RIAA Lawsuits Begin - 261 Sued
from the hammer-comes-down dept
No surprise here, as this was rumored to happen last week, actually. However, this morning the RIAA continued to shoot themselves in the foot by filing 261 lawsuits against their own customers for offering music on file sharing networks. I agree that these people probably did break the law. However, these lawsuits will do much more to harm the music industry than to help it. That they don't realize this (and many of its defenders don't realize this either) is unfortunate. These lawsuits were inevitable due to the closed-minded thinking of an industry that refuses to admit its business model is obsolete and that it's time to adjust. I had hoped they would realize in time the mistake they were making, though, it seemed unlikely. Now we'll have to go through this farce, where kids are going to get punished well beyond what they deserve so that the music industry can make a "point" - while trying (and failing) to kill off the best promotion and distribution mechanism for music created so far.
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One possible future
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The RIAA's disservice to it's clients
What is required is an organized boycott of music stores for a single day, just to make a point. Drop music sales through the floor. Imagine what would happen if millions of people stopped buying music, for just one day. Make those statistics public knowledge and you'd have a sharp edged sword to use against the RIAA. Make the RIAA sit up and listen to the consumer.
Yes, sharing music online is probably illegal. Yes, the artists should be compensated for their work. Yes, the exisitng business model is out of date. No, suing people won't work.
Adopt the Microsoft approach: embrace, extend, eliminate. Embrace digital technology. Extend it with features beneficial to the consumer. Eliminate the competition. You can't just run off to the third point, it just doesn't work.
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Re: The RIAA's disservice to it's clients
Imagine what would happen if millions of people stopped buying music, for just one day.
Artists would be injured, the record companies would feel the bump and ask "what was that?" Other that that...nothing. Because Joe Sixpack would have nothing to do with this, because he isn't affected by it. What is the sound of 100,000 techies screaming on the internet?
Sadly, nothing... because most of those who support the RIAA, the record industry, and the artists don't have the internet, or don't care about these lawsuits, as it doesn't affect them.
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The trouble
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No...
While I agree that downloading is stealing (not probably... is) I think that you're entertaining a lot of wishful thinking. The RIAA will win. People will continue to pay too much for music. This will all be over with soon and the consumer will continue to be fleeced by anyone and everyone (i.e. back to normal).
I am not an RIAA fan, but I am fairly realistic.
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Re: No...
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