Software Industry Slams Digital Britain Report For Protecting Music Industry Interests
from the and-not-software-industry-interests-as-well dept
At first, this sounded like a good thing: a software industry group slammed the Digital Britain report that came out recently for basically caving to recording industry interests, noting that it was just that industry using its lobbying power to try to prop up a failed business model. Indeed! Except... then you look at the details and it's not as impressive. The software group is the Federation Against Software Theft and Investors in Software (FAST IiS), which should already have you scratching your head... and then the details show that basically they're not upset about propping up a failed business model, they just wish it also propped up their own failed business model:"All digital content is equal before the law and so too should be all digital industries. A piecemeal approach will confuse digital consumers, both the public and businesses, will muddy the legal framework and will therefore ultimately impede Britain's success in the new digital economy of the twenty-first century."Yes, it's awful that the plan basically tries to prop up one industry -- but why should it need to prop up two industries with failed business models?
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Filed Under: digital britain, music, protectionism, software, uk
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The software industry is booming, not failing
Software wants to be able to stop pirates like the music industry has just secured with ISPs and the government's Memorandum of Understanding.
Software is not looking for a handout at all.
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got it wrong
They talked to the bbc about how the software industry found new ways to work in the new markets, yet the music industry hasn't.
I don't see them saying they want the protection of government.
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It's because..
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Um...
"“The entertainment sector appear to have lobbied the Government to consider establishing a ‘pirates tax’ on all of us as well as yet another quango to oversee it, meaning more cost, and more hassle," said FAST IiS chief executive John Lovelock."
""I think it’s time that [the entertainment] industries came up to speed in the modern market and changed their business models to encourage their customers to use the internet for their purchasing," he said."
Both copied directly from the linked to article.
I don't have a link to the entire statement, so I may be missing an important part.
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position of it industries
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