Tilted Cat Head
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We Don't Want To Be Information Slaves
Quote:
View: The Pirate Bay to BBC: We Don’t Want To Be Information Slaves
Source: Torrentfreak
posted with the TFP thread generator
The Pirate Bay to BBC: We Don’t Want To Be Information Slaves
The BBC has published a podcast which takes a look at piracy through the ages, also covering the modern concept of ‘intellectual property’. Of course, no story of piracy would be complete without discussing The Pirate Bay so Peter Sunde also plays a significant part in this 20 minute program.
The podcast starts off with the BBC reporter buying physical bootleg DVDs on the streets of London, but later develops into a discussion with The Pirate Bay’s Peter Sunde.
“Today, piracy has become more and more like, someone who likes freedom, someone who likes information exchange” says Peter. “It’s only positive, it’s only, only good and you know, that is piracy according to some people, and you get labeled as a pirate.”
Peter then goes on to state some of the objectives and motivation behind running the world’s largest BitTorrent tracker: “We’re fighting, The Pirate Bay is fighting for freedom because we don’t want to be information slaves, we don’t want to have someone else decide what we should and shouldn’t think.”
Despite massive effort by the music and movie industries to create a negative image of piracy, for some, the term ‘pirate’ has lots of positive connotations these days and Peter is happy to be labeled as one: “We call ourselves pirates because the recording industry is calling us pirates and we think it’s a cool thing to be a pirate. It’s people today that want to share information and the internet has changed how people actually distribute music and movies so the industry is very scared of the change.”
Most modern-day media pirates would agree, piracy hasn’t always been easy. Tools haven’t always been readily available nor priced in a way that makes piracy accessible to all. The internet - providing worldwide communication and information interchange for everyone who accesses it - has changed all of that. Putting that genie back in the bottle may prove impossible, says Peter:
“Previously we wanted to have information free but it was hard and the Internet has made it easy. This is an evolution that’s needed and I think in a hundred years we’re gonna look back at this period and say: “We were so stupid to even try and stop it”
But the movie and music industries are attempting to stop it and they do not consider themselves stupid for trying. Indeed, the movie industry in particular is putting huge resources into trying to curtail piracy and has put significant amounts of effort into shuttering The Pirate Bay.
“Getting all of the industry against you makes it very hard,” says Peter, “it is so important that the people can communicate and they want to stop this for, you know, economical reasons - and they’re not even right about the economical aspects.”
The BBC interviewer questions Peter on this point: “You say they are wrong about the economical aspects but they would say: ‘I own this film, I own this music, and you are stealing this from me’. How are they wrong about the economical aspect?”
“Well, what we’ve seen in the music industry is that interest is growing, more people are interested in music and they spend more money than ever on music, but the record industry is shrinking because nobody wants to buy CDs anymore, it’s an inferior product, you can’t put the CD directly on your MP3 player.”
Indeed, the music industry has been incredibly slow to adapt to the digital revolution, in the main preferring to insist that people continue to buy their music on plastic discs, instead of the incredibly popular, flexible (and easily copied) MP3 format. Peter believes it’s about control:
“They don’t want to sell MP3s because they feel they don’t have the control they used to have, so they don’t understand that they are losing out on money because they are not following how the industry is changing.”
But it’s the ‘reproduction pirates’ - file-sharers - that are taking over the ship now. They’re everywhere says the BBC, and they’re multiplying. Tarleton Gillespie, assistant professor at the Department of Communication, Cornell University explains:
“The generation that scares the music industry more is the next one, the one that’s coming up now because they’ve never known anything different. There’s always been peer to peer [for them], there’s always been very easy ways to get on whichever service you want and the music is there. So the question of how to get it…it’s not backroom dealing or someone setting up a table on the street corner, it is always there, so the music industry is struggling because they have to figure out how to convince that generation to think of anything other than “this is the easiest and most free way to get my music.”
The full 3-part article accompanying the podcast can be found here.
The podcast itself can be downloaded here, and is packed with lots of information, provided free of charge, without DRM, and in convenient MP3 format. How media should be.
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For some reason this is hitting the media wires a bit more mainstream than normal. If you didn't catch the Pirate's Dilemma thread, I urge you to watch even the short abridged version.
We've discussed the ideas of how the music industry has to adapt, I never thought of the idea that the next generation, the future buyers of music, haven't known any different to be able to download music via p2p networks. The next coming generations will know nothing about a physical meidum to purchase intellectual works. Music delivered directly to your ipod. Movies directly to your cablebox/DVR/AppleTV/Tivo. Books delivered to your ebook reader. Jobs has always trashed an idea before he launched his own. Recently he stated that no one reads books anymore. Really? But yet iPhone and iPod touch seem to be using natural gestures that people do when reading books. The book industry is bracing for this very idea that Apple may enter into the ereader market.
The only physical things that people will be buying will be clothes, houses, cars, and other durable goods.
We may not want to be information slaves, but there's a good chance that we will be come one because the current trend is a service system of information.
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