Legacy Music Industry Shouldn't Get To Watch Over The Royalties Of Independent Songwriters

from the we've-done-this-before dept

Last year, a very strange thing happened in the copyright space: a pretty major update to copyright law was passed and it wasn’t that controversial. Leading up to that passage there had been plenty of concerns, but a compromise was worked out last fall that was… actually pretty good for everyone involved. It wasn’t how any sane society would craft copyright law from scratch, but the key aspects of the Music Modernization Act were to attempt to fix a lot of other really broken stuff. At the time we focused on the fact that it would help expedite moving some very old music into the public domain, which was great. But the much bigger deal to the music world was a reform of the mechanical licensing process for songwriters.

As we discussed in walking through one of a few lawsuits that had been filed against music streaming platforms over mechanical licensing, it was such a complex area of copyright law that basically no one fully understood it. Every single copyright lawyer I spoke to in trying to understand it would give me a totally different answer. So part of the Music Modernization Act was to clear up the questions around mechanical licensing and internet services, making it easier for songwriters to actually get royalties they’re owed, without the convoluted process that used to be in place.

As with all things, the devil is very much in the details, and suddenly things are looking a bit problematic. The law directs the Register of Copyrights to designate an entity to become the new “mechanical license collective” (MLC), effectively creating a brand new collection society for these mechanical royalties. The Copyright Office has an open comment period on this, which is about to end, and musician Zoe Keating has noticed that the entire process appears to be rigged to (of course) help divert money to the big music publishers and away from independent artists. She’s written a very detailed, but well worth reading, description of the problematic aspect of what’s happening, and is asking the Copyright Office to extend the comment period as more songwriters — especially independent ones, learn what’s going on and can weigh in.

The key part in all of this is that the organization that represents the biggest music publishers, the National Music Publishers’ Association (NMPA) is angling to run this new MLC. Indeed, it appears to be acting as if it already is in charge of it:

The NMPA very cleverly named their proposed group the ?MLC? and continually refer to it as the ?industry consensus? group. David Israelite in his sworn testimony to congress said the NMPA ?is the trade association representing all American music publishers and their songwriting partners.? That?s not quite true. The NMPA does not represent songwriters like me.

Again, there is so much confusion on the street about mechanical royalties. I?ve been talking to all the songwriters I can the last couple weeks. So many are confused about what these royalties are and how to collect them. Some songwriters have tried to educate themselves and have read up about it only then to be confused by the NMPA?s naming confusion and as a result, think that the NMPA?s MLC is already The MLC or that it is the same as the AMLC or that everyone is on the same page. In short, there is confusion. That confusion benefits the NMPA.

A big part of the role of whoever becomes the MLC (whether it’s the NMPA’s version or another one) is, of course, to get the money they’ve collected to the artists who deserve it. And therein lies a bit of a concern:

There is a pot of unclaimed royalties that have already been paid by music services that is estimated to be between $1.5 and $2.5 billion. A major task of the new MLC will be to apply some clever technology to match that money to its rightful owners. I?ve already explained the difficulty of collecting when you?re unrepresented. Without question, a large portion of these unclaimed royalties belong to self-published songwriters.

The new law says that after three years the board of the MLC can decide to liquidate that pot of unclaimed royalties and distribute it to themselves by market share. This strikes me as a huge conflict of interest. Does the NMPA even have any incentive to do what it takes to match the royalties to whomever earned them? Are the unclaimed royalties of unrepresented songwriters just going to keep getting distributed to Sony, Universal etc now and forever going forward?

If you’ve been reading Techdirt for a really long time, this may sound familiar. Way back in 2004, the law over a different kind of royalty — for interactive streams — that was collected by a new group (SoundExchange) spun off from the organization representing the big record labels (the RIAA) said that it, too, could keep the money for itself, if the organization couldn’t find artists. And, magically, SoundExchange had “trouble” finding lots of artists, including some really big names. By 2009, we noted that SoundExchange was hanging on to over $100 million that belonged to artists. Public outcry over this did eventually result in SoundExchange promising not to just keep the money for itself, and to its credit, after a lot of work, the organization did become much better at finding artists.

But it boggles the mind that having already gone through that experience 15 or so years ago, the Copyright Office would set up a nearly identical boondoggle. And, as Keating notes, the NMPA doesn’t want much oversight over its proposed organization (unlike the competing proposal, which Keating is supporting):

If the NMPA is awarded this contract by the Copyright Office they will control billions of dollars in royalties without oversight (unlike the AMLC, the NMPA proposal says the Copyright Office will not oversee their entity) and with a conflict of interest that gives them incentive to liquidate and distribute unclaimed royalties to their members rather than to the songwriters who actually earned them.

