http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-fi-pollmusic9aug09,0,4581014.story?coll=la-home-headlines

Is Copying a Crime? Well…
Many young people say that duplicating CDs or DVDs they own is legal. The 
industries disagree.

By Charles Duhigg
LA Times Staff Writer

August 9, 2006



A few years ago, when a friend offered 15-year-old Evan Collins a compact 
disc of illegally downloaded music, Collins turned him down flat.

"Me and my parents used to download music for free," said Collins, who 
lives in Bloomington, Minn. "But we decided it was like stealing from 
musicians. So I don't take stolen music from friends, either."

But later that year, when Collins met a girl he liked, he made her a CD 
filled with songs by Linkin Park, Blue Man Group and Eiffel 65. Why was his 
CD OK, while his friends' were verboten? Because Collins paid for his music 
in the first place, he said.

"I think you're allowed to make, like, two or three copies of a CD you 
bought and give them to friends," said Collins. "It's only once you make 
five copies, or copy a CD of stolen music, that it's illegal."

Actually, attorneys say, copying a purchased CD for even one friend 
violates the federal copyright code most of the time.

But Collins' attitude — that copying purchased CDs or DVDs is legal, while 
copying stolen music or movies is a crime — is pervasive among young people 
ages 12 to 24, according to a Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll.

Among teens ages 12 to 17 who were polled, 69% said they believed it was 
legal to copy a CD from a friend who purchased the original. By comparison, 
only 21% said it was legal to copy a CD if a friend got the music free. 
Similarly, 58% thought it was legal to copy a friend's purchased DVD or 
videotape, but only 19% thought copying was legal if the movie wasn't 
purchased.

Those figures are a big problem for the Recording Industry Assn. of America 
and the Motion Picture Assn. of America, both of which have spent millions 
of dollars to deter copying of any kind. The music industry now considers 
"schoolyard" piracy — copies of physical discs given to friends and 
classmates — a greater threat than illegal peer-to-peer downloading, 
according to the RIAA.

Similarly, an MPAA spokesperson said that, in the U.S., copying and 
reproducing DVDs is a bigger problem than illegal downloading of movies.

"We've made substantial progress educating people that downloading 
copyrighted music for free is illegal," said RIAA Chairman Mitch Bainwol. 
"But we still confront a significant challenge educating kids that copying 
a CD for a friend is also a crime. This is a major focus for the entire 
industry."

Indeed, years of anti-downloading campaigns seem to be working: 80% of 
teens surveyed in the poll said downloading free music from unauthorized 
computer networks was a crime. Much of that might stem from highly 
publicized crackdowns on online music sharing. A 2004 study by the Pew 
Internet & American Life Project found that close to 6 million Americans 
said they had stopped downloading unauthorized tunes because of lawsuits 
filed by the RIAA.

But when it comes to stopping people from copying physical CDs, 
high-profile lawsuits are much less likely to occur. Prosecutors say it 
would be next to impossible to get one teen to testify in court that 
another had slipped him or her a copied disc at lunchtime. And besides, 
isn't sharing music a time-honored part of teen friendship?

"It's pretty confusing," said Collins, who was interviewed after 
participating in the poll.

Even lawyers say the law is hard to understand. Distributing free copies of 
a purchased CD or DVD is only a federal copyright crime if the value of the 
copied discs exceeds $1,000, said Assistant U.S. Atty. Elena Duarte.

But giving away even one copied disc may be a civil violation or break a 
state law.

"A strict interpretation of the law says that if making a copy robs the 
marketplace of a sale, it is prohibited," said attorney Mark Radcliffe, a 
copyright expert at DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary. "So anyone giving a copy 
to a friend could technically be sued. But there is some sentiment that as 
long as people are only giving copies to families and a few friends, it's 
probably OK. But how many friends should one person have?"

In the last decade, copyright activists and entertainment companies have 
battled over that very question. Courts have generally avoided commenting 
on the appropriateness of copying CDs for friends or how many friends 
constitutes a copyright violation. But music and film companies have argued 
that any sharing violates the copyright code.

However, free-speech advocates say the copyright laws were never intended 
to stop kids from giving mix-CDs to friends. In fact, some say, because 
music is as much about personal expression as listening pleasure, sharing 
is integral to why songs have value in the first place.

"At my wedding I handed out about 150 mix-CDs," said Siva Vaidhyanathan, an 
associate professor at New York University and author of "Copyrights and 
Copywrongs: The Rise of Intellectual Property and How It Threatens Creativity."

"I was freeloading on songs by Louis Armstrong and others, but I think 
that's why they became musicians in the first place," Vaidhyanathan said. 
"Music has worth because it lets us communicate in ways we can't manage on 
our own. But to communicate, we have to be able to share."

Some of those polled agree. While 97% of teens and adults polled said they 
considered shoplifting an item worth less than $20 a crime, fewer of them 
(83% of teens, 76% of young adults) considered it a crime to buy a 
bootlegged CD. (In fact, according to Duarte, although selling a bootleg 
violates the law, purchasing it is not prohibited by the federal copyright 
code.)

"I rely on my instinct to determine what's right and wrong about sharing 
music," said Annette Cook, a 21-year-old senior at San Diego State 
University who participated in the poll. "If my friend makes me a copy of a 
CD they purchased, it's not really stealing, it's spreading interest in a 
band. That's how I learn about music I end up buying."

