ASCAP, BMI Demanding Payment For 30 Second Previews At Web Stores

from the are-they-insane? dept

It's been really stunning to see just how little dignity groups like ASCAP and BMI have in trying to suck every last penny out of any kind of musical usage, without ever once considering the damage they're actually doing to songwriters. It's as if the folks who run these groups have no concept of the actual impact of their crazy demands. In just the last few months, we've seen them try to squeeze more money out of music video games -- apparently not comprehending how much those games help promote musicians and sell more product. Then there was the fancy trick, where they claimed that websites that embedded music videos from YouTube had to pay even though they were already getting paid by YouTube directly. They just wanted to get paid twice. And remember back in the summer when they claimed that the ringtone playing on your phone required a public performance license on top of the royalties already paid? They have no shame.

So, I guess it should come as no surprise at all to find out that their latest target is the 30 second previews that you hear on iTunes or Amazon.com. Yes, they're claiming that those 30 second previews should count as a public performance, and they want to get paid. Now. And they're asking Congress to make it happen -- because, as we've been learning recently, if you're inept at running an actual business, just go to the federal gov't and ask them to bail you out.

Rick Carnes, the head of the Songwriters Guild of America -- and who, we've been reliably informed, is a big fan of this site (that's sarcasm) after our previous articles debunking some of his more absurd claims -- explains the situation:
"Yesterday, I received a check for 2 cents. I'm not kidding. People think we're making a fortune off the Web, but it's a tiny amount. We need multiple revenue streams or this isn't going to work."
Talk about entitlement culture. Because Rick Carnes is unable to structure a smart business model, and thus makes pennies, everyone else needs to just cough up and pay? Yeah... that's reasonable. How about rather than trying to squeeze every penny out of everyone else (and then funnel it to the top artists instead of the smaller artists, anyway), you spend some time actually understanding basic business models -- such as ones where you convince someone that something's worth paying for, rather than just demanding Congress give you a cut of everything, in a way that harms the very musicians you claim to represent?

And, of course, as the article above notes, it's a flat-out lie that songwriters aren't getting paid for a lot of this stuff:
"These guys are afraid that the business model is shifting away from public performances to a model of private performances," [David] Potter [from the Digital Media Association (DiMA)] said. "This is a turf battle. They are saying, 'The songwriters aren't getting paid.' Baloney. Songwriters are getting paid. They're paid sync rights and (mechanical) rights. They aren't getting paid for the public performance in a download because there is no public performance in a download."
This is a pure money grab by people who don't want to come up with a business model demanding free cash from those who did come up with a better business model. They're blaming everyone else for their own unwillingness to adapt.
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Filed Under: performance fees, previews, rick carnes, songwriters
Companies: ascap, bmi


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  1. icon
    TriZz (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 9:42am

    Oops...

    I just sent this in to you guy...perhaps I should actually use the Crystal Ball before trying.

    This is absolutely ridiculous!! I don't know how many times that I've used the preview to listen to all the songs to make sure the one song I heard wasn't just a one-off track of the rest of the album.

    They should be thanking iTunes (and the like) for this feature.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  2. icon
    Tom Grochowicz (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 10:23am

    Or..

    This could be an incredibly clever tactic to get online stores to remove the preview function, thus forcing the consumers to buy more music they don't actually want!

    I mean, think about it...it further limits a consumer's exposure to new music, so that seems to go along with their current trends.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  3. identicon
    Vic, 17 Sep 2009 @ 10:58am

    Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    One more evidence that "We the Consumers of the United States" need bigger and stronger consumer rights lobby in the Congress!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  4. icon
    GeneralEmergency (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:00am

    Dear Mr. Carnes...

    Ricky baby...

    I was just sitting here by my open sliding glass door, humming my favorite Squeeze tune and I noticed three deer nearby listening to me and tapping their little hoofies.


    Ummmm....So -bill me-, asshat.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  5. icon
    Dark Helmet (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:01am

    Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    "One more evidence that "We the Consumers of the United States" need bigger and stronger consumer rights lobby in the Congress!"

    Or you could go with my "swift slaughter of all lobbying groups and lobbyists, along with their immediate family members" option....

    link to this | view in thread ]

  6. identicon
    Anonymoose, 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:04am

    I have the solution...

    Apple and others should simply remove the 30 second preview for those artists who believe that a consumer listening to a sample of a song to determine if they want to buy it is a public performance of some sort.

