Tuesday, October 31, 2006

'Stop treating iPod users like criminals' - silicon.com

'Dr Ian Kearns, deputy director of the IPPR, said: "It is not the music industry's job to decide what rights consumers have. That is the job of the government."'

Hurray! At last someone actually willing to stand up to the BPI bully-boys. Let's just hope that the government listen to the recommendations from this thinktank and actually have the bottle to enact a law that protects the rights of the consumer over the rights of the multi-national entertainment conglomerates who think it's ok to install stealth software on your PC should you dare to listen to a CD on it.

We know what the big five want - they want the same ridiculous rights of ownership of their "product" as the software companies currently enjoy. They don't want you to own music, they want you only to own a license to listen to it. That way they can make you pay as many times as they like if you want to keep listening to it. I'm waiting for the first online store to try charging for a "music upgrade"; "but it's been remastered so that's another fiver you owe us."

Unfortunately it's the only way that they can see to retain their monopoly on music distribution - if they stitch up online distribution now by tying us all into proprietry DRM and music leasing they will eventually close off the internet to all the independant artists, through technology and consumer inertia.

None of the BPI recommendations are pro-artist, unless you sell so many units the record companies need you more than you need them. I think musicians are starting to realise that.

The record companies don't even have to pay huge advances anymore - they just pick up bands that have got a following themselves through hard work, the internet or a reality TV show. The Strokes even recorded their own first album - they paid for it.

CD's still cost less than 70p each to produce for quantaties over 1000 (that includes cases and artwork) yet we are lead to believe that £9.97 is "supermarket cheap". Yes, it costs to distribute them but a cd weighs as much as what? A banana? Bananas come from the tropics. On a boat or even by plane. They have a supply chain; producers, marketers, distributors, and sellers. They don't cost £10 each.

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

UK leads fight against online child abuse - silicon.com

It's good to see the good work of CEOP and all the affiliated bodies getting some praise for all their efforts in combatting online child abuse.

Now if the US government could just figure out that a child's life is worth more than profit they might do something about the "57.8 per cent of commercial websites offering images of child abuse" which are hosted in the US.

Perhaps they are taking the same line as they have on internet gambling - it's illegal unless taxes on the profits are flowing into the US treasury. Bastards.

Think U Know: What Porn? - silicon.com

Leader: What porn? - Public Sector - Breaking Business and Technology News at silicon.com

This link is to a Silicon.com article about the upholding of an advertising complaint about some ads for thinkuknow.co.uk. The bright side it's another bit of publicity for thinkuknow.co.uk which ultimately is the important thing.

ITN News at Ten ran an article on "the hideous dangers of letting your child go anywhere near a computer" (oh OK it was "internet safety" but let's be honest they wanted to use my title) and although they spoke to someone from CEOP they didn't mention thinkuknow.co.uk. Truely stupid.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

Love Commandos go down a storm

Well I never - we've never had girls dancing in their bras at one of our gigs before.  We were performing in a battle of the bands competition at Club Juice in Walsall on Saturday.  We came second to Necrotize, who were very worthy winners.  The other band competing were Pretty Dead Things.

All in all one of the best LCs gigs in a while.