The Insanity Of Copyright Law: When Even Professionals Have No Idea They're Breaking The Law
from the is-it-so-easy? dept
My cousin works (year round) for a summer camp. Her husband (who, technically, is also my cousin, but not by blood), works in film & TV production, doing all sorts of work in and around the entertainment industry. He's worked on various movies and TV shows. To help his wife out, he helped set up a website for the camp, and posted a slide show video the camp put together of campers, which he uploaded to YouTube. The video... was set to the music of a very famous major label recording artist. This is the kind of stuff that people do all the time. Because it feels normal and natural and if the music is a part of their lives and was what they experienced when the photos/video were taken, it seems totally natural to include it as backing music for the video.I received an email from him, however, after he got a note from YouTube about how the video infringes on content from Universal Music. His concern -- and remember, he works in the industry -- was that he knows the camp has an ASCAP license, and he couldn't figure out why that didn't allow him to post the video. He was asking what he should do and if there was any way to make sure the video was legal.
The problem (well, one of many) here is simply that the ASCAP license only covers a limited set of rights under copyright law, and does not cover things like putting music to a video. In fact, without knowing the details, I'd bet that the ASCAP license his camp has really just covers performances at the camp. But, still, here's a guy who works in the industry who naturally assumes that what he's done shouldn't violate copyright law. Because it seems ridiculous to think that it does, especially when the camp that the video is for has "an ASCAP license."
The idea that anyone should need to understand the differences between performance rights and reproduction rights and performance licenses and sync licenses, just to post a fun slide show of a summer camp, doesn't make any sense at all. It's a serious problem borne out of a history of copyright law that was designed for an entirely different purpose. It's supposed to be for commercial infringement, not personal use, and copyright law has been built by simply duct taping on new or different rights every few years as the technology changes. What you get is a hodge podge mess that's impossible for most people to understand, even those who work in the entertainment industry and who that same industry insists only wants ever more draconian copyright law.
The system is hopelessly broken. But rather than looking to fix it, we have Congress trying to duct tape on another batch of rules and rights. What a shame.
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Filed Under: copyright, infringement, videos
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It's not broken
What feels normal is irrelevant because copyright owners don't care what you feel, they want control over everything you see and hear, how you see and hear it, and who creates it.
We won't fix it unless we remove the current congress-persons who are in the pockets of lobbyists, which would mean there would be what, 5 people in congress? And that would take people FIRST understanding the currently confusing law and considering those who vote are apathetic and too lazy to think for themselves... don't count on them understanding the law enough to push congress to remove it.
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Professionals should know
On the other hand, if the video just recorded an event at the camp, and music was playing at the event, and got recorded on the posted video, then...??
Ok, the law is broken.
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Re: Moar?
Perhaps even scrapped.
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Re: It's not broken
The system is rigged until/unless we can break up the major parties and find a way to open the system up so that it can become more directly representative. While I do not think something as drastic as going to a parliamentary (Europe) or direct democracy system (ref: Switzerland) would be wanted or welcomed, the simple fact that it results in greater participation in governance by most factions within a society leads to better results for all when balanced properly.
With that said, something needs to be done because the status quo is a complete disaster...
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Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
It all goes back to trying to stop piracy and in the end only affecting paying customers and normal people.
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Re: Professionals should know
But what about a blogger who writes "In fact, without knowing the details, I'd bet that the ASCAP license his camp has really just covers ...". Surely placing such bets without checking the details is just gambling and doesn't evidence expertise ?.
But maybe the real purpose is just to raise outrage so facts don't matter !.
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Re:
This, imho, goes to the heart of the efforts of copyright maximalists, very knowingly transforming commercial law into criminal law.
Combined with the parallel effort to transform a communications technology into a broadcast technology equals a very knowing assault on citizens' Constitutional rights, about which the maximalists don't give a rats ass.
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Re: Re: Professionals should know
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Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
When the intrusion becomes too much, the **AA's and their ilk will be wiped out, the only question is, how long will it take them to get to the top of mount stupid, how much damage will they do along the way and how many people will be hurt when they eventually go over the edge and crash down on the innocents below.
