iPod May Become Next Fair-Use Battleground 334
jaredmauch writes "USA Today is reporting on a trend of selling iPods on eBay which are preloaded with music and movies. This raises interesting questions about the legality of the files, including those that offer seemingly legitimate services of transcoding DVDs for the iPod video (while selling you the DVD disc as well)." An example from the article: "A 60-gigabyte video iPod loaded with 11,800 songs, with a starting bid of $799. The iPod alone would cost about $400. 'I don't see how it's different than selling a used CD,' seller Steve Brinn, a Cincinnati pediatrician, wrote in an e-mail to USA TODAY. 'If the music industry asked me not to do it, I just wouldn't do it.'"
Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)
The same reasoning could be used... "I wasn't selling him cocaine illegally. I was filling his prescription for cocaine. No, I didn't check to see if he had one. I made it clear that if he didn't have a prescription, he shouldn't buy the cocaine from me."
Think the cocaine argument would fly in court? Then why would the fair use argument these pirates are trying stand up? It just doesn't hold water for me.
- Greg
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:3, Informative)
It is going to get to the point where I can not let a friend barrow a CD that I paid for even if I don't want to listen to it.
So when will congress start investigating drug dealing and sex with minors in the Music industry?
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:2, Insightful)
It is going to get to the point where I can not let a friend barrow a CD that I paid for even if I don't want to listen to it.
It depends on what the ITMS TOS states. (Disclaimer: I do not own an mp3 player, nor have I purchased music online) If the TOS expressly limits the secondary market for the songs that are sold through their service, and you break it by selling a loaded iPod, then the RIAA (o
ITMS ToS v. First-sale doctrine (Score:3, Informative)
It doesn't matter at all what the license agreement or ToS says. Apple, iTunes, the iPod, the store where you bought the cd, the shrinkwrap license, the damned RIAA...none of them have the right to tell you that you cannot resell a legally purchased piece of their intellectual property.
Why? The First-sale doctrine [wikipedia.org]. The Copy
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:2)
Which congress are you talking about? State congress? which state?
As far as the music industry goes, if you want to launch an investigation into the music industry, you won't be doing it from congress because the music industry has more lobbyists than the tech industry.
When Google decides to investigate the music industry, that will be the end of the music industry. It's simple, Google simply has to give up the search information on specific industry execs to the state, federal government, or the media
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:2)
Do you believe in the tooth fairy?
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:4, Insightful)
The only way it'd be legit is if they included the CD with the sale; then it'd be like selling a used CD. You have a right to back up a CD for personal use, but you have no right to then sell copies of that song unless the sale is approved by the copyright holder.
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not discussing fair use in general. I'm discussing the seller in the article.
The seller goes by a shady legal theory used by spammers and other pirates... they make a "back up copy" for you. If you don't own the original item, you shouldn't buy or use the "back up".
Selling iTunes songs you bought and destroying your copies so you're truly transferring ownership of the file... it may well be legal. But these people who sell "pre-loaded" iPods with 11k songs and 30 hours of video for a $300 premium are not people who are within the letter or spirit of "fair use". They are just the same software pirates who spam you all the time about "0Em S0ftwhere" finding another lucrative piracy venue... Ebay.
- Greg
Well outlaw Blockbuster (Score:2)
Look, the video rental industry has something to lose here if the laws are changed. There are industries at stake here, so its a much more serious issue than piracy.
Re:Well outlaw Blockbuster (Score:3, Informative)
They purchase the videos you see on the shelves through entirely different distribution channels than you or I do, when we want a video. Along with their physical tape is an agreement that allows them to rent out the video to others, probably in exchange for money -- an amount probably exceeding (over time) the actual value of the cassette if you bought it in the store. In return they don't pay upfront anything like the inflated price that consumers do f
Re:Well outlaw Blockbuster (Score:2)
If the price of Cds are raised to $20, fair enough, if the price of CDs are raised to $50, fair enough, download your $50 CD and re-sell it for $70-100 to get your money back.
Re:Well outlaw Blockbuster (Score:5, Informative)
First sale permits anyone to rent any DVD. If you go to Best Buy, and buy a DVD off the shelf, you can rent it as much as you like. Indeed, many independent video stores do just this sort of thing.
The reason that rental stores sometimes pay more than the ordinary retail price for a video is to get it early. That is, they want a period where customers can rent a video before they can (effectively) buy it.
