Facebook Offers Hundreds of Millions of Dollars for Music Rights (bloomberg.com) 84
Facebook is offering major record labels and music publishers hundreds of millions of dollars so the users of its social network can legally include songs in videos they upload, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday. From the report: The posting and viewing of video on Facebook has exploded in recent years, and many of the videos feature music to which Facebook doesn't have the rights. Under current law, rights holders must ask Facebook to take down videos with infringing material. Music owners have been negotiating with Facebook for months in search of a solution, and Facebook has promised to build a system to identify and tag music that infringes copyrights. Yet such a setup will take as long as two years to complete, which is too long for both sides to wait, said the people, who asked not to be named discussing details that aren't public. Facebook is eager to make a deal now so that it no longer frustrates users, by taking down their videos; partners, by hosting infringing material; or advertisers, with the prospect of legal headaches. The latest discussions will ensure Facebook members can upload video with songs just as it's rolling out Watch, a new hub for video, and funding the production of original series. Facebook is attempting to attract billions of dollars in additional advertising revenue and challenge YouTube as the largest site for advertising-supported video on the web.
DACA (Score:1)
DACA......is CACA
Re: DACA (Score:1)
Yes MAGA fuck DACA.
Business Opportunity (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't understand all of these companies in a rush to try to put a stop to people who want to do free marketing for them.
Re:Business Opportunity (Score:5, Insightful)
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The music labels don't want you to buy the song on Amazon or iTunes, they want you to pay $1M for the right to use it in your 'work' AND charge the end-user $10 every time they hear it.
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People are already doing that with Youtube.
"Free Marketing" is almost worthless, Sound is already "OFF" by default on my machine and I run ad blockers as well as an extensive host file. And this is a growing tend. Browsers are comping with the ability of have sound off individualized for web sites as well as autoplay videos being stopped by site.
Cash is King, especially when pitted
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The music industry as a whole has changed. The big corporations haven't figured that out yet. All they know is they're hemorrhaging the money they used to make and they don't know why. For years the game was simple. Find decent artist, preferably young and exploitable, sign artist into lopsided contract in return for putting up capital to record, and pay radio to play the crap out of single until millions of copies sold. If artist pisses you off, air play stops and artist goes away. They had control of
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Why should they be, won't to play and record music, have fun, why should my tax dollars pay protect you imaginary monopoly, serious money, get a real job flipping burgers and play and record in you spare time for fun, with hundreds of millions able to exactly the same and self publish on the internet, why should tax payers spend hundreds of millions dollars to create a false monopoly at the expense of free speech and this without properly proving the social worth of the content and paying for that social va
I wish youtube would do that... (Score:4, Interesting)
There -really- needs to be a licensing regime where popular commercial music can be used on user's videos, and for the creator of the music and the creator of the video to share the ad revenue. On my videos I do not use commercial music (I license royalty free music, which is like finding a needle in a haystack in terms of finding a good match for your piece) so that I may monetize the videos, but every once in a while I would love to use a piece of pop music or a film score in a video. It would be great if I can just do it, and then the artist / publisher gets a cut depending on the length used.
Right now if a video has a copyrighted song in it, the publisher can either claim the whole video, or take it down. It's all or nothing. I don't believe there is a revenue sharing option, which would make everyone happy and allow for an explosion of creativity.
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I can see some artists being against it completely though. If I were a musician I probably wouldn'
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Because all original works have inspiration from some other work. Here's sort of an extreme example, but if we can find something on which we can agree, we can argue inward from that point:
You had no part in creating the English language. Why do you feel entitled to distribute and share the revenue of works in this language?
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The English language is old enough that even if there were initial copyright, it no longer exists. Copyright only exists on pieces that are ~40-100 years old (depending on your jurisdiction and how well a rights holder has kept up with the paperwork).
The reason copyright exists is to allow people to profit of their art when performing it in public. You get great leeway as it is with modern licensing schemes and fair use laws, if you want to embed the digits in your work, then talk to the creator and get a r
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The English language is old enough that even if there were initial copyright, it no longer exists.
In other words, you agree that it's desirable to rely on copyright eventually expiring. I'll have to wait to see whether Train0987 agrees with this.
talk to the creator and get a revenue sharing deal going, it's not that hard.
How would this work for an individual amateur video producer who has no revenue in the first place?
And are there request forms? Or if a free-form contact method such as email is preferred, what elements should a successful request include?
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I do agree that copyright eventually expires.
It's called investment in your business. Everyone on Youtube hopes to hit it big, so if you want a big name soundtrack, you have to invest and pay the license fee.
For most record companies or even many individual musicians and bands, you can find sales or licensing information right on their website. If not, contact them and say what you want to do and what you can offer (doesn't have to be money). Small bands and individual musicians will often allow you to use
Good luck getting a label to reply (Score:2)
larger companies often want a deal and exchange of money.
Provided they even reply in the first place. Other comments to this story, such as this comment [slashdot.org], report that record labels (which control master rights) and music publishers (which control sync rights) have a habit of ignoring licensing inquiries entirely.