    We'll see how that math works in a quarter or so.


    Side thought: I'd love to see an actual arena setup where tickets are sold, and 30 second clips of songs are played for the assembled audience. Just to show how ridiculous this all is...

    link to this | view in thread ]

  7. icon
    iNtrigued (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:08am

    Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    Hmm... sounds good, but what does your option entail exactly? We talking about the guillotine, public stoning, etc, or does Dark Helmet have something more sinister in mind?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  8. icon
    Designerfx (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:15am

    guys like this

    who think they deserve other people's money, don't even deserve their own life. These kinds of people are quite literal leeches on society. Do I believe I deserve Mike Masnick's money? No. So why should in any conceivable way, an industry declare that they deserve other people's money?

    Remember the guy who said "I don't take a piss if someone's not paying for it?" (while he goes to the bathroom at one point in the program).

    link to this | view in thread ]

  9. icon
    Free Capitalist (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:22am

    Great idea. Charge for window shopping.

    Charge for window shopping a product that is leased, not purchased, and where most everything "browsed" will be unsatisfactory for "take-home" or "lease-at-home" purposes.

    You know what... I think I'd rather just go try a strip club.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  10. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:23am

    You can't blame them for trying, but it seems to me they run into two problems. First, a fair use argument does appear to have some measure of applicability, though its metes and bounds is not clear. Second, a public performance argument is likely to receive a chilly reception given that even if these 30 second snippets can be viewed as a performance of sorts, there still remains the additional requirement that it be public. It is hard to imagine that a person sitting at the desktop/laptop/cell phone/etc. who listens to the snippet is in a place that can be characterized as public within the definition stated in copyright law.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  11. icon
    DocMenach (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:23am

    I'm suprised AC hasn't showed up yet

    I wonder how it will be before AC (you know the one I am talking about) shows up and spouts some more of his industry shill non-sense. That guy really needs to set up a profile so I can look through his past comments and laugh my head off.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  12. icon
    anymouse (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:28am

    Re: I have the solution...

    The problems is that it's not the ARTISTS who believe that they should be getting paid, it's the collection societies (who don't pay all the artists anyway) who think they should be getting paid.

    Nice to meet my larger anonymous mammalian counterpart....

    link to this | view in thread ]

  13. icon
    ChurchHatesTucker (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:29am

    Rick is a skank

    ""We make 9.1 cents off a song sale and that means a whole lot of pennies have to add up before it becomes a bunch of money," said Rick Carnes, president of the Songwriters' Guild of America. "Yesterday, I received a check for 2 cents...""

    So you wrote, what? Thirty seconds of a song?

    Now I see why he's pissed.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  14. icon
    Dark Helmet (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:34am

    Re: Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    "Hmm... sounds good, but what does your option entail exactly? We talking about the guillotine, public stoning, etc, or does Dark Helmet have something more sinister in mind?"

    Well, my taste for irony sort of requires that the lobbyists be slaughtered in some way utilizing whatever they are lobbying for. Examples:

    1. Cigarette lobbyists: Well, the obvious punishment is to make them smoke constantly until they die of nicotine poisoning, but I've never been a fan of the obvious. Instead they are put on public display, naked, and children who have been arrested or otherwise caught smoking underage will be required to put out lit cigarettes and cigars on the lobbyists exposed skin until they die. Doublely(sp?) useful as a deterrent to keep underage kids from smoking!

    2. Gun lobbyists: They have their achiles tendons sliced down the middle, forcing them to sort of crawl around on all fours around a special "game park" that is home to all kinds of animals with mounted weaponry that randomly fires for a little HUMAN HUNTING!!! These animal hunters could include the simple (You think a bear is dangerous now? How about one in chain mail with wolverine-type claw extensions?), to the more complicated (bunnies attached to mini helicopter aparati and mounted machine guns, controlled by gamers from home), to the necessarily hysterical (Sharks with fricken laserbeams attached to their heads).

    3. Entertainment lobbyists: How does the televised pumping of Britney Spears, Cher, Justin Timberlake, or Gwar directly into the eardrums of lobbyists at the kind of decibals that will shatter a human skull sound?

    Now...THOSE are pubic performances, my friends.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  15. icon
    :Lobo Santo (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:35am

    Re: Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    Stoned to death!