This is increasingly important. As we’ve continued to show in our latest Sky is Rising report, the number of musicians and music being created continues to skyrocket. And a whole lot of that is coming from independent songwriters and musicians. The idea that the legacy industry should be able to collect and be in charge of distributing many millions of dollars owed to those independents seems problematic in many ways — and it’s not helped by the presumptuous attitude of the NMPA in pushing its own organization as the solution.

Keating is asking the Copyright Office to, at the very least, extend the deadline for comments beyond April 22nd, and hopefully the Copyright Office will listen.

The education issues here are huge. All the songwriters, large and small, that I?ve talked to have asked why they haven?t heard about any of this controversy when so much money is at stake. ?If it was a big deal, why haven?t I heard about it??. I can?t believe the deadline is as soon as April 22. We need more time to educate songwriters on this issue so they can choose which entity will administer their mechanical royalties.

I call on the Registrar of Copyrights to extend the comment period.

Meanwhile, I call on all songwriters to submit comments to the Registrar of Copyrights.

As Keating points out, one of the biggest challenges she’s always had in making a full-time living as a successful independent musician is not piracy, but rather the legacy industry getting in the way and keeping money it owes her.

Ironically, a lot of the obstacles in the early stages of my career came not from file-sharing/piracy sites but from the established music industry and their gate-keeping. I understand that the NMPA is trying to protect its members from an industry that most often tries to siphon off as much of their member?s earnings as possible, but they should not protect themselves at the expense of unrepresented songwriters. Lets not bake the mistakes of the past into future systems.

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Comments on “Legacy Music Industry Shouldn't Get To Watch Over The Royalties Of Independent Songwriters”

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124 Comments
Mark Atwood (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

"The government" has "no legitimate interest" in forgotten and abandoned checking accounts either, but the law is if you abandon a checking account that has money in it, after a fixed and known number of years, the balance reverts to the local state government.

The law exists in large part to remove the temptation of the banks to "lose" the account holder information and then take the money for themselves.

This seems the same sort of thing to me.

If the mechanical licensing process cannot identify and pay the copyright owner after 7 years, the money (and all interest that it has earned) reverts to, say, a split between the Library of Congress and the National Endowment for the Arts.

If the NMPA fights that, that is direct proof on it’s face of their malicious duplicity and intent to steal.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

They’re no different than large corporations who exploit workers by making a fortune while paying a pittance. Smart workers know their worth and demand it (they get overpaid), while most people don’t care about business and just want enough to survive or live a middle-class lifestyle. Artists often want fame (which translates to other opportunities and groupies, etc.), so it’s not always as exploitative as it seems.

The problem the "legacy" companies have is they were set up for an era that did not include the internet. If their overhead were lower, they could and would adapt, but they are, financially speaking, too big and too slow. Even in a world without piracy, they’d still be dinosaurs.

Mason Wheeler (profile) says:

musician Zoe Keating has noticed that the entire process appears to be rigged to (of course) help divert money to the big music publishers and away from independent artists

"Divert."

As important as it is to call out publishing interests on their continuous abuse of the word "steal" WRT copyright infringement, it’s equally important to apply it appropriately instead of using euphemisms. So let’s call a spade a spade here: the process is rigged to allow big music publishers to steal money from independent artists. The NMPA has designed a system in which they get to take money that rightfully belongs to independent artists, and stuff their own pockets with it instead. That’s legitimate theft.

Gary (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

Copyright is not theft,

No, Copyright is actual literal theft as I outlined above. I even cited an example which you ignored.
It is also stealing from the public domain. Taking works out of public use for two lifetimes.

But I’m so glad that dead authors are "encouraged" to make more books by archaic laws that were drafted not to promote creativity, but to stifle the free flow of knowledge. Because Queen Anne was terrified that the masses would have easy access to works via the Gutenberg press.

You really should tell your employer to give you better retorts for the astroturfing, eh?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

Okay, I’ll bite. You’re saying that copyright holders would produce less content if copyright lasted 50 years after author death than 70?

How about now, since the RIAA/MPAA didn’t appeal to have the limit extended to 95 years? You’re saying we can expect less content?

Has the copyright allowed Kurt Cobain and Michael Jackson’s corpses to start creating?

