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| quote: | Originally posted by wong
I was thinking about that too, but I think there would be less of a paper trail if they just had a download instead of an actual physical copy (vinyl) of the product. So I think it would be safer for a download, but I guess I don't own my own shop so I'm not sure! |
No actually the whole thing about a white label is just that - it's a white label. The only paper trail is the label, and it's white....it's blank...you have a paper trail that's blank.
For buying and downloading music off the net, typically the seller needs to have an agreement with the labels in question. In a traditional record shop, the owner buys directly from the distributor, and (as far as I know) does not have to pay any additional fees after the product has been bought by the shop owner. This is the key part, as it frees the record shop owner from legal liability, and only leaves the artist and original pressers at legal fault. However, since there is only a blank paper trail to follow, the original bootleggers will not be found.
Of course I may be wrong, as I know next to nothing about law, much less audio law, but this is the way I think about it.
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