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Provider of Free Public Domain Music Shuts Down

Mark Rogers writes "The International Music Score Library Project has provided access to copies of many musical scores that are in the public domain. It has just been shut down due to a cease-and-desist letter sent to the site operator by a European Union music publisher (Universal Edition). A majority of the scores recently available at IMSLP were in the public domain worldwide. Other scores were not in the public domain in the United States or the EU (where copyright extends for 70 years after the composer's death), but were legal in Canada (where the site is hosted) and many other countries. The site's maintainers clearly labeled the copyright status of such scores and warned users to follow their respective country's copyright law. Apparently this wasn't enough for Universal Edition, who found it necessary to protect the interests of their (long-dead) composers and shut down a site that has proved useful to many students, professors, and other musicians worldwide."

2 of 242 comments (clear)

  1. A few duties. by Ninjaesque+One · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    Since the poster is so handily throwing around opinionated statements, I thought I would serve one up, steaming. Has anyone heard of a relative semblance of neutrality here? Sure, you can be famous for hating Microsoft with all your might, but that's the shtick; if we just throw away neutrality, then we're now idiots. . . without a shtick. There has to be a normality elsewhere so that the abnormality surfaces.

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    Ninjas and pirates. How piquant.
  2. foo by Magustrench · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    foo

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    Take off every Sig.