I’ve been streaming the new Leonard Cohen album free from the Guardian site and loving it for days now. It just occurred to me to a) buy it, and b) point the link out to everyone else.
Reblogging again to point out a glaring fact about this.
This is how to deal with the internet and copyright.
You put something up which can be accessed for free, but not downloaded. People listen to it, are reminded that Leonard Cohen has a new album out soon, decide that they like it (I love it, incidentally, definitely a return to form Dear Heather wasn’t that good), and not only buy it - because they have confirmed that they want it and it’s worth putting money into - but link other people to it, who may not have heard Leonard Cohen before, and alert them to the album’s existence and that it is awesome and should be bought.
There may be piracy, recording the tracks etc. and not buying the album, but it’s peripheral to the larger effect, which is to advertise, increase sales, and increase knowledge of the album. I’ve forwarded this link to about six people now, and although one of them (my dad) will probably rip my copy of the CD when I get it and not buy his own, those are six more people who already know how they feel about the album and, if they like it, are significantly more likely to go out and buy it when it comes out.
That, multiplied by however many people saw and followed the link and passed it on to their family and friends, increases your market, which increases your sales, which increases your profits. All without draconian legislation or censorship. It’s an honour system of a sort, and it works because, on the whole, people want to reward artists for their work.
tl;dr - Copyrighted works and the internet; doin it rite.
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Posted on January 28 2012 at 01·03 PM / Permalink
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- Ayu: Prediction: Every TV studio and film studio and record company starts to go down. Then one of two things happens:
- 1. They realise the fuckery they've created and repeal the laws, pardoning their victims
- 2. Every pro studio shuts down, copyright becomes basically worthless as freeware and opensource entertainment takes wing, since there's no risk attached
- I personally think 2 would be AWESOME. And it wouldn't have to be free. Just, you know. Community-ey.
- Self-publishing.
- Small studios on the rise
- Big corporations pay the price of their mistakes
- It would be by no means a bloodless or victimless victory, but it would be a victory
- Jormy: It would be a seismic shift, and those are rarely harmless
- Ayu: Indeed. People will get hurt by this, some will have their lives ruined forever, and the only way I personally can deal with that knowledge is to hope that we're looking at a seismic shift in the right direction
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Posted on January 23 2012 at 02·14 PM / Permalink
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