| Well, I don't really believe in royalties to begin with, but if you're going to have them... I think royalties should be set in a way that maximizes what I'd call the versatility of utility. If royalty costs are far beyond the actual infrastructure or service costs, it seems as though entire industries and uses of content cease to exist. It also seems pretty clear that huge differences between prices and real world costs are what lead to extensive piracy - people develop a perception of being cheated when you try to charge $25 for an e-book or album download. On the other hand most consumers seem to feel fine about paying $1 or $5 for a song/album/e-book. You could argue that 'oh, the creator should have the right to control what they make as much as they want and charge whatever they feel like,' but it seems pretty clear that given free reign, copyright holders feel entitled and abuse copyright in ways that entirely undermine the whole system. I'd say that if you believe in copyright there's a legitimate interest in restraining royalties to reasonable amounts so as reinforce the legitimacy of the whole system. After all, the perceptions of gouging and rights abuses create large masses of people like me who no longer believe in copyright as a whole to any great extent. Ensuring the liberalization of restraints and apparent reasonableness of exercised privileges allowed creators seems key to creating a copyright institution that can survive and appear legitimate in the long run. |