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Thread started 05/29/12 5:02am

Balladium

Prince; Internet; Piracy; Intellectual property; Usury

I have read much about Prince's views on the issue of the internet, its facilitation of piracy; and his feelings on intellectual property. I think as an artist, as a prolific creator of this material, he has a right to earn his livng from it. But I want to put forward an argument of my own about why I think his desired business model is untenable.

I want to firstly define an important forgotten concept in modern life: Usury. This is imo the vilest act on earth. It singularly is responsible for almost all of the evil and human suffering one witnesses today. Usury is quaintly forgotten and thought to be equivalent to "interest" as in a sum of money paid in exchange for borrowing money. This is not the whole story.

Usury is the receiving or stealing of unearned wealth. Every economy on earth today is based on money systems which rely on unpayable debt upon which usurious payments are demanded by a privileged and powerful few.

We know that Prince has experimented with digital distribution and says he doesn't like it. My biggest problem with artist's wanting payment for their creations is as follows:

1. Fair payment for a fair quantity of work.

An artist creates a masterpiece once and yet expects to be paid for it indefinitely. This is usurious. It is unearned since the artist was paid for their work already. The attempt to indefinitely milk the creation which is at heart God's gift of inspiration to all humanity. The few other "professions" which also try to extract usurious payments are similarly misguided.

2. The cost of replication of the work is minimal.

The plastic, paper and effort required to replicate the work as a distributed work is minimal. Thats why pirates can sell their products so cheap and still make a profit. The artist is not performing the material again and again each time it is replayed and yet they and the distributors want to extract indefinitely monies for the enjoyment of experiencing it. Again usurious.

The cost in digital distribution is even less still.

Let the artist perform it indefinitely if they want payments once again. Concerts and live performances are fair payment for fair work. This is what musicians who want continued payments should be doing. Not expecting unearned wealth to keep on pouring into them.

Let them decide on a fair sum they would like to be paid by a distributor and then be done with it. There should be no other protection, copyright or indefinite rights once the material is out. The cost of replication is small remember. Let the distributors afterwards compete for the lowest prices and if they can make money off it then let them do so. But everyone should have this right. No one distributor should suddenly become the practicer of usury in place of the artist. Remember that the artist has been paid and may continue to make money off the creation by performing it, distributing it, and so on in competition with everyone else.

The same should be true of movies, books and all other creations including scientific articles, gene research and so on. Patents have not worked and just propagate the usury.

I don't want to turn this into an essay (perhaps it has already become one); but this topic has been debated many times but very few see the underlying usury here. Knowledge is inspired. Knowledge belongs to all humanity. No person needs a billion usurious tally marks in their bank account to survive.

i hope that Prince can ponder on this and see that Truth cannot be sold. Truth just is. Once it is out it should not be restricted. There are no secret truths. Trying to control, obsess over ownership, and become a miser with Truth will destroy one's soul ultimately.

No honest man of Truth ever asked for payment for revealing the Truth to people. Asking for payment betrays falsehood. Do not believe or trust in persons who ask you for payment in exchange for their falsehood.

Prince is a blessed man in many ways. I hope he might consider the alternatives to the accepted business model.
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Reply #1 posted 05/29/12 10:43am

EyeJester7

WOW!!!

Beautiful read! I really enjoyed the points you outlined. I agree with you on all of your aspects. I am studying 'Usury' on a higher scale now even, and the facets you presented are often forgotten. You really demonstrated the need to study and define the underlying reasons things are. What I find so compelling about your argument are the closing sentences. "I hope that Prince can ponder on this and see that Truth cannot be sold. Truth just is. Once it is out it should not be restricted. There are no secret truths. Trying to control, obsess over ownership, and become a miser with Truth will destroy one's soul ultimately.

No honest man of Truth ever asked for payment for revealing the Truth to people. Asking for payment betrays falsehood. Do not believe or trust in persons who ask you for payment in exchange for their falsehood."

It reminds me of two songs (In Particular) where Prince is talking about "Truth" and it being "Sold". First we have 'Gold'.

"Everybody wants 2 sell what's already been sold

Everybody wants 2 tell what's already been told"

It seems from this line, he believes truth can be sold in a sense.That everybody seems to want to sell it?

The same is said in "Muse 2 The Pharaoh"

"But when all truth is told, would U rather be dead or be sold?

Here..it seems as if Prince, believes when the truth is told...You might rather be sold or dead..

I am not here to look too much into this.lol

But I think you deliver your points so well. It causes one to think again, and possibly Prince should look at it in a new light. This argument goes a long way, when one really studies the flow of numbers and people's associations to it.

Wonderful thread! Impeccable and outstanding points my friend! nod

It's Button Therapy, Baby!
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Reply #2 posted 06/01/12 5:11pm

LittleBear

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Funny. There are a couple of threads talking about Prince's attitude on where he does and doesn't want his music to be heard. Must be something in the water! I found the articles posted by ArielFriend in this thread [http://prince.org/msg/7/381785] really interesting, even if they're from over 10 years ago...

I'm trying to wrap my head around your argument, as the topic of intellectual property is really interesting to me. You extended the definition of usury from money gained off of interest on a loan to "unearned wealth" gained after payment. An artist should therefore be compensated: initially for having created his/her work and then subsequently only when performing this creation, thereby sticking to "fair payment for a fair quantity of work."