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Re: Re: Professionals should know
Ah. In that case, it's kind of like the "studies" and "data" and "evidence" and "facts" about how rampant piracy is and how it's causing $200 billion in damages/losses and tens of millions of workers are being laid off due to it and artists are literally starving in the streets and so on and so forth. Am I right?
All of that (THOSE studies) being completely untrue, debunked regularly or flat out having no basis whatsoever in anything even remotely resembling fact.
I guess it's only okay when YOUR side does it.
"Surely placing such bets without checking the details is just gambling and doesn't evidence expertise ?."
Is this the same kind of non evident expertise that leads to laws like SOPA? You know, laws that IT experts, Constitution experts and so on and so forth are saying are violating Constitutional rights, technically impossible to implement (without causing damage to current infrastructure) and so on and so forth.
Again, it's okay when YOU and YOUR KIND do it. But heaven forbid anyone else do the same thing, or not even that, just voice their opinion on their own opinion blog. You cry to the heavens, without noting your evident hypocrisy.
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Re: Re: Professionals should know
Regardless of the licensing, what the guy was doing is something the vast majority of the people would consider ok. Any law that criminalizes the vast majority of people is a bad law.
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again
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Re: Re: Professionals should know
Ding, Ding, Ding! Winner!
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Re: Re: Moar?
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Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
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Re:
The average_joe knows only that they have purchased the song. They have no idea about what rights they did or did not purchase.
And, frankly, they shouldn't have to worry.
When I was a kid, I had no idea that making copies of my cassettes for anyone who wanted one wasn't within my rights. Of course, back then no one seemed to care much and artists realized that tape networks got their music distributed all over the world.
Ahh...how time's have changed.
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Re: Re: Re: Moar?MOAR!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
Need I go on?
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Re: Re:
He's a "professional" but he couldn't grasp that his license was (presumably) for singing songs at camp and not for posting professionally recorded music on the internet? Yeah, right.
Of course, this is all Mike's take on it. And given his admission that he has no journalistic integrity and the fact that he often leaves out inconvenient truths, we can rightly assume we're only get part of the story in another effort to manipulate and to slam IP law.
And, frankly, they shouldn't have to worry.
Yeah, because "professionals" just get licenses and don't worry about the details. Right.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Moar?MOAR!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
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Re: It's not broken
And I know longer care what copyright owners feel in return. So now were even. I'm not even willing to compromise to rolling copyright back to it's original 14 years now. Complete abolishment is the ONLY thing I'm willing to concede to at this point.
They want to be beyond reasonable, I can play that game too.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
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Re: Re: Re:
"Of course, this is all average_joe's take on it. And given his admission that he has not a lawyer and the fact that he often leaves out inconvenient truths, we can rightly assume we're only get part of the story in another effort to manipulate and to promote overreaching, out of touch IP law."
You're doing the same!
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Re: Re: Re:
He's claimed nothing else.
"we can rightly assume"
Yeah, this is the sort of thing that makes me giggle. You attack Mike for a story lacking details (which is presented as a commentary on an anecdotal personal story, not the investigative journalism you seem to crave), then admit that you're just assuming stuff yourself.
As ever, no details from your "side". Just personal attacks and an avoidance of the central point of the story. Four comments, and nothing other than attacks and your own opinion ("of course he should have known") in lieu of facts of even acknowledgement of the ongoing idea being addressed.
It's no wonder you're the only person here with a dedicated parody account of your usual comments.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
And you're assuming said professional actually purchased the licenses, no where does it say that the cousin-in-law actually arranged the ASCAP license for the camp. It only states he is aware the camp has an ASCAP license.
Nice twist on words though, and given you've repeated it in so many posts you clearly have no other value to offer to this thread.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
lol. what a total buffoon.
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Re:
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Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
And the outrage should come from the fact they felt the need to have an ASCAP license in the first place, its a gd summer camp.
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Re: Re: Re:
Unless you promote ASCAP going for the girl scouts as well...
