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The argument (if you can call it that, since I'm not arguing rather than invoking discussion) is that, along with documented cases involving the likes of Michael Jackson & Britney Spears, the large record and film companies who so desperately cry that they are hard done by with online piracy, do themselves steal the works of unknown artists. This seems to be done in the full knowledge that they will most likely never be taken to task on it since they have both more expensive lawyers, and the option to quietly buy off anybody who stands in their way should they be found out.
As for SnotMonkey's suggestion that music is atrocious these days, offering nothing more than a remake of a tune that in some cases was released barely five years ago, I couldn't agree more. After all, it has already been proven by independent research bodies that digital piracy has had no effect on sales, rather than a simple drop in the quality of the product. The way I see it, the turning point will come when the record companies, along with every other industry currently facing an economic slowdown, realise that multi-million pound extravagances and private jets are simply not needed, and are in fact the sole reason why they need to charge so much in order to balance their bottom line.