More on Thieves
Jun. 11th, 2003 03:53 pmFollowup to this morning's post on the copy-protection on Radiohead's Hail to the Thief.
Prompted by
scapegoatee's statement, "There's no way I'm going to go out and buy crippled merchandise," I am re-connecting with my natural state of anger at record companies (and all other giant conglomerates for that matter). The model that is clearly bubbling under the surface is that you should buy the CD for $18 and, if you want the MP3s, buy the new copy-limited ones from iTunes music store (or future equivalents) for $1.50/tune. If I want the whole album and I want to play it in both formats, I can do so for $38 instead of, say $17 for the same thing a year ago.
As was noted on one bulletin board, the record companies claim that part of the reason for high CD prices is that their products are being pirated. Well, loves, if you're going to peddle copy-protected merch, you should drop the price to $10, shouldn't you? Some enlightened software companies (e.g. WaveMetrics, creators of Igor Pro) offer software licences that allow you to install two copies: one for your office and one for you home or laptop. This policy recognizes how the product is actually used.
Big record companies are repellant and greedy. They are not good for artists, the public or music in general.
Prompted by
As was noted on one bulletin board, the record companies claim that part of the reason for high CD prices is that their products are being pirated. Well, loves, if you're going to peddle copy-protected merch, you should drop the price to $10, shouldn't you? Some enlightened software companies (e.g. WaveMetrics, creators of Igor Pro) offer software licences that allow you to install two copies: one for your office and one for you home or laptop. This policy recognizes how the product is actually used.
Big record companies are repellant and greedy. They are not good for artists, the public or music in general.
on that point
Date: 2003-06-11 07:38 pm (UTC)It's weird that this latest Radiohead CD has these idiot protections because they have long been a fan of the Internet and so on. They spoke out in favour of Napster and they released Kid A online ten days before it was available in stores. Result? Kid A debuted at #1. So I'm thinking that this is not a Radiohead decision but a manufacturer's one.
The phrase "crippled merchandise" is terribly accurate. In fact, if you check the case, you'll see that the "CD" logo that all compact disks have is not present anywhere. That's because you DIDN'T BUY A CD. There was some hubub about this awhile ago but basically, look up something along the lines of "Phillips redbook CD format lawsuit" and you should find some stuff in Slashdot and so on.
Interesting stuff.