I'm NOT the one making the music available for FREE. I'm NOT the one who negotiates the contract between the artist and whoever else they deal with. I have NO control over that. I can't go in and fix a way outdated model that shoulda been dumped years ago. That is between the artist and the market holder. The artist creates, the market holder distributes, the consumer consumes. That is the way of things.brent wrote:Tackle the main issue. How are you a consumer when music is free? How is an artist going to keep making music when the 98% market holder only pays the artist 1 cent per song, when people DO pay?
I've seen it happen in way to many marriages. It's called "communication breakdown". Parties involved stop talking to eachother because each feels the OTHER is in the wrong. Lawyers get involved, innocent people get harmed.
The only difference is that I as a consumer have nothing to lose, whereas an artist has everything to gain. If the industry's only defense is piracy well then that's just the saddest excuse I've ever heard.
Again you give waaaaay to much credit for piracy.


So stop trying to pull the CD out of every one else's eye when you have a LP in your own. OK?