And don’t forget that your Congress wants to enact laws that may make doing normal things like email on the Interwebitubes illegal, require ISPs, etc to keep records of everything you do on the web and cause ordinary people to lose access to the web for downloading a song. At least some are trying to repeal the ban in on-line gambling. Just like drug laws, prohibition doesn’t work.
An Important Message From The Global Entertainment Industry
By Uncle Dave Monday February 23, 2009
This is from The Pirate Bay who is having an interesting time being prosecuted in court this past week. Follow posts on the ongoing trial here.
0
Search
Support the Blog — Buy This Book!
For Kindle and with free ePub version. Only $9.49 Great reading. Here is what Gary Shapiro CEO of the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) said: Dvorak's writing sings with insight and clarity. Whether or not you agree with John's views, he will get you thinking and is never boring. These essays are worth the read!Twitter action
Support the Blog
Put this ad on your blog!
Syndicate
Junk Email Filter
Categories
- Animals
- Art
- Aviation
- Beer
- Business
- cars
- Children
- Column fodder
- computers
- Conspiracy Theory
- Cool Stuff
- Cranky Geeks
- crime
- Dirty Politics
- Disaster Porn
- DIY
- Douchebag
- Dvorak-Horowitz Podcast
- Ecology
- economy
- Endless War
- Extraterrestrial
- Fashion
- FeaturedVideo
- food
- FUD
- Games
- General
- General Douchery
- Global Warming
- government
- Guns
- Health Care
- Hobbies
- Human Rights
- humor
- Immigration
- international
- internet
- Internet Privacy
- Kids
- legal
- Lost Columns Archive
- media
- medical
- military
- Movies
- music
- Nanny State
- NEW WORLD ORDER
- no agenda
- OTR
- Phones
- Photography
- Police State
- Politics
- Racism
- Recipe Nook
- religion
- Research
- Reviews
- Scams
- school
- science
- Security
- Show Biz
- Society
- software
- space
- sports
- strange
- Stupid
- Swamp Gas Sightings
- Taxes
- tech
- Technology
- television
- Terrorism
- The Internet
- travel
- Video
- video games
- War on Drugs
- Whatever happened to..
- Whistling through the Graveyard
- WTF!
Pages
- (Press Release): Comes Versus Microsoft
- A Post of the Infamous “Dvorak” Video
- All Dvorak Uncensored special posting Logos
- An Audit by Another Name: An Insiders Look at Microsoft’s SAM Engagement Program
- Another Slide Show Test — Internal use
- Apple Press Photos Collection circa 1976-1985
- April Fool’s 2008
- April Fool’s 2008 redux
- Archives of Special Reports, Essays and Older Material
- Avis Coupon Codes
- Best of the Videos on Dvorak Uncensored — August 2005
- Best Videos of Dvorak Uncensored Dec. 2006
- Best Videos of Dvorak Uncensored July 2007
- Best Videos of Dvorak Uncensored Nov. 2006
- Best Videos of Dvorak Uncensored Oct. 2006
- Best Videos of Dvorak Uncensored Sept. 2006
- Budget Rental Coupons
- Commercial of the day
- Consolidated List of Video Posting services
- Contact
- Develping a Grading System for Digital Cameras
- Dvorak Uncensored LOGO Redesign Contest
- eHarmony promotional code
- Forbes Knuckles Under to Political Correctness? The Real Story Here.
- Gadget Sites
- GoDaddy promo code
- Gregg on YouTube
- Hi Tech Christmas Gift Ideas from Dvorak Uncensored
- IBM and the Seven Dwarfs — Dwarf Five: GE
- IBM and the Seven Dwarfs — Dwarf Four: Honeywell
- IBM and the Seven Dwarfs — Dwarf One: Burroughs
- IBM and the Seven Dwarfs — Dwarf Seven: NCR
- IBM and the Seven Dwarfs — Dwarf Six: RCA
- IBM and the Seven Dwarfs — Dwarf Three: Control-Data
- IBM and the Seven Dwarfs — Dwarf Two: Sperry-Rand
- Important Wash State Cams
- LifeLock Promo Code
- Mexican Take Over Vids (archive)
- NASDAQ Podium
- No Agenda Mailing List Signup Here
- Oracle CEO Ellison’s Yacht at Tradeshow
- Quiz of the Week Answer…Goebbels, Kind of.
- Real Chicken Fricassee Recipe
- Restaurant Figueira Rubaiyat — Sao Paulo, Brasil
- silverlight test 1
- Slingbox 1
- Squarespace Coupon
- TEST 2 photos
- test of audio player
- test of Brightcove player 2
- Test of photo slide show
- test of stock quote script
- test page reuters
- test photo
- The Fairness Doctrine Page
- The GNU GPL and the American Way
- The RFID Page of Links
- translation test
- Whatever Happened to APL?
- Whatever Happened to Bubble Memory?
- Whatever Happened to CBASIC?
- Whatever Happened to Compact Disc Interactive (aka CDi)?