    We'll need a HUGE bong....

    link to this | view in thread ]

  16. icon
    :Lobo Santo (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:37am

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    'Gun Lobbyists' you say? Kindly elaborate...

    link to this | view in thread ]

  17. icon
    Dark Helmet (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:40am

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    "'Gun Lobbyists' you say? Kindly elaborate..."

    Well, see you have these projectile things called guns, and there are lobbyists on both sides of the debate, pro-gun ownership and anti-gun ownership. Since I stated that ALL lobbyists are getting the treatmen, both sides go into the game park for Human Hunting fun.

    Sorry, I'm sure you were itching for a political fight there, but that wasn't an attempt to pick on either side.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  18. icon
    anymouse (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:46am

    Consumer Lobby..... great idea..... I'm going to patent it ;)

    "One more evidence that "We the Consumers of the United States" need bigger and stronger consumer rights lobby in the Congress!"

    Since lobbying is all about the money, we should stand up and make ourselves heard by creating an actual Consumer Lobbying group and buying our own laws. If consumers united and each donated a dollar a year, we would have some significant 'seed' money to start bribing, er, lobbying our government officials.

    There are a lot more of us (consumers) than there are of them (RIAA, MPAA, etc), even though they appear to have deeper pockets, that's only due to us buying their products in the first place. Imagine being able to 'donate' .05 for each iTunes purchase and have it go to 'fighting the power', something at checkout, "Would you like to help fund consumer rights organization in an attempt to 'buy back' our culture from the evil MAFIA overlords by contributing .05 per song purchased?" (but worded a little better).

    I think I need to patent this idea (collecting money from consumers and buying laws that favor consumers over existing industry monopolies), then I can start suing when someone actually takes the idea and runs with it (this is the new American way, right? Idea, do nothing, Sue, Profit.

    Just kidding (or am I????)

    link to this | view in thread ]

  19. icon
    Josh - To common a name. This is me. (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:48am

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    Damn you DH. I almost lost my lunch laughing. :)

    Now, I may be in the minority here, but even though I detest Britney Spears music, I still think the woman is so doable. And when I saw the line "pumping of..." All my brain saw was pumping Britney Spears, and I got so freaking excitied...Then I saw the word Cher. *shudder*. Thanks for bringing me up, and then back down, DH.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  20. icon
    :Lobo Santo (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:48am

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    Ah! I'd forgotten the 'All Lobbyists' caveat.

    Not itching for a fight, was worried suddenly that you and I had diverging opinions about such a divisive subject. (Generally, you're right there with the comments I'm thinking--only with better witticisms.)

    Thanx for the clarify.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  21. icon
    diabolic (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:51am

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    The helmet doubles as a bong.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  22. icon
    Josh - To common a name. This is me. (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:51am

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    OMG. I just read what I wrote. I so wish I had used the preview button. Now I look like one of those pervs on the internet. Good thing it's anymouse. :)

    link to this | view in thread ]

  23. icon
    bwp (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:54am

    Just wondering...

    If Apple/Amazon/etc. have agreements to sell these songs on their sites, isn't it reasonable to think that they included in the agreement the right to use the 30 second clips to entice consumers to buy the songs?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  24. icon
    iNtrigued (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 11:58am

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    Well I like it! Sign me up!

    Since we already know they are void of all humanity and in all likeliness are ROBOTS, maybe a little paradox would cause their circuits to overload & heads to explode. Such as:

    What if we sent in lobbyists to lobby against lobbyists?

    And if their heads didn't explode, wouldn't that at least force them to lobby against our lobbyists which would start a never ending circle(redundant?) of counter-lobbying?

    Then vwalla! no more lobbying for special interests.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  25. icon
    iNtrigued (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:06pm

    Re: Consumer Lobby..... great idea..... I'm going to patent it ;)

    FINALLY, my family has been holding this patent for years! Now we can finally cash-in by suing you. Thank you and have a great day!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  26. identicon
    Anonymous Noel Coward, 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:08pm

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    yeh, i was gonna say something about ignorant boobs but thought better of it

    link to this | view in thread ]

  27. identicon
    Ryan, 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:10pm

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    What if we sent in lobbyists to lobby against lobbyists?

    Which would just be...the status quo. You don't think all lobbyists are lobbying for the same thing, do you?

