First of all, the whole piracy thing is way overblown. Plenty of artists support distribution of their songs/movies/whatever through the internet, via YouTube, torrents, etc.
What if an artist doesn't? Where is he or she protected especially if the distribution is free and not providing compensation?
Louis C.K. just offered his latest standup feature exclusively online for $5.00, DRM free.
It netted over $1 million and counting.
http://hothardware.com/News/Louis-CKs-DRMFree-Internet-Experiment-Nets-Over-1-Million-and-Counting/
iTunes offered a better, easy, reasonably priced alternative to piracy. iTunes is insanely popular.
Pandora, Grooveshark, Spotify, etc. are other services offering good alternatives.
Netflix online streaming service is another good example in the movie industry.
Offer a service that is easier/better than scouring the internet for pirated copies, and maintain a reasonable price, and you're golden.
Agreed. But I don't see how this bill will affect those services as long as they are following copyright laws already written.
And "maintain a reasonable price" is a flimsy argument. What if I don't want to? What if I think is a reasonable price is different than what you think is a reasonable price? Does that mean it gets to be pirated on the internet?
If I write a song that I think will give you a spiritual experience so I charge $2000 to listen to it once. Who's to say I can't do that?
Basically what this amounts to is price gouging. But far worse. It's bullying the US government to meddle with the Internet like fucking communist China. Except it affects the entire world.
It's not using logical leaps and slippery slopes. There is precedent that this shit actually happens. Big companies remove content because it doesn't like the message. It sues/fines people for fucking LINKING to copyrighted material, not hosting it online. And they don't have enough control. They want more.
TigersX cannot exist because anyone can post anything linked to another site. Posting farks from another board? Godfather goes to jail. EVEN IF YOU LINK TO THE SOURCE MATERIAL.
This is straight up 1984 shit, and no one seems to care.
Seriously, do yourself a favor and research it yourself. Or at least watch all of the videos, read all of the articles that I posted here.
I have read some of the articles. It's hard to filter through the hyperbole and get to the meat of the bill. That's where I'm confused.
We've gone from "protect copyrighted material on the internet" to "the Feds and the corporations are trying to create a dystopia in an effort to make more money."
Where in the actual bill does it state that companies can remove websites based on a subjective criticism of the message presented? Where does the bill state that they will sue you for linking copyrighted material?
And since we're discussing a judicial issue, where's the justification for linking copyrighted material if it doesn't give compensation (at least based on whatever contract has been written) to the person or company that actually owns the material?
I understand how spoiled we are with the internet. It's wonderful. Sharing and learning is at an all time high, but this is a capitalistic economy. It is a free market. And if I own something, what right does anyone have to use it without my permission or without paying for it? Especially for any sites or users that are making a profit with the use of copyrighted material.
Outside of the internet, you purchase a song at the CD store. You read an article from a magazine you buy at a grocery store. You watch a movie after buying a movie ticket at the movie theater.
You listen to the radio thinking it's free music, but the radio paid for it. You turn on the TV to watch a movie, but the cable company paid for it.
But inside of the internet, many of these products are available for free and the people doing the work have no control.
We like to link articles here at the X. That way we
can click the link to read the article at its original source. That gives the source more hits thus providing the opportunity for more compensation for the work they've done.
But what if no one clicks the link? Who is to protect the author that writes the article on their website?
Again, most of this is petty and many of the complaints are from people who are already making gobs of money. But this is a legal issue, and there has to be a line drawn somewhere. What's fair has to be established and it should be enforced equally in internet and non-internet areas.