Is The UK Turning The Policing Of File-Sharing Over To The Copyright Cartel?
from the inmates,-asylum,-etc. dept
The UK released its "Digital Britain" report a couple of months ago, and it was derided not just because it was very vague, but also because it caved to the interests of the recording industry. The extent to which that's the case is slightly staggering. The British government has now released some details on part of the plan that would create a "Digital Rights Agency" -- a government-backed industry body to tackle file-sharing. The government says that the group wouldn't have any enforcement power, but that it could be "backed up by legislation." That sounds an awful lot like giving the copyright cartel the ability to set the rules on what people can do online, which will certainly only benefit them, and not the public -- just in case you wondered whose "rights" a Digital Rights Agency would seek to protect. The justification for such an approach is pretty appalling. The report says that consumers' attitudes towards content has changed, and that they're not willing to accept limitations on how and where they access it. Smart businesses would see this as an opportunity to change their business model and create new products and services that fit consumers' changing attitudes. But instead, the likes of the recording industry go looking to government to get a legal stick with which to beat customers to fit their outmoded business models.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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Filed Under: file sharing, music, recording industry, uk
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Re:
Democracy didn't fall to the need to compete industrially (as was always predicted and feared), no, no such luck... democracy fell because we had too much time and money. So much excess time and money that we placed a higher value on entertainment than anything else.
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The business angle is missing
A digital rights agency isn't a bad idea if its going to try and mediate between all the interested parties and find a real way forward. That way maybe issues such as those between the PRS and Google could be avoided.
But if its just going to be a '3 strikes' system in different cloths...what's that point in that?
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Not the main problem
The recording industry wants to return to a model where they sell teenagers albums at $15 each. I work with teenagers and young college students, and I can see that is not going to happen. People don't realize how different this generation is from previous ones. Today's young people are not going to put nearly as much money into music as they used to.
I think the recording industry has moved a little bit. They might be realizing that selling individual tracks at $1 - $2 each with essentially no marginal cost would allow them to rake in the same amounts of money they used to make. However, their model still involves the assumption that they control the channels for music distribution and promotion, and that genie is going to be the one that is very hard to keep in the bottle.
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Legal Alternatives
I'll admit I still occasionally download songs from thepiratebay.org but I first check those other sites.
Let the free market decide!
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Re: Legal Alternatives
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Progress
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