
Originally Posted by
Mindgames
Very true (so far - but don't get me started on what people are doing with virtual musicians) - but it's still not the point Amelia, Forrest and I are making. If you produce an item of creative art, be it a story, a photograph or a movie, the critical issue isn't how long it took you, how hard you worked or how many you knock out in a week, it's if that piece of art pays your mortgage or not.
There are countless millions of people for whom the creative act in itself is their goal, and they're prefectly happy to throw their work out for free (cue DeviantArt nd a billion homepages). Others have a half-assed stab at making back their overheads by selling a few copies, but don't really care if their stuff is leaked. Our problem is there are still a lot of us for whom that piece of art is the only thing putting beer on the table, and if it takes a year to write a book or three years to write an album, it had damn well better pay back in the tens/hundreds of thousands or we're living on the streets.
What (with respect) the 'public' don't get is that the studios, labels and managers of the world are immune to copyright theft - they make enough buffer income to live with it and still gold-plate their washroom doors. The reason is that the loss of revenue is offset to the artists in their royalties and advances, and yeah, some of us have a little cash put away - but not enough to afford the costs of keeping our stuff secure. Labels and studios do that for us, and in return they take a damn big percentage from every book, DVD or album sold. If they stopped all the 'bad press' lawsuits and stern warnings, then frankly I'd give up what I do and look for a secure income stacking shelves. It's just not worth it to have your entire year's salary put in the hands of a Ukranian copying shop.
I KNOW that people think sharing stuff is a victimless crime, and I appreciate that 'the industry' can shoot itself in the foot by associating with the sharing system (viral advertising and all that) - plus for a lot of people getting exposure for their art is more important than the theft - those people usually have a dead-end job to keep them fed while they upload tracks to maispayce. The people you've already heard of don't have the fallback. We're professionals trying to sell a product that can be copied and shared endlessly, a unique thing in this world and a damn hard way to pay the bills because of it. If you want a world of free-access art, then you'll get a world where the only artists left are amateurs.
mG
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