The Police Discography Torrent Tpb Pirate
Download music, movies, games, software and much more. The Pirate Bay is the galaxy's most resilient BitTorrent site.
Photar, I have no problem with the ethics of what the Pirate Bay are doing. I don’t mean to be facious but I wonder whether you mean to ask “What do I think about the ethics of those who us The Pirate Bay to share copyrighted material”? At the end of the day TPB are offering people the opportunity to commit copyright offences, but it’s the individuals who actually perform anything “unethical”. Cisco Systems creates IP routing equipment that China uses to filtering and monitor its population’s web access. Phil Zimmerman’s PGP is used to cloak highly discusting peadophilia and terroism ‘chatter’. In both cases no one questions their ethics. For me it’s the whole “guns don’t kill people, people do” concept.
What do you think Photar (and others)? The Pirate Bay is also a demonstration of the changing landscape in copyright and the attitude to which people now view it.
Finally, after years of over pricing, price fixing and continual abuse of the system by the MPAA/RIAA people are rebelling against it and it’s places the TPB which are at the for front in leading to perm. Change within the establishment. TPB is essentially a Napster for all media content and given time the entertainment industry will begin to offer reasonably priced material over the net. Our appitite for this type of stuff is also so big that the paying “per item” is also going to become a dead zone, subscription services for content is coming.
The current offerings are insulting. I think true enlightenment will start to happen once the shift occurs in those in power. Ageing old men in charge of these companies dont understand or care about this new technology, they see it as damaging thier bottom line. In fact embrassing it could create more wealth. Typically, most people who download material would never actually buy it due to the monetary constraints. That said, the entertainment industry would probably make more money by offering monthly/yearly subscriptions services to content than by selling individual items which the public cant possibly afford. I know Photar, why don’t we ban google as well?
They help facilitate people to find paedophilic images. They also index torrents just like mininova, and to a certain extent thepiratebay. Buku panduan belajar piano pdf key. Such as this; It is the users of thepiratebay that commit infringements, not the site itself.
And users are committing infringement because all fair use has gone out the window. Even copying a song off a cd, or recording the radio is supposedly a crime in the UK, because we have no set in stone fair use rights. Also, it is typically not the artists that lose out, but the media companies that take their IP in the first place. A 6 figure advance looks amazing to a student band, but after a few years they realise they only recieve a very VERY small amount of royalties.
The few bands that subscend this, do so by renegotiating contracts after the first one expires typically by releasing many many hits. Most bands that can only manage one or two top 40 hits (or those that get signed and get no hits) will get nothing beyond a small advance. The money the bands get comes mainly through live concerts.
Meanwhile, the label has made millions off cd sales, downloads, and rights from pubs and clubs etc. Again, the artists sees little. The IP system needs a complete overhaul, it is completely screwed for consumers, and just as screwed for the artists, only the fatcats in the middle appear to benefit, and a few very lucky artists. The MP’s review goes a step in the right direction, but piracy will not decline until tracks online are about 10-20p each, with no DRM, and a choice of compression between uncompressed at 256kbit MP3, not the substandard stuff completely locked down that is available now. If anything piracy will increase as people begin to learn about DRM.
My hope is that a stupid company like sony will release a DRM system that auto installs into the UK market. This is covered under the computer misuse act and will result in immediate criminal prosecution.
It seems that an act put in place to stop hackers and other unscrupulous individuals, is our only defence against a raving multinational out for more profits no matter what the cost to creativity and consumers! Stephen, it may seem that the fight is lost. But what I was saying in my previous post is that the prevealence of piracy, lets call it that cause that is what it is, is only going to feed legistators and DRM creators. The only reason you have the option of piracy now is because the media companies are at a point where they’ll make more money selling non DRM music. At some point fairly soon 5 10 years from now maybe, you’re going to realize that all of your digital stuff is going to support DRM and then the media companies are going to stop selling non-drm media at all.