... translated this means.Jo Dipple, CEO of UK Music, said: "It is vitally important that fairness for songwriters, composers and performers is written into the law.
" My members’ music defines this country. It is only right that Government gives us the standard of legislation our music deserves.
"We want to work with Government so this can be achieved."
worn thumbs":21zj8on4 said:I remember when CD's were first introduced they were a lot more expensive than the older media.It was justified on the basis that there were very few plants that could produce them.Strangely enough,the price never went back down when the production facilities became widespread.
CHJ":10y6tlyn said:I suspect the real underlying problem is that the creator of any retail item is the person least rewarded, those involved getting it to Joe public taking by far the greater cut.
RossJarvis":nlsuhfbg said:Is it illegal for me to overhear music that's being played in a car or on someones headphones? I really need to know in case it's best to stay indoors with earplugs in. It's getting very worrying hearing next doors TV through the walls as I've not got a license :? :shock:
Sporky McGuffin":30fzt82a said:CHJ":30fzt82a said:I suspect the real underlying problem is that the creator of any retail item is the person least rewarded, those involved getting it to Joe public taking by far the greater cut.
The breakdown I found (at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-23840744 ) suggests:
For an £8 CD:
£2.40 to the record company
£1.36 to VAT
£1.36 to the retailer
£1.04 to the artist
72p to manufacturing
64p to distribution
48p copyright costs
finneyb":wm1fimr9 said:Who gets the copyright money? The artist?
DiscoStu":2mcpf6se said:I think something like Apple music will be interesting, I'm not sure if we are ready to move to completely on demand and not own our music (and I'm sure films will follow)
Absolutely right.DiscoStu":2jcfgst8 said:Music isn't free people create it for a living and therefore it's only right that they get paid.
I think this is a issue harder to justify.I also think that once you've paid for it then you should be able to maintain that. So for example I bought a CD in 1986 and now it won't play, I should be able to obtain a copy of the CD for the cost of the CD and not pay all the other fees again. The same should be true for films. If I bought a VHS film in 1980 then I should be able to get a DVD or Blu ray version without having to double pay the artists and studios and taxes etc
DiscoStu":28gw4gvw said:Music isn't free people create it for a living and therefore it's only right that they get paid.
That said if I have paid for a track then I have paid the artist their dues and I expect to be able to put that on any device that I own whether that be CD, MP3 player, phone, laptop or even vital.
I also think that once you've paid for it then you should be able to maintain that. So for example I bought a CD in 1986 and now it won't play, I should be able to obtain a copy of the CD for the cost of the CD and not pay all the other fees again. The same should be true for films. If I bought a VHS film in 1980 then I should be able to get a DVD or Blu ray version without having to double pay the artists and studios and taxes etc.
Rhossydd":mm78g3de said:If you buy a car a part of the cost is design, R&D, advertising etc, if you then crash it would you expect to buy another one without those costs ?.
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