zee wrote:
Fenn wrote:
have you used either of these yourself? other users warned to be careful with these types of sites.
i have used the CD method in the past, but right now i don't have a functional CD player... though i guess I can use one at work, if that's really still the best option.
Public Domain music is not like bootleg music. I would avoid bootleg (stolen, copyright avoiding, illegal copies of music that the owner/original artist wants to be payed for). Public Domain music is music that is supposed to be free. The Artist who created it wanted it that way, or the music is so old that it is no longer in copyright (and the artist is long dead and gone).
Suppose the artist is your cousin. Music is a business, it is how he pays the bills, how he feeds his family. He puts in a lot of time making it good, buying the instruments and amplification equipment and recording equipment. He rehearses and plans gigs. He should be the one who decides if his music is free or not.
Suppose instead that the artist is just starting out, or has another job and this music thing is just a hobby. Or maybe the artist is at the end of his career and has all the money he needs or wants. He just wants the music to be heard. He wants it to be out there. He wants to make people happy, or show off, or has come to the conclusion that music should be free. He can also decide if he should get paid or not.
So copyright law says who has the right to say who can copy and who cannot and if paying is part of it and who decides. If the copyright owner decides that the music is in “the public domain” it essentially has been given to the public: everyone has the right to a copy, and nobody has to pay.
If you want to listen to Michael Jackson Or Taylor Swift you probably have to pay. If not, like if you find the music on youtube and find a way to make your own copy for free you are in copyright violation. But other artists may have actually put their music in the public domain on purpose. You may never have heard their names but the music is good. That is public domain. That is PD.
You can make a copy for free and not be in copyright violation. Because you have been given the right to do it.
The descriptions I give above are general. The details are much more complicated but the general principle applies: there is music you can get for free but you are violating copyright, and there is music you can get for free and not be in copyright violation.
Also read:
https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/https://ask.loc.gov/recorded-sound/faq/313179
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ADHD-I(diagnosed) ASD-HF(diagnosed)
RDOS scores - Aspie score 131/200 - neurotypical score 69/200 - very likely Aspie