|  | Posted by Bill on 12/08/06 21:59 
I fervently hope you have your wish: that every internet site stops anyone from posting any of your music.  But let's be logical here:
 nobody pays to hear your music on the radio, so let's make sure the
 radio stations stop playing your music.  And make sure that no one hears
 any of your songs on tv or in a film.  If all of us work diligently
 towards your goal, before you know it, nobody will ever have heard of
 your music.
 
 There's a lot of talent in the world-- maybe not every singer has
 Christine Aquilera's breasts, but there are a lot of talented musicians.
 If you really want to take your music out of circulation, do it--
 someone else will be quite glad to trade the exposure for free
 downloads.  If they are really any good, they will be able to sell
 tickets to live performances, and CD's to the significant chunk of the
 population that still prefers to buy in tangible form.
 
 I have a feeling an entire generation of artists will need to get over
 it, and this will all be a non-issue for the generation that grew up
 downloading music.
 
 I don't like this solution, but it might be the only one:  a surcharge
 or tax on all recordable media and internet accounts, pooled into a
 fund, and distributed to artists according to frequency of access of
 their material.  In Canada, this surcharge is nominal and doesn't seem
 to annoy people particularly.  In exchange, you can legally copy any CD
 you like.
 
 And that's going to be my last word on the subject.  Whew!
 
 
 Christopher Campbell wrote:
 It is not a few tracks; it is all of them --
 > everything the artist has ever done, his entire life's work, now possibly
 > made worthless and irrelevant by the arrogant irresponsibility of a bunch of
 > self-serving YouTube clowns.
 >
 >
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