Latest Business Model For Record Labels: Get Paid For Giving Consumers Rights They Already Have
from the go-away dept
There's been all sorts of talk in the press lately about the future of the music business, stemming from the big MIDEM conference in France. The big talk seems to be about how labels are "reconsidering" or "rethinking" their use of DRM, but apart from some very limited experiments, it really doesn't look like much is happening, and certainly not to the degree that some stories would lead readers to believe. Another story today talks up the idea of a "global license fee", which ISPs would pay to record labels -- for some unclear reason. The IHT says that by paying the fee, consumers "could get the right to copy the music we own digitally and move it among our various music players", but that's something fair use already allows, and it doesn't spell out any other benefits for consumers, or anybody other than the labels for the fee, and points to Microsoft's deal to give Universal a cut from Zune sales as one model. As we pointed out when that deal was announced, there's no indication of exactly why Microsoft should pay up, and what it (or indeed its customers) get in return. Sense a pattern here? Faced with falling sales, it sounds like the record labels are trying to develop a new revenue stream by getting paid for no good reason. Of course, to them, fair use doesn't exist, so they act like allowing consumers to have it is something worth paying for -- much how similar copyright levies in Europe must be paid to cover copying that's already legal. If the labels want to institute a global license fee, and in exchange, allow file-sharing, perhaps that's worth talking about. But instituting the license fee and not giving anything in return just sounds like a new wrinkle on the "get people to pay for the same stuff over and over" business model big content loves.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Commie pinkos
This is communism. Without the collective ownership bit.
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Should Britney Spears Sue This 6-year-old?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lrMZXTaFkUI
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allofmp3.com
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Why even bother making music?
But they've proven to be very adept at suing people, so why don't they just stop producing "music" and start suing full-time? $150,000 per work is much better than the 60-70 cents per track from Apple -- talk about "maximizing shareholder value" and "ensuring artists are fairly compensated."
In fact I think I'm going to patent/trademark/copyright/get a papal blessing for that business model.
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RIAA site endorsing fair use
From 'Ask the RIAA'. Link: http://www.riaa.com/issues/ask/default.asp#stand
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So what's the difference?
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and the WTO is still going further
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Mega Music
Maybe one day the artists will begin to understand that it is not the consumers that screw them, but the mega labels. A site that allows the artist to sell digital copies of their music, without restriction, would be a fine first step. The artists would be compensated for their works, and the record labels would be where they belong, out of business.
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Just say no to DRM.
I have eschewed Windows XP because of WPA, WGA, DRM and other odious TLAs - in favor of a combination of Windows 2000, 98 (for games machines) and Linux - for precisely the same reason.
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