Friday 29 April 2011

The benefits of allowing copying

I'm rather belatedly in the middle of reading Moral Panics and the Copyright Wars by Bill Patry, and an excellent book it is - which I will review in due course. The message that a liberal approach to downloading actually - perhaps counter-intuitively, at least to the record and film industries - leads to increased sales is echoed in a posting by the author Paulo Coelho on his blog which is worth reading.

Years ago, before I knew a thing about copyright, when I copied friends' LPs onto tape (and permitted them to do the same with mine) I did so with the aspiration of "upgrading" in due course by buying my own copy of the disc. If I didn't like the music I wouldn't bother, but neither would I listen to the tape. Far from meaning lost sales, I am sure it meant I bought more than I otherwise would. OK, albums were desirable possessions in their own right in a way that CDs aren't and downloads couldn't possibly be - though LPs do take up a lot of space. And the tape recordings were pretty rough. There were compelling reasons to buy the LP if you could.

And there's such a lot of music available, legally, for free download anyway - including so much of The Grateful Dead's oeuvre, recorded with their blessing by their fans - further proof, if proof were needed, that allowing copies to be made does not necessarily hurt the rights owner.

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