Seegras (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:5 rights for the dead to take from the living

1841, in front of the House of Commons, MP Thomas Babington Macaulay held the following speech:
http://www.thepublicdomain.org/2014/07/24/macaulay-on-copyright/

"And you will find that, in attempting to impose unreasonable restraints on the reprinting of the works of the dead, you have, to a great extent, annulled those restraints which now prevent men from pillaging and defrauding the living."

Of course, everything he warned from has already happened, because of these copyright-maximalist wankers.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

Because Queen Anne was terrified that the masses would have easy access to works via the Gutenberg press.

How wrong can you be, as in her reign the censorship version of copyright was repealed, and then after intense lobbying by the the printers, and their use of the term, for the authors, the basis of modern copyright enacted. That is, she assented, by signing bills passed by parliament, the liberalization of printing,

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

"It isn’t "theft" when it is government sanctioned."

Eminent domain?

Would only apply if the government de facto claims ownership over private property rights. That’s not the case here.

Copyright is theft, but the government’s role is only standing to the side holding a big bat while the sleazy weasel asks for the protection fee.

Anonymous Coward says:

"As Keating points out, one of the biggest challenges she’s always had in making a full-time living as a successful independent musician is not piracy, but rather the legacy industry getting in the way and keeping money it owes her. "

Where are the "good" lawyers to fight a case like this? It could be lucrative, or a class-action? Is the legal profession so fatally flawed that it cannot give justice to anyone but the wealthy?

On the surface, it sounds like pure theft, which raises the question of why this has not been litigated.

This website is great practice for logic skills.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

Aren’t you the guy who claimed pirate stole your mailing list, stole your e-books and replaced all the names and credits so no one could tell it was your work? (Or, specifically, you couldn’t name what the work used to be so you can’t provide any citations? Not that it stops you from saying the new name of the book(s), but that’s a logic bomb for another day…) And claimed the reason why you didn’t take it to the courts was because the name behind the theft was too big to be sued?

You’d think that you’d know what it’s like to go up against an opponent with superior money, time, resources and lawyers. But that would require you having a modicum of decency or honesty, Herrick…

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

Not obsessed, just trying to keep track. If you’re as important as you say you are surely I ought to know who or what I’m up against? Seeing that you’re going to lawsuit, police action and rape me after all. Or are you trying to get a free pass into my rectum? You know only pirates who want freebies would think like that, right? Are you a pirate, Herrick?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

I’m not the one supposedly putting my legal name out there. "Stephen T. Stone" is, and there’s just not much on that name online other than this site.

If I did post as me, police involvement and civil lawsuits would follow the next day. Some of Masnick’s close buddies deliberately incited people to threaten to come to my home and kill me. One day this story will be told, but on my timetable, not his.

Masnick belongs in prison and hopefully he’ll be put there one day. That’s a natural consequence of thinking everyone online is a defenseless loser. That prick poked the wrong bear and he’s gonna take down a lot of others with him.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

Boy, I’ve waited since twenty-fucking-twelve for Masnick to get his comeuppance from the millions of artists who supposedly have cardiovascular infarctions simply because of the fact that he breathes oxygen just like they do.

This bear of yours is dead. It’s joined the bleeding choir invisible. It’s an ex-bear.

Either put your rich patron money where your insufferable little mouth is or piss off.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Super cool story bro

“If I did post as me, police involvement and civil lawsuits would follow the next day.”

It’s like you can’t help but lie. So tell the gathered throng. Are you a police investigator, a private eye, a rock star, a best selling author, a small business owner, a multi millionaire, or a Hollywood producer today? It’s is so hard to keep up with all the lies you tell on a pee minute basis.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Super cool story bro

"Are you a police investigator, a private eye, a rock star, a best selling author, a small business owner, a multi millionaire, or a Hollywood producer today?"

You forgot he’s also a certified genius, a lawyer, and an IT professional according to his prior claims.

Why he tends to end up threatening people with assault and rape every now and then is beyond me, because anyone that multitalented surely has better ways of countering arguments. Like basic logic and factual truth, neither of which he has so far been very good at finding and deploying.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Stop trying to hit me and hit me

It’s time to swat the gnats.

Ah, so you’re the kind of Call of Duty player who gets triggered by getting his ass kicked in online gaming and thinks calling a SWAT team so his opponent dies in the line of trigger-happy cops is appropriate retribution.

Wish I could say I was surprised that you were this sort of bottom scraper, Herrick.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 We all know you can’t get it up much less rape anyone

“This is why Masnick will never be taken seriously as a journalist.”

