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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday September 20 2017, @12:06AM   Printer-friendly
from the rising-tide-lifts-all-ships dept.

Music piracy is on the increase worldwide, with 40 percent of users are accessing unlicensed music, up from 35 percent last year, the global recorded music industry group IFPI said.

Internet search engines are making piracy easier, the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) said in a report on Tuesday, calling for government action.

The increase in piracy follows a slump in recent years when policing of the digital music landscape appeared to be clamping down on the practice.

"Copyright infringement is still growing and evolving, with stream ripping the dominant method," said IPPI chief, Frances Moore.

"With the wealth of licensed music available to fans, these types of illegal sites have no justifiable place in the music world," she said, calling for greater regulation of the digital music sector.

If they defeat stream ripping, there's always the analog hole...

[Ed Note - OTOH "The report also revealed the continuing rise in audio streaming. It found that 45 percent of respondents were now listening to music through a licensed audio streaming service—up from 37 percent in 2016." ]


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  • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Wednesday September 20 2017, @02:49PM (5 children)

    by Grishnakh (2831) on Wednesday September 20 2017, @02:49PM (#570625)

    I'm probably being a little too literalist, but again I feel that you and Phx are basically saying, "I've seen all the stuff that I liked when I was younger", and you haven't bothered branching out and look at stuff outside that bubble. Have you tried watching, for instance, Arabic- or Chinese-language movies? Or listening to traditional Indian music? Or even 80s rap? Now of course, I can understand trying some of these things out briefly and deciding that that entire genre is just not of interest (as is the case for me with rap), but I'm just pointing out there's a LOT of stuff out there that anyone with your attitude probably has not been exposed to. Personally, I've seen some really interesting movies when I've checked out foreign films, particularly European ones, but even some Arabic ones. Foreign films are totally different from Hollywood American ones (Michael Bay fans would not be impressed). Watch out for the French movies though; some of those are downright disturbing.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 20 2017, @04:11PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 20 2017, @04:11PM (#570670)

    It's like you're deliberately missing the point. The patterns and stories are not terribly new. Once you've seen 2-5 TV coo shows you've seen them all. Super hero movies? Done. Action? Done. Not a while lot of REALLY original stuff out there. I'm only in my mid 30s and already have trouble with a lot of stuff being boring. By 50/60 I'm sure it will be near impossible. Though it will probably be all the blockbuster hits from the last 40 years remade for VR or something.

    • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Thursday September 21 2017, @02:25PM

      by Grishnakh (2831) on Thursday September 21 2017, @02:25PM (#571160)

      I'm not deliberately missing the point. Sure, if you just watch Hollywood movies, and you're intellectual, you're going to get bored because they really are all formulaic, especially these days with everything being a remake, reboot, or sequel/prequel. But there's a lot more to the universe of cinema than Hollywood. Try watching some movies from Europe or Asia. You might eventually get bored of that stuff too (Bollywood movies tend to be rather formulaic as well in their own way), but it should take longer because now you have many different cultures' worth of movies to look through instead of just one. European movies specifically tend to be very unique in my experience. There's a reason the most famous film festival is in Cannes, France.

  • (Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Wednesday September 20 2017, @04:35PM

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Wednesday September 20 2017, @04:35PM (#570689) Journal

    No, what you're saying might be true for others, but not for me. I have branched out to other musical genres and cultures for novelty. I have listened to Tuvan throat singing and Bollywood hits. For a time I had the dial set to Afro-Pop. For video I watched series like, "El Internado de la Laguna Negra," "La Reina del Sur," or "Parineeta." There are good things there.

    But I've mined it all out. Re-watching old series seems like a double waste of time. Sure, I enjoyed watching "Airwolf" when I was a kid, but as an adult its storylines are dated, to say the least.

    Once in a while something new and novel comes along, and I'll enjoy that, but there simply isn't enough of it to compel me to pay for anything. So I've lost the habit of paying for content.

    And as that has happened, I've noticed a general loss of interest in passive entertainment. It's much more entertaining to undertake active hobbies. Also with many of them the price is right, because they're free. I've taken up flint-knapping, and all I gotta do for that is pick up rocks and reduce them to tools. As I've done that, I've found myself buying less and less and making more and more of what I need or desire. And as I do that more, I find I prefer it because I know exactly what goes into it, unlike any given thing you might buy in a store made by companies you shouldn't trust in places that will divert what you give them to ends you abhor.

    I dunno. I haven't formulated any grand philosophy about it, but as I've been doing all that there has been a growing sense of freedom and confidence, and with that a greater sense of calm. Taking back control of the material side of life has conferred freedom, and being able to do that began with taking back control of my own time and mindshare. It's not just that 80 minutes of my evenings are no longer spent watching commercials, but that the entire evening is my own again. It's not just that my head isn't trapped playing a loop of a song in radio playlists, but that I can noodle around tunes nobody else has ever heard, but which I can now play because I taught myself the tools of making music. And it's perfectly fine if nobody else ever hears them or likes them or any of that, because it makes me happier than listening to anybody else's compositions ever did.

    Anyway, all of which is to say I have really enjoyed that I have gone off the reservation with respect to media. Don't even have a desire to pirate anything anymore. I sort of suspect that therein lies the true nightmare for the *AA's, that people might do somewhat likewise and un-learn the habits that have been so profitable for the content industries.

    --
    Washington DC delenda est.
  • (Score: 2) by moondrake on Thursday September 21 2017, @09:56AM (1 child)

    by moondrake (2658) on Thursday September 21 2017, @09:56AM (#571077)

    Good point.

    Interesting you would mention that. I actually lived in China (and Japan) for several years.... So yes, I did watch Chinese, Japanese and Korean movies and series. And tried listening classical music. And while interesting for a while, I feel it still does not reach me anymore on the same emotional level as music or film could touch me when I was young, and I came to enjoy when it is quiet and I am reading or thinking, instead of being fed audio/visual content.

    • (Score: 2) by Grishnakh on Thursday September 21 2017, @02:30PM

      by Grishnakh (2831) on Thursday September 21 2017, @02:30PM (#571161)

      And tried listening classical music. And while interesting for a while

      Personally, I like baroque-era music better than the classical-era stuff (what people commonly call "classical" typically encompasses baroque, classical, and romantic), and I like the classical better than romantic.