The first kind of file sharing I think about when hearing the term is the one where people share music with others. That was the first file sharing I came across, in the form of Napster. A friend of mine was studying at the university, and had a very good internet connection. Someone had told her about Napster, a program which she had promptly downloaded.
When I got home I downloaded Napster. The program wasn’t working nearly as well on my 56k modem, and it took me about 15 minutes to download a song. In addition, I could only fit about 20 songs on my hard drive before having to get rid of one if I wanted to download another. I didn’t really think there was anything wrong with that, it more or less worked as any other demo.
Then Napster was shut down and I heard about Audiogalaxy, a similar program (although web based) that I used for a while. When Napster was shut down I thought a bit about the ethics surrounding downloaded copyrighted material. The practice, as I was told, was still legal in
Since then, I have a much upgraded hard drive and internet connection. I can easily store all the music that I want on my hard drive, and as long as I can find someone who has it, I can download it in about five seconds.
How has that changed my thoughts about the matter?
I have a much harder time justifying downloading copyrighted material now than before. The argument that it’s ok to download songs that are so rare that you can’t find them anywhere, might still be reasonable. But the fact is that the legal alternative places to download music have grown so big now that you should be able to find most songs you could ever want there.
Personally, illegal file sharing hasn’t changed the numbers of CD’s I buy. I get the ones I really like, which is a maximum of three or four in a year. I didn’t buy more before that, and then music was way more important to me. I would never download a whole CD only to burn in onto a CD-ROM with printed sleeves from the actual cover.
But even so, the arguments against file sharing weigh heavier for me now. Well, actually I’m not even sure if it’s even worth arguing about. There’s really no twisting and turning, I just find it wrong.
The recording companies who own the songs have the right to ask for as little or as much as they want to. They may be greedy bastards, but that doesn’t change anything. I can decide that the music isn’t worth as much as they ask, but how on earth can I just say “nah, too expensive, I’ll go steal the song instead”? I don’t have any right to the songs unless I pay for them. Want it? Buy it. It’s really as simple as that.
2 comments:
Nowadays a lot of people use encrypted file sharing apps like GigaTribe, since you're only able to share within a private network of friends, much less piracy than large networks: http://www.gigatribe.com
Tyvärr blir jag tvungen att flytta mötet på måndag (28/5) till tisdag (29/5 kl 13). Hoppas att detta inte ställer till det för mycket.
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