Friday 20 February 2009

Time for a Revolution

With the going on of the current Pirate Bay trial an important question comes to mind, how do people classify what is legal? Well there are laws for that right? So thats brings us to the more important question... Who makes the laws, and who are these laws made for?

So now the music industry claims that all this sharing of files is a breach of copyright and therefore illegal. But lets just for a second have a look into the past. How did the musicians work, earn and survive before technology made distribution of music as easy as it is today? Well from what I can tell they used to play their music and earn from only those performances.

With the introduction of technology that made distribution much simpler (such as tapes, CDs and now the internet digital downloads), the big content industries apparently 'crafted' laws of copyright so that they could make profit from them, and that is how society has apparently come to accept it.

But do the laws really seem fair? Sure the companies put time and effort into recording the music. But this is more of a one time cost. The cost of distribution, especially in this digital age is almost non existent. For the big content making digital copies available to sell to the public, would bear hardly any cost. Yet the amount of money they charge for something millions of times that had only a one-off cost to them to make seems absurd! Once they have covered this one-off cost of recording, they are literally making "Pure Profit".

That surely seems a little unfair when most people with standard jobs only earn for their work at that time. Why should the music industry be any different. Why should they carry on earning for a one-off effort. The distribution is practically free for them, and hence thanks to the technology that exists today they can carry on making money doing nothing. It just feels like a get rich quick scheme, put in a little effort and reap rewards for the rest of your life. Well that doesn't work for the rest of the public. Most people have have to constantly work and earn money based on that.

Now that the tides are changing, and people are using the available technology to distribute the music themselves which is cutting into the music industries' "Pure Profits" they aren't too pleased. And well they already have crafted copyright laws to make such activity illegal. But these laws seem only to benefit them and have no benefit to the general public.

Isn't it time these Draconian laws were changed. People should be able to freely distribute music. Digital distribution should just be a form of sharing and marketing, since there are hardly that many costs associated with it, it seems unfair that people unjustly profit from it. Music artists can always still earn as they used to before the technology for distribution came into existent. They could perform live acts. And with digital copies of music freely available, the public would be much more inclined to go see the real live performances.

This may negatively affect some of the artists who actually can't play music or sing, and are just over hyped by the music industries. Which from a personal point of view would actually be as the public would get much better quality of music over quantity, and artists who can't really play music or sing would find a career in something else in which they may actually be good at.

It has been long enough that we have been oppressed by the laws crafted by the big content just for their personal profit. It is time for a revolution.

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