Comments on: RIAA marks one year of college threat-letter drive
The recording industry has now sent more than 5,400 letters accusing college students nationwide of downloading music files illegally, including a new wave this week.
The recording industry has now sent more than 5,400 letters accusing college students nationwide of downloading music files illegally, including a new wave this week.
Web sites launch all the time, but they also shut their doors. We highlight 15 that bit the dust this year.
Let the debate begin: Was the iPhone more important than iTunes? Was anything bigger than Google finding a great business model? CNET offers its list of the 10 most important stories of the '00s.
Recent posts on technology, trends, and more.
Add this feed to your online news reader
day these idiots running the RIAA will be
unemployed and wondering why. I firmly believe
they really do not have a clue when it comes to
digital music downloads.
There is a proposal in the works here in Canada where anyone with a high-speed internet connection will be charged $5 per month whether or not you download music. Unlimited legal downloads! It is expected that the music industry will more than make up for lost sales from this revenue. Maybe the RIAA should lobby for something like that instead of suing single mothers and students. Those lawsuits only make them look greedy. In Canada, we have also been paying a small tax on each blank tape or CD for many years now. Is that the case in the US?
A perfect point you made is your friend who had two walls stacked to the wall with milk crates full of albums.
Should he buy them all over again?
Heck no, I agree with you that he should NOT. But have you seen the RIAA or anybody in the entertainment industry make any options available to him to get updated media (this goes for video also)? No, they would rather see your friend spend God knows how many thousands of dollars MORE to purchase everything on the latest media.
How many of us have been stuck with worthless (only in terms of technology) 45's and LP's, 8-tracks, cassettes, etc., because of "new technology"?
These guys are double and triple and dipping.
Where as I do NOT condone downloading music in this way, simply because it's illegal (and I will NOT do it), at the same time I consider it criminal on the part of the entertainment industry for not providing a legitimate method for people to get newer style media for a REASONABLE price as opposed to purchasing everything over again.
Yet we hear next to NOTHING about this angle.
I will no longer puchase new music for myself. I'm content with the boatloads of CDs I purchased when I was younger. If, by chance, the RIAA and their members miss my business, they have themselves to thank - it's my way of protesting their greedy policies, which MAINLY revolve around them using new technology/formats as an excuse to sell the same "intellectual property" multiple times to the same people.
Charles R. Whealton
Charles Whealton @ pleasedontspam.com
I wonder.......
If it's under the parents roof/household, aren't they responsible for the music being illegally downloaded/obtained??
Too bad each of those houses can't be examined closely without probable cause. I'm sure the employees wouldn't be employees anymore. heh
- Where's the money?
- by SethBr February 28, 2008 2:33 PM PST
- So, of all the money the RIAA has extorted from people for filesharing, how much has been paid to the artists (you know, the people the RIAA claims it's protecting)?
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
(16 Comments)<fx>crickets chirping</fx>