Lost revenue. Pull the other one. "They're stealing money we never made, because we never made it!" I think not. The equivalent would ford going round trying to stop people from driving if they bought a second hand ford, because that means that ford didnt sell a new ford.
I generally agree with the points you've made, Mark, but there's a big flaw in this particular argument. Ford made one car. That car doesn't get replicated and the replicates given to other people. That's what happens with music when it's shared.
Similarly:
With television it's somewhat of a grey area given that not all television is commercial; if one has a paid TV license what is to stop them recording/filesharing their favourite programmes, barring the recent expansion of the BBC's own DVD video releases.
This falls foul of the same argument. Your TV licence fee does not permit you to
distribute the one copy you are allowed to make for personal consumption, so to speak, of a television show. So what's to stop people recording then filesharing such programmes is that it's against copyright law and currently illegal in the UK to do so.
Please bear in mind I'm only pointing out the one issue here: that copying music is still a breach of copyright (bar the one backup copy). Of course, MDV's analogy holds up if we're talking about someone giving their CD away and not keeping any copies for themselves. But of course, we're not talking about that, and that is the crux of the issue here.
The best analogy I can make here is a scientific one:
There is an enzyme which recognises a very specific sequence of amino acids in other proteins. This enzyme has been developed by a company and its use has been patented. Researchers in industry are permitted to use this enzyme, provided that they buy the enzyme from the supplier. An alternative way is to make the DNA required to produce the enzyme (a master CD, if you like) - this master can then be copied essentially for ever to produce enzyme free of charge without having to buy it from the manufacturer. This is an infringement of the patent, and does the company out of the money that would be spent on the enzyme.
Where this breaks down, however, is that academic institutions may use this enzyme in their experiments, and they are even allowed to re-make the enzyme from DNA (ie they
are permitted to make copies from the master CD), thus circumventing the need to buy the enzyme in the first place. However, this is an agreement with the original manufacturer, and any attempt to pass on the protein to other institutions, academic or industrial, is in direct violation of the agreement, and infringes the patent.
Ultimately, it's the manufacturer - the band - not the damned record company that should have the say, but if the band makes an agreement with the record company, they are bound by the clauses of that agreement, and we end up in the current situation. Of course, with new bands out there getting wise (after HOW many years!?) to the antics of big labels, we now find the tide of opinion turn away from the big labels, and they don't like that.
If I'm lucky enough to be in a position where my band is 'signed' - or rather, that we're in a position to market and release our own material and go on tour etc - I will be acutely aware of the value of filesharing as a marketing tool, and as a means of making it easy for fans to get hold of material. The idea that anyone should be snooping on data is as abhorrent as the idea that all my mail should first go to someone to open before it is sent to me.
Roo