deseipel wrote:10 yrs ago, during the hey day of Napster, you had a specific number of people who stole music. Most of them wouldn't have downloaded it legally even if there was a service to do so. Why should they?
Well I think you have to also look at the group of people using, say Napster - I never did personally, or anyone I know. Music at that point was already freely available if you just knew where to look.
Let's make it a little more real and applicable; As a musician I have had to learn countless cover songs. Thousands would be a realistic number. I'm sure many here as well...
There are 3 ways I can go about learning these songs for gigs right?
1. Buy the albums/song
2. The band copies the song(s) onto a CD for me
3. I download them/get ahold of a copy myself.
Now realistically, option 1 is absurd. If I had to buy every album that I had to learn 1 song off of... it just wouldn't work right? Even buying an individual song... it just makes no sense fiscally. The industry would have collapsed long ago if every song every musician had to learn, they had to out right purchase.
It's a bit of a forced issue. What is someone going to copy them off youtube? Isn't that the same issue as it is?
And additionally, I only had to learn the lesson 1 time of hearing a great song on the radio, going and buying the album and finding it was mostly fluff with the or 2 radio hits - and that is a well known trick record companies pulled for years.
I have no problem supporting artists and musicians that make great work, what I do have a problem with is contributing to Richard Branson's island home because he developed a monopoly on the music industry.