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                                    2001/2001 (From the Archives) - MP3.com,
                                    the biggest collection of music from
                                    independent online artists. Not anymore,
                                    though. In what seems to be a final and
                                    perhaps lethal strike against the online
                                    artist community, VIVENDI UNIVERSAL
                                    destroyed around three terabytes of music
                                    before selling the MP3.com domain to
                                    CNET.com. This is the story, the ballad, of
                                    MP3.com as told by one of the pioneers in
                                    the online artist community. VIVENDI wasn't the original owner of
                                    MP3.com, but they took the website over just
                                    after they sucked the original owners empty.
                                    A look at the complete story reveals the
                                    true intend of the musical industrial
                                    complex and the way they try to achieve
                                    their goal. 
 Let's start at the beginning.
 
 In about 1998, 1999, there was a sort of
                                    "golden age" of MP3. The format
                                    looked very promising because it had created
                                    a whole new generation of artists. Sites
                                    such as MP3.com began to make it possible
                                    for artists to receive a royalty over their
                                    downloads. If someone listened to or
                                    downloaded your music, you would get a few
                                    cents. Other programs were created to have
                                    your music heard and get some royalty
                                    payment.
 
 All these things were very good for the
                                    Artist and the Listener. I could see that I
                                    was approaching a situation in which this
                                    could totally provide me with my daily
                                    bread. The listener could listen to music
                                    without having to buy it first; I would have
                                    direct response to my releases.
 
 In this same time, the MP3 format was also
                                    used in a different way. People would start
                                    to record their records and rip the CD's,
                                    put everything in MP3 format on their
                                    computer and use software to exchange music
                                    with others. One of the first pieces of
                                    software that enabled people to do that, was
                                    called "Napster", perhaps some of
                                    you remember the name.
 
 Until this time, I'm still talking about
                                    '98, '99, the music industry wasn't really
                                    around on the Internet. They were still
                                    sitting in their ivory towers, selling
                                    people the stuff they want people to buy,
                                    telling artists to play what they want
                                    artists to play, you know, the usual things
                                    dictators and criminals do. The music
                                    industry was totally unaware of the
                                    revolution that took place in Cyberspace.
 
 But right under their nose, a whole new
                                    generation of artists was formed. Artists
                                    independent from the main music industrial
                                    complex, building up an audience. And they
                                    were becoming more and more popular.
                                    Download charts at MP3.com revealed the
                                    immense popularity of many new artists.
                                    Their names were often above some
                                    better-known names.
 
 Then, a hard noise came out of a Hollywood
                                    villa. The residence from a member of a band
                                    called Metallica, to be precise. The hard
                                    noise wasn't a new tune, but a complaint. It
                                    had come to the attention of this particular
                                    individual, that people were actually
                                    sharing Metallica music over the Internet,
                                    through Napster.
 
 The musician complained that he would lose
                                    income as a result of the music sharing that
                                    was going on through the Napster software.
                                    I'm not a heavy Metal fan, but a bitter
                                    Metallica listener told I, that this
                                    particular band started out by having people
                                    share their music through tape sharing. And
                                    I still wonder, why an artist who can live a
                                    good life, would complain over people liking
                                    his music enough to share it with others.
 
 Because, through the action of this artist,
                                    and many other of course, the online Artist
                                    community was being attacked, as I will
                                    expose later on. So one can safely say that
                                    this Metallica member did not have the
                                    interest of the online artist in mind.
 
 The music industry woke up from their sleep,
                                    their little nap, and they began their take
                                    on Napster. Backed by a multi-million dollar
                                    well of money, the lawsuits began.
 
 All in the name of saving the Artist
                                    Community, the rhetoric and the propaganda
                                    began to spread over the mainstream media.
                                    The people were warned, that there would
                                    soon be no more new music available when
                                    people would massively continue to share
                                    music with each other. No, they didn't have
                                    the online artist in mind indeed. Or perhaps
                                    they did but didn't want you to know they
                                    did. Because even if the musical industrial
                                    complex would go broke because of file
                                    sharing, the new music would have been
                                    provided by the online artists! In the
                                    Netherlands, where I live, there was a
                                    campaign where famous artists were being
                                    shown with their mouths sown together, like
                                    they were torture victims. People obviously
                                    had to feel sorry for the rich and famous,
                                    eerrr, the artists. Artists who didn't even
                                    own their own music anymore and many time
                                    have big debts to the record companies than
                                    own the rights to their music.
 
 But, as we always see with propaganda, the
                                    words and the actions are two different
                                    things.
 
 Napster could not resist the flood of
                                    lawsuits that were filed against them and
                                    eventually they were taken over by the
                                    musical industrial complex.
 
 And one can argue over the legality of such
                                    programs as Napster. One can say that it's
                                    not right to share music like that.
 