The RIAA and MPAA hopes that attitude will wane. To that end, the recording 
industry association is sponsoring school programs to convince students 
that any kind of copying — what they call "songlifting" — is a crime. 
"Songlifting is like shoplifting, and that means it's wrong," reads a 
lesson plan the group sent to middle school teachers. The motion picture 
industry's trade association is also sponsoring school programs to 
discourage piracy.

Their efforts may be working. Younger poll respondents were more likely 
than older peers to believe that copying CDs and DVDs breaks the law, and 
only 25% of teens said they had a friend who illegally downloaded music, 
compared with 33% of young adults.

"One of my friends always gives me a blank CD for my birthday, and then I 
go to her house and pick out songs to burn on it," said Charlie Letson, 14, 
a poll respondent in Hampton, Conn. "But we always download new copies of 
the songs, so that we're not breaking the law."

Even Evan Collins, the 15-year-old from Minnesota, is beginning to 
reconsider his position. After the mix-CD he made to woo a classmate failed 
to impress ("She said 'thanks,' but that was about it," he said), he 
started rethinking his attitude about copying CDs.

"I used to make two copies of each CD I bought for friends, but I think I'm 
going to stop doing that," said Collins, who was speaking within earshot of 
his mother. "I play the piano and the trumpet, so I understand what it's 
like to be a musician. I don't think it's right to gyp anyone out of making 
money."

That, says Collins' mother, is music to her ears.

"We've tried to use CD copying to teach bigger lessons about morality," 
said Jill Collins, 47. "Things are so different now. The Internet makes the 
world a lot more complicated. If we can get right and wrong down on small 
things like copying music, hopefully bigger things will be clearer down the 
road."

*

(INFOBOX BELOW)

Is it stealing?

Younger consumers see strong differences between copying and outright stealing.

Proportion of young people who thought the following would be committing a 
crime: (Combined minor and serious crime)
         Ages12-14       15-17   18-20   21-24
Copying a CD from
a friend who paid for it        27%     35%     33%     38%
Copying a DVD/videotape
from friend who paid for it     39%     44%     40%     41%
Downloading free music
from an unauthorized
file-sharing server     79%     81%     70%     79%
Downloading free movies
from an unauthorized
file-sharing server     83%     83%     74%     79%
Buying a bootlegged CD  82%     84%     76%     76%
Buying a bootlegged
DVD/videotape   83%     84%     80%     77%
Shoplifting an item
worth less than $20     97%     97%     98%     96%
Shoplifting an item
worth more than $20     99%     99%     99%     97%
*

Q: Where or how did you first find out about the music you most

recently acquired? (Multiple answers allowed, selected answers shown.)
         Ages 12-17      Ages 18-24
Heard a song or interview on
the radio       57%     57%
A friend recommended /
played it for me / lent it
to me   47%     40%
Saw a music video or
advertisement on TV     33%     30%
Music website: MTV, iTunes,
Yahoo Music, etc.       23%     13%
Brother or sister       20%     14%
My parents      15%     4%
Heard it on a TV show
(such as "The O.C.")    15%     8%
Heard about it on an online
social site, such as MySpace, etc.      12%     5%
Read a review in a magazine or
Newspaper       5%      6%
*

Q: How would you describe the type of music you are most passionate about? 
(One answer, selected answers shown.)

Male

Ages 12-14

Rock: 23%

Pop: 6%

Rap/hip-hop: 25%

Country: 3%

My music tastes range across genres: 27%

---

Male

Ages 15-17

Rock: 23%

Pop: 1%

Rap/hip-hop: 27%

Country: 6%

My music tastes range across genres: 29%

---

Male

Ages 18-20

Rock: 21%

Pop: 1%

Rap/hip-hop: 23%

Country: 12%

My music tastes range across genres: 34%

---

Male

Ages 21-24

Rock: 21%

Pop: 0%

Rap/hip-hop: 21%

Country: 11%

My music tastes range across genres: 31%

---

Female

Ages 12-14

Rock: 12%

Pop: 14%

Rap/hip-hop: 21%

Country: 4%

My music tastes range across genres: 31%

---

Female

Ages 15-17

Rock: 13%

Pop: 8%

Rap/hip-hop: 28%

Country: 6%

My music tastes range across genres: 33%

---

Female

Ages 18-20

Rock: 16%

Pop: 4%

Rap/hip-hop: 19%

Country: 7%

My music tastes range across genres: 42%

---

Female

Ages 21-24

Rock: 12%

Pop: 5%

Rap/hip-hop: 18%

Country: 10%

My music tastes range across genres: 39%

---

Note: More information on this poll can be found at: 
latimes.com/entertainmentpoll

---

How the poll was conducted

The Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll was conducted from June 23 to July 3 
using the Knowledge Networks' Web-enabled panel, which provides a 
representative nationwide sample of U.S. households. Of the 4,466 minors 
and young adults invited to participate in the survey, 1,904 (43%) 
responded to the survey, with 1,650 qualifying. The 1,650 qualified 
respondents included 839 minors (ages 12 to 17) and 811 young adults (ages 
18 to 24). The margin of sampling error for both groups is plus or minus 3 
percentage points. In order to provide as representative a sample as 
possible, the survey results were weighted to U.S. census figures for 12- 
to 24-year-olds in the United States in terms of age, race or ethnicity, 
gender and region, and for urban or rural residence and Internet access.

Source: Times/Bloomberg poll


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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