Archive for category RIAA

Email to an Artist re: Jamie Thomas and KaZaA

trueAnthemscreenshot(As regular readers already know, I work part time for trueAnthem an online music distribution and viral marketing company.  Below is an email from one of trueAnthem’s artists and my response.)

Greg what is your stance on the RIAA suing people that do downloads on KAZAA and like services…. as I was logging in to yahoo saw this article featured … Yahoo Jamie Thomas Verdict

Suing individual consumers while sound legally is a stupid business strategy.  However it is not surprising given the old business model.   The people in charge of the RIAA and music labels got to their positions because of their knowledge of the music industry, contracts, distribution, and marketing.  As a result it is not surprising that they failed to understand the technology available and how to profit off of it.

From their standpoint the technology was something to fear.  Take a look at the recent writers’ and actors’ strikes and you will see how everybody is fighting over what the revenue distribution should be for digital downloads.  Because people don’t know what the digital pay model will look like they are afraid to create deals (they have no idea whether they are getting a good deal or a bad one.)  The alternative is to license content on a revenue share model rather than a royalty rate.  This would leave music labels and movie studios in the positions they have put their talent for years: relying on someone else’s honest accounting.  Given the rumors of bad accounting in the movie and music business it is not surprising that the revenue sharing model is not one that the studio executives jumped on quickly.

catch22Personally I believe the RIAA and record labels should have made licensing of catalogs extremely easy early on and thus allowed lots of different distribution models to be tested.  Had they done this, market theory suggests that the good ones would have succeeded and everyone would be in a better position than they are today. (Again I think studio executives expertise is partly to blame. As I said earlier their expertise was not technology.  As these models succeeded they would be replaced by executives who were both experts in technology and the music industry.  Thus even if they had been smart enough to have done this they would have been signing their own pink slips.  Considering this Catch-22 it is not surprising that they did not embrace the technology.)

Another reason why they did not adopt digital distribution early on was the fear of piracy.  The theory behind most early RIAA and studio attempts at digital distribution revolved around DRM (trying to assure that the music was not copied and distributed for free.)  One of the problems with this focus is that it mainly restricts legitimate uses by your customers while doing little to restrict those who are going to pirate music.  Video game companies are currently dealing with this as well and are beginning to realize that they will never be able to keep everyone from getting the game for free. Instead they are focusing on creating incentives to buy the game rather than get it for free (back to value added services.)

Had the music industry recognized this from the start I believe they could have discovered they were profiting despite the piracy.  A working paper by some people at Harvard Business school argues that they are still profiting despite piracy (and their own missteps.)  Ars Technica has written a good summary of the paper.

I think that some of this should have been obvious in the sense that the music industry has been profiting despite free distribution for a long time.  Radios have been playing music for free since the early 1900s.  Despite this free distribution, music labels have profited.  In fact I would argue that without this free distribution they would have profited much less because they would have had no easy vehicle to get people to listen to the music.  Very few people are going to buy music from a band they have never heard.

Getting back to KaZaA, I think that even with the reduced digital distribution market available it was not hurting music sales as much as record labels believe (I have an old post about other possible reasons for decline in music sales.)  I believe a majority of people are using the internet to discover the music people discovered on the radio in the past.  While some people will inevitably “steal” music they otherwise would have purchased, lots will buy music they otherwise would never have discovered.  I think the biggest thing digital distribution has done is create larger markets for niche bands.  In the past labels where limited in signing and distributing bands that catered to smaller niche markets because of the distribution costs.  The internet reduces this problem by aggregating people with similar music tastes (such that they can find bands that fit their niche more easily) and reducing the cost of distribution (less of a financial barrier to distribute the music in the first place.)

happy-gilmore-cheque-checkAs far as the Jamie Thomas $1.9 million dollar verdict I think it hurts the record labels as much if not more than it helps them.  From what I have read Jamie Thomas was the perfect person for them to go to trial against (other than her being a mom.)  While I believe the evidence linking a user to specific uploads is tenuous at best, the evidence against Jamie Thomas was strong: she did not have a wireless router, she replaced her hard drive after being notified of her infringement, she used her only internet username, she regularly locked her computer, she was caught lying numerous times…  She clearly deserved to lose the lawsuit.

That being said the RIAA is never going to see the $1.9 million dollars and all it does is make them look like even bigger bad guys because of the large amount of the award.  Nobody objectively thinks that $1.9 million is a fair penalty for her.  If the RIAA were smart it would settle with her today for $5-10k and announce how given the circumstances of a single mother of two they would rather not see the money then be at all responsible for financially ruining the family.  Then they need to bring up the artists whose songs she “stole” and give them each their share of the settlement.

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Clearly Record Labels Don’t Get It

In response to a recent survey which indicated that people who download pirated music pay for 10 times more music than people who don’t, EMI’s Bjor Rogstad said

“There is one thing we are not going away, and it is the consumption of music increases, while revenue declines. It can not be explained in any way other than that the illegal downloading is over the legal sale of music” (link)

I beg to differ. There are a number of reasons that while consumption is up (not even sure that is true), revenue would decrease:

  • People are downloading individuals songs rather than albums. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that studios made more money when people had to buy $15 CDs rather than $.99 tracks.
  • Streaming music. More and more people are listening to music primarily on their computers. As a result they can take advantage of streaming music services thus decreasing their need to buy music to have something to listen to.
  • MySpace music. MySpace has become THE place that younger adults look for music. As a result a number of bands are choosing to try and do it on their own without a label. Need proof check out: trueanthem urlabel imeem etc.
  • Quality/Quantity of music available. I would argue that the quantity of quality music available through labels has decreased (perhaps as a result of all of the above.).
  • The point being that there are a number of reasons labels decrease in revenue can be explained other than piracy. Perhaps it is time that record labels stop blaming consumers and start thinking about what they can do to change their model.

    DISCLOSURE: I am an employee of trueAnthem

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    Itunes for news?

    I stumbled across a great article on twitter (thanks to @copyrightlaw) about how 3 media execs are trying to start an RIAA/Itunes for news. The writer Mike Masnick hits the nail directly on the head as far as I am concerned:

    The news is important, but people want to be able to share the news, spread the news and discuss the news — and you can’t do that when it’s behind a paywall. The very act of putting up a paywall diminishes the value of the cont

    This seems to be a concept the RIAA and more recently the AP keep missing. Intellectual Property derives its value from being shared. It is the basis for all U.S. IP law; creators are granted limited duration monopolies in exchange for sharing the information with the public. The whole point is

    To promote the Progress of Science and useful Art

    In this social media age, the value of information is directly tied to your ability to instantly share it and your opinion about it.

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    Harvard and Joel Tenenbaum

    Nate Anderson at Ars Technica wrote an interesting update on the Joel Tenenbaum RIAA case.

    Tenenbaum, who everyone agrees is a typical RIAA target, is being defended by Harvard Professor Charles Nesson and a team of students from his class. However it appears there is some dispute as to who is leading who. In a blog post today the team wrote “Make no mistake about it: we are a student run team.” The first comment, and only thus far, is Prof. Charles Nesson stating “make no mistake, we are a faculty run team, with me as Joel’s lawyer, captain and supervisor of the team.” (post) Which is it?

    My guess is that the students are trying to emphasize their importance as the true announcement was with regard to the team new addition, famous litigator Matt Feinberg. It appears that even the great minds at Harvard need help defending Tenenbaum in the face of the RIAA. Further proof that copyright law’s statutory damages are difficult to defeat. (For more info check out Ron Coleman’s recent post.

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