    A better idea would be to make sweeping tax cuts to deprive politicians of the means to meddle. My favorite scenario is one in which personal federal income taxes have been abolished -- all funds have to come directly from state budgets. That would really be fun to watch as bureaucrats squared off against bureaucrats in a true bloodbath.

    Or I could see the merits to going DH's path and just shoot the bastards. Anarchy looks better all the time...

    link to this | view in thread ]

  28. icon
    roxanneadams (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:15pm

    I use the 30 second feature all the time on Amazon and Itunes. Take it away and you, my dear friend Rick Carnes, can go pound sand. I'm the one of those dumb schmucks still paying for the music that I download, and actions like this make pirate music more attractive than ever.

    "Yesterday, I received a check for 2 cents. I'm not kidding. People think we're making a fortune off the Web, but it's a tiny amount. We need multiple revenue streams or this isn't going to work."

    For the last ten years I have made it a point never to buy a brand-new music CD, because of jerks like you who claim that you are speaking on behalf of the entire music industry. Used music CD = no royalties for you.

    I buy MP3s from Amazon and Itunes because the price is reasonable for me as a consumer. Specifically, the ability to hear that 30-second snippet means that I don't have to waste money on a song that sucks rotten eggs. Take that listening privilege away and I won't buy one 99 cent MP3 until I've had a chance to first download a pirated copy and listen to it. You and your friends at the MPAA and the RIAA are losing the war by alienating the dwindling ranks of paying customers.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  29. icon
    Raybone (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:18pm

    Now...THOSE are pubic performances, my friends.

    Nice one DH.....


    In any case...as a musician, I personally would support an alternative to the current system of royalty collection societies. Could not some smart entrepreneur build a more equitable and efficient system that doesn't sound like extortion? A system where, oh instead if making people pay to listen or venues to pay to play, the public has an incentive to use and promote music? Insights? Even from the annoying and frustrating AC?

    You know the one I mean

    el raybonious

    link to this | view in thread ]

  30. icon
    kyle clements (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:22pm

    m'kay

    So, lets think about this for a minute.

    I like to try before they buy, and the 30 second preview is a very reasonable compromise between letting me hear the song before hand, and still have a good reason to buy (for the other 3 minutes of music)

    so, if they get rid of these previews, I will leave your legit site, go to the pirate sites, download the full album and listen to it a few times; then you expect me to go back to your site and pay for something I already have? Is that the plan?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  31. icon
    GJ (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:26pm

    Re: Consumer Lobby..... great idea..... I'm going to patent it ;)

    You can't simply buy politicians with money. You have to offer them a place on the board, with extravagant expense accounts, and an understanding that you will continue this in the future when they get out of politics, and you have to offer the same incentives to their cronies. So having a reliably revenue stream is necessary to be a lobbyist. It also ensures that the politicians you have in your pocket have a continued interest in working for you, because if you disappear, their network of corrupt folks will frown on the fact that the gravy train has stopped. If you can't do that, they will have to depend on avian flu scares to make $5 million (David Rumsfeld), or global warming to become the next messiah (Al Gore), or swine flu (300 people dead from the vaccine, one person dead from the flu itself, this was in 1976, see http://www.examiner.com/x-6495-US-Intelligence-Examiner~y2009m7d10-CBS-60-Minutes-300-death-claims-f rom-1976-swine-flu-vaccine-only-one-death-from-flu) and that's a lot more work for them. See how that works? --GJ--

    link to this | view in thread ]

  32. icon
    Hephaestus (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:26pm

    Re: Or..

    "thus forcing the consumers to buy more music they don't actually want"

    When sites stop offering previews, what will occur is people will try before you buy via P2P, through Torrent Sites, or via anonymous P2P networks (ANts P2P, RShare, Freenet, I2P, GNUnet and Entropy) .... then since they have the song already, they forget to go buy the song at the music site.

    As I have said before, this is a good thing....
    It causes greater losses at the record labels as people migrate to alternate sources for music (P2P, anon P2P, new artists, CC, etc). This forces the labels to seek out other new revenue streams. Its a never ending cycle until a Catastrophic failure occurs. In this case it will be caused by the labels themselves.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  33. icon
    iNtrigued (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:35pm

    Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Another brick in the wall (oops, I hope they do not come to me charging for the quote...)

    First, I got to say I do like your idea and again great fnckin name.