This used to be common, back in VHS days. A video would come out and cost a hundred dollars. No one would buy this for home, but stores would buy it to rent. Eventually the price would come down. This is dying out since the industry has changed practices with DVDs. (Studios, retail outlets, and rental outlets don't always get along, you see)
There's no license, though, because copyright doesn't cover a right to rent videos. Check out 17 USC 109, which covers this, if you like.
There is an exception to this, however, for music and computer software other than console games. This came about in the 80's, and was the outcome of lobbying between RIAA, software developers, and rental stores. Libraries have an exception to this, but for-profit rental of CDs is illegal in the US. It's not in some other places, however; Japan has CD rental shops, for example.
Re:Well outlaw Blockbuster (Score:3, Informative)
Here:
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:3, Insightful)
1. Purchase iPod for $400.00
2. Purchase 11,800 songs from iTunes for $11,682.00
3. Sell on eBay for $799.00
4. Profi...err, wait, loss of $11,283.00
Pure genius! Where do I send my investment money?
Economics aside, don't forget that the Fairplay-restricted iTMS music is tied to the machine that the song was purchased on and you'd probably have issues syncing the iPod.
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:2)
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:3, Insightful)
If one were to own all the media listed, would it be illegal to purchase an ipod preloaded with the content? I cant see that as being illegal. What about users who are too inept/lazy/etc to transcode the content themselves? Should there be no legal recourse for them to get their content onto their devices legally? What about the guy shipping used
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:2)
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:3, Insightful)
That's what you'd like to think. And it is certainly what the content cartel wanted everyone to think as the DMCA was moving through Congress. But in fact, the law makes no stipulation that circumvention be only to prevent illegal copies. It makes no allowance for legitimate copies at all. That's why some people call anti-circumvention legislation the super-copyright ... it gives to conte
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:2)
Similar situation around here ... around the fourth you can purchase all sorts of Fireworks all the way up to 6" shells, the fireworks dealers make you sign a paper stating that you are leagally permitted to use the fireworks in the area you will be using them in and that they are not liable for any damages.
The
Re:Bullshit, Bullshit, and more Bullshit (Score:2)
(Thanks, I'll be here all week. Tip your waitress.)
The article is kind of a cop-out, ending the article with, "'The question that needs to be asked is, if you buy a DVD, are you allowed to put it onto an iPod?' Onigman says." Citizens not aware of DMCA regulations may be surprised by the answer. The extent of the article is, "Ooh, there may be some illegal activity here." This graduate of the Barnum & Bailey Clown College for Journalism can't ta
Not exactly (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not exactly (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Not exactly (Score:3, Interesting)
Unfortunately, I think what's going on on ebay is essentially selling the same music multiple times while still retaining the original. IOW ma
Re:Not exactly (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not exactly (Score:2)
That may be true, but the technical limitations placed on songs downloaded from iTMS currently prevent this. The iTMS Terms of Service [apple.com] do not explicitly forbid resale of your songs, but the store provides no obvious mechanism for doing this, aside from giving them your iTMS login and password so they can register their device with FairPlay. iTMS currentl
Modify the article title... (Score:3, Insightful)
iPod and used CDs to become next fair-use battleground
Re:Modify the article title... (Score:5, Insightful)
Spend five minutes in a Cingular wireless store and you will see what the average person thinks
when they aren't able to transfer previously purchased ringtones or games to their new phones.
Re:Modify the article title... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Modify the article title... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Modify the article title... (Score:5, Insightful)
Agreed, this is one of the most common cases of DRM woes that Joe Public is just now starting to come to grips with. In a case like this it's especially easy to see how DRM is there for the company's benefit and not yours, and on top of that it's hard to make the case that this is somehow stopping piracy. Now if every user could transfer files between anyone's phones then there might be a piracy issue, but you can't so there isn't. And there's nothing stopping a cellular provider from having a proprietary application in the store that would give them and only them the ability to transfer your legally purchased ringtones/wallpapers/what-have-you from your old phone to your new one. This is how they handle number portability (store-access-only app to perform task), there's really no reason they can't do the same with phone files. It's telling then that they DON'T offer this service. The argument can be made that they simply haven't caught up to their own technological demands yet, i.e. it's a new problem for them and they will fix it soon, but I'm willing to bet that this won't be the case.