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Moar?MOAR!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
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It's the fundamental law of advertising, if you want to boost my business, you have to pay me. That's why television stations have shows and movies those companies that make them pay the tv station to show them and it helps recoup the costs of advertising car manufacturers, special ointments and some brand of cola*.**
*All of whom also pay me for using my music*** (obviously only if they actually use it,there's currently a loophole, where if they don't actually use something that I have rights to then they don't have to pay me, but hopefully that loophole will be closed in the future)
** Someone pointed out I might have gotten it backwards about shows and adverts, but as I pointed out to them, it doesn't matter to me, I get paid anyway.
***Well, when I say my music, I am not actually a musician, but a long deceased relative of mine, who actually come to think of it also wasn't a musician, but did write poems and some of those were put to music and while he's dead, and the generation after him are also dead, I share ownership of the rights with a couple of other people and we all get paid thanks to copyright and I have to say I find it a real inducement to be related to people who created stuff in the past and I will obviously go out of my way to be related to many more if at all possible.
(Btw this is partially honest truth, I do indeed, currently "technically" benefit from works that were written 100 years ago and more, which I think is insane and once certain legalities are settled I will be distancing myself from that kind of nonsense.)
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
Well, the invention of the wheel was someone else's work too. You must enjoy the hexagon wheels on your car, because having round ones would be "using someone else's work, for whatever you feel like using it for".
You really don't understand how culture works, do you?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
It is uncertain in ways that make you uncertain about where it is uncertain.
Otherwise you would not have asked the question.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
That, I think, is the crux of Mike's point: It isn't that he was trying to "post whatever music he wanted to anywhere on the internet"; it's that he was trying to post a video of pictures from the camp, that happened to be using the copyrighted music.
Are you suggesting that for every video anyone uploads, if there is any music whatsoever in the background, they have to make sure it isn't copyrighted or that they have rights to upload it?
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Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
How so. If they were singing themselves I don't see how content ID could have flagged it - do you have any more details?
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Re: Re: It's not broken
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Re:
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Re: Re: Professionals should know
Why doesn't it bring the rules into question?
Surely placing such bets without checking the details is just gambling and doesn't evidence expertise ?.
When someone who's been writing about copyright issues for years isn't sure what the rules cover, don't you think there's at least a possibility that says more about the rules than about Mike?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
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Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
It's a crock! They'd never go after a Church because that would be the spark that lights the fire inside the sheep who know nothing about copyright laws, let alone SOPA/PIPA/ACTA.
Too bad the **AA groups are not stupid enough to go after Church's as that would just be so awesome. I believe THAT would wake people up.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
_sigh_
never mind.
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Re:
Are we to presume from this that you've never told anyone a joke you heard, never told a story, never sung a song or whistled a tune without getting permission to do so from the "original artist" or current rights holder?
You know, I kind of think you probably have, but you have those in a locked off segment of your mind where you think of them as being somehow "different" for no reason other than it's you doing it.
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Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
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Response to: Anonymous Coward on Jan 4th, 2012 @ 7:34am
Baka.
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Re: Re:
You think music is worthless, yet apparently it's so difficult to produce that you must take someone else's.
Certain obvious economic realities of life are escaping you.
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Re:
You first AJ.
Stop using an "Officially licensed Dodgeball Average Joe's Gym" image as your icon. I'm pretty sure you don't have the rights to do that either.
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Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
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Re: Re: Re:
That's precisely what happened here. I'm no real expert on copyright nor I intend to be (I'm still sane, these laws are for the insane to understand - no offense meant) but when I saw they had a license for ASCAP I automatically assumed the copyright holder made yet another mistake on the takedown issue. But no, it's just like Zediva. You can lend your DVDs but you can't stream them. The very same physical DVDs, one user at a time for one DVD player at the 'data center'.
But it was well explained and proven in the Zediva case. IT's the length of the cord that's the issue. Surely if the camp was located besides any Youtube server or mirror it would be fine. /sarcasm
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Re: Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
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Creating Bogus Rights
As most people know, who visit this site, copyright was meant to be for a limited time as a means of encouraging the creation of content. The content industry along with their lawyers have unfortunately corrupted copyright to be treated as property right.