 But what about MP3.com and other legal MP3
                                    sites, where the online artist community
                                    releases music and communicates with the
                                    audience?
 
 Obviously, they are different then the file
                                    sharing programs as Napster.
 
 But not for the Musical Industrial Complex!
 
 The guys at Universal were working overtime
                                    to find a way to accuse MP3.com of
                                    "something illegal".
 
 Completely in the current spirit of
                                    globalization and privatization, they
                                    themselves were taken over by a company
                                    called Vivendi and their orders were to go
                                    after the online Artists now. Can't have
                                    independents, don't we?
 
 But there was a problem. MP3.com was not
                                    like Napster. People were actually offering
                                    their own music there, and making quite a
                                    name for them. This is the kind of
                                    competition you never hear the Musical
                                    Industrial Complex complain about, but I
                                    think that it is a major reason why they are
                                    losing CD sales too. There are many Online
                                    Artists who make music of professional
                                    quality, especially in the electronic
                                    genres. Some are better than the so-called
                                    signed artists.
 
 Here it didn't help to pull a Rock Star out
                                    of his Villa to complain about loss of
                                    money.
 
 Here some people were actually well aware of
                                    how artists are treated by this musical
                                    industrial complex.
 
 MP3.com looked like a fortress, which could
                                    not be taken by the corporate vampires. But
                                    there was one weak point, an option for
                                    registered MP3.com visitors to
                                    "beam" their CD's.
 
 In short, someone could put a CD in his
                                    drive, click on the mouse and MP3.com would
                                    recognize that CD. You could then go to your
                                    work, and log on to the MP3.com website with
                                    your own password, and you could listen to
                                    the CD without actually having it physically
                                    with you. MP3.com had MP3 files of that CD
                                    which you could listen to.
 
 MP3.com called this program: Beam It.
 
 I never saw the use of it, but I could also
                                    see how it could be abused. I would borrow
                                    your CD's, beam them in a few minutes, then
                                    you take your CD's back and I could start to
                                    download from MP3.com.
 
 Unfortunately, the lawyers at Vivendi also
                                    saw this and they started to beam complaints
                                    to the judges. Again, they posed as the
                                    victims were in fact they were the pirates
                                    themselves.
 
 To make a long story short, they provided
                                    the Online Artists with a speed-course in
                                    Globalization and the vampirism that comes
                                    with it.
 
 MP3.com was sucked completely empty before
                                    Vivendi bought the website.
 
 One of the first things they did was to
                                    label the artists as "clients".
                                    Shortly after that, they cut down the
                                    royalty payment with 90%. Yes, you hear this
                                    correctly. Where some of the artists had a
                                    real perspective off being able to live from
                                    their music, the fruits of their hands, by
                                    the stroke of a pen this future was made
                                    impossible. I do not know how many of you
                                    would accept an income cut of 90%. We had
                                    to, because Metallica could otherwise not
                                    have their next car.
 
 In the meantime, they had also fired most of
                                    the people who originally set up MP3.com and
                                    hired people that would do nothing all day
                                    but answering public complaints from
                                    artists. In politics, these people are
                                    called "spin-doctors".
                                    Spin-doctors are professionals in bringing
                                    bad news as good news. A good spin-doctor
                                    can make someone rejoice over his own death
                                    penalty.
 
 The Spin Doctors that were hired by Vivendi
                                    did their best to make the artists believe,
                                    that they were in fact clients. MP3.com
                                    would be a service provider for the artist.
                                    And when they had this in the mind of most
                                    artists, they pulled back the last ten
                                    percent of the royalty income. A contact
                                    told me how even in these times, the parking
                                    space at MP3.com's office was filled with
                                    BMW's and other expensive cars.
 
 Then they went over to charge the artist a
                                    big sum of money every month to have more
                                    than three tracks available for free
                                    download. The website looked like one big
                                    MTV ad, Vivendi's signed artists were
                                    promoted and the independent artists
                                    difficult to find. The quality of the music
                                    by the independent artists also didn't
                                    increase. Of course not! The serious artists
                                    found different sites while the dumbed down
                                    remnant who believed the lies of the spin
                                    doctors kept on putting their tunes on
                                    MP3.com. A thing for which they had to pay a
                                    lot of money, too!
 
 Critique could lead to deletion of the
                                    website. Sane comments on MP3.com's policy
                                    had to be written down intelligently,
                                    because the rules were tightened on the
                                    site's messageboard. A lot of things were
                                    labeled as "insults". After a
                                    while they went so far that only artists who
                                    paid a lot of money every month to have
                                    their music on the MP3.com website could
                                    freely post their messages of the MP3.com
                                    forum. Only the dumbed down remnant who
                                    bought the brainwash education by MP3.com's
                                    spin doctors were able to post. This is how
                                    they killed the critique.
 