We will continue to see more and more instances of companies using DRM to force the consumer to repurchase the same products over and over again, it's a huge cash cow for them and your average user just doesn't know any better. All it takes is a slight change in format from one release of a phone to the next and voila! Everything old is new again, as in you automagically don't own any of those songs you "bought". Well, you still have them, just don't expect to ever use them on another device, and good luck if your current device dies.
I think one of the fair-use rights that needs to be examined and codified in detail when all this comes up in the courts, as it surely will soon, is some legal definition for media transactions. Are you licensing the media? Getting a license only for that specific device/format? Are you purchasing it outright without distribution rights? This needs to be strictly defined and mandated across the board. Right now the terms of the sale are completely to the corporations' advantage because they switch between the above options depending on what you are buying and from whom, and it's never very clear anyway. How many people would actually continue to purchase digital media if there were large clear labels on their purchase that told them 'This media can only be used on the device for which it was purchased and may never be copied, backed up, transferred to another device, or format, ever.'? As it stands right now people think 'hey I paid money for it, I own it.' and expect the rights that come along with physcially owning something. they are in fact receiving something very different. Personally I feel it's a bait-and-switch by the companies; including a 50 line legalease licensing agreement in 4 pt text at the end of a 12 page user contract (or shrinkwrap EULA) is full disclosure in name only.
Re:Modify the article title... (Score:2)
Not even the RIAA would dispute that you own the physical CD medium, and that it's your right to sell it. If you've made a backup copy first, then you're a bad boy and they'll sue you.
But it's harder to prove ownership of the music/video on the iPod. If you downloaded it from iTunes, you can't get it back off the iPod, so that's all legal. (More or less. I don't know what would happen if you opened an "iPod service station" downl
Re:Modify the article title... (Score:2)
That's not true, they have disputed it. I believe Garth Brooks was one big name performer who was trying to push, along with the RIAA, to make the used CD market illegal, vowing not to allow stores that dealt in used CDs to sell his new material.
Re:Modify the article title... (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.planetgarth.com/gbnews/garth049.shtml [planetgarth.com]
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/business/200206 14-9999_1b14usedcds.html [signonsandiego.com]
it's only a matter of time (Score:2)
i don't see how it's different too... (Score:2, Insightful)
different opinions i guess...
Meaningless (Score:2, Insightful)
Show me evidence of lots of iPods actually being sold for far above retail value because of the songs loaded in them, and maybe I'll agree there's an issue to discuss here.
Re:Meaningless (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Meaningless (Score:5, Informative)
You were saying? Sure not *far above* market value, but still.
Re:Meaningless (Score:2)
Re:Meaningless (Score:5, Interesting)
The obligatory "You must delete all of this as soon as you get the laptop if you don't own every piece of software ever written for OSX" line is a hoot too.
This is wrong. There's no justification for it. If I were calling the shots on ebay this would get your auction shut down. A second offense would get your account shut down.
Re:Meaningless (Score:5, Insightful)
If someone's making a business out of selling pirated copies of songs at 3 cents a piece, I can see how that would ruffle some RIAA and Apple feathers.
As I said in an earlier post, if someone is selling their only copies of 11,800 legally acquired songs for 3 cents a piece, then that's their business and there's nothing to see here. But that's not the case, is it?
Re:Meaningless (Score:2)
The best example they could come up with was one fool out there somehere who paid $551 for a used iPod. The example they lead with is being offered for $800. That's very different from news that it was sold at that price.
Given that people willing to screw the copyright holder's can already buy music that cheap at AllofMP3.com, it seems kind of silly to suggest that there's massive demand out there for iPods laden wi
Re:Meaningless (Score:2)
Re:Meaningless (Score:2)
Well, see, they'll show you a picture of what it was like brand new. Then they'll open it for you and preload all the music and videos that you want on it. Then they'll send it to you.
But don't worry. The one they're sending you was absolutely the one they pictured still sealed in the box, only opened once to load all that extra bonus content on it. Honest.
Re:Meaningless (Score:2)
The RIAA wouldn't have standing for such a lawsuit, since they weren't harmed by the new/used deceit. The buyer might.
Re:Meaningless (Score:2)
Re:Meaningless (Score:2)
I mean, if what they really wanted was the movies, it would be a hell of a lot cheaper to just buy HK bootleg DVD's.
could be legal (Score:5, Informative)
Re:could be legal (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:could be legal (Score:2)
Re:could be legal (Score:2)
I don't know how much you paid for your law degree, but I think you might want to ask for a refund...
