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Metallica joins recording industry's attack on Napster
Rock band launches suit against Internet music downloads
By James Brewer
5 May 2000
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The giant conglomerates of the recording industry have come
by a new spokesman in the person of Lars Ulrich from the heavy-metal
group, Metallica. In December of last year, the Recording Industry
Association of America (RIAA) filed a suit against Napster to
prevent the California company from providing the software which
enables computer users to exchange music files across the Internet.
Just last week Metallica entered the dispute by launching its
own suit against Napster and several large universities, charging
them with violations of the Racketeering Influenced & Corrupt
Organizations Act (RICO), the law enacted in 1989 to prosecute
organized crime. (The Clinton administration later amended the
act to include the sale of counterfeit goods that impinge upon
intellectual property.)
Metallica is also suing the University of Southern California,
Yale University and Indiana University. The band has issued a
statement proclaiming that the college students who use Napster's
software "exhibit the moral fiber of common looters loading
up shopping carts because 'everybody else is doing it.'"
Many of Napsters' users are college students who use their campus
network servers to store mp3 files.
Mp3 [short for MPEG (Moving Picture Experts Group) Layer III]
is a file format that compresses the data size of digital music
typically distributed on CDs to one-twelfth the size. A typical
2- to 3-minute music cut is reduced from almost 30 megabytes to
about 2 1/2 megabytes. This has made the exchange of music files
across the Internet practical. In fact, mp3 music has gained such
popularity that already several colleges in the US have barred
students from transferring the files because widespread copying
of the data has clogged up their networks.
Napster is a server-based software which links users, allowing
them to view each other's mp3 files and select them for downloading
onto their own hard drives. The client software, which is fairly
small, is downloaded and installed on the user's hard drive. Then
the user can connect to the server, which allows sharing mp3 files
with anyone else who is logged in at the same time.
The RIAA has a long history of opposing the introduction of
any new technology that would allow consumers to copy music. The
most notable battle was over the development of DAT (Digital Audio
Tape). The recording industry successfully prevented the introduction
of DAT recorders into the broad consumer market because they claimed
that the technology would be used to illegally copy music CDs.
In its public statements against Napster, the RIAA has quoted
a few well-known artists, but with noticeably tepid support. Several
artists are quoted as saying, "artists should be paid for
their work." The vitriol that Metallica brings into the debate
is just what the RIAA needs. A clear danger arising from Metallica's
suit is that it seeks to use the court system to force educational
institutions into policing the students' online habits. Metallica's
attorney has publicly stated, "Our focus is not on chasing
students at this time, but if this does turn out to be technically
doable and we find out that there are people, who instead of studying
for finals are downloading thousands of files then that might
be the kind of person we go after."
Metallica has subsequently handed the names of over 300,000
people to Napster, demanding that the users' accounts be disabled.
In a publicity stunt the band's drummer Lars Ulrich delivered
13 boxes containing 335,435 user IDs listed on 60,000 sheets of
paper. Napster attorney Lawrence Pulgrum said in a statement,
"Napster will review the over 300,000 fan names that Metallica
turned in as soon as possible." He said "if the claims
are submitted properly, the company will take the appropriate
actions to disable the users Metallica has identified," adding,
"Of course, if the band would provide the names in computerized
form, rather than in tens of thousands of pages of paper intended
to create a photo op, that would expedite the process."
Intellectual property
RIAA claims to speak for the rights of artists against "pirates"
who steal their music. Is this really the case? Since the beginning
of this industry, copyright law has been used by record companies
to steal from artists their life's work to make huge profits.
Artists, in general, have had to either become learned in the
ways of the business or hire professional agents before becoming
"successful musicians." It is a matter of fact that
money has dominated the recording industry since its beginnings.
