Apple, the RIAA, and Ringtones 218
pilsner.urquell writes "Apple's interest in defending the rights of the consumer has cost them a lot of grief in the ringtone market. 'John Gruber of the Daring Fireball cites Engadget, which reported that the RIAA wanted to be able to distribute ringtones of its artists without having to pay them big money to do so. It won a decision last year before the Copyright Office saying that ringtones weren't derivative works, meaning they didn't infringe on the copyright of the songwriter.' The piece goes on to explain the tense relationship between Apple content holders regarding ringtones and other pieces of IP, such as in the recent withdrawal of NBC."
I never knew copyright law was THIS broken (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I never knew copyright law was THIS broken (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I never knew copyright law was THIS broken (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I never knew copyright law was THIS broken (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I never knew copyright law was THIS broken (Score:4, Informative)
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Eivind.
Wrong (Score:5, Informative)
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I think that the RIAA/MPAA absolutely want a pay-per-device or even a pay-per-listen/pay-per-view business model. In fact, it sometimes seems like they think they deserve to be paid whether you're using their product or not. For example, Universal has demanded to get a cut of consumer electronics (like the Zune and iPod) just on the off chance that those electronics might be used to play music from Universal.
Paid for doing nothing: it's great work if you can find it.
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It's already like that, in the form of intengible, locked-to-this-machine DRM downloads.
You realize in 10 years DVD's maybe won't even be published anymore.
We're about to enter the next level of digital right management hell now.
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Copyright law may be almost hopelessly broke, but the whole DRM bullshit was broken from the get-go.. Silly physics, always proving to be stronger than the apes trying to ignore it's laws.
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Weird, that (Score:2)
Re:Weird, that (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Weird, that (Score:5, Insightful)
These assholes, in theory, are supposed to be working FOR the artists. The ONLY reason the MAFIAA exists in the first place is because of the artists...No artists...No music...No money to collect royalties for.
The MAFIAA needs to be taken out back and shot. It's the humane thing to do after all.
RIAA is for the labels, not the artists (Score:2)
the problem is that the big labels sign on with the RIAA to protect THEIR interests. some bigger artists are slowly working on cutting out the middleman, but they are taking baby steps. the thing is that the majors still have the power to promote the hell out of an artist/band and if a new artist/band tries to stand up to this, the label will just find somebody else willing to sell their soul for a chance at fame.
at Apple's last iPod press event, Steve Jobs
Re:Weird, that (Score:5, Insightful)
It's one thing for an artist to decide they do not want their music for ringtones...agree or not, it is their right.
But that has nothing to do with the MAFIAA making money off of ringtones without paying the artists. This has nothing to do with whether ABBA is willing to allow their music to be used for ringtones or not.
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In fact, they can't even specify that I'm not allowed to make a derivative work of satire.
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Re:Weird, that (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, the laws of GOOD TASTE!
Re:Weird, that (Score:4, Informative)
Obligatory Link (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I never knew copyright law was THIS broken (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I never knew copyright law was THIS broken (Score:5, Informative)
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It seems this ruling says that if you can legally play a song you can legally use a clip of it as a ring tone. IANAL but I think that means that you can safely do the conversion on your own assuming
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Playing an audio file from your phone through speakers requires different permissions than playing the same audio file from the same phone through the same speakers in response to a phone call event... How screwed up is that?
Well, somehow this rule seems to apply to Apple phones only. Most other phones will be happy to play anything playable as a ringer.
Note to consumers: Don't pay for ringtones! Help stop those stupid commercials on TV by making their business model fail. This might be one of the rare occasions where an organized boycott might actually make sense and work out fine.
Re:I never knew copyright law was THIS broken (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I never knew copyright law was THIS broken (Score:5, Informative)
If you don't want to do that, you can even email the ringtones to your phone (your 10 digit number @vzwpix.com), although MP3s will be converted to QCP in the process and lose some quality, and you'll be charged 25c for the message unless you have a picture messaging plan.
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If I want to get a file on to my phone (Sony Ericsson K800i with Orange in the UK), I connect it to my PC using the supplied USB cable and drag and drop it using Explorer. If it's playable, I can use it as a ring tone.
Pay for ring tones? I understand that people do, I've just never really understood *why*.
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Indeed. There is so little value added to US wireless service that I finally, after 10 years of cell phone ownership, kicked my Verizon account to the curb and liberated myself from wireless hell. Of course, I'm in my mid-30s (married, w/ kids) and no longer hip and socially affluent, so it was quite easy to do. :)
Some day, when I can get unlimited air time w/o roaming charges throughout the entire continental
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Do this, Apple, and ther
Entertainment Cartels Want it All (Score:5, Insightful)
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"Apple makes very little from sales of music in iTunes; the vast majority of revenues are funneled back to the record companies, which then devise how to avoid paying their talent and keep as much as they can."
Looks like the author of the article agrees with you. Even if the article does seem as biased as a slashdot poster...