Re:could be legal (Score:4, Insightful)
According to TFA, that wasn't the situation. The seller was stating that if you didn't own any particular song or video on other media, you were obligated by copyright law to delete it from the iPod.
Spammers use this kind of shady legal reasoning to sell pirated software: They're not selling you the software. They're selling you the service of creating a back-up on CD/DVD. If you don't already own the software, you shouldn't buy it. It's not their fault if people who don't already own the software are buying these $60-$80 backup CDs and illegally installing the software.
It's a bunch of hogwash, IMO. And whether they're getting ill-gotten gains by slapping copies of software on CDs and selling them via spam or they're slapping pirated music and video on iPods and selling them via Ebay, it's still crap. If the case you cited (seller deleted/destroyed any other copies he had of the music/video he was selling) was what was happening, that would be one thing, but most of these sellers are not that honest.
Re:could be legal (Score:2)
While it would be easy enough to prosecute these guys under existing laws, I have no doubt this will be used as an excuse to create even more restrictive and unreasonable laws instead, much the same way AVIs were used as an excuse to create the DMCA, no matter that the l
Should be legal... (Score:3, Interesting)
A 60-gigabyte video iPod loaded with 11,800 songs, with a starting bid of $799. The iPod alone would cost about $400. 'I don't see how it's different than selling a used CD,' seller Steve Brinn, a Cincinnati pediatrician, wrote in an e-mail to USA TODAY. 'If the music industry asked me not to do it, I just wouldn't do it.'"
The example we get in the article summary has a few conditions to consider. IF the seller actually owned all that music, an
One guy is selling one with the 3 Matrix movies... (Score:5, Funny)
distinction... (Score:5, Interesting)
Is this someone selling many of these iPods, making many copies of digital songs when they don't have permission to? That would seem pretty clear-cut illegal.
Or
Is this someone selling their iPod and the only copy they have of the songs, which they acquired legally. How can that possible be illegal?
In the case of the article, it's clearly someone running a business with pirated music. But, if I wanted to sell my loaded iPod and don't have copies of the music elsewhere, is there really a law on the books that stops me?
I also think the question at the end of the article is apropos: If you own a DVD, can you legally put the movie on your iPod at all given DMCA restrictions?
Re:distinction... (Score:2)
Depends. The DMCA doesn't criminalize making the copy (you are allowed to make backup copies of media you own); it criminalizes breaking the encryption to make the copy. If the encryption was broken by someone in a different country where there is no DMCA, and you then make a copy of the unencrypted content, then you are not breaking the encryption, y
Re:distinction... (Score:2)
No, there's no general exception for backups. Sometimes an exception can cover this sort of thing (e.g. 117 or 1008) but more often, that is not the case. Sometimes making a backup would be fair use, but there's no use that is invariably fair or unfair; it always depends on the circumstances.
Incidentally, the operative word in 1201 is 'circumvent.' That is, to get around something. Getting around encryption by decrypting the ciphertext yourself doesn't s
Re:distinction... (Score:2)
Re:distinction... (Score:2)
Before the 1990s, there really wasn't the means to transfer music off of the media in a lossless fashion. There is now. If record companies wanted to, they could have ELUAs on each CD to make clear what your rights to use the data are.
Re:distinction... (Score:2)
To play protected ACC files (FairPlay) on a computer you must use (legally speaking and as implemented) iTunes and that system has to be authorized to play the music by the iTMS account that purchased the music in the first place (your
Re:distinction... (Score:2)
Who cares? While many copyright infringements and circumventions are crimes, criminal prosecution is unusual. Civil actions, brought by plaintiffs such as RIAA, MPAA, etc. are much more common.
Since these are not criminal suits, the concept of reasonable doubt flies out the window. In fact, copyright is basically a strict liability statute. While your mental state might affect the amount of liability you face, so long as you did the deed, it doesn't matter what you were thinking
Re:distinction... (Score:3, Informative)
Depends on the specifics. Without knowing more, I'd say that it sounds like a negligence suit, which among other things only works if you acted unreasonably. Relying on expert advice, even if it's wrong, is likely reasonable, so you would
Not a fair use issue (Score:5, Interesting)
Used Music No More (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Used Music No More (Score:2)
Now you can have a shiny new copy anytime you like. Since many online music stores naturally discount their music, it's often the case that you can buy the
Re:Used Music No More (Score:2, Funny)
Someday I'll own all of my dad's LP's.
