UPDATE: Latest news says that they will now only have to pay $50,000....
7/13/2007 6:11:35 PM
dagnabbit
7/13/2007 6:23:17 PM
I just don't understand how anyone can believe the justifications..."The royalties go to the artists..."Sure, but what about stations that don't play any songs written by artists in the RIAA? Hell, radio stations that play Gregorian chants have to pay these fees to the RIAA.It stinks like shit and I hope people hold their congressmen liable. I had the opportunity last week to talk to a state rep., and the first thing I brought up was this internet equality act.
7/13/2007 7:27:41 PM
There were a couple of threads about this including links to the act that you mentioned. I don't know how much traction it got in Congress but it looked very promising.
7/13/2007 8:47:27 PM
^^Not true. If the radio station negotiates a contract with the copyright holders it will automatically super-seed the federal royalties. Of course, before now it was always cheaper to pay the fees than try to get rights from the copyright holder. Not because the holder wants a lot of money, most musicians are desperate to get their music played they would give the rights away for free. But it takes money to contact them and sign a contract with a lawyer present (otherwise the government will come after you for the fees). Now, if congress does allow the fees to become prohibitive, it is likely that large holders such as the RIAA will get together and start their own clearinghouse with reasonable fees and standardized forms, bypassing the government. But such things take time and effort, so don't expect anything over-night. That said, it is quite possible that internet radio was never worth the effort and was only possible given the generous rules of the past.[Edited on July 14, 2007 at 12:17 AM. Reason : ^]
7/14/2007 12:16:43 AM
^ what do you mean "not worth the effort"?Are you saying there is no future in internet radio in principle ?I mean it seems to me in time it might well surpass the usual radio, surely there is room for profit.If nothing else talk radio seems it might find a home on the internet in the future.Is it just a matter of inane government regulation ?
7/14/2007 2:28:46 AM
I said it was quite possible that there was no future in internet radio, it is too soon to tell. If in fact the new fees are prohibitive, then the future will be determined by how effective the internet radio industry is at getting access to copyrighted material through other channels, as I described.
7/14/2007 8:54:38 AM
The thing that really bugs me is how RIAA is getting their panties in a wad when a HUGE number of stations don't play ANY music by RIAA artists.
7/14/2007 11:21:30 AM
well if they can get them shut down, less competition for the RIAA to push their product [Edited on July 14, 2007 at 11:36 AM. Reason : +]
7/14/2007 11:31:20 AM
but, I thought the deal was that you HAD to pay the royalty fees, NO MATTER WHAT. is that not true now?
7/19/2007 9:07:40 PM
wtf. if the usa is really a democracy therefore if the majority of americans wanted to "download" pirated music why should the RIAA nazi's have any power to stop it. i think something needs to be done. The RIAA shouldn't be allowed to harass the put the american people to its knees
7/19/2007 9:42:19 PM
^ Hmm, the American people today, yesterday, and always have strongly supported the spirit of copyright laws and making sure content producers profit from their creations. It is because so many people dream of creating their own song/book/movie and don't want the law changed to pull the rug out from underneath their dream of one day having such laws make them rich. Similarly, the push against such laws is minor, since most people refuse to believe they will ever get caught. So, is it any wonder that a democracy would repeatedly increase the duration and voracity of copyright laws to the extreme?^^ Nope, the royalties are merely a means of escaping copyright laws. You can play anyones music on your station, whether the copyright holders wants you to or not, as long as you pay the royalties to the government which then is supposed to disperse the money to the copyright holders (so far millions go undistributed every year). If you get contractual legal access to the copyrighted material from the owners, then you can avoid paying the royalties to the government; perhaps paying them directly to the copyright holders or even paying nothing at all. [Edited on July 19, 2007 at 11:29 PM. Reason : .,.]
7/19/2007 11:26:08 PM
oh really?http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SoundExchange
7/20/2007 12:07:51 AM
7/20/2007 9:07:27 AM
It doesn't matter if a majority of people oppose it, when the RIAA has Congress in their pockets. This currently isn't a salient enough issue for elected officials to think it would hurt them at the polls.The RIAA already gets a cut of the sale of each blank CD, even if you use them for data. They actively seek the legal authority to hack into people's computers on fishing expeditions, and delete what content they suspect *might* be a copyright infringement. Add onto this the barriers to shift the content between mediums (if I buy the music, I should be able to listen to it on my computer, in my CD player, wherever I want), and their authority is sickening.
7/20/2007 9:18:43 AM
I bet you money that Michael Moore's next movie is about the RIAA. Think about it, they're the next big unstoppable entity that does all this stuff that everyone hates.That and the MPAA. GOD I HATE THE MPAA SO MUCH.
