The big "industry v/s end-consumer"-trial of the The Pirate Bay-guys began yesterday.
BBC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7892073.stm
-and has already been watered down:
BBC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7895026.stm
The industry knows that even if they succeed in shutting down one torrent server there are still hundreds running and the only winners will be the lawyers. Yet they persist.
Why?
Here's an idea, probably horrific to some of you though, why don't we just pull the whole copyright thing out of the laws? - Let 'the tax-man' pay decent artists decent wages? (let public interest in acquiring the work be the measure of just how high wages the artists get).
It would mean thinking outside the proverbial box of course, but just think of all the resources that could be saved (and I'm not only thinking of court-time here), and how much easier it would be to 'make it' as an artist (put it on the web, and if anyone is interested the download will begin and the check would be in the mail), think of all the 'let's teach some bimbos to dance and call them a band'-pop music that never would be anymore, the diversity of garage-bands that would actually 'get a chance' instead…
Sure, It wouldn't be an easy transition (all the freeloaders in the industry would of course fight it) but I believe it a possible, even desirable, if a somewhat utopic one.
Your thoughts welcomed!
(But, please observe the T-BBS policy of not enabling your fellow posters in criminal behavior: do not exchange information on how to break whatever copyright laws might exist)
____________
Just BTW: look here: Legal threats against The Pirate Bay. For a list of how TPB usually deals with lawyers and the like.
Some of it a bit infantile (DreamWorks), some of it hilarious (White Stripes / WEB SHERIFF).
BBC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7892073.stm
-and has already been watered down:
BBC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7895026.stm
The industry knows that even if they succeed in shutting down one torrent server there are still hundreds running and the only winners will be the lawyers. Yet they persist.
Why?
Here's an idea, probably horrific to some of you though, why don't we just pull the whole copyright thing out of the laws? - Let 'the tax-man' pay decent artists decent wages? (let public interest in acquiring the work be the measure of just how high wages the artists get).
It would mean thinking outside the proverbial box of course, but just think of all the resources that could be saved (and I'm not only thinking of court-time here), and how much easier it would be to 'make it' as an artist (put it on the web, and if anyone is interested the download will begin and the check would be in the mail), think of all the 'let's teach some bimbos to dance and call them a band'-pop music that never would be anymore, the diversity of garage-bands that would actually 'get a chance' instead…
Sure, It wouldn't be an easy transition (all the freeloaders in the industry would of course fight it) but I believe it a possible, even desirable, if a somewhat utopic one.
Your thoughts welcomed!
(But, please observe the T-BBS policy of not enabling your fellow posters in criminal behavior: do not exchange information on how to break whatever copyright laws might exist)
____________
Just BTW: look here: Legal threats against The Pirate Bay. For a list of how TPB usually deals with lawyers and the like.
Some of it a bit infantile (DreamWorks), some of it hilarious (White Stripes / WEB SHERIFF).