But anything he's purchased on iTunes will be tied to his email address...
so will whoever inherits his email address also inherit the music he's purchased
from itunes? Or does the itunes music store license prohibit that?
Re:Used Music No More (Score:3, Funny)
eBay won't let it be... (Score:5, Insightful)
Given the fact that you can't buy movies on iTunes yet, this is a no-brainer. Even if the iPod were sold with original copies of the CD, it's still a breach, and as such can't be sold.
The real interesting point here is whether or not eBay is open to the sale of "used" MP3s, and how in fact the ownership of these items can be transferred if at all.
Currently MP3/AVI/MP4 are all considered to be backup mediums, and as such are removed for Unauthorised Copies.
How did the music get there? (Score:2)
However, if you bought them off of iTunes, and they are the only copies you have, then it seems pretty clearly legitimate. (Unless there are heinous contractual terms preventing transfers of the music from the original purchaser.)
What if you bought them from Apple but had made some copies? Apple's DRM allows a certain number of copies to be made. Can I sell a few of my copies of the $0
will that work with iTMS songs...? (Score:2)
nobody stopped that auction (iirc) and he even said he did it to see if he would be told to cease, and what grounds they would cite. he outlined that he ensured that the songs were only for the buyer (deautherized his computer to
its obvious (Score:2, Insightful)
it is obvious that you are not allowed to sell the songs. with all the stuff we see EVERY day about people being sued, how could you think that selling an ipod full of music wont get you in trouble? i hate the RIAA as much as the next
Remember kids! (Score:5, Insightful)
And remember kids! Selling iPods full of music is illegal! (Well maybe not if they're all downloads from itunes, but ripped from CD sure thing). So make sure you sell your iPod with all files deleted from it!
And sell the undelete program in a separate auction. Which is linked from the cleansed iPod auction.
How is this not piracy? (Score:4, Insightful)
Best anti-DMCA example (Score:4, Interesting)
This is somewhat off-topic, but this is the best example to show your friends, family, and senators why the DMCA is bad. Here we have a perfect example of something we should be legally allowed to do with traditionaly copyright law (space-shift), it's certainly technically feasible, and there is demand. But we can't actually legally do it, because of the DMCA.
Back on-topic, selling iPods preloaded with media is most likely illegal, unless you include the original media in the sale. (Just like selling any other type of copy of media is illegal).
If original source isn't included, it's unethical. (Score:5, Insightful)
IANAL, but...
Now, just like with laptops that come loaded with $10,000 worth of software "for demo purposes only, if you don't own the license, you must remove it upon receipt," this is copyright violation, and, by definition, piracy [answers.com].
The iPod sold for $152 more than an equivalent 'blank' iPod. Therefore, someone was willing to pay a premium for the added content. Therefore, the seller made money off of the content that they put on the iPod, in violation of the copyright holder's rights. That meets the FBI's definition of piracy.
Now, if the seller instead says "GIve me a list of your TV shows/movies/music, and I'll pre-load your iPod with that for you," it's a lot more gray. That is at least nominally only including content for which the recipeint has the legal rights to use. But selling it with stuff preloaded, and saying "you must remove..." is shipping it with infringing material, then telling the recipient to do something active to become legal.
I'm not one who believes 'IP theft' is anywhere near the same as physical property theft; but this is roughly the analog of selling someone a car with a stolen stereo in it, and saying "Upon receipt of this car, you must turn the stereo in to the proper authorities." You're still selling stolen merchandise. (I think this is the first time I've found an 'IP theft vs. propterty theft' analogy appropriate!)
I have no problem with people who want to commit 'civil disobedience' by breaking copyright for personal use. But the moment you have monetary gain, it's no longer okay. That's not 'fair use' any more.
If you include the source material (CDs, DVDs, or Apple account media was purchased with from the iTunes Music Store,) then I would consider it 100% legal.
