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Info for Musicians
The following was written in response to a discussion by the
Board of Governors of the New York Chapter of National Association of Recording
Arts and Sciences (NARAS) regarding the position NARAS should take with respect
to a new public relations campaign proposed by the Recording Industry
Association of America (RIAA) condemning those who download music from the
Internet.
_______________________________________________________________________
The subject of digital rights, and the position NARAS should
take with respect to it, is near and dear to me. I've read a great deal about
it. If I may, I would like to offer a few thoughts:
1. Intellectual
Property
1. Irrespective
of what we think should be done, it is still currently illegal to download
copyrighted music that you didn't buy. This is a problem that needs to be
addressed. The statistic discussed in the December meeting that there were 3
billion downloads the previous month shows that the law is going to have to be
changed, unless you take the position that downloaded music is stealing and
thereby criminalize the society. But how can fifty million people (over 200
million worldwide) be wrong? How do we reconcile the reality of downloaded
music with the idea of intellectual property?
Intellectual property has not always been defined and
protected as it is today. Thomas Jefferson wrote about the philosophical
considerations:
If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all
others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an
idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to
himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of
everyone, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it. Its peculiar
character, too, is that no one possesses the less, because every other
possesses the whole of it. He who receives an idea from me, receives
instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine,
receives light without darkening me. That ideas should freely spread from one
to another over the globe, for the moral and mutual instruction of man, and
improvement of his condition, seems to have been peculiarly and benevolently
designed by nature, when she made them, like fire, expansible over all space,
without lessening their density at any point, and like the air in which we
breathe, move, and have our physical being, incapable of confinement or
exclusive appropriation. Inventions then cannot, in nature, be a subject of
property.
The above quote appeared in John Perry Barlow’s excellent
essay, "The Economy of Ideas", an essay that first appeared in the
March 1994 issue of Wired Magazine. Barlow writes:
If our property can be infinitely reproduced and
instantaneously distributed all over the planet without cost, without our
knowledge, without its even leaving our possession, how can we protect it? How
are we going to get paid for the work we do with our minds? And, if we can't
get paid, what will assure the continued creation and distribution of such
work?
Since we don't have a solution to what is a profoundly new
kind of challenge, and are apparently unable to delay the galloping
digitization of everything not obstinately physical, we are sailing into the
future on a sinking ship.
This vessel, the accumulated canon of copyright and patent
law, was developed to convey forms and methods of expression entirely different
from the vaporous cargo it is now being asked to carry. It is leaking as much
from within as from without.
Legal efforts to keep the old boat floating are taking three
forms: a frenzy of deck chair rearrangement, stern warnings to the passengers
that if she goes down, they will face harsh criminal penalties, and serene,
glassy-eyed denial.
Intellectual property law cannot be patched, retrofitted, or
expanded to contain digitized expression any more than real estate law might be
revised to cover the allocation of broadcasting spectrum…
The entire concept of intellectual property needs to be
re-examined and ways of protecting it need to reconsidered. Unfortunately, the
entertainment industry has, by legislative crook and judicial hook, obtained a
20 year copyright extension. The Supreme Court recently upheld the "Sonny
Bono Copyright Term Extension Act (CTEA)" that extended the life of
existing copyrights an additional 20 years. This, in the face of Justice Steven
G. Breyer’s estimation that only 2% of works copyrighted between 1923 and 1942
are available to the general public. The Supreme Court case pitted the public
against Disney, whose early Mickey Mouse cartoons were to enter into the public
domain in 2003, and for whom the Congress drafted the legislation in the first
place. This is a clear case of a multi-national conglomerate using its
political muscle to the disadvantage of everyone but itself. So, instead of
creating new content, and allowing long-standing laws to work, the
entertainment business frantically seeks to manipulate the process to its own
ends. And it does this with the obsequiousness of penurious politicians and a
supinely acquiescent Supreme Court. That is the BEST the establishment has to
offer, and it has nothing to do with progress or the good of the society.
2. Competition
for the CD
The current argument over intellectual property is the
result of the sharing of music files encoded as mp3s, Windows Media files,
RealAudio files or other formats currently available. The music business blames
these downloads, which it perceives as piracy, for the 10% decline in sales for
the year 2002. This raises several questions, among them: how and why people
listen to music, what other products compete with CDs, and what is the role of
radio?
Why is it that record companies pay dearly for radio play
and fight Internet play? What is the real difference between radio and the
Internet? Perfect copies? If we look at the Internet as analogous to radio, the
problem becomes one of performance rights, not the unlawful exploitation of
intellectual property. People are creating their own "radio" on their
hard drives, and they are constantly changing it. Would this have anything to
do with the "McDonaldization" of radio by Clear Channel and others?
Would the fact that almost every song on commercial radio is bought and paid
for have anything to do with the narrow focus and homogeneous nature of radio?
What drives radio is advertising and money, not music. A lot of music gets left
behind thanks to the current state of radio; that consumers are rejecting it
shouldn't be surprising. They're creating their own mp3 playlists, and if the
labels were smart, they'd be doing everything in their power to be on those
playlists, just like they do everything in their power to be on the playlists
of radio stations. Instead, they scream copyright infringement and call their
lawyers.
