View Single Post
Old 27-08-12, 23:40   #2
photostill
The Enigma
 
photostill's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 9,977
Thanks: 3,009
Thanked 1,524 Times in 928 Posts
photostill has a brilliant futurephotostill has a brilliant futurephotostill has a brilliant futurephotostill has a brilliant futurephotostill has a brilliant futurephotostill has a brilliant futurephotostill has a brilliant futurephotostill has a brilliant futurephotostill has a brilliant futurephotostill has a brilliant futurephotostill has a brilliant future
Default Re: MPAA & RIAA Going Broke? -We are Winning!!!

Actually it's better than you realize for several factors. This is about the MPAA, the movie enforcement division for infringement and lobbying for new laws. A bit earlier came the one for the RIAA which read much similar in scope. Both indicate dropping incomes for funding to the employees with many being laid off. Those of the senior management positions taking pay cuts but the one place both did not cut, is the funding for lobbying.

The future is even more grim for the parent outfits. Part of it is the public hate for them they have generated with their actions. In all the moral high roads they've attempted to take, the actions far better than words have told the story of just how low down they are. The public has gained not only a distaste for the majors by their lobbying groups reputation but are drifting away from them as an entertainment choice.

One such article mentioned that the majority of music listeners no longer really desire the new latest greatest. That they prefer the old rock n roll to the newer products coming out. So much for the future sales at this rate. Another is that these same listeners aren't finding places to hear new music, other than file sharing sites. Go to the radio and it's a wasteland of replay on the hour, every hour of the same songs. Those songs paid for to be played on the air. But hearing new music isn't in the cards.

Then there are commentators stories that tell of an even more disruptive trends. One stated his kids were 15 to 16 years old and they wanted nothing to do with TV, music, nor the other forms of entertainment that are all raising so much cain about pirates. His claim was his kids wanted the tv for game playing, not watching over the air broadcasts. This means the future of these outfits is even grimmer than it is today. Sounds like they got their wish in not one stealing their stuff and at this rate, they will have to give it away to get anyone's attention.

The next commenter said his kids were 3 and 4 years old. At home, they didn't have a tv. So they went on vacation and visited kin that did. The kids were dismayed that they couldn't back up what they had missed, could save it anywhere, couldn't pause it, and horror of horrors, it had commercials all over the place. Again representing the future generation market. No better than the ones ahead of them.

This is not about piracy. This is about failure to meet market demands again. These producers are going for reaping profit, not making a good product and it's caught up with them as they have reached the bottom of the barrel for viewership/listeners.

It doesn't end here. Let me give you a glimpse for the future of gaming publishers/gatekeepers/movie studios/newspapers/major music labels. Most of the independent makers of games are like the authors of books and their publishers. They make a product and turn it over to the publisher to get it out to market. Only when all is said and done, very few make any money beyond the initial loan made them. Either they get no royalties or almost nothing beyond that. The publishers seem to absorb all the money leaving nothing for the creators.

An independent game maker has had a successful series of 4 games called the Broken Sword series. It's basically a point and click game. It's won all sorts of awards of best game, best game script, and on and on. So it has quality. But the company isn't making any royalties off the games even after 10 years. The publisher contacted them to release the 5ᵗʰ game in the series only to be turned down. The company says this time they will do it themselves. Towards that effort they have started a kickstarter page to ultimately fund it themselves and likewise get pretty much all the money from the game, minus expenses.

http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/165500047/broken-sword-the-serpents-curse-adventure
Nor is the first of many kickstarter projects. Independent musicians have funded albums including quality artwork and jewel cases, an ink pen maker has funded his own specially designed pen, a movie director has funded his movie, among the many, many, kickstarter projects. They are all doing one thing. They are getting around the gatekeepers and reaching the market themselves. As they do so, those with the plan to keep all the money, such as movie studios and major labels are finding the way they do business is leaving them out in the cold.

Isn't this great? Say goodbye to these PNAs that are trying their best to control the internet for a store. Their days are numbered.
__________________

You can help this site, by clicking on the link below to buy a Premium Account.
& Thank you for helping us. Click;




photostill is offline   Reply With Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to photostill For This Useful Post:
Ladybbird (29-08-12)