YouTube To Block Music Videos In the UK 161
ChunKing writes "YouTube is to block all premium music videos to UK users after failing to reach a new licensing agreement with the Performing Rights Society. For many of us in the UK this is great news. The two main music licensing agencies in the UK — Phonographic Performance Limited and PRS — have a stranglehold on music use in this country and are stifling creativity."
New 404 message: (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
It looks to me like the PRS needs Google more than Google needs them. Hopefully Google will refuse to show any more of their dross until they can come back with some reasonable and sensible licensing terms for all their music.
The most ridiculous part is that the PRS apparently can't even tell Google which artists would be covered by their licence. If they don't know who they're representing then how are the artists ever going to get any money from them ? Totally ridiculous !
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
"Great news?" (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:"Great news?" (Score:5, Informative)
Re:"Great news?" (Score:4, Insightful)
Public awareness might well be a good thing.
It's quite common to see PRS stickers on the instrument cases of amateur musicians. Presumably the logic is "I'm a performer. I support the society that protects my right to perform.". The "Performing Rights Society", right? PRS encourages that misunderstanding with the slogan "keep music live".
So it's good to spread the word that that is not what this organisation is about. This is the organisation that lobbies for more grasping application of copyright law. They're the ones that want you to buy a license just to have a radio in your workplace. They're the ones want it to be illegal to perform Happy Birthday in a public place without the premises having a license.
They campaign to restrict the rights of performers, not protect them.
Re: (Score:2)
>>>They're the ones that want you to buy a license just to have a radio in your workplace
You're joking. It's bad enough the UK makes you "rent" your television set, but now you have a license on radio too??? Frak that. The airwaves belong to the People, collectively, and we don't need to rent our own property.
Re:"Great news?" (Score:5, Interesting)
You're joking. It's bad enough the UK makes you "rent" your television set, but now you have a license on radio too???
Actually I support the TV license. Most people get more value back for that than they get in return - not only BBC TV, but also its web content, radio, podcasts etc.
The PRS radio-in-the-workplace thing is another matter. They consider that if a customer hears music coming from a radio (or CD player, whatever) that it counts as a 'public performance'.
The insulting thing with radio in particular is that they've already been paid for the content by the broadcaster.
Looking on the bright side, PRS is doing what it's meant to do: lobbying for those it represents; copyright holders. It's government's job to slap them down when they ask too much.
And back on topic: it's Google's right as their customer to say "no thanks, the price is too high, come back when you're cheaper".
Re: (Score:1)
He's not joking.
But it's not a license to own the radio, it's the right to have it on in a shop or office, or anywhere where people can hear it that isn't for personal use.
Yes, it's ambiguous. Yes, it's pretty unenforcable. Yes, there are enough loopholes that I think a lot of people wouldn't even pay lip service to the idea. Yes, it's ridiculous but it's there as long as people are paying it
Re: (Score:2)
It's quite common to see PRS stickers on the instrument cases of amateur musicians.
Perhaps some of those "PRS stickers" on those instrument cases might be about what's *inside* [prsguitars.com] those cases?
Just sayin'.
Strat
Re: (Score:2)
Except that the logos are completely dissimilar, and it's seen on violin cases as well as guitar-like instruments.
Re: (Score:2)
The slogan "keep music live" dates back to the early days of sequencers, and the stickers were branded Musician's Union, not PRS. The band I was in through most of the 90s used to have one on our... erm... sequencer flight case.
Choco ration is going up again... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I dunno, but at least UK users will stop posting me youtube links that I can't watch. If only the RIAA manages to get the same thing done, then soon I won't have to worry about music vids I can't watch ever again.
@google: would it *kill* you to at least give me the title of the video I can't watch. srsly
Every cloud.... (Score:5, Funny)
At least i won't be able to be rick rolled now
Re: (Score:1, Informative)
They said "Premium".
Re:Every cloud.... (Score:5, Funny)
At least i won't be able to be rick rolled now
Wrong. Guess what you get if you try to view a blocked vid.
youtube...hulu... (Score:3, Insightful)
Anarchy in the UK? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
What's going on is:
And voila, we have finally solved the underpant gnomes' quandry and sold our individual nation states down the to
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
They thought 1984 was an instruction manual.
