EFF Wins Promo CD Resale Case
DJMajah writes "Universal Music Group's case against Troy Augusto, fought by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, has been dismissed by a federal judge. UMG sued Augusto, the owner of Roast Beast Music, over 26 eBay listings of promotional CDs. UMG argued that promo CDs distributed for free to radio stations, DJs and other industry insiders could not be resold; the discs usually carry a label reading 'For promotional use only, not for resale.' UMG asserted the doctrine of first sale does not apply, as the discs were not actually sold and therefore remained UMG's property. The judge ruled that the doctrine does apply because the discs were gifts. The labels indicate no expectation of their return."
I'm sure in the future they will modify their labels to require the return of promo materials.
Go go EFF!
it would DEFINITELY be to the EFF. What heroes they are, in today's world!
It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
Will this then apply to books who have had their cover torn off and returned to the publisher? Most of those books carry a "if the cover is missing this book cannot be resold" blurb. Booksellers who can't sell a quantity of trade paperbacks return the front cover in lieu of the entire book for a refund. It saves on shipping and the publisher doesn't want the unsold books back anyway. So would these be considered 'gifts' to the bookseller, and presumably under this ruling also viable for resale?
I'm actually a bit sad that the EFF won on this case. Because if it hadn't of been overturned, you could label "anything" as no-resale and send it to someone. Like, you know, that giant pile of bricks or the entire output of a nuclear reactor and mail it to the RIAA.
Because, with the policy they were trying to establish precedent for, you could do so, mark it as no-sale and no-disposal, and force them to build warehouses to store the random crap you send them.
I used to work at a music store in my youth and selling promo CDs is what got me through college.
If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
Maybe I'm just overly hopeful, but it certainly seems to me that people in the legal system are begining to see just how ridiculous many of these 'flimsy' shrinkwrap/EULA/itsnotyoursitsreallyalicense type arguements are.
Wish in one hand...and you'll soon be washing them both
There goes promotional copies of CDs that reviewers keep, I guess.
Not if they want a good review. B-)
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
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I don't think even that is enforceable. If you give something to someone unsolicited it's a gift and the recipient can do whatever they want with it regardless of whatever BS sticker it attached to it. I mean, why not put a sticker on it that says "Return after 30 days, along with $1000"?
- We'd use the CDs for in-store play, thus generating customer interest.
- Word of mouth advertising from our employees.
- Often, in exchange for free copies of the CDs, we'd let a label representative make a small in-store display of that or other recent/new/upcoming releases from that label.
I left that job with thousands of discs, which I sold at used stores for $1-$4 a piece -- nice severance package, if you can get it.It's always struck me as funny that record companies get pissed about free music being available online, when they happily send music stores multiple free copies of nearly every new CD that comes out. I've often wondered how many tens of thousands of free copies of each major release get sent out. (I understand the logic -- quid pro quo and all that -- but it's still a strange practice.)
Now I know what to do with all my dead monkeys!
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
But such a technical solution doesn't exist. In any case there must be a strict trust relationship from both sides for it to work. Either that, or rabid lawyers threatening each other into submission.
Different, how? It is the world we live in, now. In this world, DRM is inherently a failure, and you can't tell people how to use the CDs you mail them. That's the way it must be.
The law is clear. If you choose to mail something to someone that they did not ask for, it becomes their property. End of discussion. Done. Sending it through the mail, unsolicted makes it a gift.
Whatever idea you had in your head that prompted you to mail it makes no difference to the law. The recepient didn't ask you for it, you sent it anyway for whatever reason. Bing bam boom, it's theirs now. It doesn't matter if they want it or not. It doesn't matter if it's cross-promotional.
There is a way to send something to someone without sending it to the world. You contact them and say "If you agree to my conditions, I will send it to you." Then, if they agree, you send it, if they don't, you can't send it anyway and bind them to your wishes. I can't emphasize how fundamentally important that is... no one can force someone else into a contract.
Not really. The music industry has pretty much tested, since its very inception, the outer bounds of what the legal system would allow.
The whole idea of "licensing" or "leasing" music rather than selling it isn't a new one. The Victrola Company attempted all sorts of shenanigans with its records, including invalidating your right to play the record if you bought it for less than $1 (that's from 1906!). They attempted to back this up not only with contract law, but with patents as well. Their attempts at price-fixing via this method, both on records but even more significantly on machines, went all the way to the Supreme Court ("STRAUS v. VICTOR TALKING MACH. CO. , 243 U.S. 490").
So this is really nothing new at all. It's just the music industry playing screw-the-consumer in the same manner they have always done.
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Those who believe the Internet is private,
find their privates are on the Internet.