Posted to the home page of Mellencamp.com per John's request. 
In the ten days since John posted his thoughts about Internet Piracy on
Huffington Post  it has generated approximately 1000 comments plus 
hundreds more on
Facebook as well as related blog reports and commentaries. We're posting a piece that reinforces John's position here that came in response to a piece in The New 
Republic that was critical and dismissive of John’s view.
The New Republic  took John to task for many points he made while
The Trichordist expounded on John's point of view 
and, later, provided more insight
in a secord article 
It was John’s hope that his piece would further discussion and reflection from 
lawmakers, the music industry, consumers at large and advertisers about what 
role they play in the damage inflicted by piracy on the those who hope to earn a earn a 
livelihood in music.
John is glad that the conversation catalyzed by his piece has become as animated 
as it has and only offers this additional comment that paraphrases a line in his 
song “Jim Crow”:
“You can call it what you want to  - But it's still stealing”
Mellencamp Character Assassination. The New Republic Bravely Stands Up For 
Corporations and Criminal Groups That Exploit Artists. 
The Trichordist - By David Lowery
I’m sort of delighted by 
this. I mean I went to a very liberal college and there’s a certain kind elitist 
and dim knee jerk liberal I really dislike.  Dorm room revolutionaries who end 
up unwittingly doing the work of the man.  The kind that end up blogging for The 
New Republic.
Recently John Cougar Mellancamp wrote a piece in which he criticized the music 
business.  In particular he criticized them and his fellow 
artists  for not standing up to  large corporations like Google who have 
monetized illegal file-sharing by selling advertising against illegal download 
search results and also by providing advertising directly to file infringing 
sites.
The New Republic-always the class act-decided to respond with a 
character assassination piece.   They sent the remarkably 
ignorant Lydia DePillis (on twitter @lydiadepillis)  a 3 year real estate 
journalism veteran to “School” the 40 year music business veteran John  Mellencamp 
on the history and future of the music business.  It’s freaking hilarious.  Not 
only does this “professional” journalist not understand that  the main point is 
that Mellencamp is criticizing the music business for not protecting artists she 
wanders completely off topic and makes historical claims that have no basis in 
fact. Further she incorrectly disputes Mellencamp’s facts.
I’m just gonna give you one example.  The 3 year journalism veteran claims 
that search engines don’t make money off the searches for illegal downloads.   
it took exactly 3.2 seconds for me to disprove this…
...Also she then dismisses and mocks Mellencamp’s correct claim that Google 
makes plenty of money serving ads on sites that it knows are infringing. .
Here is Google’s Doubleclick serving an ad for Jeep on the that same site 
www.dilandau.eu A site that Google’s own transparency report ranks as the 24th 
most copyright infringing site in the world. Isn’t knowingly providing money to 
an illegal enterprise a RICO predicate? 

It is sad but not surprising to see The New Republic standing up for the 
right of giant corporations and criminal groups to make money by exploiting 
artists songs. The New Republic has totally lost it’s way. They are now for the 
big corporations and against the little guy.
If The New Republic has any journalistic integrity left it needs to correct 
the falsehoods in this article. Further they should apologize to Mellencamp for 
the nasty tone of this article. I’m sure they won’t but it’s worth a try. Maybe 
tweeting at the author will work better @lydiadepillis 
The Trichordist followed up their piece about John with another interesting 
piece about advertising on sites with pirated material. Read it here:
Madison Avenue and Media Piracy, Are Online Ad Networks the Birth of SkyNet? 
 
What John Mellencamp Doesn’t Understand About His Industry’s Future, or Past 
- 
The New Republic By Lydia DePillis
John Cougar Mellencamp, 
country music crooner and defender of old media, has had it with all that music 
floating around for free on the internet these days. Last week,
he took to the Huffington Post to air his disapproval, in a 
column that so perfectly encapsulates the enduring mentality of analog incumbent 
industries that we thought it worth closer read.
“I’ve been doing this a long time and I’m confounded by the apathy of 
those who have participated in music-related successes and are now witnessing 
the demise of the entertainment business as it has existed since the beginning 
of recorded sound and moving pictures.”
This would imply that the entertainment business has never before 
adapted to new platforms for distributing music and movies. And yet, FM 
radio, tape recorders, and the Walkman all forced the music industry to 
change.
“Tell me where, under today’s conditions of de facto indentured 
servitude, will the new artists come from?”
Let’s talk instead about the indentured servitude of artists to major 
labels who produce records to be as commercially palatable as possible in 
order to support massive operating costs.
“If I were a young songwriter today, I would be looking for another way 
to earn a living. The same would go for the young screenwriter or novelist. And 
what about the guy who only had one or two hit records 10 or 50 years ago? What 
happens to this guy who depends on that income to support his family if people 
are stealing those songs now? Tough luck, right?”
Sure, there was a time in the past when it was easier for musicians to 
make money. But that period was not so long and not so great for everybody 
as you suggest—only about 25 years,
if Mick 
Jagger is to be believed. 