- Whatever Happened to Context MBA?
- Whatever Happened to Eliza?
- Whatever Happened to IBM’s TopView?
- Whatever Happened to Lotus Jazz?
- Whatever Happened to MSX Computers?
- Whatever Happened to NewWord?
- Whatever Happened to Prolog?
- Whatever Happened to the Apple III?
- Whatever Happened to the Apple Lisa?
- Whatever Happened to the First Personal Computer?
- Whatever Happened to the Gavilan Mobile Computer?
- Whatever Happened to the IBM “Stretch” Computer?
- Whatever Happened to the Intel iAPX432?
- Whatever Happened to the Texas Instruments Home Computer?
- Whatever Happened to Topview?
- Whatever Happened to Wordstar?
- Wolfram Alpha Can Create Nifty Reports
Of course, downloads — legal or not — are killing the Music Industry. The Music Industry is an archaic leftover from times past.
With the ability of artists to record their own music in their basement that rivals what can be produced in multi-million dollar studios (assuming they have talent) and the ability to sell music through iTunes and other outlets, who needs the Music Industry?
The only reason it still exists at all is because not everyone has switched over to digital downloads. Lots of the less-technical still buy CDs. When that market finally dies off in, to pick a timeframe, 10 years, again, who needs the Music Industry?
Downloading killed music industry, not the music.
Anyone who is crying for the fat pigs RIAA/MPAA members) is an idiot.
GregA, check out how much the big boys (of RIAA members) make every year.
There was not a single year they’ve been paid less than year before it, obviously their business runs great.
What better proof you need that the *music industry* is doing well?
If anything, downloading would have killed *music industry* – not the music.
GregA, check out how much the big boys (of RIAA members) make every year.
There was not a single year they’ve been paid less than year before it, obviously their business runs great.
What better proof you need that the *music industry* is doing well?
Anyone who is crying for the fat pigs RIAA/MPAA members) is just an idiot.
#31 GetSmart – it’s all about Tivo-like functionality and commercial skipping or not.
History shows that Hollywood never embraces technology advances for the consumer – just like the Pirate cartoon indicates.
Exception being an over-use of CGI in their shows / movies.
#31 – If YOU decide now, before going to bed, that you want to watch the three consecutive shows of Heroes, tomorrow night (or soon), and had a choice of :
– HD, 1$ 43 minutes no commercials
– HD, Free, 60 minutes with commercials
I would pay the 1$ – as the “download” doesn’t count towards my monthly download cap.
I doubt DVD quality movies would ever be free including commercials – but they could be cheaper than a Blockbuster rental if there’s three minutes of embedded commercials.
I would call such an interruption a bathroom break.
FWIW – music download links on Pirate Bay don’t ever even make the Overall Top 100 Torrents. Heroes, Prison Break, 24, Lost, Audio Books, Games, and recent movies ALL the time.
If it’s so easy for anyone to record their own music in their basement, then why are bands renting studios and signing with the big labels?
How can you say that the movie industry should just sell their movies for $1?
The budgets for movies are different than for movies, and of course even if they did sell for $1, you guys would complain about that and get the free pirated stuff.
@Getsmart
Im not paying for anything that has commercials in it if they dont allow me to skip it. That is a fact.
Also US music market isn’t the world.
Most of countries have much less restrictive copyright laws and – unlike here in USA – they have real piracy problem (i.e. in many Russian and Chinese stores you get to choose between “original” CD, “fake” CD that looks like original including covers/booklet, and the cheap junk CD that is just a CD)
AND YET (!!!)
their musicians, singers and bands still DO SELL a lot of their music.
If you believe what RIAA is saying, you might as well believe Earth is flat.
#16: “I could download my favorite 3 stooges episode (Men In Black) for $3.50.”
You can do it for free with VDownloader and YouTube. Works like a charm.
#2: to call the $hit that’s on the radio today “music” is being very generous.
Lousy music sales are due to lousy music.
Uncle Dave,
The Arena Rock era was about theater… And modern arena rock bands are about that theater as well. The small time ma and pa music operations will never be able to put on a show like Kiss or the Greatful Dead.
That era is effectively over, and like it or not, the internet killed it. I for on, lament its passing. Look at all the kids on this thread who don’t understand what it was that they missed.
# 40 GregA said, “That era is effectively over, and like it or not, the internet killed it.”
Kiss stopped playing arena’s because of the internet? I think you have your time line confused.
You can’t kill music, nor the music industry. The internet just changes things a little. And, there still is a demand for live shows, even in little towns. I spent many a day not even five years ago in a place that saw a good music wave. We had less than 30,000 people, but there was still a demand for live shows.
And, try as they may, these companies will scream copywrite; they’ll stomp and throw a tantrum, but in the end, you can’t kill the cockroaches. They should be encouraging the download and use of these songs in videos. It’s the same as if they gave it to a dj at a radio station to play and play and play…
Why don’t they see it for what it is?