'Twould seem the RIAA, record companies, and their pack of snarling, salivating hyenas…er…lawyers, haven't noticed that pay-to-download is a workable business model that has people's attention - and money. If record companies produced CDs with 15 or so good songs, none of this would be an issue. Music piracy was a case of necessity inventing. You want just one song from an otherwise putrid CD? Download it. Now, some of those songs can be downloaded legally, for a small fee. The average Joe is quite happy to stay legal when the customer is satisfied.
"The PIRATE Act (S.2237) is yet another attempt to make taxpayers fund the misguided war on file sharing, and it's moving fast. The bill would allow the government to file civil copyright lawsuits in addition to criminal prosecutions, dramatically lowering the burden of proof and adding to the thousands of suits already filed by record companies. It would also force the American public to pay the legal bills of foreign record companies like Bertelsmann, Vivendi Universal, EMI, and Sony. Meanwhile, not a penny from the lawsuits goes to the artists."
"Don't let the record industry use your hard-earned dollars to pursue this fruitless war; tell Congress to sink the PIRATE Act!"
Funky Dung
















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