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TomPoo
09-26-2002, 10:28 AM
at the end of this article, they make interesting comments on what deterence measures they are taking now



LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Pop princess Britney Spears, the bubbly dancing spokesgirl for Pepsi, will soon be hawking again but on a more serious note in a commercial to warn people of the evils of online piracy.


Spears, rapper Nelly, hip-hop diva Missy Elliott and other pop stars will be featured in coming weeks in TV spots funded by the world's biggest record labels to educate people about illegal downloading of music, which the music industry blames for a protracted sales slump.


After falling more than 5 percent in 2001, CD shipments dropped another 7 percent in the first half of this year as illegal downloading of music persists at high levels.


Industry estimates show that more than 2.6 billion music files are downloaded illegally from the Internet each month, mainly through unlicensed "peer-to-peer" services.


"We want to hit fans with the message that downloading music illegally is, as Britney Spears explains in one of the spots, 'the same thing as going into a CD store and stealing the CD,'" said Hilary Rosen, chief executive officer of Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), a trade group for the music industry.


"Too many people don't realise that when you download a song you like from a peer-to-peer network or some other unauthorised Internet source, what you're doing is stealing music," she said.


The TV ads will be shown at a Congressional hearing in Washington on piracy Thursday, but will not be aired for a few weeks. The print portion of the campaign will be launched Thursday with full-page ads in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times and publications like Roll Call aimed at lawmakers.


The print ads ask the question, "Who Really Cares About Illegal Downloading?", then answer it with a diverse list of nearly 90 major recording artists and songwriters, including such superstars as Eminem, Madonna, the Dixie Chicks, Missy Elliott, Elton John, Sting, Phil Collins, Luciano Pavarotti, Brian Wilson, Spears, and Natalie Cole.


The campaign is the brainchild of an alliance of several recording, publishing, musician trade groups known as Music United for Strong Internet Copyright (MUSIC) Coalition.


The group includes the RIAA -- which represents industry giants like Bertelsmann, EMI, AOL Time Warner, Vivendi Universal and Sony -- the Association for Independent Music, American Federation of Musicians, Christian Music Trade Association and several others.


The campaign is the industry's latest effort to discourage illegal trading and sharing of music made popular by Napster, which at its peak attracted tens of millions of music fans.


While the labels succeeded in idling Napster through copyright litigation, the once popular song-swap service exposed an entire generation of youths to the concept of file-trading, leaving in its wake a more powerful crop of imitators including Morpheus MusicCity, Grokster and Kazaa.


In addition to pursuing these services in court, the labels have resorted to a method known as "spoofing" on the free peer-to-peer services and are also mulling lawsuits against individual song-swappers.


With "spoofing," the labels hire companies to distribute "decoy" files that are empty or do not work in order to frustrate would-be downloaders of movies and music.


Some analysts see these methods ultimately working. "File-transferers are the ones who are going to migrate to paid subscription services," said Lee Black, analyst with Jupiter Media. "The disadvantage that come with peer-to-peer services, like bad or bogus files, will ultimately drive people to subscription services," he said.



<IMG SRC="http://tompoo.50megs.com/images/tompsig3.jpg" width=300 height=100>

There is nothing more exhilerating than pointing out the shortcomings of others, is there?

TheMojoPin
09-26-2002, 11:22 AM
Y'know, the second I hear a struggling band living out of a van say, "man, don't download our songs! We can't feed ourselves! Buy the album!", I'd stop downloading ASAP. But until then, all I hear are multi-paltinum artists decrying the "evils of online piracy." Fuck you and buy me a gold plated swimming pool.

<img src=http://www.ltrooster.homestead.com/files/themojopin.jpg>
"You can tell some lies about the good times you've had/But I've kissed your mother twice and now I'm working on your dad..."
-TMP

TheKnicks23
09-26-2002, 11:51 AM
Y'know, the second I hear a struggling band living out of a van say, "man, don't download our songs! We can't feed ourselves! Buy the album!", I'd stop downloading ASAP.


Thats a good point, all those bands that are struggling to make it really need money to keep living. But these millionares piss me off. Whats wrong Brtiney? Only made 50 million last year?

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my_mr_happy
09-26-2002, 11:55 AM
I have a friend in a band and she loves the MP# era because they have no money and it is a great way to ditribue music at no cost. Helps them build a fan base

my_mr_happy
09-26-2002, 11:56 AM
as far as their own music.. It make me mad because these people make SOOOO much money. Were does greed end with some of them? not to mention they play the stuff on the radio anyway.. people used to copy onto regualr tape decks in the 70-80's... I just don't get it.. how much money do they need

El Mudo
09-26-2002, 12:06 PM
they blame the slump in the industry on "piracy" but how come no one has bought up the fact that pop music really really really really sucks ass right now, and no one wants to buy crappy records?

ah...ahh...ahhh...HAKUSHI!!
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"This ain't the summer of Brock...this is all year Angle!"

FelixDasGato
09-26-2002, 01:31 PM
Aside from the "stars" complainng about the money loss, they will never stop the sharing of files. People were getting and distributing music way before napster and the others and they will continue to do so long after the current ones fall.

whale_JUNK
09-26-2002, 03:46 PM
madonna should fight father time to get her body back. she's gone from major league POA to stringy hag. argentina cries for you.

Junge zum Verkauf !

JustJon
09-27-2002, 10:00 AM
I plan to watch those commercials as I search for each of these artists on Kazaa.

It's also worth noting the P2P services are creating anti-spoofing technologies...

<img src="http://www.chaoticconcepts.com/bans/rfjustjon6.jpg">

Jennitalia
09-27-2002, 10:07 AM
madonna should fight father time to get her body back. she's gone from major league POA to stringy hag. argentina cries for you.




i can only hope i look that good when im in my 40s

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whale_JUNK
09-28-2002, 06:04 PM
first time i've been quoted. i am so honored. thank you. <P>

Junge zum Verkauf !