Everything flows


Think back to fifteen years ago. Nobody had an email address. Google didn’t exist. Nobody thought about downloading music. Nobody thought about watching TV shows on a computer monitor. We used to queue up for our train tickets. What about now? We use the Internet to do research. We use it to do the shopping. We use it to do our banking. We use it to listen to music or to read books… I can’t remember the last time I took a glance at a phone book. I purchase my concert ticket on the web and I print it just before the show. If necessary, I also print a map to know precisely where the concert hall is. File sharing systems has brought the CD to their knees. Google has changed the world and we were unable to predict that change. We didn’t see the net coming. 

New technology always challenges the established order. We should not forget that the only thing permanent is change.

My precious opportunity




An opportunity is a good chance, a possibility due to a favorable combination of circumstances. It’s all about making the right thing at the right time, making the most of what comes your way. The web gives to an artist many opportunities to put himself on the map. By interacting and learning from other webnauts, I think that we can constantly be exposed to opinions that we‘d never have come across otherwise. Moreover, a blog enables the artist to explain his art, in his own words. For instance, I’m a musician and I set myself very high standards. That’s the reason why so many songs I wrote never saw the light of day. I think this brand new blog is an opportunity (thanks Bob…) to introduce you a tune I recorded six years ago when I was in high school. Without this blog, it had never been listened to.



This area may be under video surveillance...


Nothing can be hidden on the Internet. As time went by, it became one of its fundamentals. It means that everybody can easily see everything that you do on your blog, Flickr, Youtube and social networks like Myspace or Facebook which make it possible to know all about anybody’s life, from the name of the company he works for to the last time he was drunk in a nightclub. That’s why I’m not a huge fan of Facebook for instance. When someone tags me in a picture, he gives without my consent some details from my private life. 

Facebook pretends to offer sophisticated privacy controls so that information that has been made private by a user will stay hidden. Ok then. But in an article entitled "Marc L***", the excellent French magazine Le Tigre managed to draw precisely the portrait of a webnaut just by piecing together several pieces of information scattered on the Internet. The article, which made a huge buzz in France, wanted to warn us about the transparency of our lives on the web and to point out the dangers of publicizing personal information. On the Internet which tends to blur the boundaries between private and public, anonymity is nothing else than a myth.

You can read the article (in French) here.



The breaker of our reading habits

The Internet embodies a real revolution in our way of thinking. It is irrevocably leading all of us to adopt several new habits. For instance, digital technologies and particularly the Internet, deeply impact our reading habits. Indeed, reading on the web suggests a very different sort of reading to that which we were accustomed to. Indeed, everything is connected nowadays thanks to the hypertext. Contrary to the book, which is a closed object with a beginning and an end, the web isn’t limited and every text, image or video may lead us to other texts, images and videos…


I don’t work anymore like I did before having a computer connected to the whole knowledge of the world. In that way, I can say that it broke my working habits. When I do some research for a school project for example, I spend a lot of time collecting pieces of information, whereas in the past, I used to restrain my preliminary researches to a few books. Moreover, needless to say that I rarely move to the library since I can get almost everything I want on my screen.


But we can’t neglect the fact that such an abundance of information may affect our analytical ability. When we read an article on the Internet, we scan the headlines, maybe a paragraph or two to get an idea of what’s new. The articles are short and get to the point. That’s the web’s working principle and according to me it might become our “working principle” if we don’t pay attention. Thereby, Internet is a powerful tool which represents not only an evolution but a real revolution in the way we think and work.

Pirates attack !




The internet is a powerful marketing tool used since its early days in order to promote artists. Now more than ever, music seems to be prevalent in our society of immediacy as attested by the growth of blogs, webradios and musical social networks. Notwithstanding, for some time, the web has been blamed for being responsible for a crisis within the entertainment industry, particularly in the music industry.

On Tuesday, September the fifteenth, French Deputies voted in favor of Hadopi 2, a law project which shows a profound lack of understanding of what the Internet actually is. The proposed measures and sanctions aim at eliminating illicit downloads considered as a serious threat for the music industry by the French Ministry of Culture. "There is no reason that the internet should be a lawless zone" according to President Nicolas Sarkozy, convinced that the web is nothing short than the potential killer of musical creation. Emphasizing threats from file sharing systems, the law project which is in line with what one calls the "graduated response" gives to a specific court the possibility to decide to cut the internet accesses that are known for being used to download data protected by copyright. With this project, the government, which only wants to protect the producers backs, contravenes to the presumption of innocence and gives the possibility to exclude someone from the information society.

The major music labels (Sony-BMG, Universal, Warner, EMI) dominate the music industry and they want to stop at all costs the ever-growing phenomenon of free sharing of music, claiming that its impact on their business has been devastating. I think that it is funny when we know that Sony is one of the most important producer of mp3 players, blank CDs and CD burner, isn’t it? Then, who are the ones to blame? If illegal downloads have such an impact on the CD sales, Sony has dug his own grave… They just refused to accept that the industry they work for is in a state of profound change. Instead of punishing the ones they call “thieves” or "pirates", the system itself has to evolve. If they really want to make money with music, the majors will have to offer satisfactory alternatives to illegal file sharing.

They can decide the cut of the web subscription to internet users known for downloading illegally but according to me, they won't be able to eliminate such a well-spread activity. One must move with the times, after all. With the advent of peer-to-peer which was popularized by file sharing systems like Napster, the act of downloading music became extremely frequent for millions of webnauts. Everybody has an mp3 player and file sharing and streaming providers offer immediately good quality music. It seems difficult to evaluate the specific impact of free sharing on the recording business. Though, Felix Oberholzer and Koleman Stumpf looked at a sample of albums sold in the US in the second half of 2002 and showed in the Journal of Political Economy that the effect of downloads on the sales was “statistically indistinguishable from zero.” There are less and less people ready to pay for albums they can get simply and freely thanks to the Internet. Why should we pay? To support the artist who gets at best $2 per album? It’s extremely hard for composers to earn a good living purely off their music. That’s not new. Recording labels always have promoted the most bankable artists and a very small number of the albums released are actually profitable.

That's a fact that Internet and the audio compression technologies such as mp3 music format deeply transformed the music industry. They have profoundly impacted the recording business. They have made information sharing much easier and the web is without a doubt the future of recorded music.

As a musician and a composer, I want my work to be easily available to most people and Internet seems to be an incredible opportunity for an artist to put himself on the map. Myspace, last.fm, Youtube, socials networks... The artists don’t need middlemen anymore. The Internet is going to change the way we consume music but it is not going to kill the entertainment industry.  The producers want us to believe that music is dying with CD’s but the music isn’t actually limited to an object. The web will continue to increase variety and to lead to the appearance of more new artists, questioning a system when only four labels record, distribute, and promote the music.