Man of Honour
- Joined
- 17 Nov 2003
- Posts
- 36,749
- Location
- Southampton, UK
I've just had an interesting discussion about Pink Floyd's win in the high court about their wish for their music not to be distributed as individual tracks.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/8561963.stm
The way I see this, this is only detrimental to the consumer. I am very aware the PF design their music to be listened to as a whole album but removing the choice for a consumer to buy one track is daft IMO. Why should the consumer have to pay for a whole album when they only want one track? Surely the consumer demand for single tracks is enough reason to keep it?
The Beatles are equally at fault here. At the end of the day both PF and The Beatles are multinational content providers and to limit the distribution of their music isn't only a stupid business decision but hugely detrimental to the consumers who want to listen to it. No wonder people pirate it.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/8561963.stm
The way I see this, this is only detrimental to the consumer. I am very aware the PF design their music to be listened to as a whole album but removing the choice for a consumer to buy one track is daft IMO. Why should the consumer have to pay for a whole album when they only want one track? Surely the consumer demand for single tracks is enough reason to keep it?
The Beatles are equally at fault here. At the end of the day both PF and The Beatles are multinational content providers and to limit the distribution of their music isn't only a stupid business decision but hugely detrimental to the consumers who want to listen to it. No wonder people pirate it.