scotartt on 3 Aug 2000 14:34:07 -0000


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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> intellectual property, Hollywood style


> I remain fairly unimpressed with all the whingeing by people about
Napster
> being closed down, but perhaps the net does hold out some hope for
artists

What I find galling about this whole debate is the insipid polarisation of
views that many of its participants try to force on people. Either you hate
RIAA and all big capitalistic artist-exploiting record corporations and
love Napster/MP3.com etc as saviours of artistic freedom or you are in love
with big record corps and despise the blatant copyright theft of Napster
and like. I can dislike record companies AND Napster you know, but actually
I don't hate either ... I dislike BOTH for their worst aspects.

First thing is; Napster (maybe), MP3.com (definitely) are just the NEW
RECORD CORPORATIONS. Yes, (not quite as) big, and capitalistic just like
the old ones ... only SMARTER because they found a way to acquire almost
unlimited catalogue without actually bothering to PAY anyone or spend much
promoting individual artists. The second thing is we currently got a molto
imperfect system which pays artists scraps while creaming huge corporate
profits -- but it is always proposed this is replaced with effectively NO
system of paying scraps (that what we live off) and no real mention is made
of corporate profits in this new model (do you think Napster, despite its
lack of a proper business model, is an artist-run charity after all?). I
don't like what's here already, and personally I don't care if people want
to trade INFERIOR copies of my work over the net - after all I offer in
that form already. Yes MP3 is an INFERIOR medium technically to CDs because
it uses 'lossy' compression -- i.e. it THROWS SIGNAL AWAY. Hence I regard
MP3s as being only "demo" quality, so personally I don't care about their
distribution on the net - as long as I am identified as the author that is.
However the individual artist definitely has a MORAL RIGHT OF ASSERTION
whether such inferior reproductions are allowed or not. If you want to hear
Metallica in its painful fully ugly (in)glory, buy the CD. They *DO* have
the right to assert this, just as a painter could tell a gallery to hang
the real painting not a photo (let alone a bad one) of it. (And in
Australia at least an artist has a legislated 'moral right' to their work
remaining unaltered in this way).

Personally I am already involved in many different types of alternative
distribution models, but when one wants to tear down what's there already
one should also try to propose some alternative system of management for
musical IP not offer just a lot of hot-air waffle about how eViL the record
corporations are. Musicians already know this - quite a lot of us face it
every waking day.

Just a thought from a musical artists perspective.

regs
scot

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