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Guest post by Wade Sutton from the Disc Makers BlogIf you won’t respect somebody’s art enough to pay for it, what makes you think you deserve the same in return?
I know what I’m about to say is going to ruffle a lot of feathers because I posted something about this on my personal Facebook page and it stirred up a proverbial hornet’s nest.A few weeks ago, it occurred to me that I had recently seen multiple posts on Facebook from artists and songwriters asking for information on how to “jailbreak” devices like the Amazon Firestick and the Google Chromecast. Those are the gadgets you plug into your television to stream video from services such as Netflix and Amazon Prime. Jailbreaking those devices allows users to download applications so they can watch pirated content, like movies currently in theaters.I had a big problem with this because I had seen past posts from many of these same artists expressing outrage about people not wanting to pay for their music, how streaming companies like Spotify and Google undervalue songwriters, and about how their family and friends won’t support them by coming to their shows or buying their music.So the question I posed to them on Facebook was this: If you won’t respect somebody’s art enough to pay for it, what makes you think you deserve the same in return?You would have thought I had thrown a grenade into a room full of kittens.Look, I knew that post was going to make some artists — particularly those I was calling out — feel uncomfortable. But what amazed me was how many of them ultimately attempted to justify the behavior of stealing art.Wade Sutton is the founder of Rocket to the Stars, an artist services record label with clients around the world. He is also the creator and host of The Six-Minute Music Business Podcast, which was named by CD Baby as one of “five music-business podcasts artists can’t live without.” Wade was a featured speaker at the 2018 Music Entrepreneur Conference at Harvard University.