I was window shopping on Discogs. It is an general encyclopedia of records, tapes, and CDs. If you wanted to know a particular album, it would show that album from the US, the UK, and many other countries in the world. It also has links to people selling that particular media.
While trying to figure out the version I am window shopping for, I came across one that is banned on Discogs site. Why would an out of print record be banned?
I don't remember. It was some record or CD of something l found.
That opens up a new cap of worms now. Who decides what is detestable or obscene when it comes to e-commerce?
It might've just been a legal issue.
Quote from: Sick Of Silence on May 08, 2019, 01:00:21 AM
I was window shopping on Discogs. It is an general encyclopedia of records, tapes, and CDs. If you wanted to know a particular album, it would show that album from the US, the UK, and many other countries in the world. It also has links to people selling that particular media.
While trying to figure out the version I am window shopping for, I came across one that is banned on Discogs site. Why would an out of print record be banned?
Honestly, there are only so many notes.
I feel it absurd, generally, when Pop Music entertainers complain their music has been stolen.
Even if Music Copyrights are legit (which I generally doubt), the protection should last no longer than a decade.
After all, Patents for products that actually cost $$$$$$$$ to engineer and manufacture, and actually improve or even save lives, are limited to a mere eighteen years !
None!
The sale of music should be open-market!