stop buying CDs for the rest of 2003
Sep. 10th, 2003 09:53 amThe music industry is trying to stuff the file-sharing genie back in the bottle by attacking their own customers instead of moving into the 21st century with an appropriate business model. Musicians who try to earn a living through that backward-looking industry risk long-term ruin. Around 60 million Americans share files, and heaven knows how many in the rest of the world. This is a massive market waiting to be tapped, but the industry is gripped by fear of the new technology, like a rabbit caught in the headlights. This is the same way they reacted when recordable audio cassettes were marketed, and when listening booths were introduced in record shops. It is the same way the film industry reacted about recordable video cassettes. They are completely out of step with a technology that could revitalise a sagging, top heavy industry.
We need a large-scale movement to stop buying CDs for the rest of 2003. Xmas is traditionally a windfall period for the record companies. Deny them this. Let the record shops and artists know, and the Luddite executives just might change course, stop hurting little people, and save their industry before too much damage is done.
Buy from artists who share and sell their music online. For example:
no subject
Date: 2003-09-10 03:54 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-09-10 06:13 am (UTC)It is a risk I know, but the alternative -- to sit still and make nice stationary targets -- doesn't appeal to me. I was reading about how people take being executed as political prisoners in Chile and during the Nazi Holocaust, and it never ceases to amaze me that most people just kneel down and obediently take a bullet in the head. I promised myself that in a similar situation I would make sure I hurt my executioner really badly.
If these asshole executives get their way with these phoney lawsuits it just makes them braver to try something worse. Already they speak as if it is their right to have their hand in your pocket. They say that they have "lost millions" in lower sales. But that is a logical absurdity. You can't lose something you never had. They think it is their right to expect people to spend a certain amount on CDs, and when it doesn't happen they will hurt people to get it. They already consider it their money even though it was never given to them. What will they do next if we let them get away with this bullshit?
The ridiculous thing is that there is evidence that mp3 filesharing increases the public appetite for music rather than reducing it. There is actually some doubt about whether sales really are down -- they may be cooking the books in order to attack file sharing), but if they are down then they probably need look no further than the terrible way they handle business -- they attack their customers; they rip off their artists, casually destroying them with a flick of a pen; they vastly overcharge for antiquated technology; they live in isolated ivory towers on obscenely high wages; they "fix" the markets and foist shallow music upon an increasingly sophisticated audience.... on and on it goes.
By the way, love the icon. :D
music industry
Date: 2003-12-02 04:35 am (UTC)