Archive for the ‘ Ripcord Technology Group ’ Category

Are iTunes downloads actually “licenses” rather than “sales”? And why it matters.

I have been arguing this point for years as anyone taking one of my classes at Berklee can testify.  This past week, rapper Eminem and his former production company F.B.T Productions won a significant digital royalties lawsuit granting the artist and production company a 50% split of revenue from digital downloads and ringtones. Universal Music Group will be required to pay a higher share of royalties for downloaded music or on ringtone sales according to a recent ruling by a federal appeals court.

This is a potentially HUGE change from how the recorded music industry’s business model works.  This new ruling may now mean that digital copies of  music are digital “masters,” which command a much higher royalty share than single or album “sales” do.

When consumers purchase a download from iTunes, they are actually “licensing” the song for playback within certain boundaries. According to many label contracts, licenses are to be treated as splits, perhaps split 50/50 between artist and label. To date, that has not been the case as downloads via iTunes and other sites have been treated as “sales” of copies of the song, rather than a license of the “master recording”.  Eminem and company challenged that assumption.

The labels have been accounting as if a download was the same as the sale of a single, using the existing contract language to define the payments.

Posted via email from John Pisciotta’s posterous

Music industry groups have sent an open letter to Google’s Eric Schmidt, asking him to do more to prevent people copying music online.

Several prominent music industry groups have sent an open letter to Google’s Eric Schmidt, pleading with him to do more to prevent people copying music online.

Posted via email from John Pisciotta’s posterous

Anybody else miss Milt Capp’s Venture Nashville blog?

Anybody else miss Milt Capp’s Venture Nashville blog?

Newsweek cover story “The Creativity Crisis,” tells Andrew Keen about the faltering creativity scores in North America…

Why trying to save Piano Rolls is a bad Idea, in 1909 and 2010.

Why disruption is a good thing and best left un-messed.
Why trying to save Piano Rolls is a bad Idea,  In 1909 and 2010.
The 1909 Copyright Act in the US was driven in large part due to fear over a new-fangled technology, wanted to try to preserve some deteriorating piano rolls.
Interesting post form Mike Masnich,

http://techdirt.com/articles/20100712/18325210185.shtml

Posted via email from John Pisciotta’s posterous

Topspin Media CEO Ian Rogers on Why Data Is the Future of the Music Biz

MusicSynk late financial opps meeting

Leaders don’t create followers, they create more leaders.Tom Peters

We live thinking we will never die. We die thinking we had never lived. Cut it out.

Does Capitalism Destroy Culture?