[opendtv] Music rules

  • From: Monty Solomon <monty@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: undisclosed-recipient: ;
  • Date: Sun, 3 Apr 2005 21:19:01 -0400

Music rules
A Supreme Court ruling against peer-to-peer network Grokster would do 
more than punish music pirates. It would affect the future of the 
Internet.

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Andrew Leonard

March 30, 2005  |  I decided to rip my vinyl in honor of MGM vs. 
Grokster, the case heard before the Supreme Court on Tuesday that 
will likely result in a landmark ruling on copyright law.

"To rip one's vinyl" means to convert long-playing records to digital 
files. And if some doomsayers are correct, it's the kind of thing the 
music biz would be able to prevent me from doing if the Grokster 
decision goes their way. In a worst-case scenario, anything that 
would allow me to copy music, whether it's a CD-burner, some 
audio-editing software, or a peer-to-peer network like Grokster, 
would be illegal.

But to be honest, stopping me from taking moldering P-Funk, Rolling 
Stones and R.E.M. albums and transforming them into MP3s for my own 
enjoyment is not the highest priority for the entertainment industry. 
In the Grokster case, a roll-call of music and movie studios are 
targeting their sights on file-sharing peer-to-peer networks. Their 
argument is that the creators of those networks should be deemed 
responsible for what people do with them -- technically, that means 
they should be found guilty of "secondary liability" for the 
copyright infringement committed by file sharers.

The case before the Supreme Court does not pertain to whether the 
actual act of file sharing is illegal. Let's accept for now that when 
you or I grab a copy of the newest Aimee Mann track from Kazaa or 
LimeWire, we are committing intellectual-property piracy, stealing 
royalties from starving artists, and threatening the entire economic 
basis of the music industry. Personally, I enjoy supporting the 
artists I like by purchasing their records on iTunes, and I 
especially savor doing so after I have heard a free sample of their 
music over the Net. But that's an entirely separate issue from what's 
at stake in this case. MGM vs. Grokster deals with whether the 
creators of a technology are responsible for how it used. It's not an 
understatement to say that the case could influence the future of the 
Internet.

This is why the "secondary liability" charge makes a lot of folks, 
particularly those in the computer, consumer electronics and telecom 
industries, very nervous. A decision in favor of the plaintiffs would 
represent a reversal of the precedent set 20 years ago in the famous 
"Sony-Betamax" case, which held that Sony was not liable for any 
copyright abuses likely to be perpetrated by owners of VCRs because 
there were "substantial noninfringing" uses of the product. In other 
words, because the VCR could be used for perfectly legitimate 
purposes, like watching a rented movie, it was OK for Sony to sell 
it, even if some people were going to use it to tape copyrighted 
television shows.

...


http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2005/03/30/grokster/



 
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------
You can UNSUBSCRIBE from the OpenDTV list in two ways:

- Using the UNSUBSCRIBE command in your user configuration settings at 
FreeLists.org 

- By sending a message to: opendtv-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the word 
unsubscribe in the subject line.

Other related posts:

  • » [opendtv] Music rules