i feel that people are a little bit confused about this discussion of
streaming media, and a lot of it has to do with not understanding the
words that are being thrown around.
so, we live under
the system we call capitalism. while there are many ways to categorize
people in capitalism, the most widely adopted (and most successful, in
terms of explanations) way to do this is to broadly split people into
workers and capitalists. it's not a clean partition, and it's not
exhaustive, but it's fine for the discussion.
simply
stated, the workers in a capitalist system are the people that make the
goods, whereas the capitalists are the people that own the systems of
production and appropriate a profit from the worker's labour, while not
producing anything themselves.
now, let us analyze a
music distribution system, like spotify. clearly, the musicians are the
workers in such a system. and, who are the capitalists? that would be
the managers - spotify, google, apple....
and, we see
the same thing in this system that we see in every other capitalist
system - the capitalists make large profits by exploiting the labour of
the workers, while the workers starve.
now, it's pretty
blatantly obvious that capitalism is an exploitative system. so, one of
the things that anti-capitalists (like socialists and anarchists) seek
to do is to gain control of the means of production, so that they don't
have to pay the capitalists. anti-capitalists would consequently seek to
smash systems like spotify and replace them with artist-run spaces.
that is, independent labels and independent artists. bandcamp is not
exactly an artist run space, but it's far closer to a socialist model.
the
confusion stems from this idea that any process of exchange is
upholding capitalism, which is just a misunderstanding of capitalism.
capitalism is not exchanging things. there are diverse types of market
socialism. capitalism, specifically, is the appropriation of labour by a
managerial class. and, the entrenchment of services that stream music
for peanuts that are sent to a centralized corporate bureaucracy, while
the workers get nothing at all, is one of the most blatantly
capitalistic things we've seen happen in our lifetimes.
this
confusion is upheld by social norms which seek to trivialize certain
economic activities as outside the market. generally, it's "feminine
things" that are trivialized in this way - child care, housework, social
work and art, to name a few examples.
i hope i've clarified a few things.