Threats, Lawsuits Fail to Revive Industry & Fool Says Don't Rush In
Plagiarism Today continues to provide us with the best aggregation of IP news every week in its Saturday Linkroll. Today we're linked to Corante's post "Even Fools Don't Invest in the Music Business," noting the Motley Fool's warning (We're All Thieves to the RIAA) that
a good sign of a dying industry that investors might want to avoid is when it would rather litigate than innovate, signaling a potential destroyer of value. If it starts to pursue paying customers -- which doesn't seem that outlandish at this point -- then I guess we'll all know the extent of the desperation. Investor, beware.
While you're at it, take a look at the Los Angeles Times article, CD Sales Fall Again; DVDs See First Drop,
The [falling] figures underscore the industry's failure to combat music piracy with a campaign of lawsuits and threats.
We like the music industry. We really do. Some of our best friends are musicians and composers and they're suffering some pretty hard times here.
We just think -- as the RIAA's conduct is proving -- that BigMusic, like the American automobile industry in the 1970s, needs to start listening to at least one of the weathermen who knows which way the wind is blowing.
Get the picture? Yes we see . . . . (check out those hair-dos!)
