@merko
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This is really nonsense.
I'm sure a handful of people will still make millions after convincing
some big record label or movie giant that they have "the solution".
But it's not ever going to work. Anything that can be viewed, can be
copied. And as long as the industry and lawmakers keep their current
attitude, piracy will only increase.
That covers a lot of ground.
1. Money will be spent and made to find a solution. This has not changed.
2. The whole point of the SoC development is to link the hardware and software together in a manner to make decryption extremely difficult.
3. The industry must adapt and so too must the user and the lawmakers
that are elected by the users to represent them.
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There's no reason to believe most pirates aren't perfectly willing to
pay creators of music, movies, etc. In fact, I'm willing to bet that
there is a very strong correlation between people buying a lot of
music and movies legitimately, and people pirating a lot of the same
stuff. Too bad there doesn't seem to be any studies to check for this
correlation.
Did you read this:
HRM. Can you see the irony in the title?
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Today, the industry have started what could perhaps best be
called a "war on consumers". Surely people want to pay a musical
artist, but how many of us want to pay greedy companies so they can
afford more lawyers to sue little girls and other average consumers?
You are correct. There are huge problems with the approach of industry. There are many examples of misjudgment. The Sony Spyware scandal being the latest.
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And no, the "war on consumers" is by no means limited to people who get both pirated and legitimate material. In fact, as disturbing
as they are, these lawsuits are very rare. You're probably worse off
if you only buy things legally. Copy protection - which is of course
not present in the pirated versions - make life hard for you. You may
not be able to play CDs or movies with the devices you want to play
them, because of region protection or "side effects" of some
copy-protection. Forget making back-ups. You may have to
watch stupid anti-piracy "commercials" which are of course removed in
pirate releases (although some of the most funny examples circulate
separately due to their comic value).
Last year Sony was exposed for installing harmful software on your
computer, without asking, if you wanted to play some of their music
CDs. They'll be sued no doubt, but this seems to be getting much
worse. The industry's current big project is the HDMI movie format
which involves complex protection in both movie players/computers as
well as monitors/tv screens. At the heart of the system lies the
possibility of "revoking" functionality for devices that have been
compromised. In other words: If your TV manufacturer leak their secret
encryption key, you'll find that your TV won't be able to
display new movies. Maybe not, though. Since several encryption
experts have claimed that the system is readily breakable, it's
possible that the system won't be used as intended and will end up
doing nothing.
But if it does work, there is a simple solution for people who don't
want to worry if their particular movie player AND their particular
display device will both be capable of watching some new movie. They
can get a pirated version, which will of course work perfectly
everywhere.
Yes, and you make the point of the whole discussion. A solution is only possible with user agreement.
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So the bottom line is: the industry is whining about pirates, but
most of their action will actually only harm legitimate consumers, not
pirates. Even if you buy the legitimate original, it's often
convenient to get a pirate release of the same thing because the
original is so crippled.
While the industry is shooting themselves in the foot, lawmakers
aren't doing better really. In most western countries at least, laws
have in the last decade or so been passed that make normal cultural
exchange illegal. If I like some song, I can't legally send a copy to
my friend anymore. Lawmakers have determined that everyday
cultural intercourse is a threat to culture!
Perhaps, you should become a "lawmaker." How far does your sense of responsibility go? You made the effort to post this, perhaps you should consider your potential.
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(Of course, when the politicians say "culture", they actually mean the big movie and music companies, but I'm not sure if this is an
intentional euphemism or if the average lawmaker simply doesn't know
any other form of culture.)
But humans are cultural animals, and so it happens that most
people just don't care about such silly laws. So the laws don't really
have much effect except undermining the public respect for laws in
general.
Hence the requirement for a system that can be applied consistently throughout the world. Now, there is a challenge.
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Well then - is it true that piracy hurts artists? I don't know. But
again I'm willing to bet. I think that it really does harm big artists
who sell millions of records. They have nothing to gain and the
fanbase is not proportional to their sales. But small or medium
artists probably gain at least as much as they lose. What they lose in
sales is probably made up for because they get more fans as their
reputation spreads from mouth to mouth - or from hard disk to hard
disk.
Yes, Microsoft apparently encouraged the same process, but that really does not address the issue of creation and the management of distribution for profit. Legal profit is an incentive that is absent from an economy based on theft. That is a key point.
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But I'm sure there is one clear loser: the big record labels. The
current music industry has a winning concept, based on
economy-of-scale. They hype up a few "big" artists and do everything
they can to make everyone buy the same few records. The system is
tried and perfected: you can't avoid hearing these artists on the
radio (and you don't get to hear much else), you see them in
commercials, the artists get enormous coverage for their soap
opera-style personal lives (an artist with potential for great
headlines surely has much better chances of getting a record
released).
Actually, the objective in doing this correctly changes the rules sufficiently to solve the problem you address. This will be quite humbling to the music industry - or any industry that digitally distributes a product.
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This way of distributing music is clearly an historical exception. The
modern trend of aquiring a taste for arts mainly through exchange with
personal friends and aquaintances is clearly nothing new. The
invention of mass media with few transmitters but many receivers
disrupted this for almost a century, but that time is likely to be
over soon.
Free and fee. Things have not changed and will not.
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A result from this is that people's tastes will continue to become
much more divergent. There will be many more "big" artists, and they
won't be as big anymore. And the big record companies, who rely on the
old form of distribution, won't be needed anymore.
We agree. "Marketing" will take other forms and may move "fee" to "free" as it did with broadcast television in the beginning. It does the same thing with sports and their events. How do you think even the Olympics or the World Cup gets paid for?
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And that's probably the cause of the problem. There's no threat to
culture. It would easily be possible to make most people pay a little
for downloading un-crippled music and movies. It would have to be
much, much cheaper than today of course. So while they could spread it
to their friends, it might not be worth the hassle. A good and
reliable download rate is worth something after all - and furthermore,
most people find it reasonable that artists should be rewarded for
their work. In fact, this system is likely to make everyone a winner,
except for the big labels and a handful of their chosen faces. And
that's why they are fighting with more and more desperate methods to
hinder this cultural development.
"...all pirates will be fans. There are ways to organize an economy around fans."R&B