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RIAA, Music Unions Agree On Payments For Digital Play

Anonymous Brave Guy writes "BBC News is reporting that musicians and artists will now be paid directly for broadcasts of their work in the U.S., without the cash going to record company middle men, as a result of a deal struck between trade unions and industry representatives including the RIAA." Note the tidbit toward the end of the story mentioning the new European copyright directive, and saying "It gives copyright owners permission to use encryption to block the duplication of copyright-protected works." Permission?

3 of 119 comments (clear)

  1. Interesting article at MSNBC by ryants · · Score: 5, Interesting
    This is mostly on-topic... I think... oh well.

    MSNBC has this article which is a pretty description of the origins of copyright in the US and how the system is currently completely out of whack.

    --

    Ryan T. Sammartino
    "Ancora imparo"

  2. Astonishing by melquiades · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What? The record companies actually relinquished any control of anything? You're kidding. What's the catch?

    The RIAA's large-scale actions of recent years -- first and foremost the DMCA! -- have been designed not so much with an eye to profit as an eye to control. They are a very powerful cartel, and they'd like to keep it that way -- even at the expense of immediate profits.

    So what's the catch here? Could it be that they're suddenly worried about anti-trust action? Were the two artists' unions involved actually that effective?

    If the unions were effective, it might be worthwhile to start making the anti-DMCA case to them. The kinds of controls on copyright the DMCA creates are ultimately to the benefit only of the copyright holder -- which, in the case of most recordings, is the record company and not the artist. Although it appears to benefit artists by protecting their work, the DMCA actually takes music out of the hands of musicians.

    It would be a long, difficult, argument, but perhaps it's time to start making it. I'm a musician, and I'm convinced; I think others could be as well. If the artists' unions can pull off a deal like that, they might also be able to pull the rug out from under the **AA's run on the constitution.

  3. Re:artists, etc. by dhogaza · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Speaking of Warner Brothers, they've got one of my photos on two of their pages at the official Harry Potter website. You can include it in e-postcards you send.

    They did not ask my permission. They did not pay for the use of my copyrighted work (this particular photo has been sold for publication several times).

    Needless to say we'll be talking (they've already made an offer to another photographer in the same situation).

    In all fairness, it's the web design firm's that at fault, but I find the irony quite humorous.