I'm not saying your wrong, but I think your theory drastically overestimates the number of adults that have an interest in child pornography. He would be severely limiting his target audience that way.
Interesting. I'd rather they not have a school paper than one in which the First Amendment rights of students are violated. Were this a private school or even a professional news company, then the owners/publishers would be able to publish what they like without violating anyone's rights. However, this is a public school, and therefor a government run institution. When they say that students cannot publish an article as is, they are engaging in government funded censorship.
No, I'd say Mike is "do as I do." The things he produces that have no marginal cost (techdirt) are given away for free. This is then used to sell other things, such as company analysis and guidance as well as time that he spends as a speaker.
To apply this to music, as you did, would be to give the music away and charge for the t-shirts and concerts.
Re: Nestle's Kit Kat Bars Give Consumers An RtB In Japan
Not according to the rules of English I learned. When using acronyms, the choice of indefinite article is determined by the sound of pronouncing the first letter.
@: Everyone who says "Band X isn't on Rhapsody so therefore it is not unlimited.
Suppose you went to an "All-you-can-eat" buffet. When you get up to the buffet counter you notice they don't have spaghetti, and that's what you wanted. Does that make them NOT "All-you-can-eat". That's ridiculous. The unlimited services are unlimited in how much of their stuff you can download with your paid subscription.
How would you know that it was even put on there by the police unless you saw them doing it? Maybe you found a GPS device and thought you were being setup by that TV show Cheaters or something.
I wasn't going to be as harsh as Luci here, but I do wonder what an artist should do if they don't want their shows to be "exclusive" events catering only to the top 5% (by income) of their fans. Your solution for ridding the world of scalpers is basically to remove a secondary market by pricing the item at a price that will still sell out, but which only a select group can afford. This limits an artists outreach severely.
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To apply this to music, as you did, would be to give the music away and charge for the t-shirts and concerts.
On the post: Nestle's Kit Kat Bars Give Consumers An RtB In Japan
Re: Nestle's Kit Kat Bars Give Consumers An RtB In Japan
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Virtually Unlimited
Suppose you went to an "All-you-can-eat" buffet. When you get up to the buffet counter you notice they don't have spaghetti, and that's what you wanted. Does that make them NOT "All-you-can-eat". That's ridiculous. The unlimited services are unlimited in how much of their stuff you can download with your paid subscription.
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On the post: Ticketmaster Trying To Cut Down On Scalpers... Or Increase Fee Collection For Itself?
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