How many times you gonna shit that little nugget out jhonboi?

“One day a network news camera will be recording his answers to questions he refuses to answer here. Let’s see how he behaves then.”

I can’t wait to see you answering questions about threatening to rape mentally ill people.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re:

"Where are the "good" lawyers to fight a case like this? It could be lucrative, or a class-action? Is the legal profession so fatally flawed that it cannot give justice to anyone but the wealthy?"

Lawyers want profit, therefore they go where the profit is.

For Keating this is no doubt a sizeable chunk of money. However, whether it’s enough to keep a first rate lawyer in a business which will occupy several billable months of time is another question entirely.

As for the pro bono lawyers…they do exist, but thanks to the actions of copyright trolls such as Prenda’s spiritual successors, Keating is one of VERY many people fighting avaricious fraud claims.

"This website is great practice for logic skills."

Surprising to see you make that claim, Baghdad bob, given that you’ve spent your years around here strenuously avoiding causal logic like the plague.

Rico R. (profile) says:

I’m an independent musician, and this is the first time I’m hearing about this comment period on the Music Modernization Act, and it’s almost over! I say this with the utmost respect, but if Techdirt, a non-major small-time news operation, is the first time I hear about a potentially troubling implementation of updated copyright law in a way that directly affects me, there’s a major disconnect between legacy gatekeepers and actual creators. I have to wonder if legacy players are hoping that smaller independent artists (like myself) just don’t do anything so they can make money off of works they don’t own or represent. And they say that copyright law is designed to protect small creators like me? Yeah, right!!

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re:

"I have to wonder if legacy players are hoping that smaller independent artists (like myself) just don’t do anything so they can make money off of works they don’t own or represent."

Of course that’s the case. Any company will try to make as much profit as the law allows. One problem with copyright law is that it makes racketeering effectively legal.

"And they say that copyright law is designed to protect small creators like me? Yeah, right!!"

"They", by which we mean the copyright cult of legacy gatekeepers and middlemen, have tried to promote that lie ever since Queen Anne’s statutes. The reality is that copyright law was always meant to be a protectionist tool for gatekeepers to retain a monopoly while locking actual creators into the role of kept sheep.

It’s pretty obvious that copyright law can’t protect a single creator from having his/her work copied. Ever. Its only practical use for the creator is to prevent retail sales of said work and in preventing someone else from claiming the work as theirs.

For the gatekeeper/middleman, however, copyright forms the core of a legal racketeering analogue usable as a business model with extreme return on investment and few risks.

Anyone telling you that copyright is for the creator is trying to sell you the brooklyn bridge.

Samuel Abram (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

It’s pretty obvious that copyright law can’t protect a single creator from having his/her work copied. Ever. Its only practical use for the creator is to prevent retail sales of said work and in preventing someone else from claiming the work as theirs.

Hence why I license all my original music with a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial license.

Samuel Abram (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

I did read up on the debate, and I’m still in favor of the NC condition. I wouldn’t receive an income from it otherwise (Even Jonathan Coulton and Cory Doctorow don’t eschew the NC condition nor would they be likely to do so in the future). I’m not convinced that the "share-alike" would suffice. Also, I don’t necessarily care how people license derivative works of mine. as long as they attribute it for me and don’t use it to make money without my permission.

That being said, I’ve written it in my will that every work of authorship I have ever created will enter the public domain upon my death. Also, I didn’t sync my music for monetization in youtube because that would go against the NC part of my license.

Samuel Abram (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

Would you mind explaining what you mean by this? I don’t follow.

Gladly. I’m signed via Songtrust to BMI for performance rights. I also own all my master rights via bandcamp. If other people share my work, I’m okay with it, nay, support it because it shows people are actually interested in it. However, if somebody were to sell my work or a derivative work from my work, I’d like a cut from it. The Noncommercial condition does this. The ShareAlike does not. This is not hypothetical, considering that I actually have earned money from not only my own music on Bandcamp, iTunes, and Spotify, but through BMI as well (I have 20% songwriting credit in the Mega Ran song O.P.). While it is true I would receive more income from live shows, booking gigs is hard and I rarely perform live. That being said, if I play my cards right, my music may be in an upcoming rapper’s album (won’t spill the beans, sorry).

Does that explanation suffice? I apologize if it doesn’t.