There are other reasons for CD sales to be down.
Dan Bricklin and Forrester Research list reasons for the
drop in CD sales:
…the economy, competition from other forms of entertainment
(including the yearly $6 billion of video games and the rush to the new DVD
video format), and finally the shorter playlists on radio (partially a result
of Clear Channel's control of 60% of rock radio listening and their style) that
leads to fewer new musicians becoming well known. …MTV is playing fewer music
videos, and in general, there is a record industry style to push a narrower
range of musicians. You can imagine that the death of Internet Radio will also
cut down on the ways to find out about new music.
Price is a major reason for the decline in CD sales. On
Bricklin's website there’s a chart that shows that between the years 1991-2001,
the average price of a CD went from $13.01 to $14.64, which is a 12.53%
increase in price. The record companies raised prices precisely at the time
costs were coming down. When a DVD costs $19.99 and includes the movie in
multiple formats with bonus material and no hassle, and a CD costs $18.99 and
comes with potential legal hassles, limits on fair use, and all the finger
waving the RIAA can muster, the choice of which product to buy becomes clear.
To put it simply, consumers feel that out of all their entertainment options,
CDs provide the least bang for the buck.
There are five or six new and growing ways for people to
spend their entertainment dollar. The video games market is one place the
consumers went, and music followed suit. VH1 News recently reported that the
new place to break an artist is in a video game. Some companies like Island
Records know this. They have a great track record of getting music on video
game soundtracks. But unlike Island, most don't. There are other distractions
that draw business away from the record companies: DVD, the fastest growing
home electronics development in the history of the world, the Internet itself,
email, cable TV, movies, and even more than ever, mobile phones. In addition to
that, the product marketed by record labels is narrow and significantly over
priced in comparison to the other available entertainment options. Portable CD
players are being replaced by iPods. Instead of the 12 songs on a CD, there are
1500 songs on an iPod. Why shouldn't CD sales be down? Truth be told, the
record business is lucky to be alive.
Ananova.com reported that 3.8 million DVD players were sold
last year, double that of the previous 12 months. DVD sales reached 80 million
last year, representing a 111% increase over 2001. Twenty million DVDs and 1.2
million DVD players were sold in December 2002 alone. The movie industry sold
1.6 billion tickets, taking in 9.3 billion dollars in gross box office receipts
in 2002, up 11% from the previous year, despite President and CEO of the MPAA
Jack Valenti's recent statements that the future is bleak. Not since the 1950's
have so many movie tickets been sold. Meanwhile, movie sharing on the Internet
is at an all time high. The movie business isn't suffering because it isn't
suffering! On the contrary, the industry is making more money than ever. This
is happening at a time when consumers are being offered MORE choices to view
movies than ever before. People spend more money when they have more choices.
Advances in hardware and software have propelled the movie
business ever since the VCR, which at the time was decried as the death of the
movie business, just as the cassette was to be the death of the music business.
In both cases, these "copying" devices enhanced their respective
businesses. Whether it’s the MPAA or the RIAA, there is no reason to trust
those who have cried wolf in the past about new technology, especially when
history has shown that advances in technology increase consumer spending.
Then there is the reality that the Internet is changing many
businesses. eBay, the fastest growing and most profitable of the major internet
companies, is selling everything entertainment (and everything else) to scores
of millions of people every week, including music and musical instruments. As a
result, they have put many music and instrument stores out of business. In an
era of rapidly evolving technology, businesses that adapt will survive, those
who don't, won't. As reported by the New York Times on January 17, 2003:
eBay reported a profit of $87 million for the fourth
quarter, more than triple the $25.9 million posted a year earlier….Revenue was
$413.9 million in the quarter, up 89% from a year earlier…For the full year,
eBay earned $249.9 million, up from $90.4 million a year ago. Sales increased
62% to $1.21 billion….Last year, a total of $14.9 billion worth of merchandise
was sold on eBay. This is just shy of the $15.5 billion in sales analysts
expect this year from Federated Department Stores, the parent of Macy's.
These are startling numbers, and they reveal the way of the
future. According to The Times, January 24, 2003, sales at Amazon increased
28%, to $1.43 billion, and this in the face of one of the toughest retail
markets in years. They did this by expanding their product lines (to include
clothing) and offering free shipping to consumers whose orders exceed $25. They
did it by providing greater service for less money. Perhaps the music business
will take note.
It is true that downloading music is a very popular entertainment
option for many people. The number one p2p application, KaZaa, was downloaded
3,145,095 times during the week of January 6-12, 2003. The number two p2p
application, iMesh, was downloaded 440,877 times during the same period. KaZaa
estimates that it had 140 million users by the end of 2002, twice as many as
Napster at its peak. These fantastic numbers indicate a desire among consumers
for music that the music companies traditionally satisfied but increasingly no
longer do. This raises another question. Why don't the record labels have p2p
networks? They have proven to be wildly popular. They don't require expensive
investments in technology to start and maintain, and most importantly, the
online community has embraced them wholeheartedly. The reason is, they can't
agree with their "partners" – publishers and artists – on how to
share the money. The same greed that got them into their current problem
prevents them from extricating themselves from it.