Their own fault (Score:5, Interesting)
Record industry (or their representative in some manner) gets stroppy, demands multiples of the usual licensing fee.
Google tells them to get stuff (made $7bn last year by NOT caving in to people like you)
Record industry up in arms, tries to gather sympathy
Everybody else in the UK goes on Youtube to look for the latest Rhianna, finds it's still online, it's just certain "official" and HD versions that you're missing, and carries on as normal (or, at worst, moves to a better video place if they REALLY want high-quality music videos).
Google carries on making $7bn a year
Record industry misses out on a share of Google's IMMENSE revenues.
Artists revolt and put their work on Youtube themselves.
Seriously, is it just me or is the record industry TRYING to commit commercial suicide?
Re: (Score:1, Insightful)
(made $7bn last year by NOT caving in to people like you)
That's a nice way of saying "gets away with murder because it's the new Microsoft." When Google bought YouTube, everybody wondered why they were taking on that huge liability. People made the mistake of thinking that Google would be held to the same standards as other web sites. You should try hosting millions of videos without first clearing the copyrights. Google negotiates after the fact and the only punishment is that it has to change its ways if the deal doesn't happen. You try that.
The Pirate Bay is o
Re:Their own fault (Score:5, Insightful)
Man, such an ignorant post.
Google barely scratches a profit from youtube currently. That $7 billion profit your crying about is from other aspects of the company, not form advertising on youtube.
Google negotiates after the fact because they are big enough that other companies can't exploit them. It's not murder, it's user generated content. It's not Google throwing up those videos. Google if anything, is inadvertently acting as a wall currently, between users and corporations trying to squash the information paradigm shift.
Sure they're making billions in return, that's what companies do. If they weren't making it, someone else would be.
Re: (Score:1)
That $7 billion profit your crying about is from other aspects of the company, not form advertising on youtube.
You mean Google did NOT make "$7bn last year by NOT caving in to people like you." and "ledow" ignorantly made that connection just to express his Google-is-the-savior argument?
It's not Google throwing up those videos.
I wrote "hosting", not publishing. Again, you try that. The Pirate Bay isn't even hosting copyrighted material, but they get dragged in front of a judge.
It's not murder, it's user generated content
No, it's called an expression.
Re: (Score:1, Interesting)
YouTube became a big player in the sense that they got the attention but did not have any liquidity worth suing for. The question back then was why someone with enough resources to be an interesting litigation target would buy something so obviously in muddy legal waters. The "user generated content" defense was bandied about back then, but clearly that's not what it's about. You can still make your own videos and use music that is royalty free (CC, PD, DIY).
Re: (Score:1)
Yeah, but that's the problem - the someone else should be the artist / originator. OK, that's the pipedream, but the fact is that the PRS is a non-profit organisation that collects royalties for musicians (not very efficiently these days, it has to be said), and YouTube / Google _are_ taking money out of their pocket.
Yes, it's shortsighted of the PRS to block YouTube, especially since they have no viable alternative, and the PRS has a very haphazard ap
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
No... my point is that $7bn means that they can ENTIRELY abandon music videos (and, thus, enforce a policy to remove music videos from YouTube) and not even care. In fact, they would probably make MORE money through less hassles. None of that $7bn came from people paying Google to look at music videos, except a TINY, TINY proportion of Google's ad earnings which are probably FAR outweighed by the licensing required for them. But I bet some of those ads fund the record industry indirectly (e.g. a CD-Wow a
Re: (Score:2)
Anonymous Coward write:
>>>The Pirate Bay is on trial for making money by furthering copyright infringement, yet here you are, touting a $7 billion profit as if that were something Google earned as a defender of fair business?
>>>
I suspect the poster "AC" would be better represented by the initials "RIAA". Obvious shill.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Is it just me or were Music Videos given away free as adverts for the product at one time... when did they become the product?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Their own fault (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I have an idea...
