Summer
1999
Piracy
is Your Friend
By Jaron Lanier
Reprinted from the New York Times, May 9,
1999
Piracy is a phony issue that record labels are
hyping to rip off artists. Piracy has always existed. That's
why there's a mountain of blank cassettes in any big electronic
store.
When someone decides to buy your music instead
of copying it, they're doing it for a lot of reasons. Maybe
they're ethical. Maybe they like the convenience of not having
to hassle with the uncertainty of copying something--Will
it come out right? Is it done yet? Maybe it's their way of
expressing good will to you.
But face it, if your music wasn't available
for free in some form, no one would have a chance to hear
it to decide to buy it in the first place. The old form of "free" music
was radio (which is often taped by pirates) and MTV, but
eventually the Internet is going to take over everything.
There will still be TV and radio, but they'll be implemented
digitally. Give it 10 years. When that happens, the idea
of not giving away music for free will be exactly the same
thing as never promoting music at all.
The real question should not be, "How can
I keep my fans from hearing my music for free?" It should
be, "How can I best make money from my fans?" Those
are two different questions. Sure, you "lose" money
to pirates. But you also lose money to a label that isn't
doing anything for you.
It used to be that a label was needed to finance,
manufacture, store, ship and market your music. That's how
they earned their cut. The arrangement made sense. If the
music business wasn't shrinking before our eyes, it would
still make sense.
But in the digital era, it costs nothing to
ship your music over the Internet to a fan. So the biggest
reason for labels just went away.
As for financing, well, if advances were stacked
up against finance deals in other industries, they'd look
a lot like usury--except that they aren't even loans: once
they're paid back, the label still owns the master. There
is simply no worse conceivable form of financing. We can
do better if we take charge of our own careers.
But what about marketing? Can labels still do
that? Of course they can, for a few big acts. But once you
are established, your own Web site connects with your fan
base better than the label can.
Even if you are a huge artist, think whether
in the course of your whole career, not just the next couple
of years, you lose more money to pirates or to labels who
will be taking most of your money for no reason at all?
When somebody in a dorm room buys thousands
of dollars' worth of gear and stays up all night hacking
MP3's just to get "free" music, that's what you
call an opportunity, not a problem. You have found yourself
a new generation of fanatics. The only problem is that computer
companies are making the money right now instead of musicians.
Labels can't prevent piracy. No one can. I know
computers as well as anyone on the planet, and I promise
you, kids will break whatever copy protection scheme the
labels come up with. And the industry knows it.
In fact, the easier it is to copy music, the
less of a threat piracy will become. When piracy gets easier,
professional pirates have less to offer. The only pirates
left will be fans. And there are lots of ways to make money
from fans.
The reason the Recording Industry Association
of America and the labels are pushing anti-piracy laws and
technologies has nothing to do with preventing piracy. They're
doing it so that they can control the new digital music channels.
To keep anyone else, like you, from sharing the power.
They're doing it to rip you off. Period.
You can make more money in the new era
of "free" digital
music. But only if you break free of label mind control.
-------
Jaron Lanier is a musician and the
comptuer scientist who coined the term "virtual reality." The
above is an excerpt from his manifesto, "Piracy Is
Your Friend."
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