 All these things were so obviously wrong,
                                    that it really surprised me to see how easy
                                    it was for the musical industrial complex to
                                    brainwash the artists. It seemed like the
                                    Spin Doctors were making excessive use of a
                                    mentality that is planted in western
                                    societies. "You respect your music,
                                    don't you", they said. "Your music
                                    is worth something, so by paying us you show
                                    your self-respect". And people were
                                    buying these idiotic things. Their slavery
                                    was brought to them as a sign of
                                    self-respect. How sick can you be?
 
 But when you think about it, it fits
                                    perfectly in the works of the musical
                                    industrial complex. When you look at the
                                    bulk of what is released, it's all about sex
                                    and drugs and gang violence. About
                                    emptiness. Vanity. Don't think! In my
                                    contacts with representants of the industry,
                                    I have come across this almost every time.
                                    One time I hear an annoyed voice saying to
                                    me: "You talk an awful lot about
                                    Babylon, don't you". The other time I
                                    find out that behind my back people whom I
                                    work with closely are being told that my
                                    lyrics have to be changed. I hear other
                                    artists telling me what they are being told
                                    by the music industry: "I want music
                                    that makes the pussy wet".
 
 Why were MP3.com's spin doctors so obvious
                                    in their spinning and got away with it? How
                                    come they knew they were going to be
                                    successful in dumbing down the artists?
                                    Simple: because that is what they do all the
                                    time! It's the reason for their existence!
                                    They know they are successful, just look at
                                    western society. The fact that a lot of
                                    people are absolutely not aware of what is
                                    going on, too dumbed down to see they are
                                    fooled, is partly because of the works of
                                    the musical industrial complex!
 
 For me, being an independent online artist
                                    is an essential part of my identity and also
                                    one of the premier conditions for my work. I
                                    try to spread consciousness, to wake up
                                    people for the fact that this Babylon System
                                    that you hear the Rastas speak about all the
                                    time is in fact a horrible reality. And I am
                                    very much convinced that the musical
                                    industrial complex is a part of this system.
                                    When you look at the bulk of music that is
                                    put out to take their place in the hearts
                                    and souls of the people, it's all aiding the
                                    globalists.
 
 Anyway, I researched further and found out
                                    that Vivendi was not only specializing in
                                    sucking artists and artist-friendly
                                    websites. Like all these
                                    globalist-corporations, they are versatile
                                    criminals and I am not afraid to say so,
                                    because this is an established fact.
 
 Judge for yourself. Dutch National Media
                                    revealed how the Vivendi Company also
                                    specialize in bringing clean water to people
                                    living in the ghetto's and slums of South
                                    Africa. Privatization, you know. So they now
                                    charge these poor people for the water.
                                    Needless to reveal, that these people cannot
                                    pay for their water bill. They don't live in
                                    a slum because they can, do they. And what
                                    happens if you don't pay your bill? Well,
                                    simple: you are being cut off.
 
 I call that criminal. It's criminal to
                                    deprive people of their basic needs such as
                                    water. It's criminal to cut artists with
                                    90%, no, over 100%, of their income. And now
                                    that Vivendi got what they want, they sold
                                    the remains to CNET.com and the future
                                    remains uncertain for the online artist
                                    community.
 
 The lies and propaganda concerning this
                                    matter is unbelievable. VIVENDI claimed that
                                    they couldn't have CNET take over the
                                    contents of the website because VIVENDI did
                                    not have the ownership of the music on the
                                    website. While that ownership remark was
                                    true, it seemed no problem at the moment
                                    VIVENDI took over MP3.com from the founding
                                    owners. In what seems to be of the final
                                    spins, the Online Artists got another blow
                                    in their heads, another punishment for being
                                    independent.
 
 A heartical request to VIVENDI by MP3.com's
                                    founder, Michael Robertson, to have the
                                    Archive.org website store the music on their
                                    server, was sent to deaf ears. All the
                                    actions and reactions made it clear that
                                    VIVENDI insisted in having the contents of
                                    the website DELETED.
 
 VIVENDI didn't delete everything from the
                                    website, though. MP3.com had developed a
                                    unique online distribution system for the
                                    online artists. People could have music sent
                                    to their MP3 walkman, or restaurants and
                                    stores could select MP3.com music for play
                                    in their place. This system is now in the
                                    hands of the corporate vampires too.
 
 Operation Kill Online Artist Community in
                                    full effect.
 
 The ballad of MP3.com is a disaster for the
                                    online artists and listeners. But, as we
                                    see, it goes beyond that even. It's part of
                                    a bigger ballad, the "ballad of
                                    Babylon"!
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