Sounds familiar. (Score:2)
Is there any place where someone can buy a 250GB hard drive that is pre-loaded with movies or Simpsons episodes? If not, then maybe I should start a little black market business...
on behalf of my fellow americans (Score:5, Insightful)
why?
because you shouldn't have to be a lawyer in life to just be able to listen to some music. all of these "vile evil illegal" things us consumers are doing with music have nothing to do with anything except the march of technological progress. the only people who should change are the music cartels. the consumers should do whatever they want, the artists should do whatever they want.
what technology has done is made consumers suddenly able to do things only cartels could do before. in the pre-internet environment, with only a few cartels around, it was easy to enforce the arbitrary rules that made the music business profitable for them.
notice that these arbitrary rules have nothing to do with morality or right and wrong, they only have to do with a profitable business model from a bygone era. what consumers are doing now with music files renders that business model obsolete, as there is no way to enforce these arbitrary rules anymore, since it's not just a few big cartels who have these powers. really, i think the us government and the legal system have more important things to worry about than if an 8 year old downloaded flipsyde from a friend. as if that is even inherently wrong in any valid moral context. it's only wrong in the context of killing some rich company's business model.
the cartel's attempts to make their pain our pain because technological progress is rendering their business model obsolete is not a valid position to prosecute any consumers. period. nothing will stem this tide. nothing the cartels can do will change the new landscape. pandora's box has been opened. you can't put what has been let out back in the box.
the only future for us as consumers and artists is the chinese model: piracy is rampant and unstoppable, and accepted. artists simply make money off of endorsements and live shows. that means they won't make jay z or fifty cent money, but music will be made nonetheless, and artists will still be financially quite comfortable, because artists make music for the sake of music first, not for the sake of making money.
it's not like someone suddenly announced that wall street traders will make a tenth of what they used to make, and so no one wants to be a wall street trader anymore. people make music because they love music. period. that's been true ever since we were just banging on drums around a campfire, and will always be true, no matter what the economic future of the music world holds. and besides, it's a way for teenage guys to get chicks. do you honestly need anymore incentive than that?
music, in quality and quantity, will not change in the least. you could even make the argument that music would get better in quality and quantity, without an artificial financially driven entity sitting between consumer and artist.
and music distributors?
they will die.
and i really don't see what the problem is with that. all we are witnessing is their painful death throes now, and their attempts to drag us down with them. fuck them.
but there will always be a niche for someone to "get out the word", for an influential company to promote struggling new artists. the last dying vestige of the old music cartel's corpse will morph into this new entity. old school disributor --> new media promoter
Re:on behalf of my fellow americans (Score:2, Funny)
Re:on behalf of my fellow americans (Score:2)
Copyright does have it's roots in morality. To protect the rights of the original creator of an artistic work. That way nobody else could claim they were the one who wrote a book, or a song and exploit it for their own profit.
music, in quality and quantity, will not change in the least. you could even make the argument that music would get bett
This isn't fair use, it's a scam. (Score:2)
So you buy the iPod, take it home, sync it up to your computer... and...
FOOM
All the music's gone.
You don't get to listen to it.
Unless you're just going to use the iPod standalone, and never (even accidentally) sync it up, you're spending $300 for a time bomb. Even then, you're going to lose all the music when the hard drive dies.
This isn't fair use, it's a scam.
look at your own words (Score:3, Insightful)
What DO I own then? (Score:2)
Re:What DO I own then? (Score:2)
Reputable legal advise!?!? (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe we can solicit opinions from people who actually have some knowledge on the subject. I mean, they might as well just have asked my garbage man, or a egronomist, or a CEO. Sure, the guy is a doctor, but his degree ain't in law.
-Rick
why is this post about the iPod name specifically? (Score:2, Insightful)
This isn't new, and it isn't about the iPod either. It's a much larger issu
Limited value....... (Score:3, Interesting)
As a potentional consumer, this sort of preloaded iPod deal seems to be of limited value.
Not only will an iPod *not* allow you upload songs onto your computer, for storage, but if you want to actually add any more songs at all, you'd have to reformat the iPod to accomodate the new iTunes account, taking all those songs with it. So, why would I want an iPod with someone else's music collection on it?
The idea does raise a geniunely evil possibility though. I'm no fan of DRM, but I can see why musicco's are worried. If I collect tens of thousands of MP3s from eMusic, etc., and came into a financial pinch where I needed money quickly, what would stop me (besides the FBI) from selling a collection of DVDs ("Great Pop Music Through the Decades. All Artists Included!") for like $1,000 or $10,000 each? AS few discretly handled deals and I could be sitting pretty.
joab
Larger question: Proof of ownership? (Score:2, Interesting)
If you stole an iPod loaded with music and movies (Score:2)
Once for the initial theft, twice for the illegal eBay resell, third for selling music, and finally fourth for selling movies?