Not only that, but the property rights of the consumer to the use of content continue to be extinguished and criminalized.
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Where does you cousin live? Year round summer sounds great!
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Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
It may be hyperbole to imaging someone demanding compensation in this example. But this illustrates the idiocy of infringement claims.
I do not think it is okay to copy and re-sell someone else's copyright, but I do think the copyright holder actually benefits when the general public hears, performs and reuses their works in non-commercial i.e. profit seeking ways.
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Re: clarify
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
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Its a Moving Target
If we went back to copyright as originally envisioned infringement would be greatly diminished. Shouldn't that make the "strong" copyright crowd happy? I doubt it.
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Re: Re: clarify
Simply singing a cover version of a copyrighted song is infringement but can't trigger content ID - because that mechanism is built around the audio fingerprint of a particular recorded version - and is fairly dumb - you can easily circumvent it if you know how.
Of course you may get a non-automated response (try covering anything by the Eagles on Youtube) - but that is pretty unlikely for this type of case.
John Doe has suggested that there may also have been recorded music playing (ie they sang along to a pre-recorded track) - that seems a plausible explanation to me.
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Re: Re:
"It's obviously fair use!" Uh-huh, obviously...
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Re: Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
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Re: Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
Is there some kind of exemption for non-profit entities?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
Money is the only language they speak and if you don't have much, they can't hear you.
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Re: What is broken
Here is a link to a recent post that describes why I hold this opinion. posted by Anonymoose Custard (profile), Jan 3rd, 2012 @ 2:28pm
it starts out:
The problem is that Copyright came with a promise similar to the promise that Patents have: That once the creator has profited from the work, the work enters the collective cultural domain. The reasoning is that then the Public will always have access to the works.
I'm sure there will be arguments that this is/is not true; Either way it should be if we have any desire to have a healthy growing society, much less a healthy growing economy.
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Re:
By the way, the provisions is Title 17 concerning fair use are not the only criteria that may be used by a court presented with such an issue. The four have to be considered, but then again a court is free to augment them with other criteria that it believes is appropriate under the circumstances of a case.
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Re: Re: Re:
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
My point still stands, recorded music or not, this is fair use. He did not post a cut from MTV of the music video. He did not post up a video with just the song playing. He posted up a video of his kids singing in a church play. There was no monetization on his part and there was no harm done to the market for the song being sung. The more people get their videos taken down, the more they are going to wake up to what is going on.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
Nope, but ideas are.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
Characteristics of Culture:
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Re: Re: What is broken
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
What is Culture?
(Emphasis in original.)
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
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Re: Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
Don't know what the situation is in the US - but in the UK the PPL and PRS do not require licenses for places of worship (although that is no longer backed by the law).
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Re: Re: Re: clarify
Its a sad use for Shazam ©
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Re: Re:
LOL! I love how you copyright abolitionists suddenly become maximalists when it comes to my avatar. Bring on the lawsuit--I'd enjoy the opportunity to clarify personal/fair use rights. De minimis non curat lex.
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Re: Re: Re:
"It's obviously fair use!" Uh-huh, obviously...
I would primarily argue de minimis, with fair use in the alternative.
"If the allegedly infringing work makes such a qualitatively insubstantial use of the copyrighted work . . . it makes more sense to . . . find no infringement, rather than undertake an elaborate fair use analysis." Ringgold v. Black Entertainment Television, 126 F.3d 70, 76 (2d Cir. 1997).
It's hilarious how you guys want this to be infringement. LMAO!
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Re: Re: Moar?
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Re: Re:
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You need a synch license -- but you can't get one
Problem is: you can't get a synch license! When I started learning the guitar and posted my own recording of "Brown Eyed Girl" on YouTube, I got an email from Van Morrison's publishing company. The company said that I needed a synch license to post the video -- but they wouldn't give me one. They did kindly agree to let my video stay up if I gave Morrison's publishing company credit in the video's comments, which I did. But without a synch license, the publisher has the right to send a takedown notice (absent fair use arguments).
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Even in. Your cited case, infringement is mentioned in the suit.