“We need to restore intellectual property to its rightful owners and 
reconstruct the business that has lost thousands and thousands of jobs plus 
billions of dollars in revenue.”
According to the recording industry’s own numbers, the sector grew 
from $132 billion in revenues in 2005 to $168 billion in 2010. The record 
labels' revenues from digital music
grew 5 percent in 
2010 and another 8 percent in 2011. Somebody’s making money here. 
“Why is thievery allowed to continue on the Internet? And why do people 
think it's so impossible to correct?”
Nielsen reports that only 28 percent of internet users globally use 
illegal music services on a monthly basis. That's not insignificant, but it 
leaves quite a bit of market share for paying business. 
“Right after radio was invented, they played music and sold 
advertising. Then it dawned on some: ‘Hey, they’re playing our music, and 
they’re selling advertising on our backs; we should get paid.’ So performing 
rights organizations like ASCAP and BMI were established with the express 
intention of protecting the intellectual property of artists who create it... 
They turned new delivery systems into multi-billion dollar businesses. That was 
progress.”
Here’s what they also did: Having tried and failed to keep their 
artists from playing on the radio in the 1920s, record companies
came up with high-fidelity technology that just sounded better, and 
allowed them to keep selling records. Real progress comes from innovation, 
not squashing anything that threatens your cash cow.
“But where are ASCAP and BMI today on the new delivery system—the 
Internet? Where are the record companies? Where are the book publishers? Where 
are the unions to which we pay dues that are supposed to protect actors, 
writers, songwriters, and producers? And, most importantly, where's the 
government? Apparently everybody’s too busy making excuses and shrugging their 
shoulders to realize their gravy train has gone up the waterspout.”
Where are they? In court and on Capitol Hill, constantly, for the past 
decade. Killing Napster, Limewire, and Kazaa. Suing thousands of individual 
downloaders. Trying like hell to pass anti-piracy legislation, and failing 
after internet users rose up in opposition (even movie industry chief Chris 
Dodd admits SOPA and PIPA
aren’t coming back). They could have saved themselves a lot of trouble 
(and money) by instead working on new models for distributing their content.
“There is a law that exists to deal with copyright and the Internet 
that dates back to the good ol’ days of 1990s: the Digital Millennium Copyright 
Act. It was supposed to bring U.S. copyright law into the digital age but it 
included something called ‘Safe Harbor Provisions’ that basically 
says that each artist is responsible for retrieving his own merchandise and 
shutting down anyone stealing their property, which is kind of a joke.... [U]nder 
the Safe Harbor Provisions, search engines behave like unpoliced department 
stores where anyone can steal whatever they want with no real threat of 
significant repercussions.”
Wrong analogy: The search engine doesn’t profit when songs are 
downloaded, legally or illegally. Rather, it’s more like UPS, which sends 
and delivers what people want. Would you sue the big brown for carrying 
stolen goods? 
“On top of everything, they’re collecting advertising money from 
Madison Avenue. So what's happening is your search engine leads you to an 
illegal downloading site where you can download— you name the artist—their 
entire catalog and, at the same time, see products and services offered for sale 
ranging from soft drinks to pornography and, adding insult to injury, that 
merchandise appears to be endorsed by the artist to whom it's attached. The 
artist, who is already being stolen from, now appears to be shilling for these 
products.”
Just like you’re endorsing the breast enlargement ads on the side of 
my screen right now? 
“Recent history has shown that things can, in fact, change. When online 
gambling, once a huge and thriving underground business, was determined to be 
illegal sites went out of business almost overnight. Why? Because legal gaming 
enterprises and government regulation brought the hammer down where it hurt the 
most—credit card companies were told they could not be part of this dubious 
trade and they complied immediately.”
Except that now, some states are
legalizing online gambling because it’ll generate more revenue when 
regulated and taxed—not to mention create thousands of jobs. It’s not the 
state’s job to privilege one revenue model over another.
“In the same way, if anti-piracy legislation were the order of the day 
servers, wherever they may be including the mythical ‘cloud,’ could and would be 
shut down thanks to technologies that have been developed and successfully 
employed during the fight against terrorism. The means to get this done actually 
exists; what we’re lacking, at the moment, is the will to do it.”
Shorter Mellencamp: The U.S. government should put the same resources 
into going after people swapping music on the internet as it does pursuing 
terrorists. 
Actually, it’s not that easy to automatically identify music that’s 
being distributed without the creator’s permission, which is why search 
engines rely on content owners to submit claims. Google is
already using those claims to demote websites that repeatedly violate 
copyright protections. Going around shutting down data centers for every 
stolen song that slips through would just take out large chunks of the rest 
of the internet, to little effect.
Ultimately, clinging to an old business model means that artists lose 
out, too. Courtney Love said it best,
way back in 2000: "I’m 
looking for people to help connect me to more fans, because I believe fans 
will leave a tip based on the enjoyment and service I provide. I’m not 
scared of them getting a preview.”
John is glad that the conversation catalyzed by his piece has become as animated 
as it has and only offers this additional comment that paraphrases a line in his 
song “Jim Crow”:
“You can call it what you want to  - But it's still stealing”