The giants of the industryBMG, Sony, Universal, Warner
Brothershave created, orchestrated and dominated a mass
market. They seek to control every aspect of the creation and
consumption of recorded music and sound. Their stock-in-trade
is "intellectual property." This is the means by which
artistic work is converted into money. But with the advance of
technology, it isn't just the artists and their work that the
companies seek to control. To ensure their monopoly over the continuous
distribution of their product, they seek to impose technological
poverty on consumers through total market domination
Now heating up the controversy are new programs that will antagonize
the record moguls even more than Napster. Gnutella is similar
to Napster, but it doesn't require a central server such as Napster's
to function. Since it is decentralized it will be virtually impossible
to eradicate. The conflict over intellectual property intensifies
as the development of technology accelerates. This dispute is
obviously not restricted to the recording industry. It encompasses
publishing with a host of technologies, old and new, in the movie,
software, book and "new media" industries. There is
a flurry of news every day about the battles over intellectual
property; it becomes difficult to keep pace with the events and
players. For example, as this article was being written, rap musician
Dr. Dre filed his own suit against Napster. (Not coincidentally,
he has the same lawyer as Metallica, a Mr. Howard King.)
If we accept the premise of the RIAA (along with the movie
industry and software publishers) concerning copyrights, users
have no right to make any copy of a recording without the explicit
permission of the owner of the copyright (the recording company).
Worldwide courts generally enforce this interpretation of copyrights.
It is necessary to step back from the fray of daily events and
examine the social and historical roots of intellectual property
in order to make an objective analysis of the disputes.
Copyright came into existence with the advent of the printing
press, which paralleled the rise of the capitalist class. Until
then, there was no need to restrict the rights of the public (readers)
because they had no technology with which to reproduce the printed
word. As printing became widespread, the state had to guarantee
publishers protection from each other. Writers were restricted
from publishing plagiarized works. With the advent of large capitalist
publishing houses, it became customary for the publisher to become
the owner of the copyrights by purchasing them from the writers,
either for a flat sum, or for a percentage of sales (royalties).
Eventually copyright law was expanded to include all manner of
creative work and patent law was developed to cover inventions.
(See WSWS article: "Intellectual
property and computer software")
The basic premise of copyright law was that intellectual property
was no different than any other form of property, and as such
was exchangeable for money, therefore requiring legal protection
by the state. Copyright law became part of the legal superstructure
required by capitalism for its existence. As such, it fundamentally
serves the interest of the propertied classes.
A socialist society would not permit the private accumulation
of vast sums of property, intellectual or otherwise. Socially
produced wealth would be owned and controlled socially and distributed
democratically. Copyright law would be drastically altered in
favor of the public good. Art would be protected as a valuable
resource and artists would be funded by society.
Why should ideas be proprietary? Ideas, whether scientific
or artistic, are a product of individuals interacting in a social
environment and always rely on historical experience and knowledge.
How can a "new idea" be extracted from the dynamic of
social interchange and protected as property? To some, this may
seem a ridiculous question, because it occurs countless times
each day, but ideas become property not because it is rational,
but because it is necessary to the functioning of the profit system.
To illustrate the point, try to envision the vast expanse of musical
variety contained in all genres of recorded music, old and new.
Now consider how many copyright holders there are for all of that
music. To help with the illustration, let me remind the reader
that there are currently only four major record companies: Warner
Brothers (of Time-Warner) which owns Elektra, Reprise, Atlantic
and Rhino Records and their subsidiaries; BMG, which owns Arista,
RCA and Windham Hill, plus hundreds of smaller labels; Sony, holding
Columbia, Epic, Legacy, C2 and others; and lastly Universal, owning
A&M, MCA, Verve, Mercury and other labels. Four copyright
holders for the totality of society's musical culture. Is that
rational?
The rights of the artist
Musical artists, like artists in general, seek a connection
to the masses through their work. Most artists express a genuine
empathy for the trials and joys of the everyday lives of common
people. Reciprocally the need for music in our daily lives is
basic and fundamental. It keeps us connected to each other. Musicians
who want a mass audience generally must cede their rights and
enter into contracts with recording companies, if they are lucky
enough to get the opportunity. Because music, like all the arts,
has been commoditized by the insidious domination of capital,
artists have to struggle to produce work that is honest, healthy
and meaningful, against the corrupting influence of the money
culture.
It isn't accidental that the recording industry enlists those
artists with the most reactionary outlook as allies in their selfish
campaign. Artists who thrive on a genuine relationship with the
public would do better to trust the listening community than to
join the corporate attempts to criminalize them.
See Also:
The Internet
and Computerization
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