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Re: Re:
ROFLMAO! You guys are the best!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
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That being said. Is copyright law complex and confusing? Of course it is, it's a complex and confusing subject. All laws are, take a look at contract or rental laws, those don't make any sense to the average person either. But they need to be complex because they describe complex subjects. It's almost impossible to write laws on complex subjects that make sense to a layman but aren't so vague as to be meaningless and open to multiple interpretations. Which is exactly the complaint we have with SOPA/PIPA, are you saying you want copyright law to be made that vague? How would that help?
An example in this case would be, if I make a video of my kids dancing to current pop music, that would be personal use, if I give that video on a disc or e-mail to my friends and family, that would also be personal use, but if I post it to YouTube is it still personal use? One could argue that YouTube as a for profit business, all videos on the site are used for commercial purposes (to make YouTube money from advertising).
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
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Re: Re: Re:
I guess you don't understand irony and hypocrisy much.
Ironia latens te, te hypocrisis.
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Feeble
Then once caught out it is then a feeble justification attempt by quoting ASCAP license.
Then again these matters can be confusing and his professional knowledge can have been based much on assumptions.
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Re: Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
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Re: Re: Re:
simple and will remove our need to downrate your posts :)
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
Now back to your regularly scheduled thread.
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Re: Re: Re:
Dude, I am neither of those. I don't believe copyright should be abolished, it just needs to be dragged into the 21st century and the bargain between creators and the public needs to be adjusted for fairness.
As for my comment, you missed the point, I was indicating that you feel using a copyrighted image is fair use, but someone using a song to augment a video is obviously infringement (and basically calling them stupid for doing so).
Why the disconnect?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
Look at the people in charge of most denominational churches, they live in luxury, hell the I think organized religion has to be one of the longest running scams out there, getting people to pay money to feel better about themselves and feel forgiven for the wrong they did....
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
LMFAO!
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Fair enough. Sorry if I "broad-brushed" you.
As for my comment, you missed the point, I was indicating that you feel using a copyrighted image is fair use, but someone using a song to augment a video is obviously infringement (and basically calling them stupid for doing so).
I don't have all the facts, but it appears they were using a copyrighted song for a commercial purpose (promoting the camp). There's not a strong fair use argument there.
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Re: Re: Re: clarify
read an interview with a band member who actually was touating the company line that ripping cd's you own to put on your mp3 player for on the go use was piracy because you should buy a seprae copy for each form of use you plan to put the song to.
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Copyright-free Music
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Re:
Jamendo is a good alternative.
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Re:
The problem is that they're already vague, with the added bonus of being written in legalese. Precise language is not "Herinwith lies the agreement of both parties connected to this work to allow the exclusive useage of the unadulterated, complete, unchanged manuscript of..." yadda, yadda, yadda, ad infinitum, ad nauseam.
Precise language does not have to be complex, and many examples of complex language are built from the ground up to be imprecise, and say very little while taking up 500+ pages.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
Yeah, I have to agree that there doesn't look like a strong fair use argument there.
To be fair though, this thread started with a generalization ("...Don't put songs you don't have the rights to in your videos...") by you that wasn't just limited to this particular case.
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Re: Re: Re:
Yep people all over will memorize the entire history of copyright jurisprudence just to get the details right LoL
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Re: It's not broken
If a person wants to donate, that's a different matter, because then that person's name is on the list, and everyone knows who made the decision to donate. If it's a large corporation, it could be anyone, and you'll be passed on from person to person until you give up and go kill yourself.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
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Re: Re: Re: It's not broken
But, not only should copyright be abolished, but it should never have been enacted in the first place. See: Questioning Copyright.
Even William Patry (with my persistent nudging) has had to conclude that "To deny people the right to copy, intimately, from others, is to deny the essence of what it is to be a creative person."
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Re: Professionals should know
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
Collection agencies that charge churches should be ashamed of themselves.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Professionals should know
Copyright is difficult. I've read your posts on this site and you can't seem to understand it so how can you say it is simple. Your ideas about the law have been regularly proven wrong (see - all of your previous posts).
