What your not reading in this article is that the recording industry wants to adjust the price paid to something more aceptable to a wider range of folks, and I agree with their price structure in principle, as it does indeed seem fairer.
IF the artists got 25-50% of such fees, it would be great. But they don't. Often they get NOTHING.
The final cost to consumer should not be the only reference. It hides the fact that the poor artists are being ripped off.
The existing investor/employer control over creative intellectual property needs to be crashed and trashed.
Consider the social effects.
A bar/pub has 2 choices. Entertainment by live performers or have a DJ or jukebox to play canned pop music.
Lots of budding musicians would be able to find work if not for the ubiquity of jukeboxes and DJs. As it is, they are denied the opportunity, replaced by recorded, canned music.
And look at the $ trail. Live musicians are an expence to a bar. A jukebox is a source of revenue.
The owner of my local watering hole splits 85% of the jukebox income with the coinop vendor who provides it. So the collection agency for the RUAA and artists get 15%. And of that measly 15% [~5 cents], just how much flows back to the artists and song writers? Little or nothing, as they are usually backcharged for all the recording, production and promotions costs [usually charged off at inflated rates to connected providers] so the artists gets near nothing from this arrangement.
All musicians and performers lose under this 'marketing method' except for the few hand picked entities who are willing to live by lottery in such a rigged game. Such superstars are needed for the RIAA to trick naive artists into signing away all rights to their works for a mere CHANCE at hitting it big. They would be better off keeping the rights to their songs and performances and buying a lottery ticket in a legit state game. And the odds of hitting it big would probably be better than with an RIAA blue sky contract.
Boycott RIAA poptarts.
Support indie artists who self-release.
Help fight to restore exclusive rights to intellectual property to its creators, the artists and inventors.