Let's suppose I'm a kid. I have a fixed allowance or a
minimum wage job. I have $100 a month to spend on entertainment, if I'm lucky.
With that cash, I can rent or buy DVDs, pay for my Internet connection, go to a
concert, a movie, or a sporting event (at which I might buy some merchandise),
buy a video game, pay the extra minutes on my mobile phone bill, drive through
the drive thru, or buy a CD. From that list of options, what's the least likely
thing I'm going to spend money on? I think the answer would be the CD, even if
downloaded music didn't exist. I would argue that it's not the presence of a
"free" alternative that has caused the decline in CD sales, it’s the
presence of competing choices offering more value and fewer hassles.
3. An
Argument for Downloaded Music
It could be argued that mp3s are the greatest marketing tool
ever to come along for the music industry. If your music is not being
downloaded, then you're in trouble. If you can't give it away, you certainly
can't sell it. Daniel Bedingfield recently had a top 3 song on the radio with
"Gotta Get Thru This". However, his music was hardly available
through any of the p2p networks. His record lasted on the Billboard Top 200 for
less than a month, even though the single had been on radio playlists all over
the country for several months. It’s also been widely reported that the most
downloaded album of all time was "The Eminem Show" by Eminem. It was
downloaded so heavily that Interscope took the unusual step of releasing the
album a week early due to the rampant online sharing of tracks from the album.
Fast forward to the end of 2002 and "The Eminem Show" is the best
selling album of the year. This seems to indicate the opposite of what the RIAA
would have you believe: when people share mp3s, more music is sold, not less.
As VH1.com recently reported, at least one company believes
that file-sharing is good for business, and that it's a "promotional tool
and boosts the sales of albums that deserve it." M.S.C. Music &
Entertainment is encouraging listeners to download 20 tracks from rapper Tech
N9ne's new album, for free. "…The major labels can no longer fool the
consumer. They don't want you to sample their music because they know that if
the fans realize there are only two good songs on a record, you will not buy
it…We believe in our product."
50 Cent, Eminem’s newest talent and Rap's current street
king, sees an advantage to having his debut album, "Get Rich or Die
Trying", available before the release date:
The bootleggers are gonna go crazy with this record. They
understand how much of a presence I have in the streets. They'll probably get
the record two weeks before the album actually drops and it'll be all over the
place. …I believe word of mouth is just gonna generate more sales. Consistency
is the key to all success. If I consistently put out good music, if they buy
the bootleg this go around, it'll guarantee that they purchase the real CD when
my next album comes out. I'm in a good space financially so I'm not worked up
about the few dollars the bootleggers are gonna get.
There's a provocative piece on p2p.com regarding piracy and
on-line distribution titled "Piracy is Progressive Taxation, and Other
Thoughts on the Evolution of Online Distribution" by Tim O'Reilly. His
article discusses a number of subjects, including:
o Obscurity
is a far greater threat to authors and creative artists than piracy.
o Piracy is
progressive taxation.
o Customers
want to do the right thing, if they can.
o Shoplifting
is a bigger threat than piracy.
o File
Sharing networks don't threaten book, music, or film publishing, they threaten
existing publishers.
o 'Free' is
eventually replaced by a higher-quality paid service.
Tim O'Reilly is the founder and president of O'Reilly &
Associates, thought by many to be the best computer book publisher in the
world. He has been a pioneer in the popularization of the Internet. His Global
Network Navigator site (GNN, sold to AOL in September 1995) was the first Web
portal and the first true commercial site on the World Wide Web. O'Reilly takes
a long-term view of the intellectual property problem as opposed to the
short-term view that is characterized by the 'sky is falling' rhetoric of both
the music and movie business.
O'Reilly's observations about the book business apply to the
music business. As with the record industry, the publishing world enjoys only a
10% success rate. "More than 100,000 books are published each year…yet
fewer than 10,000 of these new books have any significant sales…" And like
recording artists and the music business, "Authors think that getting a
publisher will be the realization of their dreams, but for so many, it’s just
the start of a long disappointment".
O'Reilly continues:
For all of these creative artists, most laboring in
obscurity, being well-enough known to be pirated would be a crowning
achievement. Piracy is a kind of progressive taxation, which may shave a few
percentage points off the sales of well-known artists (and I say
"may" because even that point is not proven), in exchange for massive
benefits…
I have watched my 19 year-old daughter and her friends
sample countless bands on Napster and KaZaa and, enthusiastic for their music,
go out to purchase CDs. My daughter now owns more CDs than I have collected in
a lifetime of less exploratory listening. What's more, she has introduced me to
her favorite music, and I too have bought CDs as a result. And no, she isn't
downloading Britney Spears, but forgotten bands from the 60s, 70s, 80s, and
90s, as well as their musical forebearers in other genres. This is music that's
difficult to find – except online – but, once found, leads to a focused search
for CDs, records, and other artifacts. eBay is doing a nice business with much
of this material, even if the RIAA fails to see the opportunity.
O'Reilly makes other persuasive observations:
Piracy is a loaded word, which we used to reserve for
wholesale copying and resale of illegitimate product. The music and film
industry usage, applying it to peer-to-peer file sharing, is a disservice to
honest discussion….
The simplest way to get customers to stop trading illicit
digital copies of music and movies is to give those customers a legitimate
alternative, at a fair price….