Ninja (profile) says:

So many tireless experts on the subject and ardent defenders of artists come and spew all sorts of bullshit when there’s even the tiniest attempt to suggest copyright needs adjustments that I’m kind of surprised there isn’t any bullshit spewed so far in this article comments.

If it was about fairness and supporting artists copyright would be radically different to begin with, even considering the MMAct. The bright part is that business as always isn’t as easily accepted by the public as it was in the past so it seems things are slowly evolving and improving. Not that we won’t see the MAFIAA attempting to implement absurdities or trying Mickey Mouse expansions in the future but it will at least be harder.

Anonymous Coward says:

I once quit a computer job because the employer was making $50-100 for every dollar they were paying me, on a job I could have done for a fraction of the price for the firm I had previously quit who had contracted my new firm to do the work. They had turned a simple job into something four of their partners were feeding from.

These places make the music industry seem honest, and the consumer is the one that pays the price.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Which alleged "scam" do you refer to? Your posting sounds libelous except for my being an alias. If I posted as myself you’d be sued for this.

You don’t make Masnick look very professional when you pollute his comments section with remarks like this.

My stories are much cooler than you’ll ever be, that’s for sure.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: you’ve got me there.

I liked the one where you were running a multi-year multi police agency investigation into “Mikes dirty deeds.” You can write some nice fiction.

As far as your threats, we both know that much like you, they are impotent.

“You don’t make Masnick look very professional when you pollute his comments section with remarks like this.”

As ever jhonboi you are the maestro of grade level projection.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 you’ve got me there.

Ah, is this the part where you threaten your months-long police investigation, on the behalf of the Internet persona who was mildly offended?

C’mon, Herrick, put some effort into it this time. You’re not fighting Grindr here, you might actually have a fighting chance! Not much of one going by your track record but let’s face it, it’s an improvement.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 you’ve got me there.

I don’t do police investigations.

As for the rest of the stuff, looks like it might be time to get that going. Getting REALLY sick of Masnick and his crew.

Every name that posts here is discoverable. Anyone who thinks they can harass me anonymously is making a very large bet on that.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:5 you’ve got me there.

Bro you claimed to have the local, state, and Feds looking at Mike. Or did you forget that particular series of lies?

Next you gonna go all “I know people with a particular set of skills and you don’t want to cross me. Which is about one step up from “my big brother is gonna beat up up.”

You do realise that you have to use your real name to file, right bro? I can’t wait to laugh at the pathetic life of the “real” Jhon Smythe.

Rocky says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

Nice goal post moving there and which is totally besides the point of which of them are more honest.

They didn’t steal, they inflated the cost up front and got paid which could be considered morally dubious. If we on the other hand look at the music industry and the collection agencies that regularly steals (as in actually depriving someone of real money) from independent artists among others – I’d say the persons in the example you gave is indeed more honest.

You do understand that someone can be honest AND morally corrupt at the same time, don’t you? It’s called not being a hypocrite.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

And yet only one industry allows people to sue others and demand payment based on unproven accusations.

If the US being the only country to have Section 230 is grounds for its repeal, I hold that copyright fanboys can piss off and get a job like everyone else instead of having their corpses paid for 70 years of doing fuck all.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re:

"the employer was making $50-100 for every dollar they were paying me"

"I could have done for a fraction of the price for the firm I had previously quit"

Two things to mention here. First off, you seem to think that salary is the only cost involved with hiring someone. I’d look into that if I were you. There’s a massive amount you don’t understand.

Second, no wonder these companies decided to use contractors instead of hiring full time staff, if people like you were quitting at the drop of a hat. Even hiring for the kind of basic entry level job you were surely doing involves a lot of overhead expenses, and it’s often cheaper for those companies to hire contractors than it is to rehire and retrain every few months.

The fact that you think the above is restricted to the tech sector also exposes your utter ignorance.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re:

"I once quit a computer job because the employer was making $50-100 for every dollar they were paying me…"

Ah, so today you’re pretending to be the IT expert, Baghdad Bob?

IT companies still work according to market conditions and as displayed in your "example" it’s possible to quit the job and go to work as a consultant or some more credible company.

Whereas an artist doesn’t have the ability to take the business elsewhere if said artist ever put pen to a Sony contract.

That Anonymous Coward (profile) says:

One does wonder why they can’t look at the historical timeline of these collectives.
How much money is in their coffers that remains there because they somehow can’t locate the artists they are supposed to pay?
How much money is paid from their coffers to their staff who can’t manage to do the job they obstensively paid to do?