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Because in most cases it's a waste of time and money to respond to licensing inquiries you won't be able to afford or even to negotiate small deals.
But if you want cheap licensing, there are plenty of small fry audio licensing websites out there. Many photographers use it for wedding videos and the like. You can even get some sites (songfreedom.com) that do pop songs licenses starting at ~$20/mo. But again, if you're a big channel and want to use big names, be prepared to spend big money.
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Nobody feels entitled to anything. It's a simple statement of physical fact that when you release something to the public you have no control over its use anymore. You are angry because 2+3=5 and 5 isn't your favorite number. That's basically what the digital media argument comes down to.
Your only option is to ask some people with guns to help you get some money. What most "pirates" say is that you don't have to go that far but no one offers a middle ground.
That's where we are. And the "pirates" are st
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Because nothing is taken.
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The exclusivity pursuant to TRIPS is taken, and all WTO member states are required to recognize the exclusivity pursuant to TRIPS.
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"If I were a musician I probably wouldn't care how much money I'm making if a group of racial nationalists (or some other group of people, say PETA for example, I just think are assholes for that matter) are using my work as part of their message."
I think this issue is largely overblown. If some joker uses a song I wrote, I would hope my fans are smart enough to figure out that I don't necessarily agree with someone just because they used my song.
You can release your art to the world or keep it all to your
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I create an exact copy of your car and drive it. What have you lost?
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Music is a big part of our culture and, thanks to Disney and the RIAA, it's locked up perpetually.
There's nothing to stop musicians from releasing works to the world independent of organizations like Disney and the RIAA, in fact professional quality recording, mixing and mastering is more affordable and accessible than ever before. The internet provides a mechanism for distribution that is much more affordable and accessible than the previous physical distribution mechanisms. The majority of musicians, songwriters, producers, etc, will sell out to corporate music where possible because that guarantees t
Ringgold v. BET (Score:2)
Then the author of that video failed to adhere to industry-standard set dressing practices. See Ringgold v. BET, 126 F.3d 70 (2d Cir. 1997) [ncac.org].
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the author of that video [which included a radio playing nonfree music] failed to adhere to industry-standard set dressing practices.
What industry?
I was referring to the television industry.
It's people sharing cell phone videos of their friends and family
The same laws apply to all people.
You must be a fucking riot at parties
You assume I behave this way at parties. I do not. I behave this way in discussions about copyright on Internet forums, such as Slashdot and certain project pages of Wikipedia and Wikimedia Commons.
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"Sure, you can use our company's music through giving our company a cut. Toward this end, our company sets 'a cut' at half our company's market capitalization. By the way, that's tens of billions of U.S. dollars."
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Because the record labels forced it on me by paying radio stations to play it.
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Useless advice. Most people including copyrighted music in their uploaded videos are not professional content creators, and are simply uploading videos of themselves dancing to a song, or a video of a live performance they were at, or some other content where the copyrighted material is an integral part of the video.
Also, most copyright-free music is, in a word,
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Why don't FM radio stations do the same and play royalty-free music?
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So let me get this straight: Record labels are paying radio stations to pollute the minds of members of the public with familiarity with nonfree musical works.
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I don't know what they do now, but yes, once upon a time payola [wikipedia.org] was quite widespread. I presume that there's some sort of workaround to get away with it.
On a slightly different topic, I once got to go to a video game launch party. I've been having quite a lot of annoyance with the 10 point game review scale, and when I had a little bit too much time on my hands, I put in one sites review scores into a spreadsheet, and basically arrived at a bell curve with a median of 8 and average of ... 7.5. It basically
Asset flips (Score:2)
Perhaps the bottom half of the point scale is for asset flips [wikia.com] and other comparably bad material.
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There were some pretty bad cassette games on 8-bit home computers in Europe.
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Yes but there are some cases where a famous and relevant song just fits your video better.
False take downs (Score:3)
How about we just implement an equivalent fine for false take down notices as users face for willful infringement? If media companies can't just spam every video with background music as infringing without risking monetary damage they might simmer down a bit.
This is new? (Score:2)
About 2 years ago I uploaded a video to Facebook, and it was immediately flagged as containing audio that may be infringing and was removed. I'm surprised to hear that this is new since they apparently had this ability years ago.
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The real question is (Score:2)
What will the artists receive from this agreement?
I'm guessing it won't be much, if anything.
Any good alternates? (Score:2)
Just Google it ... (Score:2)
... they need to pay Google to do this:
I took a video, 6 years ago, of a couple dancing after their wedding and put it up on YouTube and Sony sent me a take down notice!
All they did is use an algorithm similar to the app, What's That Song?" [apple.com]
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I shot a video of a wedding recently and overlaid American Authors - Best Day Of My Life over it. I then uploaded it to Youtube unlisted, and Facebook private open to tagged people only. In both cases there were people who couldn't see this private video shared among friends.
Did the "copyright infringement" stop? Nah, I simply put the file on Dropbox and sent everyone a download link. Also I sped it up slightly which caused Facebook's detection algorithm to fail (though it didn't fool Youtube)