File Sharing Student Fined $675K - Comments Page 2
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Of course it's not fair... it's corporate power versus democracy (in a land where corporations can pay to override democracy). The RIIA and their corporate partners lobby to change or create laws, which they then use to punish anyone who does not follow the path they have charted. The original purpose of copyright laws was to encourage creativity and innovation, by giving the creator of a work a limited period (7 years) to profit from their creation, but then to allow that creation to enter into the commons. Copyright laws have been ridiculously over-extended through corporate lobbying over the last century. Copyright currently last the life of the creator plus ? years -- several decades is just completely contrary to promoting innovation. Artists only get $1.25 from the record companies for every record they sell -- copyright laws don't help individual musicians out very much. They do help the record companies, who may have 1,000+ artists signed to their label and and taking a good cut from every record sold. |
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It is the civic duty of every patriotic citizen to ignore stupid/unfair/unreasonable laws. I am glad the founders of this country felt the same. Is Tenenbaum a thief? That is a question to be answered when the PEOPLE make the laws and not corporations, lobbyists and elitists. In the mean time, Tenenbaum is no Bolingbroke. |
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First, Fair Use was a stupid argument. There are specific requirements for Fair Use, and unless he was in some other way actually using the material for other than personal listening, Fair Use doesn't enter into it at all. Second, the artists don't get this money. You are infringing the music companies' publishing rights, not the artists. Royalties are paid to songwriters, not the musicians and bands, and the way royalties are distributed is generally unfair to the majority of songwriters. If you want to read an excellent article about file sharing and music companies and money by Janis Ian, see http://www.janisian.com/article-internet_debacle.html Blunt fact: most artists make most of their money playing live shows, not from record sales. |
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Joel Tenenbaum stole music, he broke the law, case closed. If you're going to willfully steal something, you're going to face the consequences sooner or later. It may not be a fine, it may be you reading a comment on this or some other website from someone who believes you're a thieving, selfish brat and that there are many others who feel the same way. God damn, my generation is full twats like this, it's pathetic. |
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Well downloading music is done every minute of everyday, so is speeding if you get caught you get fined 100$ , $200 |
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Laws were to protect people. Yes, you can break the law, it's your free will. If you get caught you should pay the fine or do the time. Plain and simple... |
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The RIAA are legal criminals. This group has dictated how music is going to be sold, what music gets played. This group has made millions off musicians. Some may remember during the days of the cassette that an extra 2 bucks was charged for each blank cassette sold. why, because that may mean someone may copy a song, not illegal back then. So now this group of powerful men are losing that power, and like any animal backed into a corner they are trying to get that power back, through the courts and lobbist. If coping songs back in the day wasn't illegal, what is the difference in coping songs off the net. |
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My mother taught me that taking things that one didn't own was stealing, and whether or not you steal a paper clip or a million bucks, it is still stealing. But nobody in their right mind would punish the stealer of a pepr clip the same way they'd punish the guy who steals the million bucks. So: 30 tunes @ 89c = $26.70 and for this we spend millions to sue for $675K!? What's wrong with this scenario? |
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30 songs @ .99 cents ea is much cheaper than 30 songs @ $ 22,500 ea. If he would have paid and not willfully broken the law, he would not have to file bankruptcy. Poor decision Mr. Tenenbaum |
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I would not kick so much if, what was left after legal fees of the $22,500 went to the artists, not the RIAA. The RIAA keeps sending me Cease and Desist letters for illegally sharing their music. The only interaction I've _ever_ had with P2P networking is to download torrents of the software I've helped develop (like Linux versions, and Virtual Machines) and to upload photographs I've taken myself, with my copyright on them. Does this mean that they now have the right to give me the equivalent of a speeding ticket for doing the equivalent of driving near someone who was driving too fast? At least, speeding tickets go to fund the people protecting us. The RIAA's fines? Go to their pockets, and bottom line, not to their artists, whom theoretically they are "protecting" by all this legal activity. In all the comments I've tracked, we don't even see the composers/performers of those 30 songs being involved in this case, at all. I wonder why? Shouldn't they, as the producers of what was stolen at least be mentioned, as involved? Do they care? Will they see any benefit? |
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Children, stealing is wrong, m'kay? |
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Chris has the best answer here. What bugs me the most about this is when you purchase an album you have the right to use the music not give it away. That's fine and the way it should be. But when the media you have wears out you have to go out and buy the music all over again. Why? You should be able to get another copy for just the price of the media. But there is a vast difference between that and what Mr. T did. To continue downloading and giving away the music even after he was told to stop shows his disregard for others. A more fair judgement would have been making him pay for every download x 5. All of them not just 30. In any case I don't care. I have never downloaded a song illegally. |
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The guys a thief pure and simple. If everybody downloads copyrighted material without paying for it, what's the incentive for creative people to do anything? How would he like it if his employer didn't pay him at the end of the week, claiming his hard work was too expensive? The guy needs to do some prison for his crimes, just as a bank robber would have to. |
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