No. Mozart, Beethoven and the rest are already dead... and they won't compose anymore. download all you want.
2006-06-20 16:36:40
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answer #1
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answered by kamelåså 7
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The music entertainment industry is not some poor schmuck on the side of the road begging for a job or food. Even with P2P networks and filesharing, they are still raking in billions... in other words, their coke habits and Jaguars won't suffer because of it.
The RIAA inquisition is a power grab...
Go out and buy a music CD... what have you purchased? A lisence to play it? A small and otherwise worthless plastic disk?
It's all about greed.
2006-06-20 16:40:52
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answer #2
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answered by sincityq 5
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It hurts the human beings who print up on a constrained budget their cds in the event that they at the instant are not offered up. once you're speaking approximately those that made cd singles and excursion and stuff it particularly is money they may well be utilising for their massive investments in attempting to proceed to exist properly suited and to strengthen income, and shop their contracts with publishers so as that they at the instant are not immediately dropped back into the shadows. the two way the human beings who do acquire it are so no longer keen to pay for the song that they are keen to thieve it from the internet, whilst it even is in all likelihood no longer all that significant for human beings to have their song in the event that they do no longer look to be keen to pay for it then the checklist companies and bands could purely no longer make it available for acquire via pirating. purely think of of in case you have been a musician. and you made a checklist. and you had your massive possibility after years of prepare and tears and sweat. And your checklist producer produced one million CDs because of the fact it became envisioned to sell. i might such as you to be the single to tell that musician that they have stopped merchandising off the cabinets because of the fact somebody broke the CD protection and leaked out a unfastened acquire to all and sundry and their around the corner neighbor in the call of unfastened song. song is a job purely as something, it is going to pay. And the competition is fierce. Why else do you think of they have those one million cent CDs numerous in case you purchase one at popular value subscriptions? they do no longer look to be merchandising to boot as they did earlier downloads.
2016-12-08 23:25:37
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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No, we are actually promoting it. I download many songs I don't hear on the radio. Ive gone and bought several albums from those artists because of programs like Limewire.
2006-06-20 16:36:45
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answer #4
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answered by musicfreak872002 2
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Live music is indeed better and it's impossible to download it. Just listen to it, dance, do what you have to do, because at the moment it's being performed it cannot be killed, can it?
2006-06-20 16:43:43
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answer #5
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answered by scarbrow 1
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probably but in Australia a cd costs anywhere between $25 and $30!
2006-06-20 17:19:15
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answer #6
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answered by *-*-*-*-*-*-*-* 4
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We are setting it free !!
I would not be able to afford all that music that is making my life so much more enjoyable.
2006-06-20 16:37:02
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answer #7
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answered by Laura Palmer 5
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No. But we are killing our computers...most free sites contain viruses and worms, not to mention adware and spyware
2006-06-20 16:36:26
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answer #8
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answered by photoguy1959 3
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nope. oh maybe yes perhaps
i still buy cd/s though, luv to support the artist i luvvvvv.
2006-06-20 16:43:46
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answer #9
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answered by Paula 7
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no. the record companies are doing it themselves.
2006-06-20 16:54:35
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answer #10
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answered by wolfman 5
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