Re:if they ask for you first born (Score:2)
Hey, it's a fair system: you have just as much right to buy laws as any big corporation.
TWW
Re:if they ask for you first born (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:if they ask for you first born (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:if they ask for you first born (Score:3, Insightful)
You own the copy. Sure. Do what you want with it - but don't distribute it, because that right is explicitly reserved for the copyright holder. That part of copyright law is not nebulous in any way.
Bullshit, if you pay for the license you own it. (Score:4, Insightful)
This will certainly be taken to court. Look, if you purchase a car, and your car company expects you to pay insurance to protect your car, but suddenly the state tries to claim that they actually own your car and that you only can purchase a license to drive it, and to top it off you don't even own the license, I'm sorry but thats just robbery.
If you pay for a license but don't gain any rights, if you buy an ipod and purchase the music, but somehow you don't have the right to resell the music, then what are you purchasing?
When the time comes where we have to buy licenses to breathe air and drink water, and some company comes along and strips you of your license, well I guess you'll just die.
It's one thing to allow the traditional recording industries to exist, by buying their music on ipod, but its another to give them the right to strip you of ownership, if you are basically providing welfare for these record companies, then if they were wise they'd actually be sitting down at the table to make a deal with Apple, and with consumers.
If they refuse to sit at the table, then Apple and consumers will eventually replace them with companies who do respect the right to sell Ipods on Ebay. To be frank, they are over-reaching here, and its hurting them over and over again. You cannot maintain a monopoly by force. Google is smart enough to know that the best way to maintain their monopoly is by actually putting the consumer first. The artists know this too, they make music that their fans want because they have to sell both CDs and concert tickets.
Look, here are our options, either we can have a fake corporatized art and music industry, where corporate bosses tell artists what music to make, and then tell consumers what music to buy, and then force both the artist and consumer to be caught in a loop similar to Microsofts tactics, or we the artists, consumers, CEOs, programmers and lawyers can get together and decide to offer an alternative.
Ipod, Itunes, Google, Open Source, GPL, GNU, Creative Commons, these are some of the alternatives. If the traditional industries were smart, they'd simply adapt to the market instead of trying to control it. The market ultimately cannot be controlled, and the more control you try to put on the market, the bigger you make the market for any competition which decides to offer freedom as a product. So it's simply, the recording industry is helping to fund new freedom industries and freedom based products.
Re:if they ask for you first born (Score:2, Insightful)
Actually, the only part that actually is property is the hardware. Copyright law does not confer property rights over songs. The only property in copyright is the copyright itself. Songs, by their very nature, cannot be owned. What they have, what they posess, is the exclusive right to copy the song. Property must have a specific physical instance in order to satisfy the definition. Where do they keep the Britis
Re:if they ask for you first born (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, copies are property, and copyrights are property, and works are not. But no, you there's nothing odd about the idea of intangible property. Copyrights are intangible, for example.
Basically, something is property if you can 1) use it, 2) lend to and recover from others, and 3) dispose of it by selling it, destroying it, etc. Just because something is intangible doesn't mean you can't do this. But a creative work can't be recovered, conveyed, destroyed (usually), etc. People can't lose knowl
Re:If somebody just asked me... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:If somebody just asked me... (Score:2)
Why give up the ability to do something legal when you don't have to?
Should somebody really have to tell people not to do things?
Yes, it's called the legislature.
Does the average person really not care what laws are intended to do, as long as they can get around the rules directly address?
Nope, why should they?
Re:Here's the problem I have. (Score:4, Insightful)
I agree, but it doesn't seem to work that way. In my district I generally get a choice between a conservative moron and a liberal moron. The only thing most of them do is spout off buzzwords. I wouldn't trust them to understand the problems with DRM and the RIAA even if they mentioned the words during a campaign. On top of that, most of the people around here will vote for the incumbent, and lacking that for a choice will vote for whoever has held an office before.
"She's experienced! She was on the school board, we better vote her into congress."
With our system of a representative republic, and our current state of two dominant parties, it's difficult for most individuals to find a choice that even remotely represents our opinions. Much easier for individuals to ignore the law, download anything they want and hope the courts resolve it.