Gomusic.com is so cheap its not worth pirating music.
well now the hard working artists can actually get paid
While I totally agree with copyright laws, how many times should an artist or a record company be able to extract money from you for the same music? For instance, back in 1971, I bought a vinyl copy of the classic album Who's Next? by The Who. A year or so later, when it was made available on 8-track tape, I bought it once more. Still later, it was available on cassette....I purchased it once again. Later on, when it became available on CD, I bought it yet once again. A couple of years after I bought the CD, it got damaged and became unusable. I subsequently downloaded every song from that album from a P2P site and felt no sense of remorse whatsoever since I feel like I had already purchased this music enough times to consider myself an owner of the music (as a listener, not a merchant). I have never made nor sold pirated copies of it....I just keep it for my listening enjoyment only. I personally don't see anything wrong with this.
I agree that P2P sites are, in general, a ********* of the law. However, RIAA and their participating artists and recording companies do not have the right (in my opinion) to incessantly charge me money to purchase the same songs I have already gained ownership of previously by legitimately purchasing them in the first place.
While I totally agree with copyright laws, how many times should an artist or a record company be able to extract money from you for the same music? For instance, back in 1971, I bought a vinyl copy of the classic album Who's Next? by The Who. A year or so later, when it was made available on 8-track tape, I bought it once more. Still later, it was available on cassette....I purchased it once again. Later on, when it became available on CD, I bought it yet once again. A couple of years after I bought the CD, it got damaged and became unusable. I subsequently downloaded every song from that album from a P2P site and felt no sense of remorse whatsoever since I feel like I had already purchased this music enough times to consider myself an owner of the music (as a listener, not a merchant). I have never made nor sold pirated copies of it....I just keep it for my listening enjoyment only. I personally don't see anything wrong with this.
I agree that P2P sites are, in general, a ********* of the law. However, RIAA and their participating artists and recording companies do not have the right (in my opinion) to incessantly charge me money to purchase the same songs I have already gained ownership of previously by legitimately purchasing them in the first place.