You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: EU Study Proves Piracy Doesn't Affect Sales

in #entertainment7 years ago

This is a very valid point, of course. No one is saying that content creators shouldn't be paid for the work they produce.

What is worth keeping in mind, however, is that profits in the entertainment industry have been going up, despite that industry's constant crying wolf about profit losses.

Think of it this way: content creators are often happy to give away content for free!

Publishers hate the practice and often rip off content producers by giving them around 10% of the profits made from their content, while also locking them into long-term contracts (which they even have to buy themselves out of at times).

Sort:  

I agree.. but at the same time Publishers own the content too... so I can't say they are wrong.... There are ones who take it too far but...

Glad to have this conversation with you.

Sure, copyright holders aren't wrong to sell the products they own.

However, using their influence to purposefully color the water and unduly influence third parties (such as Google) and governments - including hiding studies such as this one - and even attempting to make governments legislate tht the act of watching pirated content an imprisonable offense! This seems immoral to me.

They do this, despite the fact that studies reveal that piracy helps them to make more revenue not less (by advertising their content for free via word of mouth).

At the end of the day, the entertainment industry wants third parties such as Google and governments to force people to watch their content, rather than investing in ways of distributing content at a reasonable price so that people simply stop pirating content.