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It is clear that under monopolistic competition, the price that can be charged will be affected by consumers' willingness to pay. In the presence of cheap substitutes such as MP3s, this willingness to pay will be sharply reduced��.
Our model suggests that high costs of production and promotion have constrained diversity. Under the present structure, the industry has been forced to reduce the number of artists and the opportunities given to them.
These high costs are responsible for constraining the diversity of the products offered to listeners. Less artists, under this system, are given opportunities
Exceptional job by both debate participants. BlackJackal was impressive and seemed to hold sway during this debate. As such, I voted for BlackJackal for presentiong a more persuasive argument.
Well done both of you, you made this debate alot more interesting than I thought it was going to be. I'm going to side with Otts as I just felt at time BlackJackal was stretching too hard to make connections that wasn't there.
As the number of debaters gets smaller the judging gets much harder! In this one BlackJackel had a strong argument, but it was too frequently shot down by Otts. My vote has to go to Otts.
Comment: Black provided alot of facts, and clearly stated them. He had answers and was able to defeat alot of Otts' claims. Otts skirted around and failed in my opinion to bring forth good solid facts.
A difficult and somewhat esoteric challenge of a debate that was well argued by both participants that forced me to read and re-read many times - my compliments to Blackjackal and Otts for their lifting the standard of debate to a high level.
In the final analysis Blackjackal had a slim edge in convincing me that file sharing is indeed a detriment to quality music.
Again I cannot compliment you both enough on the fine job of debate that I've seen here.
wow, another instance of a debater making their argument well enough as to change my own view. BlackJackal did a magnificent job with this one.
Another excellent debate. Kudo's to both participants. This topic is a nasty one, highly politicized by both sides. Blackjackals assertions that file sharing is hurting the music industry is a good arguement, that it is hurting the quallity of music, Otts has shown that the industry has basically shot itself in the foot. Otts has shown that this is a evolution in the industry, same as when cassettes came along. Showing also that quallity music is surviving BECAUSE of the Internet, the winner is Otts.
Wow. Great debate. Otts and BlackJackel swung their swords mightily and well. The problem was that the topic didn't Otts much room to maneuver in (imho). This debate really boils down to establishing a detrimental link between music and file sharing, and then arguing just how strong that links needs to be. Otts says it doesn't matter, there are larger issues responsible and BlackJackel says it's enough that it's worth considering.
Since I'm supposed to judge on the quality of argument, not who was right or not, the win goes to Otts. The reason is that, for the topic, I interpreted that there must an amount of significance in the detrimental affect. By thus rule, Otts has shown that file sharing 'doesn't matter to much,' and other factors are responsible for the decline. if I had chosen to interpret this rule objectively then Blackjackal would have the win, but casting topics into binary propositions makes for very bad debates because one side usually doesn't have to do any work. Salutations to Blackjackel and I'm sure he'll find his way up the ranks yet again.
This one goes to Otts.
In my humble opinion, Jackal Started a game of russian roulette with five bullets in the revolver, and he was going first.
The very first rebuttal he had, he conceded the debate's question to Otts, and you simply cannot do that because you lose the debate.
It was a good opening statement, but it was all for naught when he conceded the point to his opponent.
The real question in debate is what came first: the money-first mentality or file sharing. Both agree that the money-first mentality caused the decline in overall music quality (I think that there are still genres of music that have improved over the years). Both participants used nice metaphors to make themselves clear and both are great with providing references and sources. In the end I think BlackJackal's simple cause and effect reasoning was better than Otts' argument. I, therefore, think BlackJackal is the winner of this debate.