to pay a royalty now?

David Longstreet
www.SoftwareMetrics.Com
Reply to this comment
Parasite VS symbiote.
by ralfthedog July 15, 2007 12:47 PM PDT
SoundExchange, I am quite sure, thinks that they provide a valuable service to the community. Most of the community see SoundExchange as a blood sucking leech. Lets try an experiment to see who is right.

Let internet radio stations choose to sign up with SoundExchange and play major label music, or let them play only independent music from bands that have opted out of SoundExchange.

If the net stations and bands that fall into the SoundExchange camp do better, we know that SoundExchange is a useful symbiote. If not they are just another Parasite.
Reply to this comment
You're kidding, right?
by enovikoff July 15, 2007 6:36 PM PDT
Local radio, at least in the big markets like the San Francisco Bay Area where I live, is completely controlled my media conglomerates that are part of the system that's trying to squeeze internet radio out of existence. In other words, the local radio stations WANT you to stop listening to internet radio so you can be stuffed full of their repetitive, uninventive, top-40 which they think is the only way to make money from broadcasting.

If you've ever listened to internet radion, which it appears you haven't, then you'd know that it offers the joy of discovery of new music, artists, and ideas that our government and big corporations don't want you to have access to. This is also why they're after file sharing as strongly as they are: it's their way or no way - they just can't imagine anything else.

Ultimately the culprit is our capitalistic system: in a competitive market, you can't post the double-digit growth that attracts high stock prices and hence investors unless you buy up all the competition, and then you're left stuck trying to maintain your market share at all costs by preventing any competition. If the government doesn't regulate capitalism, you get oligarchy which is a lesson from the 1800s which apparently has been lost as W and his Supreme Crock tries to take care of his Fortune 500 CEO friends and nobody else.
Reply to this comment
(9 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
advertisement

E-readers' next chapter--no happy ending?

There were plenty of e-book readers on display at CES 2010, but many question whether the market for such dedicated devices can support all the new entrants.
• Photos: E-readers at CES 2010

Inside the world's long-lost first microcomputer

Vintage computer historians have long revered the Altair 8800. As it turns out, an unknown computer project at Sacramento State beat the Altair by three years.
• Images: The first microcomputers

About News Blog

Recent posts on technology, trends, and more.

Add this feed to your online news reader

advertisement
advertisement