gregweller said:And, of course, it is still legal to walk into any public library in the country and check out a book you don't own, read it, take it back and then not buy the book because you already read it. For instance, I'm reading this book right now, called 'Cultivating Delight'. I first heard about it on NPR and placed a hold on it in our library's OPAC (in library-speak an Online Public Access Catalog). I did note that we had only one copy of it. Several people had read it before me, and then I got it in a couple of weeks. As I said, I'm now reading it and I'll return it so a number of other people will read it without buyng it. There is not a whole lot of difference between that and a file-sharing service like Nutella, Morpheus or Kazaa. I would argue that the library interloan service Worldcat (which I'm sure Eric is familiar with), is perhaps the original online file sharing service. I remember a stink a couple of years ago, where a group of housewives in Tenn. were threatened with lawsuits because they were scanning and sharing files of a knitting magazine. They were stunned because they said that this was something they always did--only that they would hand it to the neighbor next door instead of emailing it. I'm sorry, but I just refuse to get all upset about this.
Except, Greg, that the library paid for the book, and the contract the book was sold under included the right to let other people read the book. What you propose is for the library to buy one book, then let anyone photocopy it.
To make Napster, et al, work like libraries, anyone who uploads a copy of a song must also upload a certain amount of money. Each time the work is downloaded, the money supply is depleted as it is paid to the artists. When the money is totally gone, the file is deleted. Anyone who wishes to could put in more money, allowing more people to download the song.
Of course, those who get on their high horses about "sharing" tend to jump off the minute that it costs THEM something to "share".
The real issue, though, is respect for the creators. The pro-theft people on this list are, basically, crapping on the people who make the works they're stealing. Technological and legal solutions won't work. What is needed is a cultural shift, to the point where taking work without compensating the creators is viewed in the same way as kicking cripples or pissing in the streets, as something civilized people Just Don't Do.
(Anyone who says, "Well, the fascist corps ripped me off!" -- you are free to never give them another dime. In return, you don't get their output. If it's not good enough to pay for, it's not good enough to steal -- in the real world, people steal stuff because it's worth so much, it's worth risking jail. No one steals crap. The fact you're willing to steal it demonstrates that it is, in fact, worth your money.)