The question before us is not whether technologies such as
peer-to-peer file sharing will undermine the role of the creative artist or the
publisher, but how creative artists can leverage new technologies to increase
the visibility of their work. For publishers, the question is whether they will
understand how to perform their role in the new medium before someone else
does. Publishing is an ecological niche; new publishers will rush in to fill it
if the old ones fail to do so….
New media have historically not replaced but rather
augmented and expanded existing media marketplaces, at least in the short term.
Opportunities exist to arbitrage between the new distribution medium and the
old….
O'Reilly compares an online music subscription service to
people paying $19.95 a month for an ISP when "free" Internet is
available, or $20 to $60 a month for TV programming when there is
"free" TV programming:
Why would you pay for a song that you could get for free?
For the same reason that you will buy a book that you could borrow from the
public library or buy a DVD of a movie that you could watch on television or
rent for the weekend. Convenience, ease-of-use, selection, ability to find what
you want, and for enthusiasts, the sheer pleasure of owning something you
treasure.
Comparing TV to music, O'Reilly says a lesson that can be
learned from television:
…is that people prefer subscriptions to pay-per-view, except
for very special events. What's more, they prefer subscriptions to larger
collections of content, rather that single channels. So, people subscribe to
"the movie package", "the sports package", and so on. The
recording industry's "per song" trial balloons may work, but I
predict that in the long term, an "all-you-can-eat" monthly
subscription service (perhaps segmented by musical genre) will prevail in the
marketplace.
People want what they want and they have made their choices.
They will still buy CDs, but they want to download music. The failure of the
music business to provide a comparable alternative to peer-to-peer networks is
the most logical explanation for the "illegal" downloading of music.
And rather than address the problem by examining their own behavior, the music
companies declare the consumer to be their enemy, support intrusive,
over-reaching legislation, and act precisely against their best interests. This
remains true even in the face of the recent truce the RIAA agreed to with
several technology groups. Rather than realize the profit potential of that
about which they complain, they try to kill it, then they try to control it.
Now they're trying to control the consumer. As O'Reilly points out in his final
paragraph:
And that's the ultimate lesson. "Give the wookie what
he wants!" as Han Solo said so memorably in the first Star Wars movie.
Give it to him in as many ways as you can find, at a fair price, and let him
choose which works best for him.
The RIAA tries to ‘give the wookie what he wants’ by giving
him what they want. Their newest attempt is with a handful of half-baked music
subscription services. The New York Times recently reported that "Jupiter
Research expects consumers to pay about $79 million for downloaded songs and
CD's in 2003. Subscription services…are expected to collect about $107 million
next year." The Times continues:
The brewing battles among these services will be over how
they package songs, what kind of exclusive access they can offer subscribers to
particular artists and whether they can be used for portable devices, stereos
and cars.
If subscription services offer a broad range of music and no
Digital Rights Management schemes, and properly labeled high quality files, at
a reasonable price with fast downloads, they will have a chance to compete
against "free". Unfortunately, it is unlikely that the music business
will avoid copy protection issues. Instead, copy protection remains the number
one priority for both the music and movie industries. The future of digital
media will have movies or songs offered in various ways for various prices. If
you want to just play it once, or for a 24 hour period, it will be cheaper than
if you want to download it to your hard drive and copy it. If you want it to
play on all of your players, you will pay more than if you just want to hear it
or see it over the Internet. 2003 will be crucial year for industry online
music subscription services Pressplay (Universal/Sony), MusicNet (BMG/Warners/EMI),
and Rhapsody. They will have to develop an approach to these issues that
satisfy the demand currently being met by the p2p networks if they hope to
compete in this emerging market. Consumers are reluctant to accept limitations
on use, so it is unlikely that copy protection will lead to a cure for what
ails the music business.
The music business isn't like the movie business, even
though both are involved in the digital dissemination of intellectual property.
A song is not the same as a movie. Listening to a song on the Internet isn't
the same as watching a movie for free on the Internet. It is arguable that
downloading a song functions as a substitute for radio, a first step in the
process of consumption, while watching a movie is, arguably, the last step in
the process of consumption. Consumers may accept limitations on the use of a
movie, making it more akin to the licensing of software, but they find it more
difficult to accept limitations on the use of a CD they buy or music that they
acquire by way of a subscription service. Consumers are used to renting movies,
to licensing software; they're used to owning music, whether they buy it or
not. Digital copy protection (known as Digital Rights Management or DRM) will
only add fuel to this fire, so expect a very big blaze in 2003. In the end, it
will be the music companies that run the risk of being consumed by it. Music
companies have the opportunity to adjust to the new realities of digital
distribution but instead they cling to their existing business models where
they control as much of the distribution channel as possible. It is doubtful
that this behavior will be rewarded with increased sales.
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) was passed by
Congress in 1998 to address how technological innovation would affect
intellectual property. In drawing up the document, Congress looked to the RIAA
and similar groups for guidance as to what the law should contain. The
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) recently released a study titled “Unintended
Consequences: Four Years under the DMCA” which goes on to detail how the
“anti-circumvention” clauses of the DMCA have been used to stifle innovation,
censor free speech, and threaten academic/scientific research. These chilling
effects of the DMCA contradict and limit the “fair use” doctrine that is an
important part of copyright law. Additionally, the Digital Rights Management
(DRM) initiatives that the RIAA and MPAA propose to protect their copyrights do
nothing to protect the “fair use” rights of consumers.