Re:Entertainment Cartels Want it All (Score:5, Interesting)
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Another major "job" of traditional music companies is to handle public relations and marketing for the artists. There needs to be a viable alternative to this. Actually the model wouldn't need to change that much; just keep ownership of the music with the artists and have the current companies work for royalties.
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The problem with that idea is that it's still important for artists to get radio airtime. And pretty much all the radio stations are owned by a few big companies (e.g. ClearChannel) which are chummy with the RIAA. And that radio station cartel is supported, aided and abetted by the FCC.
In other words, to break the RIAA we also have to break the FCC.
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Why? I dont see any value added by the marketing. It just distorts the market, ensuring that anything that isnt minimum common denominator music will get far less than its fair share of market size, market space and revenue (see payola, channel control, cost of entry, etc).
The unbalanced incentive and revenue multiplication effects of marketing and monopoly rights is largely what has caused the cultural poverty and economic disparity within the music market s
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Like a web page or something?
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Like Prince [betanews.com]?
Art. (Score:2)
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You can also use them for performing art. If they are really annoying you can score a 3 point hitting a suitable bucket at the other end of the office (filled with waste water from that kitchenette floor mop if possible). If that does not qualify as performance art the performance thrown by the person who put "The Winner Takes it All" by Abba as a ringtone will. Especially afer he has fished the phone out of the bucket.
So, it's free? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:So, it's free? (Score:5, Informative)
Though it doesn't get any less fucked up by this explaination.
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The whole ringtone thing is just daylight robbery anyway. Don't know about the rest of the world and not really interested in general (my mobile can play any MP3 for ringtone and it's set to normal telephone ring anyw
Do Performance Rights Come with Liablity? (Score:2)
Hmmm, an interesting concept for something that is impossible to copyright to begin with. Of course, this is the country that fined Girl Scouts for performing "God Bless America" without permission.
Another interesting legal concept is Performance Liability. I mean, what if someone is hurt during the performance? Who's fault is it? For instance, if I program my cell phone to ring "Thriller" in a
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Wait, they own what? (Score:5, Interesting)
According to TFA, they won a decision not in court, but simply at the Copyright Office. I don't see any links to this decision itself, and I don't have time to search for it with the insignificant amount of information we are given, so I don't have any idea what this actually says... But I can't see how the Copyright Office is able to give distribution rights other than the information that something is or is not covered under copyright law. They cannot say it's not copyrighted and then authorize the RIAA to collect money, and they can't say it's copyrighted and give the RIAA permission to ignore it and not pay the copyright owner.
Anyone got any more -real- information, instead of just a link to site that links to a site that claims something that isn't cited at all?
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From TFA:
"what the RIAA actually won in the case
Derivative (Score:2)
This means we should be able to create our own ringtones, the artists and media cartels be damned, right? And distribute them freely?
So if that's the case, why are tabs derivative works? Huge archives of fan-made tabs have been taken down. What makes tabs so special compared to ringtones?
Yes and no (Score:2)
Re:Derivative (Score:4, Insightful)
If a ringtone isn't a derivative work, then yes, we can make them all we want (provided we have a legit copy of the song to start with). But no, we can't distribute them, for the same reason we can't distribute the original song. Their not being derivatives doesn't mean they aren't covered under copyright, it just means they're covered under the original song's copyright. The RIAA liked this, because it meant they could whore out any track they had mechanical rights to, as ringtone fodder, without having to renegotiate anything with the artists.
Tabs are different because they're a separate fixed form (written vs recorded) reproduced in whole (vs a slice of the original recording); it's the same for sheets in general and lyrics. (something the RIAA has been slow to come down on, but it'll happen. Just as soon as they figure out how to monetize a lyrics database.
Also, I would like to say that the concern about performing rights is a joke. Sure, performance rights have been used by ASCAP to shake down businesses that play music for their customers and the occasional giant outdoor party. (e.g. annual block party) But the idea that someone would use a 30 second ringtone to 'perform' a song for an audience is absurd on its face.
The purpose of the ringtone is to be heard by the phone's owner. In the bizarre edge cases where people make ringtones of entire songs and play them, on purpose, to entertain a crowd is no different than people using an ipod, boombox or music-playing phone to do the same, right now. There is clearly no need to cut ASCAP in on all ringtone sales for the same reason there is no need to cut them in on all CD sales. ASCAP is likely just so used to getting whatever they want with a nasty legal brief or two that they honestly think it's worth their lawyers fees to take a shot.
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That's exactly the opposite of what "not being derivatives" means, at least in the context of new works and copyright.
There are three options here:
1. The new work is an exact, complete copy of the original, and simple copyright rules apply.
2. The new work is a derivative of the original work and cannot be distributed without permission from the original copyright h
Fair Use Rights In America Amendment (Score:2)
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I wasn't aware of the First Amendment guaranteeing that intellectual property is free to the people.
