>From a story at:

http://www.usatoday.com/usatonline/20021023/4557245s.htm

Music industry spins falsehood 

By Janis Ian
The recording industry says downloading music from the Internet is ruining 
our business, destroying sales and costing artists such as me money. 
Costing me money? 
I don't pretend to be an expert on intellectual property law, but I do know 
one thing: If a record executive says he will make me more money, I'd 
immediately protect my wallet.
Still, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) is now in federal 
court trying to gain new powers to personally target Internet users in 
lawsuits for trading music files online. In a motion filed with the U.S. 
District Court for the District of Columbia, the RIAA is demanding that an 
Internet service provider, Verizon, turn over the name and contact 
information of one of its Internet subscribers who, the RIAA claims, might 
have unauthorized copies of songs on a home computer. 
Attacking your own customers because they want to learn more about your 
products is a bizarre business strategy, one the music industry cannot afford 
to continue. Yet the RIAA effectively destroyed Napster on such grounds, and 
now it is using the same crazy logic to take on Internet service providers 
and even privacy rights.
The RIAA's claim that the industry and artists are hurt by free downloading 
is nonsense. Consider my experience: I'm a recording artist who has sold 
multiple platinum records since the 1960s. My site, janisian.com, began 
offering free downloads in July. About a thousand people per day have 
downloaded my music, most of them people who had never heard of me and never 
bought my CDs. 
Welcome to 'Acousticville'
On the first day I posted downloadable music, my merchandise sales tripled, 
and they have stayed that way ever since. I'm not about to become a 
zillionaire as a result, but I am making more money. At a time when radio 
playlists are tighter and any kind of exposure is hard to come by, 365,000 
copies of my work now will be heard. Even if only 3% of those people come to 
concerts or buy my CDs, I've gained about 10,000 new fans this year. 
That's how artists become successful: exposure. Without exposure, no one 
comes to shows, and no one buys CDs. After 37 years as a recording artist, 
when people write to tell me that they came to my concert because they 
downloaded a song and got curious, I am thrilled.
Who's really hurt by free downloads? The executives at major labels who 
twiddled their thumbs for years while company after company begged them to 
set up ''micropayment'' protocols and to license material for 
Internet-download sales. 
Listen up
Many artists now benefit greatly from the free-download systems the RIAA 
seeks to destroy. These musicians, especially those without a major-label 
contract, can reach millions of new listeners with a downloadable song, 
enticing music fans to buy a CD or come to a concert of an artist they would 
have otherwise missed.
The RIAA and the entrenched music industry argue that free downloads are 
threats. The music industry had exactly the same response to the advent of 
reel-to-reel home tape recorders, cassettes, DATs, minidiscs, VCRs, music 
videos, MTV and a host of other products and services.
I am not advocating indiscriminate downloading without the artist's 
permission. Copyright protection is vital. But I do object to the industry 
spin that it is doing all this to protect artists. It is not protecting us; 
it is protecting itself.
I hope the court rejects the efforts of the music industry to assault the 
Internet and the music fans who use it. Speaking as an artist, I want us to 
work together -- industry leaders, musicians, songwriters and consumers -- to 
make technology work for all of us.
Janis Ian's popular-music credits include 17 major-label albums, nine Grammy 
nominations and 37 years of experience in the music industry.

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