Great Moments In The Fight Against Music Piracy
Via Slashdot. You saw this coming…right?
"Lest there be anyone left who believes the RIAA’s propaganda that its litigation campaign is intended to benefit the ‘creators’ of the music, Hollywood Reporter reports that the RIAA is asking the Copyright Royalty Board to lower songwriter royalties on song file downloads, from the present rate of 9 cents per song — about 13% of the wholesale price — down to 8% of wholesale. Meanwhile, the big digital music companies, such as Apple, want the royalty rate lowered even more, to something like 4% of wholesale. So any representations by any of these companies that they are concerned for the ‘creators’ of the music must henceforth be taken with a boxcar-load of salt."
Here’s a business model for you: First you squeeze your customers…then you squeeze your creators. It isn’t piracy that’s destroying the music business…it’s the music business.
February 5th, 2008 at 5:06 pm
For a moment there I thought you were talking about the UK’s National Probation Service. Or the NHS. Or the Prison Service. Or the Police. Or the Fire Service. or the Royal Mail. Or the…
(you get the picture)
There are times when I’m surprised the UK’s entire civil service hasn’t gone on strike in unison (pun definitely intended). The rest of the time I think it’s merely miraculous.