Record labels are confused and contradictory. They use mp3s
in private while they deride them in public. If they’re promoting a new band,
they'll post the band’s songs on p2p networks (often in a covert manner) with
the hopes that they'll be traded and talked about in chat rooms. If it's an
established act with a history of sales, they'll "spoof" the p2p
networks with fake files (also in a covert manner). It’s just another way of
using mp3s, albeit a subversive and anti-customer way. Even the tax-supported,
nonprofit RIAA has apparently engaged in "poisoning" p2p networks.
The biggest damage done by downloaded music is the paralysis
it has inflicted upon the traditionalists in the music industry. The path to
profitability does not include a long and drawn out legal battle with
consumers, yet this is exactly what the RIAA is doing. The choice for NARAS is
whether to lead the fight for what’s best for the artists or whether to endorse
the self-serving positions of the music industry’s congressional lobbying
group, the RIAA.
There is a convincing piece by Damien Cave on Salon.com
titled "File Sharing: Innocent Until Proven Guilty" in which argues
that there is no proven correlation between downloaded music and the decline in
CD sales. He shows in in "File Sharing: Guilty As Charged?" that a
good deal of the ‘sky is falling’ rhetoric created by the record companies and
the RIAA is based on supposition and self-interest. Another recent Internet
article, "RIAA's Statistics Don't Add Up To Piracy", analyzes the
RIAA’s own statistics and argues that they do not support the RIAA’s conclusion
that downloaded music is the cause for the decline in CD sales. In this
detailed analysis, George Ziemann argues that the record industry released
11,900 fewer titles in 2000 than it released in 1999, a 25% decrease, yet the
total number of units shipped decreased only 10.3% and the dollar value of
these units fell by only 4.1%. It seems that the RIAA is misinterpreting its
own statistics.
4. Record
Company Complicity
It is obvious that the record companies are responsible for
their current predicament. Again, how did they turn themselves into one of the
most hated corporate sectors and what are they going to do about it? Five years
ago nobody gave a second thought about record companies, now they are reviled.
Record companies need to realize that music is now viewed as a commodity with a
shelf-life of 90 days, and that they made it so. As Prince recently put it :
So r most citizens really being completely disrespectful of
the value of art and the need 2 provide appropriate compensation 2 the artists
4 their works? We’ve said it b4 and we’ll say it again: the rise of digital
technology and peer-2-peer file sharing has little 2 do with people’s intrinsic
respect 4 art and artists, and everything 2 do with the cynical attitude of big
industry conglomerates, which have consistently pushed 4 more and more
commercial, highly profitable products at the xpense of authentic art and
respect 4 artists.
If people do not feel enough guilt 2 prevent them from
making digital copies of the latest episode of a popular TV show or hit pop
song, it is precisely because the industry giants have succeeded in making
these works purely commercial products, with little or no consideration 4 their
actual artistic value. It is precisely because these companies have been
consistently promoting commercial products at the xpense of artistic works.
The fact that actual works of art still manage 2 seep thru
the cracks of this huge profit-driven industry does not change anything about
the fundamental equations that have been driving and still drive the industry,
2day more than ever — i.e. that art = money, artists = money-makers, and art
lovers = consumers.
As a simple xample of how little music is valued as an art
4m by the industry, it is estimated that only about 20 percent of music ever
recorded is currently available — and, of this 20 percent, what proportion is
actually readily available 2 music lovers? What proportion is not the current
100 top albums on the SoundScan charts?
It simply appears that the instinctive reaction of the lover
of art (b it music, TV shows, movies, or other 4ms of art) is such that, if the
industry has no respect 4 his or her identity as an appreciator of art, then he
or she has no reason 2 have any respect 4 the industry as a purveyor of art. By
making digital copies of so-called cultural products, many people r not
demonstrating their lack of respect 4 art and 4 artists, but r xpressing —
consciously or not — their frustration with the way the entertainment industry
profits from art at the xpense of both art makers and art lovers.
The consumers of the commercial products of the
entertainment industry r only as cynical as the industry has deliberately made
them, by dumbing down their products, by xploiting artists, by making
profit-driven choices and decisions, and by providing their own kind with
obscene compensations and legal impunity that r completely out of touch with
the real world of ordinary people.
There is good reason for consumer cynicism. AOL/Time Warner
owns Warner Bros. Records (along with America Online, Time, Life, Fortune,
Elektra, Sports Illustrated, HBO, Turner Broadcasting, CNN, Cinemax,
Entertainment Weekly, New Line Cinema, Warner Bros Studios, In Style, Warner/Chappell
Music, Time Warner Cable, WBN, ICQ, Warner Music Group, Netscape, People,
Reprise, Rhino, Atlantic, WEA, TNT, MapQuest, WinAmp, In Demand, Erato,
Moviefone, and Road Runner). AOL makes a lot of money as an Internet Service
Provider. There is no question that a large portion of the people using AOL’s
service are downloading the very music that Warner Bros. Records claims as
being stolen. There is no question that the executives at AOL/Time Warner know
this. Also, let's not forget that it was AOL that bought Time Warner. Service
trumped content.