I had hope that you were one troll that would just stay under your bridge but once again you've reared you hideous head.
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Re: Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
I would have a problem if somebody claimed it has done it first and it was a lie, but for copying it and making it use of it even for commercial purposes no.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
Now I've been a church choir director and never had to get licensing from ASCAP, our CCLI covered music purchased and presented as part of the church service. This was yeas ago and may have changed...
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De minimis doesn't exist anymore in copyright, so you are claiming personal use and that is ok to not pay the original artist?
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And really, I'm "regularly proven wrong"? Links please.
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More copyright hatred, which of course is designed to defend the piracy he loves so much; the piracy environment he boneheadedly has based his business model on exploiting.
Snore.
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Also, go to the homepage of ASCAP. It says:
"ASCAP licenses the public performances of its members musical works...
A public performance is one that occurs either in a public place where people gather (other than a small circle of a family or social acquaintances). A public performance is also one that is transmitted to the public, for example, radio or TV broadcasts, and via the Internet."
Yeah, how could he possibly be confused. I mean the licensing company outright states that he can use the song but obviously that isn't what they really mean.
You're such a douche, climb back under your rock or go chase an ambulance for some "work" you're not welcome here.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: It's not broken
http://mobile.bloomberg.com/news/2011-12-28/creativity-springs-from-copy-making-part-2-comm entary-by-william-patry
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[personal attack]
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[blatant lies][incorrect], which [bias] is [blatant lies][digital piracy is evil][strawman]; [non-sequitur fallacy]
Snore.
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And, yeah, copyright is so hard! I mean, how could one ever figure out what their license permits? Certainly, one should just go to the ASCAP homepage and assume that they're covered. That's what any "professional" would do, right?
Chase ambulances? LOL! Good one! So fresh!
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It may seem like common sense but it is sand in the machinery of progress. Unless we give up the addiction to this permission culture our civilisation is doomed.
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William Patry cannot help but betray his recognition that the right to copy is natural, and that the Statute of Anne that annuls it is the unnatural interloper. No-one can know as much about copyright as he does and stop the truth of its corruption spilling from his pen.
"To deny people the right to copy, intimately, from others, is to deny the essence of what it is to be a creative person."
Copyright is coming to an end.
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Huh? The Second Circuit case I quoted above was about exactly that.
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De minimis doesn't exist anymore in copyright, so you are claiming personal use and that is ok to not pay the original artist?
Huh? Fair use doesn't require consent. You are very confused.
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You are a troll, sir, and sadly, one of the least entertaining trolls here. Try being absurd with a bit more gusto, if you will.
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There's a convincing rebuttal.
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They drag you down to their level, and beat you with experience...
Who knew being obtuse would be a benefit in professional trolling.... Wierd Harold, is that you out there? Not quite as random and obscure, but definitely as obtuse.
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oh look, it's that L00ny zealot Crosbie tilting at windmills again...
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You think instruments are worthless, yet apparently they're so difficult to produce you must pay someone else only once for it.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: It's not broken
For the purposes of argument take my definition of 'charter' as 2a and/or 2c from http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/charter
For your reference see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rights_of_Man#Arguments
Can you define what you believe Thomas Paine meant by 'charter', and why you feel such things as the Statute of Anne and the US Constitution did not meet that definition?
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They don't sue over these trivial things and consider it as fair use because it wouldn't be feasible to sue the whole world.
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Re: Re: Re: Can't even post videos of your kids singing at church
If the congress people opposing SOPA had any brains, they would take these examples with them, to give those people a clue about what's being considered 'infringing'.
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We, the people that DON'T infringe, we PAY for our entertainment, we PURCHASE the dvd, mp3, iTunes, etc.
You are tossing the baby out with the bathwater......and this baby got up, gave you the finger, and moved on to a new form of entertainment that doesn't treat PAYING customers like a criminal.
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Copyright
Copyright is so horribly broken perhaps it should be abolished, even if an innocent few are harmed.
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Can I take it that you now recognise that "light years apart" may be somewhat of an exaggeration?
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Someone MARRIED YOU? Holy crap do I feel bad for the person that made that choice.
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