7/20/2007 9:46:32 AM
Geez, why do you hate them so? What did they do to you? Are you one of the 100 people that got sued? As organizations they go too far, so sue them; otherwise, I think they are pretty harmless. If you fear them that much then stop listening to their crap. Are you two seriously suggesting the American people oppose copyright laws?
7/20/2007 12:17:51 PM
No I think its pretty universally accepted that the RIAA is a mob of an industry organization.Stop trying to play devil's advocate for an organization thats done everything in its power to keep record corporations as profitable as possible."BUT THATS THE SPIRIT OF CAPITALISM :saddowns:"Doesn't make them any more endearing.
7/20/2007 12:48:18 PM
^^well this internet radio thing could affect me directly. plus they're at least partly responsible for a lot of the garbage that you hear coming on terrestrial radio stations across the country. the whole idea that they (through soundexchange) are the ONLY entity that can accept royalties for music in this country is fucking preposterous.
7/20/2007 1:02:57 PM
What is also noteworthy is that when they were cracking down on Napster, etc. and fighting for special authority to hack machines on private fishing expeditions, the justification was that this was hurting the industry, hurting the artists, etc. In fact, record sales and profits were at all time highs during that same time period. Of course, artists weren't doing any better.What this is really about is the RIAA's biggest fear, the fear of losing their power and control, the fear of becoming outdated and irrelevant. When the internet medium took off, including P2P networks, the record industry realized that artists could cut out the middleman and sell their music directly online. Artists could sell their music over the internet for far less than the price of a CD in the stores, sell a fraction of the copies, and still keep much more money. Prince released a CD in that timeframe on his website, and made far more money than he ever did through a record company. The internet showed promise to usher us into a much more advantageous situation for both fans and the artists, but not for the RIAA. Through extensive lobbying efforts and strong-arming, the RIAA has managed to avoid the inevitable, when the natural course of events should have reduced their role to little more than a promotional organization.
7/20/2007 1:24:59 PM
7/20/2007 1:34:46 PM
7/20/2007 9:26:59 PM
Yeah that piracy extra part was just from Wikipedia. My big beef with them is their lack of accountability. They have a tremendous amount of power in the film industry. They have the power to cause a movie to either make hundreds of millions or next to nothing and they can rate a movie simply based on their own morals (a good example being homosexual themed movies getting NC17 while heterosexual movies getting R). And they can do all of this without any oversight. And saying that a filmmaker doesn't have to submit their movie to the MPAA is a joke. Of *course* they have to submit for a rating. If a movie is not rated it will be played in art house only, which is about 1% of all nationwide theatres.
7/20/2007 9:46:13 PM
^ Right, *of course* they have to. But they don't have to. It is a choice, it is just that the cards are stacked against the other options. But this is one of those situations where you have a choice while it is not any choice at all. If a large enough percentage of society turned against the MPAA then it would go away, no question. Movie theaters require an MPAA rating because they are accustomed to getting them. But, as I said, if an MPAA rating of 'R' started to be attached to hard-core pornography, movie theaters would quickly find other more reliable benchmarks and the MPAA would go the way of the dodo. Everyone trusts them, so whatever they say is accepted as fact, therefore they have immense power. But like the journalist that fabricates stories, their power can vanish overnight.
7/21/2007 9:21:09 AM
7/21/2007 1:38:05 PM
spaced guy, of course customers love receiving the produce of others for free. But that set-up was unnatural. In the spirit of copyright laws, content users (radio stations) are supposed to be beholden to content producers and their agents (RIAA). "Banning the MPAA and RIAA will not end the lawsuits; copyright holders will simply form new associations to resume litigation. Which brings us back to the real question at hand: is it your assertion that content producers should not be granted any special rights to their works?" Musicians and movie makers want to get paid for their work, it's why they produced it in the first place. Sure, consumers love getting content for practically free, as internet radio has provided for awhile; but that doesn't make it right.
7/21/2007 4:38:14 PM
7/21/2007 5:40:18 PM
7/21/2007 6:55:19 PM
Snark, please go to http://savenetradio.org and read http://www.wired.com/entertainment/music/news/2007/07/webcasters_face_music. You have spent this entire thread talking about RIAA and copyright laws which has little to nothing to do with the intent of the thread. This is now the third thread that has tried to get he message out about unequal treatment of internet radio and extremely unfair rate hikes that aren't at all on level with tv nor terrestrial radio broadcasts.
7/21/2007 7:45:10 PM
7/21/2007 11:31:06 PM
7/22/2007 6:02:10 AM
It was not created by the market, but by an act of congress. Sure, it was only providing a loophole around copyright laws, but there is nothing natural about cutting a check to the government every year so you can continue to use the property of others without asking the owners.
