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#11
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Re: buying promo cd's illegal? give me a break!
Re: Clubs
There is a license fee that clubs are supposed to be paying (much like a radio station) that gives them rights to broadcast the music. Obviously some (many?) clubs don't pay, or don't pay properly... but I think most labels turn a blind eye as it's free promotion (of a sort). Re:" ...if they don't , it could mean that every free cd, or item in the mail has to be returned, or you have to pay for it, even if you didn't want it etc." you can't honestly believe this. I doubt negative1 BELIEVES that - but if the ruling were to follow through (as implied by Universal), then it would TECHNICALLY mean they could ask people to return, pay etc. It would open a BIG can of worms that I think most music collectors (ironically - the same people propping up what's left of the crumbling physical disc sales market) would rather see left closed. And the comment about unsolicited is true. When I used to do radio and magazine reviews and stuff - I would request some promos and such, but I'd also be sent a bunch of discs without asking for them... people would find out from other labels, or published mags etc that I was covering a particular kind of music and send me stuff - technically I'd be liable for every crappy promo I never wanted (that has since gone the way of the charity-shop bins - no one wants crappy indie promos) that happened to have been properly labelled. It's laughable. And I think the fact that this case has been going on for a while, and no other label has jumped on the same bandwagon should be making Universal a little nervous at this stage... |
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#12
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Re: buying promo cd's illegal? give me a break!
Quote:
If the record company somehow does set a legal precedent that it's illegal to throw away unsolicited gifts if they have magic words written on them, I can imagine certain execs and lawyers might very quickly discover their houses full to the brim with promotional samples of manure that they can't legally dispose of. |
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#13
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Re: buying promo cd's illegal? give me a break!
Quote:
![]() In order to do this, the record industry would have to show why they deserved to be set apart as a "special case" in law, outside any other wholesale distributor or manufacturer, and that the doctrine of first sale doesn't apply to them. Alternately, they have to convince the court that the promos they send out are merely lent to the people receiving them. But as, it seems, not only are the promos unsolicited, but, further, there is nothing accompanying said promos to indicate that they must be returned to the company after use - no s.a.e.'s, no instructions about how to return them - they are on a sticky wicket with that one, imo. I think they are on a hiding to nothing, but record companies appear to have bottomless pockets for this kind of case, and prolly thought the guy would cave in the same way he seems to have done on the last occasion. What they evidently did not take into account when embarking on this frolic was that the EFF might take an interest and fund his case. I will be watching the outcome of this one very closely.
__________________
"If I can't dance, I don't want to be part of your revolution" - Emma Goldman |
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#14
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[update] -> Re: buying promo cd's illegal? give me a break!
good, it's about time (although it will probably be appealed)...
http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/28713 Judge rejects music industry's promo CD copyright claim In a major pushback against music industry efforts to expand copyright control at the expense of consumers, a California judge has ruled that recipients of promotional CDs are free to do with them as they please. In other words, what would seem obvious to the layman, in this case also happens to be the law. However, during a long-running legal battle that shut down an eBay seller, Universal Music Group had argued that it retained licensing rights and could prohibit such resale despite the fact that its promo CDs are distributed willy-nilly to thousands of music industry insiders who neither ask for them nor are not expected to return them. Tuesday's ruling by U.S. District Court Judge S. James Otero is meaningful not merely because it protects an income stream for CD resellers, says the Electronic Frontier Foundation, but primarily because it affirms the so-called "first sale" doctrine. .... The bottom line from the judge: "The promo CDs are unordered merchandise," Otero writes in his order (PDF). " ... By sending the promo CDs to music industry insiders, UMG transferred title to those insiders and the promo CDs are subject to the First Sale Doctrine." Read more at the link.. later -1 |
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#15
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Re: buying promo cd's illegal? give me a break!
Cool, thanks for the follow-up -1.
And yay for the upholding of First Sale Doctrine. It preserves so many rights that we all take for granted regarding copyrighted media. |
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