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Kneel Before Zod......ZOD
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Join Date: May 2002
Location: Texas
Age: 42
Reputation Power: 159
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September 5th, 2002, 01:54 AM
Quote:
--Victor Hugo ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Cool site of the moment:http://www.zod2008.com/ |
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Zeropaid Regular
![]() Posts: 113
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Canada
Reputation Power: 92
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November 14th, 2002, 05:35 PM
Corporate America (Canada, England, etc, etc.) has never volunteered any kind of positive revolution. Witness legislation on child labour, reasonable working hours, overtime pay, stat holidays. On and on. They never volunteered. It was forced on them.
No one was ever going to suddenly decide that charging $20 for a CD was too much. Were they going to stop at $25? $30? No. It's all about consumer tolerance, and in a world where the average Joe and Jane puts up with nearly anything and everything, I'm happy to see people actually forcing a change, and pretty much the only way it can happen -- through corporate pocketbooks. Same goes for those shitty albums with the one or two good songs on it. That's the artists' end not the company's, but then maybe something's wrong with the format. Maybe forcing me to buy a dozen of your songs at once doesn't work anymore. Revolution, again. Add to that the fact that I'm 100% sure that I'm spending more on products because of P2P. And not different products (computer, connection) but the same ones. If I really like something, I'm going to buy it. Hell, I'm waiting to get home so I can buy a season of Six Feet Under on DVD when it comes out, and I wouldn't have even seen that over here (The Netherlands) if it wasn't for P2P. And I don't even own a DVD player. Gonna buy that, too. The companies just don't get it and they don't WANT to get it, because they know what every grocer knows. If you let people peek in the corn, they'll only take the good ones. I don't want to see artists and creators taking up other work because their craft doesn't support them anymore (please -- no arguments of "if they loved it they'd do it anyway" -- everyone needs to eat). And I'm aware that copyright and patent are very different animals than ordinary theft. No one goes out of business because my roommate and I share a toaster. But if I build a factory and mass-produce your product for cheaper, then we're *approaching* the kind of violation that copyright infringement in the form of P2P creates (but not the ease with which it's done). There *does* need to be a new economic system of reward for these guys, and it probably involves us paying something. I'm down with that. But if you steal and you steal and you steal from us, expect a little theft in return. and now I insert the bouncing frog :fire |
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Zeropaid Regular
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Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Jonesboro, Arkansas
Age: 24
Reputation Power: 0
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The Music Industry and Music Artists don't want p2p and piracy because it take money out of their pockets. These people are greedy. By protesting against this artists are losing thier fans more than gathering them. The Computer World is smart. Microsoft and any other big company have smart people, but none like the underground computer world. In the computer world there are no rules. You're free to do what you want. There are no limitations so the technology goes further than any big business. The computer world will triumph. P2P will never die!!!! No one can stop it.!
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