I would have quoted your whole post since I agree with it 100% but in the interest of space I decided not to.
I don't understand where people are getting the idea that prices are controlled by suppliers. If consumers do not see enough value in a song to pay for it, then the price falls. In the case of digital media, that price has fallen to 0. "Pirate sites" offer songs and movies of better quality, without intrusive and restrictive DRM, with the ability to transfer it and listen to it on any hardware you have, and without the risk of having to repurchase the material if something happens to it (i.e. if your cd is scratched, you dont have to go buy a new overpriced one again). And what is the cost for all of that benefit? NOTHING.
"Pirate sites" offer a much higher quality product in every imaginable way, for free, to a much larger base of users. If I made a painting and decided that it was worth $100, how could I justify being pissed off if someone got a better picture for free? I don't understand how people can pretend that there is some inherent monetary value for a product just because it was created. Brain is 100% right when he says that the industries that pirates utilize are only feeling "attacked" because they are artificially inflating the value of their product. In short, people now realize that paying $15 for a CD that cost $0.02 to make is an outrageous ripoff.
Maybe if the music industry stopped paying people to make albums that nobody wants to buy, there wouldn't be an issue. People like Trent Reznor and Saul Williams are using this as a new business model, so that they can continue to make money while
satisfying the consumer. There's a weird concept in today's world....
http://gizmodo.com/gadgets/digital-...try-how-to-release-an-album-online-318377.php