Thanks for the response Vass, I agree with a lot of what you said. I'm not as much of a hippie as I sound.
Not everybody who downloads music falls into the category of "too poor to buy a CD", that's for sure. There are truly people who feel entitled to it for nothing. I'm just saying as a businessman, you can try your hardest to limit these people's access to your music but as an artist in the long run it might not be in your best interest when it comes to keeping people tuned into your music.
In other words, I don't think the argument is so much "Is it stealing?" because it's tough to argue that it isn't. My point is more about choosing your battles. I stand by my assertion that I would rather have my CD in the hands of someone who would appreciate it than someone who could just afford it, although the choice is never that cut and dried.
When tapes became obsolete, I found myself with a bunch of albums that needed to be replaced with CDs. So I bought a bunch of used CDs, pretty much all albums I had already bought on album and/or cassette, ripped each to my hard drive (which I understand is legal, to make one copy for personal use) and then sold the CDs, since they were all my property at that point anyway. Am I stealing the music? I already bought the tapes and have had years of enjoyment from them, and I knew all the songs by heart!!
That all being said, I was the biggest Metallica fan in the world and there is no way in hell I am buying their new album unless I get to hear it first. If I were ever to be a struggling artist, I would expect to have to give my music away to prove myself and attract attention to my shows to prove my worth to any prospective label. I would find that goal a hell of a lot easier to attain through downloads on the Internet than to pay some dink a bunch of money to make me a bunch of CDs and then go to the hassle of pushing them. But I guess when you've already paid the dink to make the CDs it's definitely irksome when someone changes your battle plan for you. But they are ultimately the customer and they dictate the market you need to be in.
Not everybody who downloads music falls into the category of "too poor to buy a CD", that's for sure. There are truly people who feel entitled to it for nothing. I'm just saying as a businessman, you can try your hardest to limit these people's access to your music but as an artist in the long run it might not be in your best interest when it comes to keeping people tuned into your music.
In other words, I don't think the argument is so much "Is it stealing?" because it's tough to argue that it isn't. My point is more about choosing your battles. I stand by my assertion that I would rather have my CD in the hands of someone who would appreciate it than someone who could just afford it, although the choice is never that cut and dried.
When tapes became obsolete, I found myself with a bunch of albums that needed to be replaced with CDs. So I bought a bunch of used CDs, pretty much all albums I had already bought on album and/or cassette, ripped each to my hard drive (which I understand is legal, to make one copy for personal use) and then sold the CDs, since they were all my property at that point anyway. Am I stealing the music? I already bought the tapes and have had years of enjoyment from them, and I knew all the songs by heart!!
That all being said, I was the biggest Metallica fan in the world and there is no way in hell I am buying their new album unless I get to hear it first. If I were ever to be a struggling artist, I would expect to have to give my music away to prove myself and attract attention to my shows to prove my worth to any prospective label. I would find that goal a hell of a lot easier to attain through downloads on the Internet than to pay some dink a bunch of money to make me a bunch of CDs and then go to the hassle of pushing them. But I guess when you've already paid the dink to make the CDs it's definitely irksome when someone changes your battle plan for you. But they are ultimately the customer and they dictate the market you need to be in.
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