    Second, I meant it to be what if we sent lobbyists to the lobbyists to lobby to them about lobbying, or something along that line. I am pretty sure no one does this yet, but its whatever.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  34. icon
    Hephaestus (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:37pm

    Re:

    You are a perfect example of what I was saying above

    link to this | view in thread ]

  35. icon
    Hephaestus (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:39pm

    Re: Re: Or..

    "It causes greater losses at the record labels as people migrate to alternate sources for music (P2P, anon P2P, new artists, CC, etc)."

    Perfect Example

    link to this | view in thread ]

  36. icon
    Hephaestus (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:50pm

    Re: Now...THOSE are pubic performances, my friends.

    el raybonious .... read all the note/entry xxx) in my profile they bullet points that show where we are going, and what we want to implement in the system you also seem to want. If you want to hop on and help this is a community project all are welcome to voice their wants, needs, and opinions. Ask one of the admins here for my e-mail and point them to this comment.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  37. icon
    bwp (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 12:54pm

    Re: m'kay

    I don't think sites like iTunes or Amazon want to get rid of the 30 second previews but if the groups like ASCAP and BMI succeed in getting more money from them for having the previews then they either drop the previews or increase the cost of the songs.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  38. icon
    Dark Helmet (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 1:03pm

    Re: Re: Now...THOSE are pubic performances, my friends.

    Yeah, speaking of which, email me tonight so we can setup another chat session.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  39. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 17 Sep 2009 @ 1:16pm

    Ok. Do you people understand that ASCAP and BMI represent the songwriter? While sometimes that is the artist is the writer most of the time they are not. The PROs are claiming this is a performance and want to collect on it. Please inform yourselves before you make foolish comments.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  40. identicon
    Jared Jones, 17 Sep 2009 @ 1:26pm

    I see both sides

    On the one hand, as a songwriter, it would be nice to get paid every time someone listens to a song. Be it part of a song, or a song attached to video. Yes, this does serve as promotion, but with all the P2P and BitTorrents around, that "promotion" isn't always translating into sales.

    On the other hand, if the song is hot, people will buy it. Restaurants, Retail stores, and other businesses all give customers "previews" before they buy. I just had a piece of bourbon chicken that they offered me...a free sample, and since I enjoyed it, I bought a whole plate. But I can't blame ASCAP and BMI for trying though. I continue to collect royalty checks off of television placements I've had thus far. :-)

    link to this | view in thread ]

  41. identicon
    Griffon, 17 Sep 2009 @ 1:28pm

    game music

    It's really unfortunate how short sighted this can be.

    I really dug the music in the new game demo WET, so off to amazon I went. I checked out the preview clips (thought they where to short) but since I had heard a lot more in the game I downloaded the CD.

    The label got paid (probable multiple times already for the same music. The band got paid for the music for the game, they got paid by me for buying the music.. .Maybe if I buy the game I will get to pay everybody again for the same music in a less useful format, or maybe they will give it to me again on the DVD (that would be nice).

    WTF is the problem now the want to get paid for 30 second clip I listened to make sure it was the same track? Great dose not even begin to describe this mentality.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  42. icon
    Thomas (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 1:34pm

    How is it a performance?

    I really like the way Amazon allows you to play the short section from a song before you buy it. If they stop doing this because the greedy songwriters demand a performance fee, then people will buy a lot less music. I never buy something on Amazon or iTunes if I can't listen to a sample of it. Maybe the **AA and Songwriters would PREFER that people go to illegal torrents?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  43. icon
    roxanneadams (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 1:40pm

    Re:

    I didn't see any foolish comments. ASCAP, BMI, independent music royalty societies, the RIAA and their partners in crime over at the MPAA have all worked hard to create an ugly experience for the end-user of the product, the music and movie consumer. Most of us - the end-user, the paying consumer, know that the artists have little say in these matters. They are simply the visible face of a dying music industry that is solely responsible for its own slow and painful death.


    Classic and much-loved TV shows aren't available on DVD because of the greed of ASCAP, BMI and the record labels, who want to squeeze every last penny out of every second of music played in the background. Some of this music can't be edited out. It's part of what made those shows unique and meaningful, so the rights-holders to the TV shows are giving up and walking away after protracted and expensive legal battles with the trifecta of music-industry bimbos whose greed is holding an entire industry hostage, keeping back innovation and killing new streams of revenue. They don't just want a share of the pie - the bimbos want it all, killing the profit margins for everyone involved in bringing these projects to DVD.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  44. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 17 Sep 2009 @ 1:54pm

    I have a solution...

