Simple, many of us are tired of being ripped off by the music industry.
We're tired of seeing musicians being ripped off by the music industry.
We're
tired of seeing our culture locked up by backroom deals and underhanded
tricks.
So many excellent artists that aren't signed by labels, and they struggle everyday just to play their music and survive, all at the same time.
The RIAA is a professional lobby organization of recording labels of which
five labels control 90% of the music distributed in the US. In 1999
these so called "protectors" of the music industry and musicians
released only 2600 CDs. In the first 4 months of 2000 Napster signed
17,000 new artists. There are over 145,000 on MP3.Com. Excellent artists
are being ignored, and discouraged by the music industry. In short,
We're forced to use various online services if we want to hear new music or
artists, or listen to a song that's not offered for sale by the labels
any more. And the best part is it's easy. No jumping through hoops to
download a song, no outrageous costs per song, and most of all we control
what we listen to, not the riaa or labels. To be able to save
paid for files to harddrive, transfer them to an Mp3 player, or
write them to CDR should be our prerogative, not that of the labels'.
About 80% of the music in the labels catalogs is not available at any
given point. Napster changed that, that is the primary reason for the
success and popularity of Napster. It's been a given since day one that
Napster would eventually have to charge for it's services. Even Karen
Allen on the RIAA mentioned this to me as early as last July (2000)
when I was contacted about this site. Yes, the RIAA contacted me within
one week of putting up the website, wanting a meeting. We settled for
a phone conversation.
Our
comment to the "Big 5" is you made your bed, now lie in it.

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