Aloone, the almost-universally held assertion that (btw- strict) copyright is necessary to allow artists to thrive is something that I think hasn't been challenged in peoples heads (I'm referring to the majority of people) Imo there are many easily overlooked points and it turns out to be a complicated question rather than a simple one .
I agree, it isn't that simple.
okay
I haven't given a "proof" (this is not a word we should use).
The trouble is that proof it's the kind of word you need to use to get laws changed, no government is going to do anything they think will have a high risk of damaging the economy.
Indeed - no government will ever change these laws because of this conversation here. But once the world starts having this conversation the technical information and studies can we worked on - I don't have any resources to work on this, I don't claim that I do. My only goal on here is to point out some under-thought points, and I will consistently make these points in such a conversation because it would be a useless conversation to listen to "without copyright we would have no art".
Of course if the record companies died, there'd still be music but it would be more like it used to be before they existed in the first place. People would still pay to see classical concerts, live bands, musical theatre and opera but we wouldn't have polished music videos or tracks. Everything would become more amateur, with less professionals and more people who make music purely for fun rather than money. A similar thing would probably happen to the film industry: no more multimillion blockbusters, just small films made by people who do it for fun, probably more like YouTube than Universal.
I like that you said 'probably' in the last sentence, but we don't know that
the best artists won't thrive to create
the best artwork - as that will be necessary to A. get rich, famous and B, most importantly - to satisfy themselves.
The renaissance time saw some of the most impressive artwork that was ever seen - artists received money through patrons who liked their work - I am thinking about a much similar system, except the patron can be a collective.
Again, go back to what I said before when you consider what a sudden change in the law would do: imagine the impact on Hollywood,.
We can iron out the implementation details later, of course it won't be a case of "everyone, I'm taking your copyright off you tomorrow" - firstly people will be on board, and creators will be given time to start getting their heads right as to how they'll "pay bills" (or make a shit load more money), and media cartels given the time to wonder can they play a part in this great new thing (most likely they can't - as from now on creators will probably deal with the public directly and collect
100% or close of what people are coughing up
for them).
Is this really in line with your frame of mind: (this is how most people 'comprehend' it)
- Lack of copyright means ticket sales are going to sink AND
- DVD sales are going to sink AND
- merchandise sales are going to sink AND
- nobody is going to give them any money! AND
- they are going to either stop creating films or they will be seriously low quality
This is exactly what needs to be challenged. As you said above:
Aloone, the almost-universally held assertion that (btw- strict) copyright is necessary to allow artists to thrive is something that I think hasn't been challenged in peoples heads (I'm referring to the majority of people) Imo there are many easily overlooked points and it turns out to be a complicated question rather than a simple one .
I agree, it isn't that simple.
But it seems like you do have it figured out?
So ya know, I'm just trying to say that in my mind this is all complicated. I don't
know that Peter Jackson will/won't be able to get another budget of ~<$300m together to create a new war trilogy. Note that LOTR trilogy raked in almost three
billion according to wikipedia (of course, that's with copyright) - that's enough money to last him
ten trilogies. I hope that it's only people with a true passion for the (new) business who
can get together money such as $300m. Btw, I also don't think that removing copyright lives and dies on the answer to this question.