if you copy music you OWN to your mp3 player you could pay a fine

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I think this is sooo ridiculous! I love having the actual CD but I do not have a CD player. The one in my car has one CD stuck in it, and since I have an iPod where I have all my music, I didn't feel the need to purchase a new car stereo. They really need to stop with these stupid lawsuits and change their strategy! Bah!!

yeah, I've been pissed at the music industry for a long time. for one thing, they turn out craploads of crap. the whole RIAArseholes can suck it. I pretty much hate the whole damn thing. so, I am doing my part and I no longer listen to music on the radio if I can help it. I no longer purchase music. I no longer think about it. I am free of those old bastards. Partially anyway. My wife still does her part and I am sure she is breaking some rules by using an MP3 player. I believe this is easier to cure than the increasing price of gas, just stop listening to music. Make musicians play live music and go see them. Frell cds and the like. Anyway, touch subject with me - damn Metalica starting some shit back in the day, arghhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh...

Books on Tape is where it is at, lol...

[this is good]
A hearty AMEN from the choir.
If you get the chance, give a listen to the NPR podcast TALK OF THE NATION released on 1/3/08.
They ask the question: Is it legal to copy music to your computer?
It seems the music "business" can't make money selling music so they are supplementing with litigation. These battles have been fought time and time again. When people began to record sound there were legal battles to try to protect sheet music. When recording became cheap and available to everyone via tape there were legal battles to try to protect vinyl.

But there seems a special viciousness this time around. Goliath RIAA is going after little David in his living room. They call it property in order the maximize the legal avenues available. They hope to define the dispute in their own terms by massive use of frivolous lawsuits because, well, they can.

But the times are changing. More bands are releasing free music, and fewer people are buying heavily produced music. I personally would rather see more of my dollars in the pockets of the artists, and fewer in the pockets of ticks and leeches.
I read somewhere that they specified that its actually music that you put in a Shared Folder that's illegal.....like that makes a freakin' difference.
I'm a huge music fan that buys mostly from iTunes...but leaning more and more to Amazon. (I like emusic but don't need that much music/month) I'm also a big fan of music blogs. Great way to dip your foot in their pool.
I do think they also need to start offering up more than just the mp3...esp. if you buy the whole album. Notes, lyrics....whatever would come with a hard copy. I think I read somewhere (lol...I read "somewhere" a lot) in one of the 'EMI no longer doing the DRM thing' articles that there are plans to start offering up this stuff. Hope its soon.
If you look at the history of the music business in America since WWII, you realize that the RIAA is just par for the course. They fought tooth and nail to prevent every single technical advancement that allowed people to more broadly use their music. Radio, TV, format upgrades like cassette tapes, etc. The digital frontier is just the latest example of their institutional stupidity.
[this is good]
I'm also an eMusic subscriber (though I get fewer songs/month at a reduced rate) and love that system. I'm really annoyed with the RIAA and try to avoid buying music through their system. If they had their way, we'd all be listening to Top40 stuff, anyway. Boring!

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