How about Google stops indexing their web pages and removes them from their database. Oh yeah and deprecate their advertisement down a few tiers so they get even less hits. I'm sure the RIAA and its international clones would consider this evil but the rest of us would relish an internet without their bullshit. Oh or make searching the RIAA direct to http://recordingindustryvspeople.blogspot.com/ [blogspot.com] instead as the top hit.
Big hand for the PRS! (Score:4, Insightful)
Well done for now forcing people onto sharing sites to pick up ripped DVDs!
Well done for forcing people to go to dodgy malware ridden proxy sites to get around Google's stupid IP range blocking!
Well done for screwing the lesser known and poorer artists who really do get benefit from appearing on YouTube vids, getting some recognition and maybe a handful of those really important sales to keep going.
Big round of applause!
Re: (Score:2)
Just Say "No !" (or "Cancel" at least) (Score:2)
1. Clear out your cookies
2. Go to YouTube
3. It says "You haven't set your country. You appear to come from the UK. 'OK' or 'Cancel' ?"
4. Click 'Cancel'
5. ???
6. Profit !
Kids can do that no probs without having to mess with proxies or anything.
(And yes, the 'blocking' is as brain-dead as that.)
Re: (Score:2)
If not in youtube then in some other site... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
MTV/VH1 are paying the copyright holders the licensing fees they demand.
So is "some other site" (unless it is breaking copyright law)
Simplified it goes like this:
PRS: You are currently paying $0.001 per play of our videos. Now we want $0.01.
YouTube: Since we get less than $0.01 per play in average revenue, we can't pay you that much. What's your next offer?
PRS: If you want the videos, that's what you have to pay
YouTube: OK, we won't have the videos then
PRS: Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
Re:If not in youtube then in some other site... (Score:4, Insightful)
YouTube: OK, we won't have the videos then
PRS: Waaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
Yup. Then again its all about posturing. Google is making the point, a bit like Apple did with iTunes, that they don't have to provide their content, getting the other party to realise how little negotiating clout they really have.
The PRS needs to stop whining. (Score:1)
Uhm, guys... You are the ones responsible for the songwriters. youTube have no obligation to them. They have a certain obligation to their own customers, but only as long as serving their customers is profitable for them. They have no obligation to make a net loss.
youTube have shown that they don't need the PRS. The PRS doesn't absolutely need youTube either but i
UK music fans lose again... (Score:4, Informative)
Services such as Pandora.com, MySpace UK and Imeem have also had issues securing licence deals in the UK in the past 12 months.
The Pandora fiasco is particularly annoying for UK music fans. I was poised to become a subscriber and pay a very reasonable fee to listen to music tailored for my tastes. Instead Pandora were forced to pull the plug in the UK, so everybody loses. Pandora lose subscription funds and advertising, the artists lose income from potential UK subscribers and Pandora adverts, and the listeners lose out on the chance to hear great music.
Actually, the PRS don't seem to be losing out. How strange.
Re: (Score:2)
Actually, Pandora 'pulled the plug' on anyone accessing the site from ANYWHERE outside of the US (and possibly Canada?). I'm in the same boat as you are, here in Australia. Used to love Pandora, but now ... no love :(
Anyway, point is, Pandora becoming US-only had nothing to do with UK authorities/organisations. It happened purely due to American laws/regulations.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
In the UK, IIRC it was again related to unreasonably high fee demands, and the arrogant assumption that Pandora would be happy to operate at a loss
Screw Pandora ! (Score:2)
We Brits have got Spotifyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy [wikipedia.org] !!!
Re:UK music fans lose again... (Score:4, Insightful)
Yeah, that's what I don't get. Services like Pandora are free advertising and generate sales for the music industry. So do music videos on YouTube.
Why in the HELL do they always seem to want to hinder or shut down these services? Don't they see that it is just free marketing for them?
Strangehold on creativity? (Score:2)
In fact, you can produce your own version of anything that is out of copyright and do exactly what you want with it. Anything you created, you can assign the copyright to anyone you like. You can play it on local radio, post it to YouTube, sell your own CDs, and you can tell the PRS to go reproduce itself off. So how does this inhibit creativity?
the what? (Score:3, Funny)
For a moment I read:
The Pornographic Performance Limited has a stranglehold on music use in England?
