Hardbopjazz Posted October 31, 2019 Report Posted October 31, 2019 Good read. https://www.whathifi.com/news/record-label-claims-amazon-is-selling-counterfeit-vinyl By What Hi-Fi? a day ago News With vinyl's resurgence, counterfeiting is an issue... (Image credit: Anton Hooijdonk from Pexels) A cautionary tale when scouring the internet for Black Friday vinyl deals or seeking out the perfect Christmas gift online, perhaps: Tommy Boy Records has claimed that Amazon is selling counterfeit vinyl – titles that the record label has never even had pressed to vinyl. Tommy Boy Records is best known for launching the careers of De La Soul, Queen Latifah, Afrika Bambaataa and more. As reported by DJ Mag, the company president, Rosie Lopez, made the claim at last week's Making Vinyl Conference in Los Angeles: "Counterfeit is another issue altogether. Somehow records that Tommy Boy hasn’t pressed in – ever – are on sale on Amazon, that’s a little concerning."... Quote
jcam_44 Posted November 2, 2019 Report Posted November 2, 2019 (edited) Interesting but I have a hard time determining how lucrative this is for someone to do. Especially with releases from Tommy Boy that were unissued on vinyl at initial release. This make it sound like vinyl is selling a lot when comparatively to previous years of physical media sales its not. Edited November 2, 2019 by jcam_44 Quote
Brad Posted November 3, 2019 Report Posted November 3, 2019 (edited) They also have problems with counterfeit books, as this article from the New York Times -- which received a lot of attention -- notes: Paging Big Brother: In Amazon’s Bookstore, Orwell Gets a Rewrite "In George Orwell’s '1984,' the classics of literature are rewritten into Newspeak, a revision and reduction of the language meant to make bad thoughts literally unthinkable. 'It’s a beautiful thing, the destruction of words,' one true believer exults. Now some of the writer’s own words are getting reworked in Amazon’s vast virtual bookstore, a place where copyright laws hold remarkably little sway. Orwell’s reputation may be secure, but his sentences are not." Edited November 3, 2019 by Brad Quote
jazzcorner Posted April 11, 2020 Report Posted April 11, 2020 (edited) At Discogs you can find a lot of russia based new labels reissueing classic jazz material without any Info on copyright or license. Discogs earns a provision on this hgrey market. It was discussed to classify all of those as "unofficial" [ as Discogs has done with some sidelabels of Fresh Sound as Gambit] but obviously noone sees through that net of new labels and companies. And a provision for the use of the platform is always welcome. Questionable IMHO. Edited April 11, 2020 by jazzcorner Quote
clifford_thornton Posted April 18, 2020 Report Posted April 18, 2020 Bootlegs are everywhere. This isn't anything new... Quote
Dmitry Posted April 18, 2020 Report Posted April 18, 2020 3 hours ago, clifford_thornton said: Bootlegs are everywhere. This isn't anything new... You call a counterfeit record dub of an officially-released album, even in a different format, a bootleg? I've been applying this to only unauthorized concert recordings. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted April 18, 2020 Report Posted April 18, 2020 yeah, I do. Pretty common parlance in record collector circles. Quote
corto maltese Posted April 19, 2020 Report Posted April 19, 2020 Yes, it is nowadays. But that's unfortunate, because I agree with Dmitry. "Old style" bootlegs (unauthorized releases of live performanes or studio outtakes) are hardly comparable to the counterfeits of officially released recording that are now flooding the market. Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted April 19, 2020 Report Posted April 19, 2020 Nomatter which, rights holders are robbed. Quote
Kevin Bresnahan Posted April 19, 2020 Report Posted April 19, 2020 Historically, "bootleg" meant an unauthorized live recording. We used to call unauthorized releases like this "grey market". Legitimate recordings released in unauthorized ways. Quote
corto maltese Posted April 19, 2020 Report Posted April 19, 2020 9 hours ago, Chuck Nessa said: Nomatter which, rights holders are robbed. That's correct, but still... those "old style" bootlegs were mainly marketed to hardcore fans who also bought all the official releases of the artist, while counterfeits are just cheap, sub-standard duplicates of these official releases. Quote
jazzcorner Posted April 19, 2020 Report Posted April 19, 2020 2 hours ago, corto maltese said: That's correct, but still... those "old style" bootlegs were mainly marketed to hardcore fans who also bought all the official releases of the artist, while counterfeits are just cheap, sub-standard duplicates of these official releases. Not every "unofficial" recording is illegal. Taping radio broadcasts is widely common and allowed in Germany by the radiostations. They provide even a special free software for your PC (a radiorecorder) to record the broadcasts means for private use and private trading. Burning up to 5 CD-R is allowed. This is also free and costless promotion for the artists to trade such Items. The artists playing at a radiostations here are payed from the station. We listeners pay a monthly fee to the government. So no "robbing the artist" is happening here und my county. Think about that. Quote
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