An expertly crafted mashup/remix of Jay-Z and Radiohead by Max Tannone. Full album available as a free download @ www.jaydiohead.com.
Should this be legal without the permission of the original artists?
An expertly crafted mashup/remix of Jay-Z and Radiohead by Max Tannone. Full album available as a free download @ www.jaydiohead.com.
Should this be legal without the permission of the original artists?
So central is the idea of the freedom of speech, that the Bill of Rights places it first and foremost as the primary tenet of a democratic republic. Specifically, “Congress shall make no law…abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press[.]” Further, this potent protection providing freedom of speech presumptively applies to all forms of artistic expression: words, images, sounds, movements and more. In an era where anyone with an Internet connection and a thought can be a writer/publisher, the importance of such a right has perhaps never felt more real to “We the people.”
In addition to this freedom, the U.S. Constitution provides a means of incentivising our creative authorship by protecting it for a limited time from misappropriation. Specifically, Article 1, Section 8, Clause 8 of the U.S. Constitution, affectionately known as the Copyright Clause, reads: “Congress shall have Power to…[secure] for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries…[.]” By granting authors the right to prevent infringers from profiting off of unauthorized copies of their works, Congress provided a means by which creators of copyrightable content could make a living through the ability to monopolize their content for a set period of time.
Therein lies the contradiction. Continue Reading…
Understanding why we do what we do is a critical, fundamental step so many of us forget to take. While Sinek isn’t the first to spotlight this notion, he articulates it exceedingly well.
Please comment and let me know why you do what you do.
Hundreds of startup companies came to the marketplace each year. The biggest challenge these brave startups faced is to compete with “free” illegal alternatives. As the sellers of cable television have known for thirty years, and the sellers of bottled water for much more than that, there is nothing impossible at all about “competing with free.”[1] One company has managed to thrive against “free” by simply being more user friendly than its illegal competition. As experts predicted when Apple launched the Music Store, it could beat “free” by being easier than free is.[2]
A different approach to competing with free was successful for Indie911. Indie911’s CEO, Justin Goldberg, believes traditional gatekeepers were an inefficient way of allowing music to flow to the public and sought to create a place where the public could find artists that were slipping through the cracks.[3] In his tenure as an A&R person, songwriter, and employee of Sony Music Publishing, Mr. Goldberg took issue with the fact that less than 1% of the music out there would ever be heard.[4] Continue Reading…