UK Overreaction To OiNK Continues
from the typical-overreaction dept
About a year ago, we noted that the IFPI had continued its totally counterproductive game of whack-a-mole and convinced UK authorities to shut down the popular private BitTorrent tracker site, OiNK. The site was quite popular -- and even Trent Reznor noted how useful it was and how it filled a void in the music space that the industry wasn't filling. However, with every whack of a mole, it was only a matter of days until plenty of alternatives sprung up.Since then, though, there's been some question about additional fallout from the closure, as authorities were arresting certain folks who used the site. While, authorities kept postponing filing actual charges, there was talk that they were going to charge them with "conspiracy to defraud the music industry," which sounds a lot like "felony interference of a business model" -- the mocking term we use whenever companies seem to think it's illegal for others to compete in their industry. And, make no mistake about it, as Reznor pointed out, OiNK was about filling a niche for music lovers, as a place to discover and learn about new music.
Well, now the other shoe has dropped, and the administrator of the site has, indeed, been charged with conspiracy to defraud while two users of the site, each of whom only uploaded a single CD, were charged with criminal copyright infringement. For a single CD upload. This all seems a bit extreme. Once again, the government is basically making criminal charges over what is really a business model issue. OiNK filled a needed void in the music industry -- one that the industry itself could fill if it wanted to. But, because it refuses to do so, that's somehow conspiracy to defraud the industry and people may go to jail for it. At some point, years from now when people recognize the promotional value of free music, they're going to look back at the industry (and authorities') overreaction to these sorts of things and shake their heads in amazement.
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Filed Under: conspiracy, copyright, oink, pre-release, recording industry, uk
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An Idea
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Wow, political leaders pursuing backwards and ineffective policies
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Okay, this one I agree with
Yes, this does differ dramatically from the GNR case because, as far as we know, the two uploaders did not obtain the music by illegally hacking the band's server and stealing it.
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I just fear
I fear for the industry.
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Minor Grammatical Nitpick.
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just admit it, it's illegal to be a music fan
and no one is defrauding the music industry. so long as people can carry a tune in a bucket, the music industry is doing fine. the recording industry is in the business of selling little plastic discs. if you think that's your market, you're boned.
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Since IFPI have achieved all they set out to achieve it's a bit of a stretch to claim it's counter productive.
In the your imaginary world maybe a number of oink replacements would spring up and make the IFPI achievements pointless. But in the real world that didn't happen - e.g count the number of people writing in about how they miss oink.
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Re:
In the your imaginary world maybe a number of oink replacements would spring up and make the IFPI achievements pointless. But in the real world that didn't happen - e.g count the number of people writing in about how they miss oink.
Just because they haven't all discovered them yet, doesn't mean they don't exist. It just means they're further underground.
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Who says I don't know about them?
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