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First, I want to say that I think for me Richard's post totally nailed my sentiment about the whole issue. Second, I did a little math, just for fun: Assuming an average song lasts 5 minutes you can get about 288 songs played in a 24 hour period. 288*.07 cents = 20.16 cents That's about a $1.41 a week. So, that basically means it would cost in the neighborhood of $5.64 a month to broadcast 24 hours a day for a month. This fee is going to stop internet radio? Am I missing something here? I know there are already costs involved in running an internet radio station, but I would imagine that the $5-6 a month would be a pretty small part of the overall cost, no? I'm I wrong in assuming that .07 cents per performance would imply that once you streamed the song, you'd pay that fee once. Am I wrong? Mark Sottilaro Richard Zvonar, PhD wrote: > My position is that one of the prime virtues of the Web is its > ability to support a large community of "marginal" on-line > publishers. The sheer variety of obscure and diverse material that is > made available through such a grass-roots system is to the benefit of > all of us (enriching the "gene pool"). In contrast to this we have > the "commercial" publishers who have to be concerned with the bottom > line, with the resulting proliferation of ads and boiling down of > programming to only the most popular material ("inbreeding"). >