touche

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Zamtuk
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touche

Post by Zamtuk »

http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/biztech/09 ... index.html

This is too funny. I hope they win this case.
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Sionistic
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Post by Sionistic »

Not that funny, i mean when the industry is getting embaresed every single week, it kinda gets old :)
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masteen
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Post by masteen »

The Recording Industry Association of America called Sharman's "newfound admiration for the importance of copyright law" ironic and "self-serving."
The irony of that statement is fucking killing me!
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Sionistic
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Post by Sionistic »

hehe you noticed that little gem too huh?
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kyoukan
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Post by kyoukan »

lol fuck the recording industry for trying to protect their property and investments.
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masteen
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Post by masteen »

kyoukan wrote:lol fuck the recording industry for trying to protect their property and investments.
It's ironic because they're the ones who first manipulated copyright laws in their favor, and they're the most self-serving industry in existance. Turnabout and all that.
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kyoukan
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Post by kyoukan »

what copyright laws did they manipulate and how did they manipulate them?
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Post by Kylere »

NO YOU CANNOT TOUCH ME NO MATTER HOW FRENCH YOU PRONOUNCE IT!!!



(preedit, yeah yeah I know what touche is, and how to pronounce it, but I am bored)
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masteen
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Post by masteen »

IIRC, they pioneered laws to allow them to buy a song in perpetuity without having to give the author a cut beyond the duration of their contract.
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kyoukan
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Post by kyoukan »

Ive never heard of a recording artist who doesn't make royalties off songs even decades after the fact.
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Post by Krimson Klaw »

Kyoukan, TLC for example got their royalties (very small for an up and coming group) upfront and ended up filing for bankruptcy even though they had the number one R&B album in the country. Bad business decision on their part? Maybe, it's a tricky call to make for a band just starting out. A no brainer for an established artist though.
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kyoukan
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Post by kyoukan »

That isn't copyright law though; that would be signing a contract without a decent lawyer looking over it first.
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Post by Fairweather Pure »

It doesn't matter who's right or who's wrong. The recording industry is going to lose in the end. Hell, they lost the day Napster was a household name. They're just delaying the inevitable.
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Post by Fallanthas »

Hrm, don't I remember that artists lose rights to a piece if they don't perform or use the song in some way after 15 years?

Seems I remember comments about Jimmy Buffet just hanging on to the song 'Mexico' by recording it himself just short of the deadline.
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Post by Chmee »

Shouldn't be because of basic copyright I don't think Fallanthas.

Basic copyright for anything created January 1, 1978 or before is life of the author plus 70 years (before that it looks like it is a bit more complicated see http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ15a.html for details).

Of course, since copyright establishes the work as the property of the author, they can sell it and there could be a stipulation like that in the contract.
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