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Piracy: The Pirate Bay Verdict (Will Piracy Ever Lose?)

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The recent conviction of the notorious P2P facilitators ‘The Pirate Bay’ in Sweden, brought jubilation from the IFPI and its major label bosses. Was it a victory? Yes, of sorts, but it most definitely was not a winner in terms of ending the scourge that piracy has been in the industries eyes. Did home taping kill the music business? NO. Did CDR burning kill the music business? NO. Will P2P file sharing kill the music business? NO. Will piracy ever stop? NO

This post aims to examine the arguments from both sides in the battle for the consumption of music. One is illegal and in breach of copyright, the other spends vast amounts of dollars recording and marketing music. But first it is important to go back and look at the history of how music consumption trends and piracy have evolved hand in hand.

When the tape format was launched along with the tape recorder the music business was against the use or release to the public of either as it believed it would hemorrhage its sales of vinyl product. Yes, lots of people brought tapes then recorded them for their fans, and so yes did breach copyright.

However, what the industry conveniently forgets is that many music consumers replaced vinyl collections with tapes and hence re-purchased music they already owned but in the new tape format. What cannot be denied is that sales of recorded music actually increased – not decreased as the industry had feared.

Moving onto the CD format and the industry was keen for the new format as it had several advantages when first released including; cheaper to produce and manufacturer, they could sell it at a higher price and once again they hoped consumers would replace their old tape format with the newer CD format. Once again during the 80’s and early nineties sales of music CDs were astronomical – blowing all recorded music sales into never seen before figures.

In the digital realm should music consumers have to re-purchase the same catalogue they already own just so it will play on a competitor device or service? Of course not! Realistically the industry should be unified in pushing for device and service interoperability. Look at it this way, without music neither these hardware devices nor associated digital music services have anything without the music.

All we currently have is a monopoly whereby one company has 75% of global digital music sales and an even higher % in terms of hardware devices in the market. This is not good for the music business or music fans alike.

Yes, P2P file sharing is a different beast from previous forms of music piracy. However, it is clearly a manner in which millions of people choose to consumer music. As such we as an industry need to work out ways to monetize this consumption trend illegal or legal. I do understand that the industry at one point did try and engage with the founders of the pirate bay to discuss a revenue share of all the advertising the service receives. Yet these same founders rebuffed these industry olive branches.

Going further, the Pirate Bay do personify the worst in P2P file sharing as they used to boast about how they were ripping off record labels. However, these same labels do have artists to pay and piracy does not help undertake that endeavor. Despite the industry having a fair point, many P2P file sharers also have a fair point to make. Labels; what is happening to these big advances you are paid on the basis of licensing your recorded music catalogues?

Why are these advances not being paid through to artists? As after all, your artist is owed a share of all these advances as without these artists music, you as a label do not have a music catalogue to negotiate with. So P2P file sharers are right to point out the fact labels are also stealing from their own artist when they do not pay through royalties to their roster of artist from these large advances that they receive from new music services wanting to retail their music content.

Does this make P2P file sharing right? Not in TMV’s mind if you want to support the artist you love and respect. However, it is time the music content owners stopped pointing the finger and started to look internally and get their own houses in order before accusing P2P file sharers of stealing copyrighted music. Stealing is stealing weather you are a label or and illegal P2P file sharer. Furthermore, why should a new hardware manufacturer or a new music retail service have to pay you advances if the label does not pay artists a share they rightfully are entitled to.

On one fine note, it is TMVs view that until labels start paying artists their rightful cut on these large advances they receive from licensing their music catalogues to new music services, labels are just providing file sharers with ammunition that labels are hypocrites! Which in the current state of affairs they quite clearly are.

 

 

Author

  • Wayne Rosso

    Wayne Rosso has worked in music and technology for decades. He has worked with such artists as Aerosmith, Bee Gees, Crosby, Stills & Nash, Public Image LTD., Beach Boys, Phillip Glass, Fleetwood Mac, Rick James, New Kids on the Block, Slash, Evanescence and scores of others.

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