The conglomerates are reeling from the impact the Internet
and digital downloads are having in changing how the consumer thinks. But it is
not the downloads that are wrecking the music business, it is the inability of
the conglomerates to adjust to the Internet and the new ways consumers want to
consume music. AOL/Time Warner just posted a year-end loss for 2002 of $98.7
billion. Sony, the only multi-national corporation to have interests in both
the music and consumer electronics worlds, has relinquished its leadership in
the portable market to Apple's iPod, due to Sony's conflicting interests in
music copyrights (Sony Music) and in hardware. Sony hardware comes with
anti-copying features making it cumbersome and inflexible. This is a stunning
result. The world's largest consumer electronics corporate creator, utterly
dominate in the market, surrendered it's preeminence because it wanted to
protect a Celine Dion song. It makes no sense. As reported in the Wired
Magazine article "The Year the Music Dies", the five major music
companies sold $20 billion worth of music last year but Sony alone had $42
billion in electronics and computer sales, making their music business much
less significant. "If Sony wants to sell mp3-capable cell phones – a big
thing in Japan and potentially worldwide – how much attention will it pay to
Sony Music's protests?" In another recent article in Wired Magazine Frank
Rose writes:
As a member of the Consumer Electronics Association, Sony
joined the chorus of support for Napster against the legal onslaught from Sony
and the other music giants seeking to shut it down. As a member of the RIAA,
Sony railed against companies like Sony that manufacture CD burners. And it
isn't just through trade associations that Sony is acting out its
schizophrenia. Sony shipped a Celine Dion CD with a copy-protection mechanism
that kept it from being played on Sony PCs. Sony even joined the music
industry's suit against Launch Media, an Internet radio service that was
part-owned by - you guessed it - Sony. Two other labels have since resolved
their differences with Launch, but Sony Music continues the fight, even though
Sony Electronics has been one of Launch's biggest advertisers and Launch is now
part of Yahoo!, with which Sony has formed a major online partnership. It's as
if hardware and entertainment have lashed two legs together and set off on a
three-legged race, stumbling headlong into the future.
Sony is also the largest manufacturer of writeable CD drives.
They, along with Philips, co-developed the CD and collect royalties from
various CD patents. All CDs, whether used by commercial replicators or bought
by the general public are subject to these royalties which currently stand at
$0.033 per disc. There were over 500 million blank CDs sold last year. The
advantage of being a multinational corporation is the ability to use one asset
to create another asset. Sony may make less money on music but they are using
it to make money elsewhere.
Similar internal conflicts exist within AOL/Time Warner,
Vivendi/Universal, and the Bertelsmann polygon. Nevertheless, they continue to
engage in businesses that infringe on their own copyrights. They are trying to
have it both ways, in all ways. Instead of dealing with their own
inconsistencies, they direct and fund the RIAA to lobby politicians to support
legislation like the "Peer to Peer Piracy Protection Act". This act
gives record companies the right to invade your hard drive (an otherwise
illegal activity) if they suspect that you have illegally obtained their
copyrights, their music. This anti-piracy law is actually an anti-privacy law,
and it also limits fair use and threatens academic freedom. The RIAA and the
music business are trying to legislate profitability. NARAS needs to take a
position with respect to the copyright issue, but it should be an independent
position. NARAS should come up with its own ideas. The RIAA is acting
irrationally.
Also, the record companies recently settled a price fixing
suit in which they admitted they were overcharging consumers. This point seems
to be overlooked by the RIAA in its attempt to place all blame for the woes of
the music business at the feet of file sharing. Is it possible that the
decrease in CD sales is related to the conspiracy by the major record labels to
fix inflated prices?
5. Opportunity
and the Future
One other word about the 3 billion music downloads each
month. That's a lot of music. There aren't 3 billion songs. Music has become
fungible. People are going through it faster than toilet paper. Never in the
history of the world has there been more music in the air and never have more
people listened to music. Out of this incredible desire and need for music,
surely some good must come. I think more opportunity than ever is available to
the musician and songwriter, and the record company too. They just have to
create new ways to deal with this opportunity, and it won't be by the old
rules. Janis Ian is a good example. Downloaded music has resurrected her
career. She's actually making money because of downloads. I think that if it
weren't for all of this activity on the Internet and all of this downloaded
music, the CD market would be suffering more than it is. Mp3s are lessening the
decline of the music business, not creating it.
Record companies are not logical, righteous entities. They
are ramshackle, profit-driven enterprises. They act in their perceived best
interests and they act ruthlessly and in many cases, irrationally. The people
who run them still have their email printed out by their secretaries. We have
to wait for the next generation to take over, the "software"
generation, the generation of people who don’t remember growing up without a
computer around. I would argue that the future of music is multi-media, the
future of multi-media is DVD, and the future of music companies is software. In
5 years, record labels will be software companies and I don't think they know
that yet. The music business will be saved by someone from the software
business who can impose a new business model on music assets.