They image a world where tech else can just glimpse something & decide if it infringes. but can’t manage to locate artists they owe money to.
They find ways to nickel & dime the artists while blaming the boogeyman ‘piracy’ for stealing all of the money, while hoping we ignore their record profits.

Perhaps it is time to stop letting them be ‘creative’ in their accounting methods & demand they clean their own house rather than blame the outside forces who don’t manage to get any of the money yet are blamed for stealing it while its just sitting in their coffers ready to buy more laws & give them bonuses for keeping the blame on anything but themselves.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

So valuable you can’t afford to name them. Big surprise. Just like the police you failed to name, your army of failed inventors you failed to name, your big bad enemies and graceful patrons you failed to name…

Is failing to name shit your secret to success, Herrick? Not surprising why your e-book and white elephant gift package business model was such a huge failure.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

To be perfectly honest I doubt think Jhon boy is actually Herrick. It’s certainly tempting to think so, given the way he was wielding the Herrick vs. Grindr case as the definitive death knell of Section 230 before major media caught on, which suggested that he had insider knowledge.

Of course, an equally plausible explanation could be that Jhon simply reads a lot of Grindr-related news. I believe Jhon boy is Herrick in the same way that I believe "Hamilton" is actually descended from Alexander Hamilton.

Buy yourself a coke anyway, and drink a toast to roasting trolls who think the best way to get a law repealed is to post angry rants on websites they think nobody respects.

Scary Devil Monastery (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

"I’ve actually created extremely valuable works that people have stolen."

Works you won’t name, whose "value" is entirely due to your own evaluation, and whose apparent evaluation by the target demographic has been so low you can’t even give them away, is that it?

For someone as "important" a multitalented self-appointed genius, IT professional, lawyer, successful businessman and prize-winning author as you repeatedly claim to be you certainly spend a lot of time on what you yourself claim to be an unimportant web site.

I doubt anyone is dumb enough to fall for that shit anymore if they still have the brains left to draw breath, Baghdad bob.

John Smith says:

Normally I wouldn’t bother posting this, but since some would misconstrue my silence, I’m just posting that I’m not going to be posting after this, at least not here anyway. At some point I’ll drop all the information I’ve accumulated and all the dots I’ve connected, but it won’t be done here.

I’m sure the anonymous cowards will have fun continuing to give me a free corner office in their brain, or maybe someone will light the figurative match and start a figurative fire that will forever alter the internet landscape. Masnick is up to his ears in many not-so-nice things that are better expressed through the mainstream media, where "snark" doesn’t cut it as a reply. The 4chan kiddies who post here don’t do very well in that environment.

Cya. I won’t be reading replies so don’t act as if I did. I came here to accumulate evidence regarding a group of people who were responsible for repeated threats against my life, and who harmed several innocent people in the process. That evidence has now been accumulated. Some people seem to think it’s funny to do that. I do not agree with them. So long.

Anonymous Coward says:

"Unrepresented"...You Mean "Uncaptured"?

<rhetorical>
"Are the unclaimed royalties of unrepresented songwriters just going to keep getting distributed to Sony, Universal etc now and forever going forward?"
</rhetorical>
[Proper markup matters.]

We all know this is simply the newest way the copyright industry plans to skin the artists they couldn’t trick or coerce into signing away their content rights as creators.

Jeff Price (profile) says:

Redistribution of Songwriter Money

Full Disclosure. I am a sitting board member of the AMLC, an entity submitting to be designated as the MLC.

In my opinion, one of the more salient points as to why the NMPA is attempting to have its entity be the MLC with a governing body of its own members that control US market share is found in the following section of the Music Modernization Act. The cut and paste of the language is

“(11) LEGAL PROTECTIONS FOR LICENSING ACTIVITIES.—

“(E) PREEMPTION OF STATE PROPERTY LAWS.—The holding and distribution of funds by the mechanical licensing collective in accordance with this subsection shall supersede and preempt any State law (including common law) concerning escheatment or abandoned property, or any analogous provision, that might otherwise apply.

This language is not needed, not required and serves only one purpose. To make it legal to take people’s money and redistribute it to others with no consequence.

The accrued but unpaid royalties could have been held indefinitely or board recommendations could have been provided to the appropriate oversite committee at some time in the future with it going towards charities, health care funds for musicians etc.

This language combined with a board of music publishers that are all NMPA members, control the most market share, that will not be using the MLC if direct licensed (which they currently are) that can recommend other people’s money be liquidated and then they receive the lion share of it speak volumes as to the intent of the MMA

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