Select Committees are part of the legislature. Minor point as I'm sure the Home Office has an even worse opinion of social media - they're just not as grandstanding about it.
You need to be covered by a valid TV Licence if you watch or record TV as it's being broadcast. This includes the use of devices such as a computer, laptop, mobile phone or DVD/video recorder.
Basically if you watch or record anything live ever you need a TV licence.
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: A question for those claiming scalpers are providing a valuable service here:
"When the people staging the show receive the money actually matters very little, as if something is guaranteed to sell out, it doesn't matter if it happens now or later, especially with a limited good like ticket sales."
Really? If they're paying for staging the show with the ticket sales I'd say it matters a great deal when they get the money.
Re: Re: Re: A question for those claiming scalpers are providing a valuable service here:
There is more that one type of risk. In cases where shows are all but guaranteed to sell out, the unknown factor is time. In most cases the stagers will want to sell out straight away. That way they have the money, they have their profit and the money required to stage the show. All months before the show will take place. As far as the stagers are concerned that is a good deal.
Time is also the factor for the people buying the tickets. They might not have enough time to queue/wait on the phone/sit hitting reload to buy the tickets from the official seller. They might not know at release if they'll be able to attend a show in six months. These people a willing to pay a premium to buy their tickets later.
The stagers don't want to have to deal with people who buy tickets on release but then find they cannot attend the event - it represents an extra cost. Scalpers also pay a role here, they'll buy those tickets (or those people will become "scalper" themselves).
I would like to note that I am note arguing against what Loius CK is doing. I am arguing against the position that scalpers (resellers) have no role to play.
Re: A question for those claiming scalpers are providing a valuable service here:
The people staging the events generally want them to sell out. The events will take place months after the tickets first go on sale and the stagers will want to have recouped their costs as soon as possible. Scalpers are absorbing that time risk themselves.
Scalpers also provide a good pricing indicator. If tickets are priced too high scalpers won't buy them (and likely neither will fans). If they're priced too low then scalpers will be making huge margins.
Personally, I believe more experiments need to be made with ticket auctioning. For example, if a ticket reseller (scalper) were allowed to bulk buy tickets (thereby absorbing the risk) and then auction them all at once (in Kickstarter stylus manner).
It is important to note that the scalper in the above example is a risk absorbing middle man. If the artist is willing to take on the risk then that middle man can be bypassed.
Indeed, this is another area where labels can have a future.
You're right there is a big problem with online retailers providing no close up shots of phones and tablets prior to purchase. On top of that, if you tried to buy one in a good-old-fashioned bricks-and-mortar shop, you would absolutely not, in no circumstances, be allowed to examine one closely first.
NO-ONE KNOWS WHAT THEY'VE BOUGHT UNTIL THEY GET IT HOME!
Considering the likely result of the Levenson inquiry is full scale regulation of the press, I find it a little difficult to be hopeful about anything arising from it.
Now the SNP has finally secured a referendum for Scottish independence, they are being pressured to explain their policies on, well, everything. Peter Wishart MP (SNP) has likely been told to pick a side, any side, so SNP can show they have thought about both copyright and the internet.
Google made its money and gained its power by supplying a superior product and not relying on government protection. Google relied entirely on the market (i.e. giving the customer what they want).
For the last thirty years Hollywood has made its money by asking the government to protect and enforce its business model. They have no confidence in their product to they use force to get people to buy it. They gave up on the market and demanded a government enforced (and, therefore, artificial) monopoly.
The public decided that Google was in the public interest.
The government is not asking you to hand over some specific documents with respect to a specific case, it is asking you to handover every document you have with respect to your entire life.
On the post: UK Gov't Report: Facebook, Twitter, And Google Are Pretty Much Unrepentant Terrorist Supporters
Legislature not Executive
On the post: The Need For Deep Pockets And Lawyers Means The FOIA Process Benefits Corporations The Most
Re: Make it a performance goal tied to budget
On the post: Copyright Industry Keeps Asking For More In Australia: VPN Ban Next?
Re: Re: Re:
Basically if you watch or record anything live ever you need a TV licence.
On the post: Copyright Industry Keeps Asking For More In Australia: VPN Ban Next?
Re:
The BBC don't do "reasonable".
