twm, all the reasons you mention about cassettes, might as well stand for the CD-R or even the downloads. Apart from the first point you make, all the rest are somehow illegal, but in no way illogical, immoral or even unfair. Always given that you have the will to go out and buy the ones you like. Of course, the problem with the illegal downloads is that you are instantly incriminated, when you download, while all other methods of "distributing" music "un-paid" is reduced for many reasons: less storage space, it is cheaper, there is no fetish issue for the younger ones-like cover art or even recording and playback quality , plus the enormity of choice-I know many young people have many TB of music, that even a lifetime of music listening isn't enough to listen to them all. But regardless the reasons when you download you break the law, and the evidence are easy to be found. Now, if one kid goes out to buy all the things he has downloaded, he should live 3 lives working his fingers out in order to pay for all this music. But do the companies and law makers take all these things in consideration? I dare say no. They try to enforce old laws or hastily re written ones, that really hurt both the listener-prospect consumer and the music business-be that the companies and certainly the artists.
United States Copyright Law
US copyright law is found in Title 17 of the United States Code and is administered by the US Copyright Office. " Terms for Copyright Protection", a U.S. Government publication, summarizes the current duration of copyright protection for published works as follows:
* Works created after 1/1/1978 - life of the longest surviving author plus 70 years - earliest possible PD date is 1/1/2048
* Works registered before 1/1/1978 - 95 years from the date copyright was secured.
* Works registered before 1/1/1923 - Copyright protection for 75 years has expired and these works are in the public domain.
The Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act was signed into law on October 27, 1998. Prior to the Sonny Bono 20 year copyright term extension, copyright protection for works registered before 1/1/1978 was 75 years; therefore, compositions registered in 1922 or earlier entered the public domain on 1/1/1998. The 1998 copyright extension did not extend copyright protection from 75 to 95 years for songs already in the public domain so . . .
* The Good News - works published in the United States in 1922 or earlier are in the public domain even if they are not yet 95 years old.
* The Bad News - no new works will enter the public domain until January 1, 2019.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7074786.stmsee also the distinction between recordings' copyright and authors copyright
http://imslp.org/wiki/Public_domain I am a vinyl record fetishist. I adore the format. I don't like the downloads at all, I think that I buy thin air. But I understand that music is the content and I some times put more weight on the container. Younger generations do not think like that. I like the notion of it, but when I think of the legal, financial and social and political implications (yes there are ) of the whole matter I get the feeling that all these laws were passed not in order to help the composer, performer and his family, but the companies. It is paranoia to think that the only music in the Public domain, is the one prior to 1923! (with only 30 years of recorded music, up to that date and this in most but not all countries) The EU law about recordings is 50 years, but since the authors of the music and lyrics retain their composing rights for 70+ years after the death of all writing contributors, this means that we will be victims of the companies blackmail for a long long time.