I almost spit my coffee.
Re: (Score:2)
Well, have you SEEN some of the stuff those singers wear nowadays? Not that I have!!!..uh....what?
Re:the what? (Score:4, Insightful)
Congratulations, you are the one millionth slashdotter to have cracked this joke.
Still, isn't it nice to know that in an ever changing technological landscape, one thing can always be depended on to surface in a slashdot thread regarding music licencing.
So let me get this straight (Score:1)
From now on, the only music we in the UK are allowed to show our friends is the music NOT controlled by these people?
So the only way you can legally hear music that these people want you to pay for is either on the radio or by borrowing the CD from someone?
Can we still legally borrow CDs?
Irrespective of that, it's been years since I paid for music, for the simple reason that if they don't want me to hear it before I buy it, then I'm going to hear it and not buy it, because I hate them now.
So they want us, w
Re: (Score:2)
Can we still legally borrow CDs?
Yes, but it's an offence for anyone to lend you theirs.
Re: (Score:2)
From now on, the only music we in the UK are allowed to show our friends is the music NOT controlled by these people?
The problem is, as unpleasantly monopolistic as these organisations are, if you want to get paid royalties for a musical composition, they're your only realistic option.
Licensees want a one-stop clearing house. They don't want to negotiate a license soup.
It's easy to roll your own license and sell downloads to private customers. But claiming royalties for public performances, radio play etc. is something you really have to go to the PRS for.
Tor - we may as well get used to the speed. (Score:1)
Not just Youtube (Score:5, Informative)
Long-standing idiocy (Score:4, Insightful)
The PRS is guilty of long-standing idiocy. In one celebrated incident [express.co.uk] a few months back, they attempted to fine a garage owner £2,000 unless his customers turned off their car radios before driving onto his premises.
This thing is absolutely fine with me. I've never watched music videos on Youtube, but I don't for a moment imagine that the kids who did will be queuing up to stuff fistfuls of fivers in the PRS's pockets in some other way. Instead they'll turn to piracy or give up on music and play with Facebook.
In due course, big media will realise that their so-called guardians are actually their enemies and they'll fire them. But, by then, there might not be a music industry that's worthy of the name. It'll be a well-deserved outcome.
Oblig (Score:3, Insightful)
PRS Show Inneptitude (Score:4, Insightful)
I know it's not 'the done thing', but I RTFA. Lord knows, the BBC aren't famed for their excellent technology journalism, but even they managed to show how incredibly stupid and "woe is me" the PRS are.
In the article, the PRS say that they've been pleading with Google to re-instate the videos in the UK. Google of course basically say the PRS made it too expensive for them. The PRS carry on acting like they're the ones who've been kicked in the teeth, and say that Google doesn't want to pay more, "despite the massive increase in YouTube viewing". Of course, as we know, video-views only cost Google money - and only ad-clicks actually make them anything.
So just because a video gets viewed lots of times means nothing - it's how many ad-clicks you get that counts.
However, where a music video is concerned, those views may, in a small number of cases, lead to the viewer deciding to buy that music or video. Of course, Google make nothing out of that sale, but the PRS does.
So the PRS is saying they want Google to pay them for advertising their product, regardless of how much money Google makes or loses from doing so.
So in this story, Google is the closest thing to a representative of the music buying public that we have. The PRS really serves itself, and to a lesser extent the music producers. As a consumer, I'm quite happy with Google's choice - if people don't want to sell me music, then I won't buy it. If someone else on the Internet wants to show me those videos instead, then maybe I'll go there, maybe I won't.
However, if I was a producer, I'd probably be rather upset by the PRS's actions (although given the spin the PRS is putting on this, the producers are probably blaming Google).
Re: (Score:2)
However, if I was a producer, I'd probably be rather upset by the PRS's actions (although given the spin the PRS is putting on this, the producers are probably blaming Google).
Everything you write is correct in spirit. But to nitpick - I think PRS represents songwriters, not producers. I think they license songs rather than recordings.
The marginal cost... (Score:2)
However, when multiplied by significant numbers of users (10s of millions in the case of Youtube), this actually does turn into a real number that is larger than zero.
