On 2004-05-17 07:30, hubird wrote:
easy said, Jan, but explain me how you'd protect the music writers rights, our rights then.
I know the music industry does it just for their own, but a copy protection system is also good for musicion's rights, and is good for the more interesting types of music, because the more small a selling rate is the more important is a copy protection system.
OT, and just my 2 €cents
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: hubird on 2004-05-17 07:31 ]</font>
(The rights of the musicians? What about the ludicrous 9% of revenue the musicians get? They creat the product and get only 9%?!)
Every copy-protection can be cracked. The hackers love challenges. You still can find every song in the internet for free. So only the honest customers suffers from the copy protection. In the end it will deter many customers to buy CDs.
How to protect the rights? Hm, first the industry has to face the true reasons why their revenue declining. It's not because of the internet, it's because they were to greedy. They invested in on-hit-wonder-products like Superstar (Super Idol) and Starsearch. This brings a lot of money, but not in a long run. Also they concentrate on a target group which is easy to manipulate, but also has not so much money. Teenager (and children) have no other chance then to download the popular music, if they want to keep up with the trend. And if they wouldnt get the chance to download, they regardless wouldn't buy the CDs. So it's not true, that the industry lost money for EVERY song they downloaded.
Another problem is the radio. The most stations only play the Top10 in an endless loop. So people who like this music don't need to buy the CDs, they just have to turn on the radio (lucky guys

).
So the main problem are the managers of the music-industry. They only interested in money, they doesn't give a damn to the music. Most of them only listen to music, when they beguile a female vocalist
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: Jan Nolte on 2004-05-17 15:07 ]</font>