The Real Cost of Free

NormaRegula

The Living Force
FOTCM Member
Really interesting article about media, creativity, artists and copyright infringement. In this rebuttal to an article written by a reporter about him and his alleged aims, Cory Doctorow says:"Commenters who claim I tell artists to give their work away for free are wrong – and they should focus on the real online villains"

http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/blog/2010/oct/05/free-online-content-cory-doctorow

from the article said:
You know who peddles false hope to naive would-be artists? People who go around implying that but for all those internet pirates, there'd be full creative employment for all of us. That the reason artists earn so little is because our audiences can't be trusted, that once we get this pesky internet thing solved, there'll be jam tomorrow for everyone. If you want to damn someone for selling a bill of goods to creative people, go after the DRM vendors with their ridiculous claims about copy-proof files; go after the labels who say that wholesale lawsuits against fans on behalf of artists (where labels get to pocket the winnings) are good business; go after the studios who are suing to make it impossible for anyone to put independent video on the internet without a giant corporate legal budget.

And if you want to find someone who supports artists, look at organisations such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation, who have advanced the cause of blanket licences for music, video and other creative works on the internet. As a songwriter, you'll be familiar with these licences: as you say, you get 3% every time someone performs your songs on stage. What EFF has asked for is the same deal for the net: let ISPs buy blanket licences on behalf of their customers, licences that allow them to share all the music they're going to share anyway – but this way, artists get paid. Incidentally, this is also an approach favored by Larry Lessig, whom you also single out as "ironic" in your piece.

It's been 15 years since the US National Information Infrastructure hearings kicked off the digital copyright wars. And for all the extraordinary power grabbed by the entertainment giants since then, the letters of marque and the power to disconnect and the power to censor and the power to eavesdrop, none of it is paying artists.
 
For those who are following the censorship and control live test in France with HADOPI and deep packet inspection (allowing to determine which contents you are downloading, watching and so on..), this won't come as a surprise.

Just as an example, The SACEM (The French company who pays royalties to musicians) had their accounting auditionned because they were many irregularities in the shadowy way they were distributing the money and how their directors were reaping huge benefits.

Meanwhile there are way too few alternatives (price wise and without DRM and such) for paying content to curb "illegal" download.

Thanks for the article.
 
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