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Lyric Sites In Trouble With The MPA

Joe the Lesser writes "Apparently the Music Publishers Association is cracking down on sites, like LyricFind, that display song lyrics without permission. 'Just because there is no central licensing body it doesn't make it right to take lyrics and publish them without permission.' says Sarah Faulder of the MPA."

3 of 566 comments (clear)

  1. That's really hurting the music industry. by LemurShop · · Score: 5, Interesting

    RIAA is seriously making some good efforts in keeping everyone hating it's guts. Can anyone even speculate how lyrics sites hurt the industry? Dont bother saying "provides pirates with track titles", most official artist sites have lyricks and track listings. RIAA is slowly but surely shooting its own foot.

    --

    This sig was cut off by the sla
  2. Attacking more customers... by Paddyish · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I remember when the MPA tried to shut down the online guitar archive which is home to tons of ways to play popular music on a guitar - all interpretations, like someone showing you how they figured a song out from listening to the radio. The MPA used the lyric argument there, too. (this was in the pre-Napster time)
    Then, P2P happened. All I gotta say is, you reap what you sow.



    That is all.

  3. No, I'm Not by waldoj · · Score: 5, Interesting


    What's your goal here? To continue to run your Website? To not need to kneel down and kiss the MPA's boots? To make a stand and defend a sane interpretation of copyright law? All of them are admirable goals. In your shoes, I'd probably have the same ones.

    How are you going about achieving your goal? By tweaking lawyers. By tweaking lawyers who have already implicitly threatened serious legal action. By tweaking lawyers who work for a massive and well-funded organization who have already implicitly threatened serious legal action.

    FOR FUCK'S SAKE, WHAT DID YOU THINK YOU WERE DOING?


    I know what I'm doing. :) I've been involved in two high-profile ACLU-backed free speech cases (Schleiffer v. City of Charlottesville, Microsystems v. Scandanavia Online ), once as a plaintiff, once as a defendant, and I've certainly learned a great deal about freedom of speech. More relevantly, I've known Dave Matthews Band and their management for years, and they have no problem with anything on my website, tablature or otherwise.

    While knowledge about point the first is amusing, point the second is the ace up my sleeve. :)

    -Waldo Jaquith