 Originally Posted by wasup
...and people are downloading them because it costs way too much to buy them (if a=b and b=c then a=...?)
If you don't have the money to buy a commercial product, you're not eligible for ownership.
I would buy them for a fraction of the price. I would spend about 1 dollar or less on an album. Not the physical CDs though (they are a waste of material, time, and money. I mean, I don't own a CD player and the music would only end up being converted to digital music so I'd just want digital music to start with).
I think you would be interested to know that most musicians want to make some money off their music. Creating quality music is actual work and if you're a professional, this is your main source of money. If CD sales wouldn't matter to them, they'd release their music freely.
How did you get that out of what I was saying....
See below.
Yes... yes it is. If I steal a car, they literally lose money. If I steal music, they don't lose money.
The difference between the car and the music is that the one is material, the other is information. When you buy music, you're only paying for the material as a necessary medium of transportation of the information (or you don't get material at all). You're actually paying for a copy of the information.
The difference is that music as a form of information can be copied, so when you do that you're not taking something from someone, you're just copying it and leaving the original where it is. So according to you that makes it OK. This is why I drew the above conclusion. The same goes for movies, software etc.
The creation of information requires effort, no less than the creation and formation of material. Hence, when you create information this is intellectual property. Hence, for someone to copy this, they need to have the copyright.
All that this does is apply the rules of material products to intellectual ones. You want to get paid for the work you have created and the time and energy you have invested, no matter if that work is music, software, teaching, art or a car. According to you, if something can be copied without removing the original, you're not stealing, hence we don't need intellectual property and copyright.
They gain money indirectly because I promote their band.
How so? If you mean concerts, then why don't all the bands just release their songs for free and earn money from touring? What's with bands who aren't interested in concerts? If you mean other people will buy their CDs because you told them about it, that's like saying it's OK to murder someone so long as you are a member in an anti-murder interest group.
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