Campus or Subscription Music Services and RIAA

Recent resources tagged with Campus or Subscription Music Services and RIAA.

Swiftboating Higher Education on P2P: Why Higher Education Is Not the Real Problem, and Technology Is Not the Real Solution

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Swiftboating Higher Education on P2P: Why Higher Education Is Not the Real Problem, and Technology Is Not the Real Solution (ID: LIVE0723)
Author(s):Kenneth C. Green (The Campus Computing Project)
Origin:EDUCAUSE Live!, Web Seminars Contributed by EDUCAUSE (12/07/2007)
Type:Presentations/Speeches
Abstract:

A steady stream of press releases from the MPAA and the RIAA about unauthorized peer-to-peer downloading suggests that college students are digital pirates and campus network officials are engaged in benign neglect. Yet ample evidence confirms that unauthorized P2P downloading is primarily a consumer market problem, not especially tied to college students on campus networks. Moreover, the media companies with strong ties to consumer broadband providers are themselves at least indirectly promoting unauthorized P2P activity. This is not new: Media companies have a long history of seeking remedy (and revenue) from Congressional action, rather than pursuing marketplace solutions.

This presentation will focus on how Big Music and Big Hollywood have targeted colleges and universities via press releases and Congressional lobbying initiatives while largely ignoring the much larger amount of unauthorized P2P file sharing taking place on commercial networks.

View this resource:

Music biz's future rests on key changes

Added by the EDUCAUSE Librarian
Title:Music biz's future rests on key changes (ID: CSD5146)
Author(s):Bob Moon (National Public Radio)
Source:Marketplace
Origin:Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (09/19/2007)
Type:Articles, Papers, and Reports
Abstract:

"When it comes to file sharing and illegal downloads, it's the big music labels that complain the loudest about being ripped off. Bob Moon reports on some ideas that might help the recording industry face the musical future. "

View this resource:

Digital Entertainment on Campus: Old Lawsuits and New Business Models

Created by Gerry Bayne (EDUCAUSE) on June 20, 2007

In this hour-long podcast, we present a session from the EDUCAUSE 2007 Policy Conference entitled, "Digital Entertainment on Campus: Old Lawsuits and New Business Models". This session consists of a panel discussion as well as Q&A from attendess. The panel includes:

Michael J. Bebel, CEO, Ruckus Network

Jeffrey Bronikowski, Senior Vice President, Business Development, Global Digital Initiatives Division, Universal Music Group

Larry Jacobson, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Cdigix

Session moderator: Susan Butler, Senior Correspondent, Billboard Magazine