New RIAA anti-p2p campaign

Chances
are, if your downloading music online and not paying for it, your taking food
out of the mouths of the musicians who wrote the songs. At least that's the
claims of the RIAA and 4 major record companies around the world. These record
companies are now gonna plaster the slogan "Feed a Musician, Download Legally"
on large outdoor billboards across 11 major U.S. cities. So if you just happen
to be in one of these cities and you see one of these signs and it starts
to tug at your heart strings, go to the street corner and toss the guy playin'
the guitar a quarter, cause chances are, he's starvin to.


The Big
Four music cartels are raking it in, reporting eye-popping revenues. And
yet they continue to pump out 'press releases' claiming file sharing is
'devastating" their multi-multi-billion-dollar businesses and that p2p is
subjecting their contracted performers and support workers to extreme
financial and personal hardship.


Ads will be plastered on outdoor
poster space in Los Angeles, New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Atlanta,
Boston, Baltimore, DC, Philadelphia, Dallas, and Houston.


They'll also deface, 'visible
outdoor space such as metro stops and the sides of buildings undergoing
renovations," says cartel propaganda site
Music United.

If ya wanna see more on the RIAA's financial hardships,
go to p2pnet.net and see
what it's all about.

Source: p2pnet

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