Soylent Bacon said:
zidine100 said:
Soylent Bacon said:
zidine100 said:
Soylent Bacon said:
zidine100 said:
Soylent Bacon said:
I can just listen on Grooveshark or Youtube or whatever, and that's good enough for me. I'll just grab the popcorn and sit back while I watch Gene Simmons and The Internet duke it out...
i hate to tell you this but that in itself would probably class as piracy. (youtube anyway, ive never heard of grooveshark myself.)
It's already a pretty unrealistic goal to severely punish
everyone who downloads music illegally, so I highly doubt they're going to track down the IP addresses of every Youtube user who watches Rock and Roll All Night. Hell, even if that were to somehow happen, I would just have a story to tell my friends about how I was one of the victims of the Great Gene Simmons Internet Massacre of 2010.
unlikely at the present time yes (still im quite sure it would be a hell of alot easer to track down youtube users than music down loaders due to the fact they already have a solid lead on where the musics hosted).... although i wouldn't put it past some people, but do you really think most copyright holders care if its on you tube in a different file format with a picture, or a mp3 file on some torrent site. I think someone will go after youtube and its users eventually, in fact im sure of it.
Pirating a song with peer-to-peer software is different from watching a video on Youtube. If I download a track with Limewire, for example, I am knowingly taking music to keep for myself and play from my computer or on my mp3 player, when I would be expected to be paying for this by purchasing CD's or paying for it on iTunes. If I watch on Youtube, I am streaming the content on a site with advertisements each time I play it. Many musicians upload their own content to Youtube, and content on Youtube that is illegally uploaded is taken down or muted, because the uploader is actively abusing it, not the users who view the video.
then if thats the case it apply s to illegaly hosted tv shows on other sites, as there is no difference.
Just because its streamed doesnt make it legal, you are not paying to listen to there music and therefore are removing potential revenue from them by using youtube, sure some artists host music themselves witch is there's and that is legal (but the amount whitch isnt hosted by the artists themselves is huge), and youtube is doing that themselves the muting and the removing to try and appease copyright holders, it is working for now, just wait for them to get greedy enough though.
oh and yes streamed files are stored on your computer in case you didn't know.
I didn't say streamed files are legal, I said the viewers are not responsible for content posted illegally on a legal site, because it is not always clear whether or not a video has been posted illegally. If I see a video on Youtube of a song, and the name of the user is the name of the band's label, I have no way of knowing for sure if it was actually legally uploaded or not, since it could just as easily be a legally uploaded video as it could be illegally uploaded by a phony user.
Streamed videos are saved on your computer, but not in a form that you can watch/listen from your computer or save to a mobile device and watch/listen on that. The only way you can do that is with illegal conversion software. One cannot be held responsible for the content being passively downloaded in an unusable form, but one is responsible if one actively converts that streamed video into a file that is usable without access to its legal source.
i dont know if its the same from where your from but here, ignorance is not classed as an excuse here, its the same with handling stolen goods.
and actually streamed videos are quite easy to use again, for example youtube, videos are saved in a flv format, witch is very easy to copy and use, and hell alot of mp4 players support it natively without conversion.
oh and yes, most media players support this file format, you can play it without conversion very easily on your computer.