    ...lets just stop selling and buying music. Then let's see just how important that 30 sec preview revenue is.

    Idiots.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  45. icon
    deadzone (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 2:00pm

    Apple should go nuclear

    I think Apple should just remove all music previews and put up a big notice explaining the ASCAP/BMI position and subsequently explaining why they don't agree with it.

    It's always so amusing to see these organizations do these things under the mistaken impression that they have some sort of leverage. They don't, not with Apple/Itunes.

    Seriously. I think that is the best position to take with these unreasonable and clueless dinosaurs of the business. Just give them whatever they want and watch them squirm as they realize the truth - THEY DID IT TO THEMSELVES.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  46. identicon
    batch, 17 Sep 2009 @ 2:04pm

    Re: Re: Or..

    I've been burned on buying cds enough times that I always download before I buy. They reap what they sow.

    30 seconds isn't enough either. If they wanted, they could just play the first 30 seconds, make a few seconds empty noise, and whats left of the song's lead in just isn't enough to tell if its worth buying.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  47. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 17 Sep 2009 @ 2:25pm

    What's the worst currency in the world? Zimbabwe? Somalia? I'll send him 1 cent of those.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  48. identicon
    Vincent Clement, 17 Sep 2009 @ 2:26pm

    Re: I see both sides

    Why, as a songwriter, do you believe that you entitled to receive a payment every time someone listens to a song?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  49. icon
    lux (profile), 17 Sep 2009 @ 5:11pm

    Think Positive!

    I think this is actually a good sign...

    If organizations like the ASCAP are trying to squeeze pennies out of a 30 second music clip, then we are winning and have backed them into a corner. If these businesses were making a decent profit, then why bother with this?

    First rule of business is fry the bigger fish, and 30 second clips are small fish. Their business is in a death rattle and they are just thrashing around. But don't worry, it'll soon die.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  50. identicon
    1DandyTroll, 17 Sep 2009 @ 6:30pm

    The future

    seems to be all likable. Just imagin' the day when the retailers actually pay the manufacturers for using their equipment in store to sell more, and of course paying someone else for playing previews, aka trailers. Or why shouldn't the car dealer pay every time someone test drive it, after all, it most probably contains software anyway, oh, and not to forget, that the test driver might potentially use the radio or try that mp3 function, i a semi public environment.... Oooh no the horror, of lost income.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  51. identicon
    TFP, 18 Sep 2009 @ 2:26am

    Public performance

    >3. Entertainment lobbyists: How does the televised pumping of Britney Spears, Cher, Justin Timberlake, or Gwar directly into the eardrums of lobbyists at the kind of decibals that will shatter a human skull sound?

    Now...THOSE are pubic performances, my friends.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  52. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 18 Sep 2009 @ 4:48am

    Ill pay them, Let me wax my boots up.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  53. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 18 Sep 2009 @ 6:00am

    ASCAP, BMI added to list .....

    Join your friends at the RIAA.

    in hell!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  54. identicon
    Tony, 18 Sep 2009 @ 6:27am

    Paying to preview a song, then paying to download the song, then paying some more because the actual act of the download is considered a public performance. Brilliant!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  55. identicon
    Ben Zayb, 18 Sep 2009 @ 11:44am

    Re: I see both sides

    "...that "promotion" isn't always translating into sales."

    In every other field, promotion does not necessarily mean sales. What makes your field special?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  56. identicon
    Ben Zayb, 18 Sep 2009 @ 11:47am

    Re: Apple should go nuclear

    I agree. Shame these people to oblivion.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  57. identicon
    Nitole, 18 Jan 2012 @ 6:16am

    Re: Or..

    "I mean, think about it...it further limits a consumer's exposure to new music, so that seems to go along with their current trends."
    What you call curent trend, already happened since 50s or before and its called payola. Before you think "but we had pink floyd before and the beatles", yes they decided by some reason pay payola to them at the time and now they decided to pay to those bands. Same thing just different bands.

    But, yes limiting the user exposure to new music may be the reason behind that. But not in a way you said, with that they will not force people to buy what they dont want, but making even harder to people find other bands and songs by the samples (a hard thing because people dont usually search on internet about music [payola says "this is all that is happening in music industry, pick what you want, if you want something."])

    link to this | view in thread ]


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