In the future there will be no record stores as we know
them, no tangible product as we know it. The CD is going the way of the 8-track
and the cassette. Soon there will be no need for the tangible thing. Consumers
have made their choice. They want to listen to music while they're working at
their computers, on a portable device like an iPod or MiniDisc player, or on a
home theater jukebox (similar to a feature of Microsoft’s Xbox). Digitally
available music has given the consumer choices and they like those choices.
They don’t want music just from commercial radio. They also want it from their
hard drives and from the Internet. Yet record companies still want to force
tangible, overpriced media on consumers who want to obtain data files and
temporarily store them on their hard drives or on cheap, disposable discs
(CD-Rs). If record labels don't start trying to be part of the future they will
be bought up and converted to it by someone who is.
People have always listened to music while they were doing
something else. That's almost the essence of "American Music". Record
companies guessed right on the "something else" for a long time, but
that was before the myriad of other choices became available to consumers. At
one time in this country, listening to music on the radio was a miracle. It’s
no longer a miracle, and when you look at the technological developments in the
last 70 years, there's little wonder why. It’s been one miracle after another.
And yet even to this day, radio is the sine qua non of a hit record. This is
especially true in the era of radio consolidation, where corporate goliaths
like Clear Channel are allowed to exist. Maybe that's the only way radio can
remain relevant: it has to become one big punch. In a world where diversity is
an evolutionary step, radio moves furiously towards consolidation, aided and
abetted by the FCC. Someone should ask the question, why is this allowed?
The way things are going, a few corporations are going to
control access to all digital information, and if the current Administration
has its way, these activities will be monitored. The reason why the RIAA is
screaming bloody murder about little ol' mp3 is because it means that they are
losing control. People are making their own individual choices, and they aren't
going along with the program of manipulation that has always limited those
choices. Now that they’re making choices, industry executives and politicians
are shocked.
The same argument extends to the television industry with
respect to TiVo and other personal video recorders (PVRs). Jamie Kellner,
chairman and CEO of Turner Broadcasting, which encompasses everything from CNN
to TNT and is a part of AOL/Time Warner, was asked in an interview why PVRs
were bad for her industry. She responded that it's "because of the ad
skips.... It's theft. Your contract with the network when you get the show is
you're going to watch the spots. Otherwise you couldn't get the show on an
ad-supported basis. Any time you skip a commercial ….you're actually stealing
the programming." Viewers might find that reasoning less than persuasive
but they'll probably be very persuaded by the threatening, accusatory tone, and
dismiss Ms. Kellner and her concerns. This is another example of an old media
being unable to adjust to technology. Yes, Jamie, your business is threatened.
You will have to change your way of thinking to save it. Abandon failing
tactics.
6. The Role
of NARAS
In order for the record industry to remain relevant it will
have to determine how to get people to buy something they can get for free. In
addition to the cable television business, print publications, and ISPs, there
is an industry that has found a solution to this problem, and the music
industry should take notice. That industry is the bottled water industry.
Bottled water is a growth market. But common sense would indicate that when
water is virtually free (i.e. tap water) that people wouldn’t want to pay $1.00
for 12 oz. of water. Yet, most of us frequently do just that. Why? Because it
is convenient, and because we have been persuaded that it is safer, more pure,
that it is "better" water. Convenience becomes necessity, belief
becomes profit.
The bottled water industry is built on customer service. If the
music business were to take this approach and ally themselves with consumers
rather than fight them, it’s quite possible that their profits would still be
growing. But record companies distrust their customers even more than their
customers distrust them. The circle is unlikely to be broken, which in turn
creates wide open spaces for the entrepreneur, for a "new" way. NARAS
has to appeal to the "new", not the old. NARAS supercedes the short
term interests of the record companies. NARAS has an obligation to ART and to
the ARTISTS who create it, to CREATIVE EXCELLENCE of its presentation, and it
is those obligations, above all, that should define its actions. The relevance
of NARAS exists in direct proportion to its independence.
Charlie suggested that the Board undertake a
"study" of the matter. He's right, only we should go further. I think
we need a symposium, a gathering of eagles. NARAS should take the lead in this
matter. Those who are taking it now are leading us over a cliff. The RIAA has
staked out an untenable position that is as unrealistic as it is anti-consumer
and anti-artist. Their interests and the interests of NARAS are not the same.
Their solutions are not good solutions. They cling unsuccessfully to the past
rather than embrace the stunning opportunities offered by the future. They will
be unsuccessful in their attempts to criminalize the society and in their
attempts to stretch the drum head of old laws onto the drum of new technology.
It is one thing to be unsuccessful, it's one thing to argue a bad position, but
it's quite another to be silly and laughed at, and that's where the RIAA has
ended up. They appear to be totally irrelevant except as bagmen. It's more than
just bad PR, it’s bad science. The RIAA reached its conclusions then looked for
supporting arguments, all the while ignoring reality, opportunity, and fact.
They overstate their position, misinterpret their own data, and make dubious
claims for artist rights, when the biggest abusers of artist rights are their
benefactors, the record companies themselves.
