Ed Price is Hungry

(but not very often)

Tip: Get a haircut

Piracy: The Good, The Bad and The Indifferent (cont.)

Conclusion

I have no particular drum to bang here, but I do think content providers need to shift their emphasis. Instead of investing vast sums of money on criminalising piracy, their efforts would be better directed towards providing better channels for downloading content and educating (rather than intimidating) the ‘napster’ generation.

Recently I’ve shifted from finding torrents of music I want to check out to looking at the download options on Amazon.co.uk. Unlike iTunes their album prices are low enough to warrant impulse buying, there’s no DRM, and the bit-rate is of a reasonable quality. The major problem is that their service is only available to UK visitors, which means I still have to jump through some technical hoops to make any purchases. Why? I don’t know… but I’m sure many people would simply revert to using torrents.

Equally there’s yet to be a convincing pricing structure for downloading TV. There’s no way I’m going to pay $2-3 per episode for anything, when I can get the full series on DVD for about $30-40 if I wait a little while. However, I would pay for downloads if the price was right (and most streaming services are only available in their native countries, so that’s generally a non-option).

Gaming is one area where I am convinced. Download prices are much more favourable than in-store prices as a rule and I don’t particularly need a pretty box or a printed manual in this case. In fact, keeping an eye on special offers on Steam has resulted in me buying several games that I’ve held off buying for months (if not years) in-store.

One last point. Why piracy? It’s a misnomer at best, a deliberately suggestive label at worst. It wouldn’t surprise me if the reclamation of the pirate label in recent years as a fashionable icon has as much to do with the public’s tacit acceptance of illegal downloading as it does with a certain Johnny Depp film. What people do when they download copyrighted content is vastly removed from what actual pirates do.  As this article suggests, it seems to be a term deliberately chosen for it’s negative connotations.

Finally, as this famous image tries to explain: "Piracy is not theft…": http://patrissimo.livejournal.com/864834.html

Posted:  January 11, 2010 at 09:43

Filed under: Miscilliness

Author: Justin (contact)

Last edit: January 11, 2010 - 09:48

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Ed Price Is Hungry by Justin Cawthorne is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at www.edpriceishungry.com