Adam Sherwin, Media Correspondent
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Music fans who indulge in widespread illegal file-sharing should have their web connections cut off by internet service providers, the manager of U2 said.
Paul McGuinness, who has guided the Irish group to 150 million album sales during their 30-year career, said companies such as Yahoo! and AOL should be prosecuted if they fail to prevent illegal file-sharing.
Speaking at the Midem music industry convention in Cannes, Mr McGuinness said: “A simple three strikes and you are out enforcement process will see all serial illegal uploaders who resist the law face a stark choice: change or lose your ISP subscription.
“In the UK, the Gowers report made it clear that legislation should be considered if voluntary talks with ISPs failed to produce a commitment to disconnect file-sharers. I'd like to see the UK Government act promptly on this recommendation.”
The UK Music trade body the BPI backed the call. Geoff Taylor, its chief executive, said: “We have tried to persuade ISPs to implement solutions that could avoid the need to take action against broadband customers who use illegal peer-to-peer filesharing.
“For more than a year, we have been negotiating with them to enforce their own terms and conditions about abuse of the account, but UK ISPs refuse to do even that on any meaningful scale. The time has come for ISPs to stop dragging their feet and start showing some responsibility, by taking reasonable steps to counter illegal music freeloading.”
In France, President Sarkozy has backed the Olivennes initiative, by which ISPs will start disconnecting repeat infringers this year. This was a “brilliant precedent which other governments should follow”, Mr McGuiness said.
He argued that the recent Radiohead release of a download priced on the honesty box principle had backfired. He said: “It seems that the majority of downloads were through illegal P2P download services like BitTorrent and LimeWire even though the album was available for nothing through the official band site. Notwithstanding the promotional noise, even Radiohead's honesty box principle showed that if not constrained, the customer will steal music.”
In 2004, U2 signed a deal with Apple to release a branded iPod in exchange for a percentage of each device sold, but even Steve Jobs, the Apple boss, had not grasped the scale of the challenge to his own businesses, including the Walt Disney studio, presented by illegal downloading.
Mr McGuinness said: “I wish he would bring his remarkable set of skills to bear on the problems of recorded music. He's a technologist, a financial genius, a marketer and a music lover. He probably doesn't realise it, but the collapse of the old financial model for recorded music will also mean the end of the songwriter.
“We've been used to bands who wrote their own material since the Beatles, but the mechanical royalties that sustain songwriters are drying up. Labels and artists, songwriters and publishers, producers and musicians, everyone's a victim.”
The manager predicted that Apple would reveal a wireless iPod that connects to an iTunes “all of the music, wherever you are” subscription service. “I would like it to succeed, if the content is fairly paid for,” he said.
U2 will release a new album in October, Mr McGuinness said, which would be a collaboration with the producers Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois. Unlike Radiohead, they are not seeking to leave their record company. Mr McGuinness said that the band had a positive relationship with Universal which would continue indefinitely.
Described as the “fifth member” of U2, Mr McGuinness negotiated a valuable deal in the late Eighties that guaranteed the group ownership of the master recordings of their albums.
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Radiohead said that they didn't care if anyone paid for the CD online. They just wanted people to be able to hear their new music as soon as possible. I don't think they really care by what means the music is acquired.
Tom, New York,
Bono and U2 live in Ireland.................cause they´re Irish !
ben, madrid, spain
I have given up on mainstream artists, going for free to copy music from jamendo.com as the money I donate to the artists goes to the artists and not to the media companies.
Recall U2 are mostly living not in the UK to save on taxes, but guess it is OK for them to evade UK taxes ?
Jay Clericus, Bedford, England
Rick, the problem is that when you walk out of a store without paying for cola, there is one less bottle of cola in the store. If I walk in, make an exact replica of the cola, and leave the original behind, what has been looted?
Matt, Laninsg Mi, USA
Bono should start living in England not Switzerland and he should pay full taxes like every hard working member of society who are struggling to make ends meet because everything is just so dear now. What's more the music industry needs to be dragged into the 21st century.
How about putting all back catalogue music online for free for everyone to share then use advertising to pay for it? Simple solution. But trying to force us to conform to an antiquated business model in the digital age simply will not work.
John, London, uk
CD prices. One of the complaints of the looters. Rubbish.
You buy a CD ONCE, you can use it over and over and over and... You can copy it to a device, like your computer, and store it away. YOU NEVER HAVE TO BUY IT AGAIN! Name another item that you will never need to replace.
It's the best bargain out there.
I'm seeing now that this looting has moved over to movies. The looters use the same argument, "screw the movie companies!" I guess they're the bad guys now.
This is nothing but looting, the cops arent' around so take it. If it's not and you're making a statement then walk into the store and steal your next Pepsi, no sugar and water is worth what they're charging. Walk in and steal those Nike's, they cost a fraction of what they charge.
Show some melons! Steal it all!
If you want to steal then steal but don't wrap it in some high and mighty cause. You're a looter, accept it or stop.
Rick, Washington, DC, USA
I don't condone illegal downloading, but I belive the music industry has to wake up and put the problem back into perspective.
The music industry has developed the reflex of blaming others when they don't make as much money as they want.
First its the downloaders, now its the ISP's. Who will it be next? Obviously any scapegoat will do, just don't admit that maybe they themselves need to re-assess their antiquated business model.
Andrew M, Zurich, Switzerland
Maybe Mr. McGuiness should explain to us how broke U2 has become because of file sharing.
Frank Marra, Ocean, NJ, USA
U2 sucks is the worst band in the world.................
Nobody will download ur stupid MP3s because U2 sucks..
Belinda, Cape Town, South Africa
How about if U2 was held responsible for all their fans that break all sorts of laws [not saying that they do, but if they do], then U2 not sell them tickets to future concerts or not sell them music at all.
Why should the ISP lose clients and revenue and not U2?
Paul, Tampa, USA
Yet further proof that U2 slowly metmorphoses into G8. Why don't they start a 'Make Downloading History' campaign.
Besides, I wouldn't download any U2 tripe if Global Overlord Bono paid me.
Des, Dublin,
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