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Saturday, July 20, 2002
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Saturday, July 20, 2002
started 7/20/2002; 1:58:34 AM - last post 7/20/2002; 1:49:44 PM
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Doc Searls - Saturday, July 20, 2002 
7/20/2002; 5:58:34 AM (reads: 6119, responses: 1)
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More proof that Cluetrain has entered the canon
Let the music keep our spirits high
| | The radio station I loved most before KPIG was WDBS. It was a little commercial FM station owned by Duke University that was a fixture in the community of music lovers in the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill area. I worked there for awhile. My nickname, Doc, is the fossil remnant of the name I used on the air there: Doctor Dave. |
| | 'DBS was nutty and doomed. Everybody knew it was Too Good to Live, which is why our theme song was Jackson Browne's Before the Deluge. That link goes to the lyrics. Read them. It's the story, told over and over again, of great radio brought to ruin. |
| | What really sucks this time, however, is that KPIG was never doomed. 'DBS was charming and wonderful, but terminal from the day it was born. It never had good ratings or much in the way of advertising sales, and Duke University never knew what to make of it other than a few bucks by finally selling it off. |
| | KPIG has been a commercial success for many years. It kicks ass in the ratings. It's far more of an institution than 'DBS ever was or than 99% of all radio stations operating today could ever hope to be. |
| | And it was an Internet radio pioneer. What it's done on the Web is technically inventive, resourceful and responsible to listners, to artists, and to both its local and worldwide communities. |
| | And here's the crowning irony: KPIG sells records. Lots of them. Every song played turns into a link that can lead to a sale. KPIG was keeping detailed records of what it played long before the Copyright office began to require it (just a few days ago). And no doubt that copious accounting, going back for years, will subject KPIG, the great Internet radio pioneer, to unusually high retroactive fees. What KPIG deserves from the RIAA is a fucking award, not a knife in the heart. |
| | Now that KPIG's gone from the Webwaves, expect a deluge to follow. |
| | To give you a sense of what we've lost, here is a pile of Google links that includes stuff I've written in the past about KPIG and Internet Radio. I'd rather have you read those items than anything new I might write today. |
| | And I'd rather have you think about what we're going to do to fix his disaser, even if you've never listened to a moment of Internet radio in your life. |
| | Culture is being murdered here. Freedom both of speech and of enterprise is outlawed for anybody wanting to broadcast recorded music on the Web (and who hasn't cut a sweetheart deal with the RIAA). |
| | Up until now we could sit and wait because we hadn't yet paid the price. Too many stations were still on the air. Too much nothing was still happening. |
| | Now that's over. Now we're paying the high price that urges action. Now we have to do something. |
| | Bonus link: JPB's Death From Above. It's from 1996. It's also prophesy. Let's help it come to pass. |
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Tom Poe - Re: Saturday, July 20, 2002- LOOK, JUST LOOK! 
7/20/2002; 5:49:44 PM (reads: 2137, responses: 0)
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Hi, Doc: I am standing here, and I'm jumping up and down, and waving my arms wildly, and present a very comical picture, actually.
Doc, here's an image of the future. In less than six months, our country can have in place the following:
1] Community-based recording studios that provide free recording services for musicians and artists. Every major city, towns across the country, villages, communities with small populations, can have one.
2] Creative Commons up and running to assist with registration and legal assistance free, to musicians and artists to register their works.
3] Enough volume to provide as many webcasters as there are communities, and more, with quality music and arts materials to play.
No license fees, no CARP, no restrictions at all. It can happen, in a very short period of time. Open Studios is a "model" that can be used right now, and all anyone has to do is visit the site, http://www.studioforrecording.org/ and http://www.creativecommons.org/
The system that trashes Hollywood, the RIAA, and the Microsoft LRM crappollla for Susquehana and the rest of them can go soak.
Look at me, I'm jumping up and down, waving my arms wildly. Check with Cory, Lisa, Olivier, but look. It's real and can happen fast, if folks want to do it. Costs little to nothing to change and wipe out the RIAA. Why not do it? Why not join us? We're DOING IT!
Thanks,
Tom Poe
Reno, NV
http://www.studioforrecording.org/
http://www.ibiblio.org/studioforrecording/
http://www.studioforrecording.org/mt/Pubdomain_Bread/
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