Blog Archive

About Me

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

postheadericon Why Do The Labels Continue To Insist That 'Your Money Is No Good Here?'

You might think that the industry so concerned about piracy at least get its own house in order before throwing stones neglect the people who make music is not available more readily available, usually without a price. This screenshot I found on my Facebook feed recently, the result of frustration (aka BRAT Productions) Daniel Barassi attempt to buy music.





If you can not see the text of the arrow is pointing , which reads: "Due to copyright restrictions you can not buy this product in your country."



This diatribe is fixed:
I'm so tired of this shit
kiss! I am a music lover! I love to shop, and the music itself. If I can not really buy a CD I bought in WAV format, so you can have the best possible quality (crap MP3/AAC). Often when I buy something legal, I get this shit. You want to stop illegal downloading? Remove restrictions stop fucking area! Find a way to talk to their labels in other regions, make a deal, and get your shit together! There is a world full of people who want the opportunity to listen to new music. Stop selling to a single region! Solve this problem and see. You will see less piracy. BUY YOUR HEADS OF COLLECTIVE ass!

Yes really. W.T.F.



Dime (Barassi and) why these things happen. If your answer includes words such as "license", "rights" or any other explanation of the settlement system that labels are erected to prevent people buy their music, their response, while "technically correct" is totally wrong.

what I explained is

why

, in this day and age, management of Internet a lot of sales, are the labels are still trying to claim that the buyer's country makes no difference. Because it just is not. The only people who find this sort of thing is acceptable legal teams, administrators and collection duties of intermediaries who need this type of convolution relentlessly stupid to keep their positions.


We will use a physical analogy, because it's exactly the kind of things everyone would like to do when there is a digital product: If you are a German citizen visiting or living in the United States and leaves at Best Buy to pick up a CD or a movie, no one checks your passport to see if you are legally authorized to make this purchase. Or, in fact, anyone can request a physical CD from anywhere in the world and have it shipped. Obviously, it is more expensive, but no one is stopping you. If you do not have any meaning in the physical world, as hell can expect it to work in a world where anyone from anywhere and at any time can at least attempt
to buy music or movies?
(If your answer contains something like "who will buy licenses, not songs," go ahead and take a F-).
Find best price for : --best----BRAT--

0 comments: