Grateful Dead halts download ban
By Alorie Gilbert, CNET News.com 05/12/2005
Facing criticism from thousands of fans, the Grateful Dead appears to have
backtracked on recent moves to deter people from trading free copies of concert
recordings over the Internet.
After consulting with the legendary jam band, a nonprofit group that
distributes the group's music online had restored the audience recordings for
downloading and streaming on Thursday.
The organization, called the Internet Archive, also made available the Grateful Dead's
"soundboard" recordings, which the band sells on its own site, but only for streaming.
Internet Archive had removed the recordings from its site after the Grateful
Dead's business managers complained recently. The move caused an uproar among
the band's fans. Thousands signed an online petition condemning the band and pledging to boycott
all Grateful Dead merchandise. The crackdown appeared to be a sudden reversal by
the band, which reportedly had long approved of fans trading homemade concert
tapes.
The Internet Archive is taking some responsibility for the dustup, suggesting
it resulted from a misunderstanding.
"We at Archive.org now realize that our mistaken attempts to move quickly
were based on what we thought the Grateful Dead wanted," director Brewster Kahle
said in the site's discussion forum. "For this, we apologize both to the
Grateful Dead and their community."
Former Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh also posted an apology of sorts on his Web site on Wednesday.
"We are musicians not businessmen and have made good and bad decisions on our journey. We do love and care about our community as you helped us make the music," he wrote in the posting. "Your concerns have been heard and I am sure are being respectfully addressed."
|