To me, though, this is an odd phrasing for intellectual property because how do you quantify the work put in to create something like a song, or quantify the value of an invention or a piece of art? I think this is part of the problem you see in Prince's stance and why you bring up usury. It's definitely a tricky issue, but I feel that any artist's claims for ownership/copyright are warranted, as is his/her position against piracy. The problem in my eyes starts with our society's packaging/selling of abstract/intangible things and also the scale and scope of demand for these ideas-turned-objects. On one hand, you can say that an artist participates in this system by making money off of copyright, but on the other hand, copyright gives the artist control over the use of his/her creation.

I suppose one could get metaphysical and ask who really owns something like an idea or who has the right to sell it (if that's even the appropriate thing to do). You touch on this, but it certainly isn't the record companies who might pimp a song out to some talentless hack or pirates who make a profit on something they stole and had no part in making. At least an artist (if you believe s/he is a vehicle for divine inspiration) will respect this gift and want to safeguard the integrity of his/her art object.

Anyway, I wonder what the ideal alternate business model looks like in today's society. (Maybe websites like Etsy and Bandcamp?) I mean, I don't want to sound greedy, but I want those remasters and everything that's in the Vault! AND I don't want to become a criminal in the process!

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Reply #3 posted 06/01/12 8:57pm

tritoncin

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One of the first and most basic things an artist should do in order to avoid piracy is to make sure his/her work is out there available to the public to buy it and not out of print, which creates usury anyway.

Go and check the prices of new and used P albums and cd's oop...

So, what do people do facing those prices? People just google it and find it for free...

"America is a continent..."
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Reply #4 posted 06/02/12 5:10am

BartVanHemelen

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LittleBear said:

I'm trying to wrap my head around your argument, as the topic of intellectual property is really interesting to me. You extended the definition of usury from money gained off of interest on a loan to "unearned wealth" gained after payment. An artist should therefore be compensated: initially for having created his/her work and then subsequently only when performing this creation, thereby sticking to "fair payment for a fair quantity of work."

I don't see why this "has to be". This is a modern concept, and one that seems almost exclusive to artists. The code I write gets executed every day, and yet my paycheck doesn't get bigger, and I certainly do not get paid for code I wrote at previous companies that is still used. And nobody thinks this is odd. The plumber who laid the pipes in my home doesn't get paid every time I take a shower. Etcetera. So why do artist need to be paid over and over again for things they did 5, 10, 20, 50 years ago -- or even worse, why does their offspring find that they need to get paid for that?

but on the other hand, copyright gives the artist control over the use of his/her creation.

Which was never the intention of copyrights.

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
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Reply #5 posted 06/02/12 12:14pm

Bohemian67

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Really great thread to think about! Thanks Balladium.

"Free URself, B the best that U can B, 3rd Apartment from the Sun, nothing left to fear" Prince Rogers Nelson - Forever in my Life -
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Reply #6 posted 06/02/12 12:27pm

LittlePurpleYo
da

Read until the nonsense about "God's gift of inspiration."

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Reply #7 posted 06/03/12 2:43am

LittleBear

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BartVanHemelen said:

LittleBear said:

I'm trying to wrap my head around your argument, as the topic of intellectual property is really interesting to me. You extended the definition of usury from money gained off of interest on a loan to "unearned wealth" gained after payment. An artist should therefore be compensated: initially for having created his/her work and then subsequently only when performing this creation, thereby sticking to "fair payment for a fair quantity of work."

I don't see why this "has to be". This is a modern concept, and one that seems almost exclusive to artists. The code I write gets executed every day, and yet my paycheck doesn't get bigger, and I certainly do not get paid for code I wrote at previous companies that is still used. And nobody thinks this is odd. The plumber who laid the pipes in my home doesn't get paid every time I take a shower. Etcetera. So why do artist need to be paid over and over again for things they did 5, 10, 20, 50 years ago -- or even worse, why does their offspring find that they need to get paid for that?

but on the other hand, copyright gives the artist control over the use of his/her creation.

Which was never the intention of copyrights.

Yes, you're right that this concept, and in general many others, shouldn't automatically be taken as given or fixed. It's easy/common to forget that many things we believe are cornerstones of our society are actually new constructs. Usury became less taboo with the rise of capitalism, and even as you pointed out, copyright as we understand it today no longer reflects its original intention.

Thinking about your examples, I feel like they reveal the implicit value judgments we unknowingly take as fact and never question (i.e. plumber's work not equal to artist's work)... Prince doesn't get paid each time I play one of his songs (just like I don't pay the plumber each time I shower), but Prince does get paid if a television show plays one of his songs. I don't get why someone writing code is any different from a scientist who's invented a new technique or drug, but I'm sure a scientist (like an artist) makes more money the more in demand his/her invention is. Tritocin brought up a good point about demand, which made me think: is a used CD from a record store different from a downloaded file? For each CD pressed, how many times is an artist entitled to be paid?

Last thing: part of the reason why people believe this concept "has to be" stems from, I think, how people view art (i.e. "God's gift of inspiration"), which reminds me of the Ted Talk heard 'round the Org--artist as individual genius? or artist as vessel for muse/divine inspiration? Where does compensation fit in this equation? Never mind the fact that even when the muse idea was popular, patrons were still paying artists and using their art for not-so-divine purposes... We want (or are told) to treat something like a song as unique (so then different from plumbing), but then we want to replicate and sell it. We want to compensate Prince for the work he puts in in the studio and for his performances onstage, but we don't want him to exploit his "gift" and/or pay him too many times... Many lines in the sand maybe, and now my brain hurts!

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