Warner Music: Where's The Conversation?
from the let's-talk dept
Last week, we broke the story about a presentation being given to various universities about a music "tax" plan. The plan presented wasn't any different from what Jim Griffin (who was hired by Warner to pitch exactly this plan earlier this year) has talked about in the past -- but Warner Music Group was quick to contact us and distance itself from the presentation -- despite the title of the presentation announcing that this was Warner Music Group's plan, and two full slides of "comments from WMG," with one of those slides suggesting people contact Griffin at WMG for more info.This week, a bunch of news organizations reported on the story -- with some, such as the the Chronicle of Higher Education, just repeating what was already known, while a few added to the story. Wired discovered that the planned name of the organization that would handle the "distribution" of funds would be Choruss. It also found out that EMI and Sony BMG have already signed onto the plan, along with Warner, which initiated it. Universal Music is the major label that's still holding out. Apparently independent labels are able to join up, as well, but the terms aren't at all clear yet.
Portfolio stepped up with its own discussion of the topic, highlighting a key point that I made to the Warner Music rep who called me: this conversation should be public. My conversation with Warner Music was off-the-record at their request, but I tried to defend posting the presentation by noting that this information should be discussed among all the stakeholders, rather than settled in a backroom deal like so many efforts by the recording industry. Otherwise, the parties that are left out of the discussion (generally, consumers) are going to get screwed.
In Jim Griffin's response to my post, he complained that: "At this early stage, many ideas may be discussed and discarded, but efforts to prematurely label or criticize the process only hinder achievement of constructive solutions." I would say back, that, at this early stage, if ideas are being discussed and discarded, why not bring everyone here into the conversation, so that we don't feel like the fix has been put on us after the "finished product" is finally announced from high atop RIAA-mountain? We're more than willing to help, right here on Techdirt.
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Filed Under: conversation, jim griffin, licensing, music, music tax, open
Companies: warner music group
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It would make
It would make my week if I found out that they cared about it and understood.
It would make my month if they took the advice and followed it through.
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Constructive criticism
Has Jim Griffin never heard of constructive criticism? Sure, much of the public feedback would be in the banal "Not one cent!" vein, but I'm sure there'd be plenty of helpful, insightful comments as well. Just because you are receiving criticism, doesn't mean that it can't be constructive.
Is this guy afraid of his feelings being hurt by his ideas being labeled or criticized? If that's not it, the only other logical explanation is that he knows the whole plan is actually worthy of criticism rather than just its implementation ("solution") details.
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Justifiable Piracide
How is it that the people with the money are never part of the discussion? Shouldn't the money represent some power?
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Here Here
I agree @Hulser apparently someone is afraid to get their feelings hurt.
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http://avondalestyle.blogspot.com/
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A 10-year old problem with 80-year old solution
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Gladly, if it is voluntary
- is voluntary
- makes all licensees immune to prosecution
- allows downloading and uploading using the protocol of the licensee's choice
- is priced reasonably
I would GLADLY pay a fee for the convenience.
If this is an involuntary, prop-up-the-failing-businesses tax that still leaves me open to prosecution, I will outright refuse to pay and join anyone in protesting this to the highest levels.
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Re: Constructive criticism
RIAA: Does this plan result in more $ for the same amount of effort?
Consumer: No.
RIAA: The idea is rubbish. How could you possible expect us to get the same, let alone LESS compensation for existing work?
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Re: Gladly, if it is voluntary
I would take out the voluntary part if the money goes directly to artists and promotion of arts. Start an academy. Recruit established artists as professors+content creators. Admit budding artists as students or interns.
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Huge risk
The problem with this music tax is of course that it legitimizes the so-called "pirate" sources of music. So, you're going to, in effect, train college students that it's OK to download as much music as they want from anywhere they can get it, but as soon as they throw their mortor board up in the air, they'll have to start buying CDs and paying for downloads from iTunes? Yeah, that'll work.
Given the history of the label's actions, I would think that they wouldn't want any part of that risk. From their perspective, it would seem to undermine their whole sue-the-consumer business model. Every day that this music tax model is in effect at the univirsity level, but not the commercial level, it would just undermine more their current commercial business model.
I guess it just does to show that the music labels really are ready to try something different. It just so happens to be something as illconcieved as all of their previous ideas.
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Snore...
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Re: Snore...
Now I use Torrent and Tor. Granted, I don't even dignify the RIAA with a download.
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Weak Ideas
Trying to spring a fully developed idea on the public as a finished project is almost guaranteed to be a failure UNLESS you manage to slip it into place quickly and quietly so that no one notices.
In this case the universities have noticed. They will be the ones who have to pay the bills. Yes, they can have music fees to pass on to their students, but students are already under huge financial stresses, and most universities are not going to be eager to pass those costs on.
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Problems?
If you're a deaf student do you still have to pay the fee?
It says the students have the freedom to share music on any application on any network. Wouldn't hosting more music increase downloading by people off campus?
If were paying for this is the music industry going to verify that the files are clean and good quality?
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So why not cut to the chase?
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something, something - Eggs
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tax
1 voluntary
2 music can be used for any net purpose videos on youtube to P2P net radio included.
3 with this the removal of any prosecution threats past and present.
4 is set at below say $5 per month or 5euros or £5 for people in europe and UK not sure for Australia they wont be allowed internet access soon.
then i would agree to this being implemented throughout the industry not just students.
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You know...
bbb
wheatus.com
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