Industry Group Suggests "Free" Music
Garg
Purveyor of Lincoln Nightmares Icrontian
The Association of Independent Music (Aim), which represents the UK's independent record labels, has suggested that music downloads could become free to consumers. That is, if Internet Service Providers (ISPs) pay the record labels, instead. The proposal represents a shift in the recording industry's method of enforcing copyrights online, and looks at ISPs as being comparable to radio stations. ISPs, like radio stations, would pay royalties to the record labels, but provide the music free to the consumer.
Source: BBC
Understandably, Internet Service Providers have so far been less than enthusiastic about the prospect. Of course, if ISPs are made to pay royalties, that cost would almost certainly be passed onto consumers.At a press conference outlining their ideas, the panel of music industry experts also said that record companies were wrong to sue people who illegally download music.
"Prohibition always ends in disaster," said Dave Rowntree, drummer for the rock band Blur. "As an industry we've learnt our lessons."
"We all agree the consumer is the wrong target to be focusing our attention on," said Alison Wenham, chief executive of Aim.
Source: BBC
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Comments
~Cyrix
I don't get it.
In any case, I'm also against this. You know damn well that the RIAA is going to try this over here. Nothing they've done so far has been reasonable, so why would they start? They'll demand HUGE "taxes" from ISPs, AND still sell their overpriced CDs.
Personally I'm with Enverex. I don't want to pay for sh.t music that I don't listen to.
It's hardly fair, but it doesn't seem quite as bad as the RIAA's practice of making examples out of individual music downloaders and suing them for tens of thousands of dollars.
Me neither, I certainly don't want to pay for someone else's crap music that I wouldn't cross the street to piss on if the record store was on fire. Then again, I don't really fancy paying through the nose for all the really good music that I do want to listen to, either.
I'll give credit for people at least brainstorming, trying to come up with a new model to replace the dinosaurs that are the RIAA and BPI (UK).
I sure as heck don't want to fund someone else's downloading of the latest whatever. Maybe there could be special, laddered accounts, where higher fee structures allow access to downloads, as in a "premium" cable TV subscription. Those who don't want it, pay less.