Internet radio petition |
Post Reply |
Author | ||
darksinger
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 29 2006 Location: Durham, NC Status: Offline Points: 1091 |
Topic: Internet radio petition Posted: April 14 2007 at 10:46 |
|
I hope i'm posting this in the right spot. if not, could it please be moved to the right spot?
anyway-apparently law makers are enacting a bill that will make it considerably difficult for internet radio to exist. if you want to do something about it, please sign the petition...
|
||
|
||
Barla
Forum Senior Member Joined: April 13 2006 Location: Argentina Status: Offline Points: 4309 |
Posted: April 14 2007 at 11:56 | |
I just signed the petition!
Long live Internet radio!! (because here in my country the music - with a few exceptions - they play in radio is soooooooooo bad.......) |
||
Angelo
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin Joined: May 07 2006 Location: Italy Status: Offline Points: 13244 |
Posted: April 14 2007 at 11:58 | |
I would sign if I were allowed, but since this is targetting US government, only US residents are allowed to sign. I whole heartedly support the effort though.
Edited by Angelo - April 14 2007 at 11:58 |
||
ISKC Rock Radio
I stopped blogging and reviewing - so won't be handling requests. Promo's for ariplay can be sent to [email protected] |
||
GoldenSpiral
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: May 27 2005 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 3839 |
Posted: April 14 2007 at 12:02 | |
Yeah, the RIAA lobby is growing increasingly ridiculous. I originally heard about this from the guy who runs Pandora.com. He says that if the law is enacted, they won't be able to afford to keep the site running anymore. It's absolutely insane.
This also affects me personally, as my college radio station has a webstream that would also be subject to this increase. As it is now, we pay over a thousand dollars each year to various organizations for the right to play "their" music, both on FM and on the webstream. We would have to dismantle the stream if this law is passed, and we would lose hundreds of worldwide listeners. |
||
andu
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 27 2006 Location: Romania Status: Offline Points: 3089 |
Posted: April 14 2007 at 12:11 | |
Those guys suck. Last night I had this peculiar dream: my friends had the occasion to incidentally listen to the music coming from the album in my cd-player, and that was illegal because they had not payed for this right. Suddenly my ceiling was broke by masked troopers who came inside by force and took me. After that I can't remember anything...
|
||
darksinger
Forum Senior Member Joined: May 29 2006 Location: Durham, NC Status: Offline Points: 1091 |
Posted: April 15 2007 at 08:31 | |
you need to stop watching brazil before you go to bed
|
||
|
||
andu
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 27 2006 Location: Romania Status: Offline Points: 3089 |
Posted: April 15 2007 at 09:52 | |
you got me there |
||
yarstruly
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 29 2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1322 |
Posted: April 16 2007 at 14:29 | |
Some more on this....
RIAA Pushes Through Internet Radio Royalty Rates Designed To Kill Webcasts
from the broadcasters-must-be-a-special-boys-club dept It's been quite some time since we last heard about arguments between internet webcasters and SoundExchange (a group spun off from the RIAA to handle royalty collection). Back in the summer of 2003, there was even a lawsuit over the royalties being set (http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20030827/197214.shtml), that were pretty clearly designed to put smaller, independent webcasters out of business. From the RIAA's point of view, this is perfectly typical. They still view the world (especially the internet) as a broadcast medium. Therefore, they want at small number of "professional" content producers who create the content for everyone else. Then they can just sign a few ridiculously large licenses with those large players, and "the people" get to consume it. It's a fundamental misunderstanding of the internet as a communications medium -- a medium where people express themselves back and forth to each other, rather than a place we go sit back and "consume." While the fight had gotten quiet lately, the good old RIAA was hard at work making sure that things were happening in the background. A bunch of folks submitted stories this weekend noting that late Friday (making it less likely to make news http://blog.wired.com/music/2007/03/...right_ro.html), the Copyright Royalty Board announced that it was adopting the royalty rates SoundExchange (http://www.kurthanson.com/archive/ne...07/index.shtml ) put forth, and making them effective retroactively to the beginning of 2006 -- meaning that many small independent webcasters are now facing a tremendous royalty bill they're unlikely to be able to afford (thanks to everyone who sent this in). That last link goes through the impact of all of this on various players -- and it's not pretty. The new rates pretty much decimate a large portion of the industry. And, it's only going to get worse, as the royalty rates increase at incredible rates ("2007's rate is a 37.5% increase over 2006; 2008 and 2009's annual increases are about 28% per year; and 2010 adds another 5.5% increase.") Of course, this is utterly backwards and damaging to the industry itself. A webcaster (especially the smaller, independent ones) is a great means of promotion for artists. It tends to attract more loyal and well-targeted audiences, who are more likely to want to later go out and buy a CD, a t-shirt or attend a concert. It lets the industry better promote material from a wider range of artists. However, in the industry's desperate need to charge for every single use, they're effectively killing off yet another wonderful promotional vehicle. The industry continues to think that it needs to do this because it wants to own all distribution and promotional avenues in order to be able to continue to take its large cut. However, that's no reason for the Copyright Royalty Board to put in place these artificial barriers that only serve to protect the recording industry's outdated understanding of its own business model. help save internet radio form the scumbags who ruined FM radio and other mediums online petition against riaa changes http://www.petitiononline.com/SIR2007r/petition.html msg to congress http://capwiz.com/congressorg/sbx/f/?aid=9461656&r=1 |
||
Facebook hashtags:
#100greatestprogrockchallenge #scottssongbysong #scottsspotlight |
||
yarstruly
Forum Senior Member Joined: September 29 2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1322 |
Posted: April 19 2007 at 15:03 | |
And another link......
|
||
Facebook hashtags:
#100greatestprogrockchallenge #scottssongbysong #scottsspotlight |
||
Post Reply | |
Forum Jump | Forum Permissions You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum |