We live in a world where it’s so easy to steal someone else’s work and take credit for it as your own. As shown in the video we watched in class, “Copyright Criminals” there was lots of controversy surrounding “sampling” a sound. Famous drummer, Clyde Stubblefield, was involved in a lot of sampling as artists used his signature drum lines in their songs. As many times as it was used, Clyde wasn’t getting paid a single penny for any of it. This was just one example of artists taking another artists credit and putting it in their own music. Sampling is extremely common in rap music to this day. Big names such as Drake, Kanye, Kendrick and many others still sample other music. It’s not as big of a deal as it was because it’s easier today to give credit to those artists. It’s also easier to find the sample being used because the search system we have with the internet now can find almost anything.
I actually have some personal experiences that relate to this subject. Over the past few months I’ve been getting seriously into DJing and producing music. After doing lots of reading and watching videos teaching myself, I’ve learned that big time producers in the music industry, such as Metro Boomin, DJ Mustard, Skrillex, etc. use samples of other beats/songs in their own. I’ve watched a video on how Metro Boomin produces some of his beats and he takes a snippet of another beat (giving credit to it) and cuts it up and edits the pitch of it and turns it into his own version of the beat.
I use a music editing/making software called audacity that allows you to cut up different sound clips and create your own sounds with them using the original as a sample. I’ve made a couple songs and tried to post them on Soundcloud, however only one of them posted while the other one keeps getting taken down for copyright. I looked in the Soundcloud copyright settings and am still unsure as to why one posted while the other didn’t.
Music isn’t the only thing that can be taken down for copyright. Almost anything you curate and put on the internet can be such as images, videos, articles, etc. As talked about in Chapter four of Lessig’s book, using content without the permission from the original content creator, it is seen as piracy.
In order for a digital content creator to best bring together digital archiving, rights and curation, certain guidelines need to be made and followed to ensure they’re not crossing any copyright/piracy lines. The legitimacy of one’s work is very important. In terms of music, any sample being used should be written in the information about the song, and should be talked about in any video, just like Metro Boomin did. For any sort of image/video/article being used, some sort of citation needs to be present. Whenever you’re taking someone else’s work for your own, the permission of use from the original creator should be required. If a digital content creator can follow these guidelines, they shouldn’t be running into problems such as copyright taking down they’re content, or even a legal case coming up in the future.