Interesting People mailing list archives

Re: Music industry proposes a piracy surcharge on ISPs


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Fri, 14 Mar 2008 08:43:19 -0700


________________________________________
From: Roger Bohn [Rbohn () ucsd edu]
Sent: Friday, March 14, 2008 11:36 AM
To: David Farber
Cc: ip
Subject: Re: [IP] Music industry proposes a piracy surcharge on ISPs

If, I say, this comes to pass, what is to say that it won't have the
opposite of the desired effect where:
b) the notion of paying such a tax causes users to reason that if
they're paying for downloading, they may as well get their money's
worth?


That is exactly the point. Decriminalize downloading, treat it as a "tax," and get the music industry out of our 
computers.   More refined versions would sample the stream from different sources to measure music DL, and adjust the 
fees accordingly.  For example, universities would pay more; slow speed connections would pay less.  ISPs could decide 
how to divvy up their fees - it just becomes a cost of doing business, the way it is for radio stations today.

In exchange, everyone in the US gets "free music."   An analog is  the fees that the BBC charges every TV owner in the 
UK. From the Wired article:
The practice spread to the United States in 1914 and currently applies to radio airplay and webcasts in addition to 
live performances. In a 2004 white paper, the Electronic Frontier Foundation called for it to be applied to file 
sharing, but the Recording Industry Association of America immediately dismissed the proposal.

Opponents of RIAA should favor this concept. Let industry participants  (artists, labels, etc) fight over how to divide 
the spoils, and let them go back to their place as a very minor tail which has been trying to wag a very large dog 
(entire Computers & Info Tech sector).  The common objection will be "it's not fair," but it's no more unfair than the 
911 tax on cellular, or .

Unfortunately, I'm not optimistic. It's apparently too counter-intuitive for the US, which has been inundated with the 
view that DL is a morality issue.
Roger Bohn


 Griffin's idea is to collect a fee from internet service providers --
 something like $5 per user per month -- and put it into a pool that
 would be used to compensate songwriters, performers, publishers and
 music labels. A collecting agency would divvy up the money according
 to artists' popularity on P2P sites, just as ASCAP and BMI pay
 songwriters for broadcasts and live performances of their work.




--


Roger Bohn      Rbohn () UCSD edu,    Rbohn () MIT edu
      Professor, University of California, San Diego
      Visiting Professor, MIT Sloan School of Management
       (619) 379-9619     cell

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