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#241 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Location: Linköpng, Sweden
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#242 | |
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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![]() So I am allowed to upload my music collection then... I really don't see how you can possibly interpret that as a commercial purpose. Someone else taking your non-commercially distributed music library and distributing it commercially on their own behalf is NOT a case of YOU doing commercial distribution. |
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#243 | |
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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#244 | |
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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AFAICT *most* people here do not equate "generous" with "giving free ebooks" but rather with "lending on the honor system". |
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#245 |
Guru
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It doesn't matter. It's not how I interpret the law. It's how the law was interpreted when Napster lost in district court (Napster tried to use the provision as its defense but failed).
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#246 |
Grand Sorcerer
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What are you talking about? The case was giving a link to a site that distributed the work under a licence available to everybody (the work is public domain or have a licence that allow distribution).
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#247 | |
Guru
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This discussion reminds me of the Diamond Rio. Back in the late 90s, RIAA sued Diamond to prevent them from selling their portable MP3 player (one of the first of its kind). They claimed that it violated the Audio Home Recording Act.
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The publishing industry is making the same mistakes. They don't approach current technologies in a way that balances the rights and needs of both consumers and authors. They continue barricading their content behind restrictive DRM and stiffling licensing schemes. I don't own the book, I just purchased the right to read its content. I cannot resell it because I don't have the license to do so. And so on. Their attempt to control customer actions and continue doing business as they always did will bring about their own downfall. |
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#248 | |
Ex-Helpdesk Junkie
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If it can still be purchased at that $0 price point, the friend can go get his/her own free copy. If not, they must pay money to attain their own copy. Either way, they too must go to the only authorized redistributor. |
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#249 |
Wizard
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@RobertDDL. Thanks for posting these links. It appears that these provisions, including giving copies to close friends, are not uncommon in the civil law countries of the EEC. Presumably these provisions also do not extend to whole books?
I must say I'm surprised. I have posted a number of times that I considered particular things were unlikely (or likely) and have been proved wrong on a number of occasions. I think it's a function of my exposure to the ridiculous intellectual property laws in the large common law countries, and particularly the United States, and the enormous influence of lobbyists which have distorted the law against the interests of consumers. I am astonished that "rights holders" would permit such an exception to exist, and presume that it was a trade-off for the levy which, even more amazingly, extends to computers, at least in Sweden. Having said this, I am not generally a fan of the EEC's approach to this type of issue. I think a levy is a terrible impost. On the other hand, I like the fact that the law recognises reality, which is that people are going to share music and movies with friends. But is it fair to allow this without a levy? Or, given the reality, would it really make any difference? A "sane" copyright law should reflect reality, and the reality is that books, music and movies are trivially easy to duplicate and distribute, and it is happening all of the time. Yet these industries remain viable. Attempts to encourage "voluntary compliance" by use of terror campaigns in the US, where young children have been sued for apparently downloading a few songs, has not worked. I wonder if recognising reality and allowing similar rights in, say, the US, would result in massive losses to the industries concerned. Though I am sure that we would be told it did irrespective of what actually resulted. If we are to have sane and enforceable laws perhaps rights-holders will need to abandon the idea that they must receive money from every single copy. This is not happening now despite laws which are unenforceable but classify ordinary people as criminals. I'm not stating my opinion yet, as I don't know that I have formed one. Simply food for discussion. Last edited by darryl; 03-01-2015 at 06:32 PM. |
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#250 | |
Fanatic
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#251 |
Fanatic
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Join Date: Aug 2014
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#252 | |
eBook Enthusiast
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Lending seems fine to me, but only when done through a system, such as Amazon's, which enforces both a time limit and the inability of the lender to read the book while the borrower has it. |
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#253 | |
Fanatic
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The point is that the studios didn't care too much, and therefore people considered the lack of legal suits as the status of freedom. And apparently they do today, too ![]() The point was that analogue copies suffer from degrading quality. The studios started to move only when the recording devices and media reached a quality level that the copy was almost as good as the original. This happened for the first time around 1964, when taxes like RIAA and GEMA (for Germany) have been introduced for the recording gear. The next step occurred in 1990, when another tax was levied, this time off recordable media, and introduced the SCMS copy control (actually it's a copy prohibiting) system - and almost killed the DAT (and made CDR live on "life support"). Surely the older amongst us remember the "Taping home is killing music" slogan. Levying a tax for copying but preventing it altogether (BD cannot be copied yet the tax levied is around 3,9€ apiece) is a con act. |
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#254 | |
Fanatic
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First of all, define friend. Then define friends. Because while it's commonly accepted to watch a movie or listen a tune in the family, it's not the same if you invite the whole school or all the friends you may have (eg in facebook) - remember the giant parties of thousands of invitees? And if charges are applied (apart for the medium) you entering the business world... |
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#255 | |
Fanatic
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However, Amazon has bought the licences, and does this under its current conditions. That is a trap, of course, since anyone that breaks the contract automatically enters under the more restrictive copyright terms - in other words if breaking a contract is not unlawful, the breaking of a law is. Beware ![]() Secondly, this may also be a marketing strategy. Amazon is almost a monopole, but some competition still exists. I wonder what will happen after the competition has been crushed. Examples are known from the past ![]() |
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