Copyright law restricts how ideas may be expressed.
RTFA... if you can (Score:2)
The words obnoxious, useless and stupid spring to mind.
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If we did that, it would make if awfully difficult to visit some of our favorite porn sites. ;-)
Subject should be "warning: javascript required" (Score:2)
No, I don't surf with javascript disabled. I've read all the articles about how I should, haven't found them compelling. But I agree with you that it's reasonable to ask
ringtones weren't derivative works (Score:2)
Come on RIAA, you cant have it both ways.
Defense? (Score:4, Interesting)
We argue estopel, and the defense rests.
Ringtones - the most important thing in the world? (Score:5, Funny)
bread: 78 million
oxygen: 91 million
global warming: 80 million
world peace: 2.8 million
liberty: 95 million
But, fortunately:
beer: 128 million
Whew... close
Bwaa World Peace (Score:2)
nice job Slashdot (Score:4, Informative)
mod parent up informative (Score:2)
Why pay for ringtones (Score:2)
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Because the marketplace is willing to.
Another great article and consumer's rights (Score:5, Informative)
source: http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2005/03/07/050307crmu_music [newyorker.com]
By the way, this is one of the best articles on ringtones, covering the technical advances from monophonic MIDI to compressed audio, and the impact on the aesthetics of ringtones. I teach a class on music technology, and the first assignment is to have students compose and create their own ringtone (not by ripping from a CD, actually creating their own). I use the New Yorker article to get everyone up to speed on how big ringtones are in the world today.
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War of the Clones (Score:2)
Copyright law economics will replace all musicians with machines. Especially because all the new that music record corps are pushing on us sucks worse than a machine, usually because it was made by a clone.
So if a ringtone doesn't infringe the artist (Score:2)
Apple and RIAA deserve the bashing (Score:2, Insightful)
And here it is: what if the sounds I want to use as ringtones are my own creation, or public domain, or licensed under a CC license, or cleared by means other than an iTunes purchase?
And what about new business models? What if some upcoming artists (or established ones like They Might be Giants) want to release samples and allow them to be used as ringtones and copied around?
The author men
And I thought... (Score:2)
Ian W.
Why can't I produce my own ringtone? (Score:2, Insightful)
Copyright and Ringtones (Score:3, Informative)
Second, the ruling on ringtones not being a derived work: it probably means that the ringtone is just another mechanical copy of the song, for which the record labels would have to pay whatever fee they've already negotiated with the artist in their current contracts, instead of being a derived work of a different sort which would require new negotiations with each artist.
I know that's not what the article says, and I haven't researched it. But it's what makes sense. (Yeah, yeah, since when does making sense have anything to do with copyright law?)
Third, if you have a song on your phone and a ringtone, the ringtone is kept in a separate file. It is a copy of the song, subject to copyright laws (because you've made a copy). This is necessary because the ring mechanisms in the phone always play the whole file, from the begining.
What we need instead is phone ringers that will use an existing, full length song file, but start playing at an offset into the file, and only play part of the file. Then you only need one file on the phone, and the whole question of paying twice is moot.
Ringtone Market? (Score:2)
Why anyone would want a 15 second song clip to play when they get a phone call is a separate question. It annoys the people around them, and it's a g
Ringtones are retarded anyway (Score:4, Insightful)
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That may well have been the case with the iPod etc. Concerning the iPhone, did the labels force Apple to put DRM into their products the same way they don't force Nokia, Samsung, Blackberry and so on?
Just curious, because my Blackberry has none of that. Any of my MP3s will do as a ringer.
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they added a simple SHA1 hash to better avoid corruption if a sync is interrupted.
No, the hash was designed to lock out 3rd party apps, plain and simple. If it was merely for "data integrity", why design it so that a perfectly good iTunes DB from one iPod won't work on a different iPod? Data integrity does not imply locking data to a single device. Furthermore, SHA1 hashes that incorporate some hidden salt are not "simple". In fact, nothing about SHA1 is "simple" - that's why it's called a cryptographic hash! Granted, the salt was found rather quickly, but my gut feeling is that it was
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Does this make any sense? If sync is corrupted, the hash will be wrong, and the ipod won't play ANY of the music that is on it. Seems like it just exacerbates corruption.
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Would you happen to have a fix for mac fanboys modding me flamebait for pointing out what should be blindingly obvious, too?
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Some of us have been approached recently by a shadowy organization trying to raise money to deal with this problem. Apparently they want to raise enough money that Daniel will absolutely have to accept it. Then they propose to assign him some enormous mind boggling task involving writing something humongous in assembler to a deadline of a year or two. It is their hope that he will then be a) too busy b) too tired to keep up this flood of stuff. The response seems to have been
Also largest non-DRM (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, and also the worlds largest online seller of DRM Free [apple.com] music.
Your point?
Re:Also largest non-DRM (Score:4, Informative)
Re:"Defending the rights of the consumer"? Apple?? (Score:2)