If the PRS is unwilling to work with a distribution model that they can collect some small royalty on (revenue collected from ads), people will find other methods of getting the same content at the marginal cost (which rounded down equals zero).
TL;DR Don't
Not very effective block (Score:2)
YouTube do not seem to be doing a very good job of blocking music videos. I am in the UK, using a UK ISP and have just watched 2 music videos uploaded by the artists, and 3 uploaded by two different record labels (Universal Music and Quinlan Road). Also there are several music videos uploaded by 'ordinary' YouTube members.
Aren't music videos advertising? (Score:2)
I thought the whole point of music videos used to be that they were glorified ads to get you out there buying music and tickets to shows.
Has that changed or have they forgotten?
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Huh wot ? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
With any Slashdot discussion concerning Britain, it's only a matter of time before somebody mentions Godwin.
Fixed that for ya.
Re: (Score:1)
And who finished off Hitler anyway:-)
Re: (Score:1, Funny)
ummm. Hitler?
Re: (Score:2)
And who finished off Hitler anyway:-)
The Red Army, next question.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Huh wot ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Nonetheless I still think he'd be miffed that they're taking his works as instruction manuals rather than warnings.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Amusingly enough, the propensity to unthinkingly invoke Orwell is akin to his concept of duckspeak. Reading multiple +5 Insightful "1984 wasn't an instruction manual maaaan" posts in a single Brit-related topic makes me wonder about the duckmods though. Perhaps it's hard to peck out the -1 Overrated with a bill?
Re: (Score:2)
Mod parent up. Couldn't have said it better...
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Socialism - Statism = ?
Re: (Score:2)
Socialism - Statism = ?
tv that you pay for monthly but that doesn't watch you in return
Re:Huh wot ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Tell them they can't watch there favourite music videos due to "money issues", they'll cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war.
Re: (Score:2)
Brave New World (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
1. MTV is almost 30 years old. Times change, old timer, and youtube != MTV. If youtube receives a request for removal by a copyright holder, they do so (see Viacom). The thing is, most companies/artists/organizations want to give their media away because the advertising they receive by being on youtube is worth it.
2. As many others have noted, youtube does not make much money off these videos. Distribution costs for youtube are higher than for MTV, and the adve
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
4. Google take down music videos from YouTube
5. PRS start whining that having the videos removed from YouTube is a bad thing for the artists.
It sounds to me like PRS want (a) Google to advertise their product for them, and (b) Google to pay them for the privilege.
Re: (Score:2)
That's precisely what the PRS do.
eg. if you own a cafe and put a radio on, you must pay the PRS even though the radio station has *already* paid them. You're paying for something that has been already paid, merely to advertise on behalf of the PRS.
Garage owners have been sued because customers left their car stereos on too loud. Workplaces have been sued because a member of the public 'might' overhear their portable radio. Hell, venues have been sued *even when they only play live music from local artist
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You know I'd be with PRS here but for 2 things:
1) It's Google's right to choose not to show the content if they're not prepared to pay the bill
2) PRS isn't able to say who it represents. As soon as it says this that is as good as an admission that it isn't passing the money onto the artists in the way that it claims that it does.
Re: (Score:2)
It's nice to see some sensible, non AC comments on this thread. Basically, some companies get a lot of money from giving away other people's content for free. When they get called on it, they don a Robin Hood costume. If the artists themselves want to give away their stuff for free, they can.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
That's nothing - I read it as PPL, which sounds quite similar to the abbreviation for Phase-Locked Loop. Oh, how we laughed !
Re: (Score:2)
I prefer tatu.ru [wikipedia.org].
Re: (Score:2)
The increased youtube traffic alone should not be used as basis for a greedy PRS rate hike. The whole ad revenue market is down across the board, so the value of ads displayed in music video context is comparatively lower than it might have been say a year ago, and so when the bandwidth has been paid for, quite conceivably google is being absolutely truthful when they argue that the proposed PRS tariffs would in fact make unsustainable the business of displaying that content to the UK audience.
In any case,
Re: (Score:2)
Because that's the law they lobbied for. It's the same for SoundXchange in the USA.