7/22/2007 7:39:16 AM
7/22/2007 12:09:35 PM
i meant the market created internet radio as an alternative to conventional radio. and it's not cutting a check to the government...the government only determines rates that webcasters pay to artists. and i fully believe they should pay royalties to the artists, just not rates so high as to put them out of business.
7/22/2007 4:34:53 PM
Well, under the old system the royalties were determined by a government agency, and were a fraction of the stations revenue. As some stations had little revenue, they paid very little for the same material that other stations were paying dearly for, just because they managed to find advertisers.
7/22/2007 5:25:33 PM
ok...you made it sound like they were paying the government instead of artists.i'm not forced to buy anything from advertisers. advertising is not necessary for broadcasters to operate. it may be necessary for them to be profitable, but some people are actually willing to sacrafice that in favor of more diversified, higher quality programming.the webcasters i listen to are simply people who love music and love supporting good musicians who don't get exposure elsewhere. not only do they play the music, but they also provide info about the artists and links to websites where you can buy the albums. they survive on donations from listeners, maybe a little merchandising, banner ads on the website, possibly kickbacks from online music retailers, i don't know. but they're not in it solely for the money (one day i hope you'll grasp this concept). they pay royalties, but the artists they play need the exposure far more than they need higher royalties.the essence of the issue remains: creative expression being stifled by record execs (via government) who benefit from the status quo of conventional broadcasting.
7/22/2007 7:01:32 PM
If they need exposure more than royalties they should pick a different label.
7/22/2007 7:11:30 PM
^^ I don't think you have bothered to read by earliest posts in this thread. If in fact the artists (copyright holders) are more interested in exposure than music royalties then all they need to do is sign a licensing contract, old rules or new, setting a contractual licensing fee at zero. The government paid royalties need to be paid in order to circumvent copyright laws. You can always get content within the laws, no need for circumvention. If your station is so tight with its content producers, then they will have no difficulty conjuring up a licensing agreement, so you can stop worrying about your pet station. This rule change is only going to be deadly for internet radio stations playing N'Sync without any source of revenue.
7/22/2007 8:22:09 PM
^^you seem to think that most bands can rely on classic terrestrial format radio stations for exposure, but for MOST genres it's simply not the case. it seems that there only a few niche markets that the radio even caters to anymore. for proof that they're not even trying to cater to a number markets on the radio anymore, note commercials these days. you like those songs you hear on a lot of commercials? well you'll never hear them on terrestrial radio (aside from a handful of publicly-supported radio stations). internet radio is pretty much the only way that most people can hear this sort of music.
7/23/2007 7:59:12 AM
G105 has like 50 songs in rotation at one time.Internet radio stations have like a thousand.
7/23/2007 3:38:50 PM
Which just goes to show G105 sucks. What's your point?
7/23/2007 4:40:48 PM
Forgive me, LS, but most people who oppose the RIAA don't do so on the basis of wanting to deny them copyright benefits. Rather, they oppose the RIAA for its extortionist tactics and outright lies to the American public about its supposed drop in profits due to filesharing. so don't pull the bullshit about opposition to copyright laws.
7/23/2007 10:53:13 PM
7/24/2007 12:00:10 AM
^^ Not spaced guy and 392, they actually dream of free information. That said, it is a God given right to lie about yourself. Like I said, the RIAA has a right to be an asshole, leave them to it. This is not to say you should stop speaking out against them, go right ahead. Just try to keep the political process out of the dispute.
7/24/2007 7:58:47 AM
^ sure, they have the right to be an asshole, but they DON'T have the right to use extortionist tactics to bilk people out of money while depriving them of due process. And unforunately, the RIAA is so deep into the political process, that one can hardly help but complain about the process that allows them to continue their abhorrent practices unscathed
7/24/2007 8:01:15 AM
We have the right to sue each other, therefore it is not extortion to threaten a lawsuit. But I agree with you in principle.
7/24/2007 9:25:48 AM
7/24/2007 10:26:26 AM
i just hate repeat commercial radioand the RIAA loves itso i'm pretty much balled from the get-go
7/24/2007 10:30:43 AM
^^ Yes, unlike the RIAA. Two wrongs do not make a right. That said, why laws have been changed by the RIAA? To the best of my understanding, all of the underhanded tactics they use are perfectly within their rights as private citizens.
7/24/2007 11:44:49 AM
so your argument is: the riaa is wrong. but since they're a collection of citizens, they have the right to be wrong?i mean, surely you aren't in favor of monopolies strongarming the public at large into compliance?
7/24/2007 12:46:05 PM