On the post: Facebook's Updated Privacy Policy Breaches EU Law, Belgian Study Claims; Other Countries Investigating
Look over there!
What personal data has the government collected?
Answer:
Facebook collects huge amounts of personal data!
On the post: King Backs Off Ridiculously Broad 'Candy' Trademark, Will Still Be Obnoxious In Other Ways
Monarchs around the world unite!
On the post: People Who Got Shorter Sentences Than Bradley Manning: Spies Selling Secrets To Russians & Active Terrorists
The UK and Great Britain?
Great Britain on the other hand could have differing laws to other parts of the UK i.e. Northern Ireland.
On the post: Switzerland Questions Crazy Hollywood Claims About File Sharing... Ends Up On Congressional Watchlist
On the post: Louis CK's Direct Tour Sales: Over $6 Million In 1 Week, Scalping Drops From 25% To Below 1%
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: A question for those claiming scalpers are providing a valuable service here:
Really? If they're paying for staging the show with the ticket sales I'd say it matters a great deal when they get the money.
On the post: Louis CK's Direct Tour Sales: Over $6 Million In 1 Week, Scalping Drops From 25% To Below 1%
Re: Re: Re: A question for those claiming scalpers are providing a valuable service here:
Time is also the factor for the people buying the tickets. They might not have enough time to queue/wait on the phone/sit hitting reload to buy the tickets from the official seller. They might not know at release if they'll be able to attend a show in six months. These people a willing to pay a premium to buy their tickets later.
The stagers don't want to have to deal with people who buy tickets on release but then find they cannot attend the event - it represents an extra cost. Scalpers also pay a role here, they'll buy those tickets (or those people will become "scalper" themselves).
I would like to note that I am note arguing against what Loius CK is doing. I am arguing against the position that scalpers (resellers) have no role to play.
On the post: Louis CK's Direct Tour Sales: Over $6 Million In 1 Week, Scalping Drops From 25% To Below 1%
Re: A question for those claiming scalpers are providing a valuable service here:
Scalpers also provide a good pricing indicator. If tickets are priced too high scalpers won't buy them (and likely neither will fans). If they're priced too low then scalpers will be making huge margins.
A good article on this is: http://mises.org/daily/3888.
Personally, I believe more experiments need to be made with ticket auctioning. For example, if a ticket reseller (scalper) were allowed to bulk buy tickets (thereby absorbing the risk) and then auction them all at once (in Kickstarter stylus manner).
It is important to note that the scalper in the above example is a risk absorbing middle man. If the artist is willing to take on the risk then that middle man can be bypassed.
Indeed, this is another area where labels can have a future.
On the post: Dear Judge Koh: Competition Is No Reason To Ban A Phone
Re: Re: Re: H8ers Need to Eat Some Apple Pi
NO-ONE KNOWS WHAT THEY'VE BOUGHT UNTIL THEY GET IT HOME!
SOMETHING MUST BE DONE!
On the post: Transparency Double Standard: UK Public Inquiry Requests Info From Wikileaks
Not Hopeful
On the post: Two Contradictory Paths In The UK When It Comes To Copyright Issues
SNP Positioning Prior to Referendum
On the post: More Details Emerge On Questionable UK Seizure Of Music Blog
SOCA, SFO and the Right to Remain Silent
On the post: UK Now Seizing Music Blogs (With American Domains) Over Copyright Claims
SOCA not SFO?
What the hell is the Serious Fraud Office for then?
On the post: When Judges Are Determining Whether Or Not Art Should Exist... We Have A Problem
Re: Re: Re:
On the post: Public Interest Groups Speak Out About Next Week's Secret Meeting In Hollywood To Negotiate TPP (Think International SOPA)
Re: Are they really in the public's interest?
For the last thirty years Hollywood has made its money by asking the government to protect and enforce its business model. They have no confidence in their product to they use force to get people to buy it. They gave up on the market and demanded a government enforced (and, therefore, artificial) monopoly.
The public decided that Google was in the public interest.
On the post: Judge Says Americans Can Be Forced To Decrypt Laptops
Re:
See the difference now?
On the post: What Is ACTA And Why Is It A Problem?
Re:
To think, your ancestor's fought a war of independence so you would never again be royally buggered.
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