ZDNet reported that the sale of illegal CDs increased 50%
from 2000 to 2001. This translates into $4.3 billion dollars in sales from 950
million illegally sold CDs. This strikes me as a much more serious and obvious
problem than downloaded music. So serious in fact that the problem of
downloaded music pales by comparison. This is where the record companies and
RIAA should be putting their moral outrage, their money and energy. Those bad
guys really are bad guys, profiting from the mass counterfeiting of someone
else's property, unlike 14 year-old kids who download music because they can't
afford the $18 for 2 songs that are going to be replaced in a couple of weeks
anyway. Equating the downloading of music with counterfeiting for profit brings
disrepute to the RIAA's more important and necessary efforts to stop
counterfeiting. Then again, it's ironic that if the RIAA were to be successful
in shoving everyone back into the CD market almost half of the CDs purchased
would be counterfeits.
With respect to the question of downloaded music, NARAS
should embrace new technologies, be the voice of reasoned analysis, and act as
an arbiter to reconcile the conflicting views of the various parties involved.
In the past, NARAS aligned itself with the RIAA and the record companies. This
was a mistake, in my opinion, and I hope that the opinions expressed in this
paper will at least give us reason to pause and to thoroughly examine our
position in the future, as well as the position, claims, and statistics of the
RIAA and their corporate backers. Above all else, NARAS must not rubber stamp
what is quite clearly a self-serving position, as happened on last year's
Grammy broadcast when Mike Greene berated and branded music consumers as
thieves and shoplifters. NARAS must be the independent voice, the voice of
objectivity. NARAS should be the "think tank" of the music business,
not an enforcer or a PAC. What we have here is the potential to become a leader
in the new frontier of intellectual property rights, artist rights, consumer
rights, the future of music, and the power of the art itself. I say let's seize
the day. In my opinion, there is a vacuum of leadership with respect to these
pivotal and crucial issues and NARAS should step in and fill that vacuum. It is
a golden opportunity.
John Snyder and Ben Snyder
January 31, 2003
Bibliography:
Salon.com
Sour Notes:
http://archive.salon.com/tech/feature/2002/07/30/file_trading/
File Sharing: Innocent Until Proven Guilty:
http://archive.salon.com/tech/feature/2002/06/13/liebowitz/
File Sharing: Guilty As Charged?:
http://archive.salon.com/tech/feature/2002/08/23/liebowitz_redux/
Chained Melodies:
http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2002/03/13/copy_protection/index.html
Clear Channel Articles: http://archive.salon.com/ent/clear_channel/
All Salon Articles About mp3:
http://archive.salon.com/directory/topics/mp3/index.html
Slate
Hit Charade: http://slate.msn.com/?id=2069732
Prince
A Nation of Thieves? http://216.239.57.100/search?q=cache:dYAKpkQLPhcC:www.npgmusicclub.com/n...
Wired.com
The Economy of Ideas:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.03/economy.ideas.html
The Next Economy of Ideas:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/8.10/download.html
Why The RIAA Keeps Getting Hacked:
http://wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,57048,00.html/
The Year the Music Dies:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.02/dirge_pr.html
Disc Slug Sought to Offset Piracy:
http://www.news.com.au/common/printpage/0,6093,5866158,00.html
Hating Hilary:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.02/hating_pr.html
Rosen Waves Bye to RIAA:
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,57355,00.html
The Civil War Inside Sony:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.02/sony.htm
The Race to Kill Kaaza:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.02/kazaa.html
Janis Ian
The Internet Debacle:
http://www.janisian.com/article-internet_debacle.html
A Follow Up to the Internet Debacle:
http://www.janisian.com/article-fallout.html
PBS
Merchants of Cool: Media Giants:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/cool/giants
Misc. Links
RIAA: http://www.riaa.org
Electronic Frontier Foundation: http://www.eff.org
John Perry Barlow Bio/Links (author of The Economy of Ideas
and The Next Economy of Ideas): http://www.eff.org/~barlow/
John Perry Barlow Articles/Songs:
http://www.eff.org/~barlow/library.html
The Recording Industry is Trying to Kill The Goose That Lays
the Golden Egg: http://www.bricklin.com/recordsales.htm
Is File-Sharing A Good Thing: http://www.vh1.com/news/articles/1459025/12052002/n9ne_tech.jhtml
Piracy is Progressive Taxation, and Other Thoughts on the
Evolution of Online Distribution: http://www.openp2p.com/lpt/a/3015
RIAA's Statistics Don't Add Up To Piracy:
http://www.azoz.com/music/features/0008.html
2002: The Year Pop Lost Its
Popularity:http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/26/arts/music/26HITS.html?ex=1041921370&ei=1
&en=18ae3e1c936343ae
Studios Using Digital Armor to Fight Piracy:
http://nytimes.com/2003/01/05/business/05CONT.html
Motion Picture Association of America:
http://www.mpaa.org/anti-piracy/index.htm
Record Year for DVDs:
http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_737236.html
The MP3 Losers of 2002:
http://www.mp3newswire.net/stories/2003/2002losers.html
The MP3 Winners of 2002:
http://www.mp3newswire.net/stories/2003/2002winners.html
I Poisoned P2P Networks for the RIAA:
http://212.100.234.54/content/6/28919.html
50 Cent…Doesn't Mind Being Bootlegged:
http://www.vh1.com/news/articles/1459547/20030115/50_cent.jhtml?headline...
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Published: 11/24/2009
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