not to mention: I;d love to hear your 'perfect' system for the movie, music, game, cable, satellite, etc. industries. if the current one is wrong whats the right one?
Now we're getting somewhere...
I for my part didn't have a strong opinion on whether pirating is wrong or right. I surely didn't like simplistic arguments like "piracy=freedom of speech" and the like.
However, recently I talked to a friend and I'm starting to lean towards the pro-piracy side, at least for music/movies. Here's why:
First of all, let's for a moment focus not on the normative side of things - i.e. what should ideally be, whether artists *should* be paid for the distribution of their music etc. - but on the descriptive side:
Here, one could argue that the advent of computers and then the internet simply changed the way things work. To put it simply, to control the distribution of music, the industry would have to control what files people copy in between their computers. So, maybe this is simply not feasible, no matter what (unless you live under a non-democratic government). Much like they couldn't stop people from recording songs from the radio, or exchanging mix tapes, they just won't be able to stop people sharing files.
Now the situation with sharing files is different from sharing mixtapes in how it will impact the industry. But both things might be the same with respect to not being controllable.
Thus, maybe the only way out of this, *if* you want to ensure that musicians are being paid, is to acknowledge that what they do is some form of community service and to support them via taxation. Simply because there is no other feasible way, independently of what might be normatively right or wrong.
However, this line of thought brings me back to the normative question. What determines whether someone should be paid for their work or not?
Well, first of all, like others have stated, music is simply not the same as a material good. If someone makes a car, I buy the car from him, I have one car more, he has one less, simple. Not the same with music though, at least nowadays where the distribution is basically free (well, I pay my ISP for the internet access, but that's the service they provide, not the artist). Yes, saying it's different from a material good does *not* automatically mean it's right to pirate it, by itself.
So what is it about music then that should be paid for? Even people opposing pirating would probably agree that it's not the distribution of music I should pay the artist for (nowadays), but the *making* of music. In that sense, making of music is more akin to providing a service than producing a good. Thus, the classical business model might actually be 'unnatural' and an artifact of the distribution not being free originally.
Hence, the proper mindset might be, you should pay an artist for the service he or she provides, which is making music. Once it's out there, it's out there and can't be controlled.
The question is now, how would this work in practice? Apart from the aforementioned taxation system, how would the music industry look like in that model? Would this mean the end of music (which, then, might be unavoidable)? That's really an interesting issue.
I could imagine that, even though it sounds naive, a situation where artists live just from donations, merchandise, and gigs, could actually work. Think Toady, think Radiohead. Maybe these are not actually special cases. With Toady you could think that, because granted he's kind of special
. But on the other hand, he only serves a niche market, and *still* can live from it. With the culture and the flow of information becoming global, all you need is to find a small percentage of the six billion people on this planet who love enough what you do.
If it were to work, surely this could dramatically change the face of the industry, with a much more fragmented culture with many niches, and profits being spread out much more and a lack of super-rich superstars. But that might actually be a positive thing, right?
Thoughts?