> âshould be protected or monetizableâ
It IS protected by copyright law - thatâs not the issue.
The problem is that copyright law applies within legal jurisdictions. US law doesnât apply to someone like me in Vietnam, or to servers in jurisdictions that donât recognise American IP law, yet weâre all connected to the same internet. The bits can be copied regardless of what any law says âshouldâ happen. You can say âshouldâ as much as you like, but unless youâre willing to work with reality as it is, youâre not going to make progress.
Annaâs Archive doesnât require membership, their content is freely accessible.
And Annaâs Archive doesnât need your permission to copy bits any more than I do. The entire internet functions through copying. When Spotify plays your song, it copies bits to the listenerâs device. This note that I wrote exists as a copy on your device - can I gatekeep you from reading it? No.
This is why calling it âtheftâ is nonsense. For something to be theft, you have to be deprived of your property. If I take your car then you canât drive it - ergo you have been deprived.
In the digital realm you still have your copies, they still work exactly the same, your property is unviolated. Whatâs on my device is my property; whatâs on yours is yours. The same bits can exist in both places simultaneously. This is fundamentally different from physical goods.
You can make whatever moral arguments youâd like, but this debate has been running for 30+ years and reality keeps smashing creators who go against it. Youâre not going to change how computers and the internet work.
I believe nothing will improve for artists in the digital age until they stop fighting gravity and learn to harness it. Arctic Monkeys built their career through viral sharing on MySpace. Saifedean actively encourages people to pirate âThe Bitcoin Standardâ and heâs still sold over a million copies. It can be done.
Because you make nothing from people who arenât fans. The only way to get fans is exposure. Someone who pirates your album and loves it might buy merch, come to shows, tell friends, or simply pay you directly once Bitcoin makes that frictionless. Someone who never hears your music because itâs locked behind a paywall will give you nothing, forever.
Itâs far better to capture 1% of a million listeners than 100% of a thousand. Youâre never going to gatekeep your way to a million fans but widespread free distribution might get you there.
If youâd like to understand this topic instead of just emotionally reacting to your situations, Iâd recommend Stephan Kinsellaâs book on the subject:
https://annas-archive.org/md5/b8e5915a387336529c79a31baf4b5a02