Friday, February 20, 2009

digital ?= free

Have you seen these ads on some DVDs, mixed in with the trailers/previews, that say, "You wouldn't steal a car," "You wouldn't steal a TV," etc.? There's a fundamental difference between stealing physical objects and making copies of movies, music, and software: The individual is not removing the material from the owner who paid. It's more like listening to the radio or taking notes in class than stealing a car. I don't really know how to feel about it, morally. For most of my life, I've taken the mixed position that it's okay to do this sort of copying occasionally, but not with material that I use frequently. A combination of the U2 incident, the current state of the global economy, and ubuntu (linux) has brought the issue to mind again, and I'm thinking about it at a slightly different angle.

The creators of music, movies, and software, should be compensated for their work, but no one should be required to pay for it. Can't we have it both ways? Consider the internet: google (and all of its projects, like gmail), youtube, facebook, and of course, the software needed to use the internet: firefox, shockwave, flash, quicktime, silverlight, (moonlight), countless firefox add-ons... all FREE, and yet no one loses. The creators are compensated, but no one is required to pay. GIMP is free; Picasa is free, ubuntu is free--an entire OPERATING SYSTEM that rivals, or defeats, windows and mac, depending on the application. i get most of my world news from the internet, for free. It's very confusing, morally. It makes musicians and movie actors/directors/producers seem greedy. Why do they charge me and mozilla doesn't? What's the difference between free and non-free content?

Well, ads provide revenue for some people providing free content, but not everyone. Google sells user behavior data. What else? What am I missing here?

(p.s. perhaps i'm greedy for wanting to own music, movies, and software. radio, television, and internet provide all of these things for free in some fashion. but that's a tangential discussion....)

2 comments:

adam said...

i don't think the creators of music, movies, and software are necessarily greedier than anyone else. i think it's that they realize now that the business model they are accustomed to using, heavily reliant as it was on individual consumers buying their products, is unsustainable. the stickers on the DVDs are a last-ditch effort to squeeze what revenue they can from a funding source that is rapidly drying up, while, in the meantime, they transition to a more sustainable model.

shouldn't the internet revolution be kind of a golden age for industries like music, movies, journalism, software? the internet is making it possible for people to listen to music, watch movies, and read the news way more than they have been able to at any time in history. yet all the major newspapers are tanking (the rocky mountain news, winner of several pulitzer prizes in the last decade alone, published its final edition on friday). i can't imagine it will be long before these industries figure out how to offer free content to their consumers and still turn an enormous profit. what choice do they have?

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.