Mazzmazz wrote:It goes beyond music and musicians. It's intellectual property and the concept of intellectual property in general. I'd be willing to bet that Toyota doesn't allow just anyone to see the designs of cars they intend to manufacture, and I'd also be willing to bet that they don't share it freely on their internal network or over the internet. And I'm sure that someone caught stealing those designs would be punished heavily, because that person was stealing their intellectual property. Even if the car was designed by one person or a team of 200 persons, it's still intellectual property and protected by laws.
Sure, the difference between a car design and a song might seem big, but in reality they're both creations and have the potential to generate income for the creators and stealing either one is theft of intellectual property.
Maybe I'm missing something here, but if you take something without paying for it, it's stealing. The Mexican grocery store down the street from me has lots of fruits and vegetables on stands on the sidewalk. Is it right for me to nick an apple and justify it to myself that it's OK because there was no one standing out there to take my money?
It seems so basic to me, am I missing something?
For the most part I completely agree with you and I don't want to split hairs, but ( hair splitting here done here

In a way, that makes the whole thing more simple. We already have laws against stealing the car AND the apple!
Its true that ISPs are in the fore front of computer communications but there is another much more obvious trench in the war. That is every operating system of every computer and server in the world. With the exception of open source, there are no workarounds, no escape. If we take the attitude that you cannot try the apple before you buy it then simply insert or embed in the OS code that no media file transfer can take place without being preceded by a financial transaction. The only way that the OS makers, Microsoft, Apple, whoever does Cell Phones, are going to get on board is if the "whats in it for me?" factor is taken care of. We're all going to have to pony up a portion or percentage of the proceeds. They become the internet PRO. Monetize the problem. Apple should be fine with this as they already have their store front, itunes, setup!
There are abundant problems with this, not the least of which is that musicians the world over or the music industry need to be on board. There are many big time players out there in the world that WANT their media to be free. The biggest I can think of at the moment is Youtube. I'd also bet some of them are major record labels who are more interested in merchandising than record sales. How hard do you think they'd fight?
Just askin
Keith