首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
The music industry, hurt by a decline in CD sales and the continued free swapping of files on the Internet, took the drastic act
The music industry, hurt by a decline in CD sales and the continued free swapping of files on the Internet, took the drastic act
admin
2011-03-10
54
问题
The music industry, hurt by a decline in CD sales and the continued free swapping of files on the Internet, took the drastic action last week filing more than 250 lawsuits against consumers. But whatever catharsis record executives and their lawyers may feel, the courts cannot solve the music industry’s fundamental problem. Nor does the answer lie in getting people to pay for each music file they download from the Internet.
Instead of clinging to late-20th-century distribution technologies, like the digital disk and the downloaded file, the music business should move into the 21st century with a revamped business model using innovative technology, several industry’s experts say. They want the music industry to do unto the file-swapping services what the services did Unto the music companies--eclipse them with better technology and superior customer convenience.
Their vision might be called "everywhere Internet audio". Music fans instead of downloading files on KaZaA--whether they were using computers, home stereos, radios or handheld devices--would have access to all music the record companies hold in their vaults. Listeners could request that any song be immediately streamed to them via the Internet.
If consumers could do this, the argument goes, they would have no interest in amassing thousands of songs on their hard drives. There would be no "theft" of music, because no one would bother to take possession of the song. To clinch music fans loyalty to the new system, and make them willing to pay for it, the music companies and the supporting industry would need to provide attractively priced, easy-to-use services to give consumers full access to the hundreds of thousands of songs available to them. Consumers could still ask for song titles or artists, as they do now on KaZaA. But they could also, for example request rock "n" roll tunes like Hat that appeared for more than three weeks in Billboard’s Top 10 during the 1960’s. Or they could ask for early 1990’s guitarists that sound like Eric Clapton, or new artists similar in style to Alanis Morissette.
Requests could be intricate, like asking for music subsequently recorded by the original members of the Lovin’s Spoonful. Or they could be simple, like requesting light jazz for dinner-party background music. The system would be interactive and could learn each user’s tastes. As listeners voted thumbs up or down to tunes (should they choose to), the service would amend their personal libraries accordingly.
If it worked, it would be as if we each had our own private satellite radio channels--customizable collection of tunes for hundreds of millions of audiences of one. It is a compelling business model, and the current music companies, as the owners of the content, could be at the fore of the system.
A tiny taste of such an approach is available on Internet radio networks like live365.com. On such services, listeners can essentially customize a radio station to their individual tastes. But crucial to the future of everywhere Internet audio, many believe, lies in widespread wireless Internet access, because wireless means portability. "Wireless gives the record companies a chance to do it all over again, and this time get it right," said Jim Griffin, the former head Of technology at Geffen Records and now the chief executive of the music publisher Cherry Lane Digital. Mr. Griffin is also a founder of pholist.org, home of an active online discussion of music’s future on the Internet.
Many of the brightest industry insiders, academies, lawyers, musicians, industry critics, broadcasters and venture capitalists assemble at pholist.org daily to debate the music business beyond downloading. Many say wireless holds the key. Myriad portable devices already offer Internet access. Some, like the BlackBerry, maintain an always-on wireless Internet connection. Some business-oriented devices, like the Palm Tungsten, now play high-fidelity music in the MP3 format. Newer cellphones also offer MP3 functions, and include extra features like digital cameras and FM radios.
The seers once thought portable devices would connect to the Internet via cellphone technology. But it now appears that Hi-Fi hotspots--wireless Internet access hubs--may eventually provide blanket coverage in urban areas and became the dominant means of connection. But there are big obstacles to overcome. To make "everywhere Internet audio" profitable, the music industry must develop a system to collect money from users and divide it fairly among performers, song-writers and others involved in creating music. How this would work is already causing hot debate. Mr. Griffin and many others in the pholist.org discussion advocate an Internet fee that would create a revenue pool to be distributed according to song popularity. Current recording industry sales in the United States work out to about $2.50 a month per person.
As CD’s sales declined, a digital musical surcharge, or something similar, could be assessed by Internet providers. At regular intervals, the industry could sample what music is being streamed to users, to determine the distribution of money to the responsible parties. By using sampling, as opposed to detailed census techniques, listeners would not have to worry about invasions of their privacy. This idea would turn the recording industry’s business model upside down. Institutions are genetically averse to massive change. But the payoff could be huge. Right now, for example, the industry incurs large costs from its CD distribution model. The industry also has many intermediaries, including distributors and promoters. To take a band from obscurity to popularity is expensive, but that is what music labels must do if they want shelf space at the record store. Recording companies are in constant quest of superstars, because fewer than 10 percent of CDs released make a profit. Revenues generated by the best sellers must try to cover the losses incurred by less popular releases.
In this context, the Internet could be a godsend to musicians as well. It can distribute a digital copy of a song to a few or to millions of listeners with virtually no cost difference. Music companies would have more incentive to nurture minor artists. As a society and culture, many argue, we would be much better served by such an approach.
Market forces alone would not produce such a system. It would take enormous industry cooperation, which could only occur with government approval, lest it be deemed a violation of antitrust laws. The need for cooperation and leadership is clear. Children should not wind up in court because they are fanatical about their favorite pop stars. If the music industry devised an affordable, equitable, and convenient alternative to file sharing, the fans would come, money in hand.
According to the passage, music industry should ______.
选项
A、continue free swapping of files on the Internet
B、continue to use late-20th-century distribution technologies
C、use more advanced technology and provide convenience to customers
D、bring lawsuits against consumers for the music files they download from the Internet
答案
C
解析
按照文章中的观点,音乐行业应该怎样。作者在第一段批评了音乐行业上周对消费者提出诉讼的做法,在第二段中指出应该运用创新技术改进商业模式,并为消费者提供便利。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/ytYO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
"Ido."ToAmericansthosetwowordscarrygreatmeaning.Theycanevenchangeyourlife.Especiallyifyousaythematyourown
ThefoundersoftheRepublicviewedtheirrevolutionprimarilyinpoliticalratherthaneconomicorsocialterms.Andtheytalke
TwoconflictsconvincedWesterncountriesthattheydarednotreducetheirforcestoodrastically.ThefirstwastheIraqiinvas
NewDealwastheprogramofsocialandeconomicreformsintroducedbyPresident______.
Likeallanimalspecies,plantspeciesmustspreadtheiroffspringtosuitableareaswheretheycangrowandpassontheirparen
Amysteriousphenomenonistheabilityofover-watermigrantstotraveloncourse.Birds,bees,andotherspeciescankeeptrack
A、makingmoreinvestmentsinJapanB、stimulatingJapanesebusinessesinFranceC、helpingboosttheJapaneseeconomyD、launching
我时常收到好心的编辑寄来的电脑报刊,面对那些每个字都认识、就是看不懂的天书,心想,这不是给文盲寄报刊吗?说来惭愧,别说上网,我连打字都不会,几次走近电脑,几次又离开它,它一点儿也不让我感到亲近。我怕一切机器,怕那些键子,那个蹦来蹦去的鼠标。让我感到安慰的是
ThefirstperformanceofTchaikovsky’sTheNutcracker,inSt.Petersburgin1892,wasaflop.Wroteonecriticthenextday:"Fo
我们青年人要像夏天的太阳一样,有一颗赤热的心,要勤奋,要勇敢,还要坚韧,除去懒惰怯弱的习惯与不肯吃苦的念头,到成年的时候,才能负担责任,创立大事业,收到良好的结果。夏天的清晨是何等舒适和快乐。我们应该早起,可以运动,可以在花间行走,看看植物的生活状
随机试题
霍乱病人的粪便可呈
开放性骨折的重要并发症是
血浆蛋白质水平降低属于
建筑给水聚丙烯管材与金属管道和用水器配水件连接的管件,必须带有()。
进一步完善和深化社会主义市场经济体制改革包括()主要任务。
企业的固定资产由于技术进步等原因,确实需要加速折旧的,根据企业所得税法律制度的规定,可以采用的加速折旧方法有()。
某卷烟厂为增值税一般纳税人,主要生产A牌卷烟(不含税调拨价100元/标准条)及雪茄烟,2014年10月发生如下业务:(1)从烟农手中购进烟叶,买价100万元并按规定支付了10%的价外补贴,将其运往甲企业委托加工烟丝,发生不含税运费8万元,取得货运增值税专
阅读下面的短文,回答问题。【Recently,telecommunicationcarriershasbeenbuildingAll-IPcorenetworksinordertoeffectivelysupportvari
"Civilization"Between4000and3000B.C.,significanttechnologicaldevelopmentsbegantotransformtheNeolithictowns.Th
Whatdoesthispassagewanttotellus?
最新回复
(
0
)