ShanJiaoFirstPaper 2 - 29 Oct 2012 - Main.EbenMoglen
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META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper" |
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< < | Are Songwriters better off under Creative Commons Licenses? | > > | Are Songwriters better off under Creative Commons Licenses? | | By ShanJiao
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< < | ---+ I. Introduction | > > | Introduction | |
Creative Commons (“CC”) is a non-profit organization provides standardized copyright licenses under which copyright owners can publish their works that the public can use and share. Instead of getting rid of copyright, CC licenses work alongside copyright and let copyright owners change their copyright terms from the default of “all rights reserved” to “some rights reserved.” [1] This article will examine the business and legal models of “old” music industry with full copyright and the “new” Internet-based music industry with CC licenses and pay special attention to songwriters’ benefits and losses in order to answer the question whether the latter model can provide sufficient incentives for musical creation. | |
> > | This assumes that music
is created because of "incentives." Because that doesn't account for
almost all the world's music, whether present or historical, which
was not produced or "created" as a result of any monetary incentive
derived from ownership of music, the assumption is obviously false.
It is also obvious that songwriters, or even songwriters and
composers, are only some of the "creators" of music. Moreover, not
all the copyrights concerned with the commercial distribution of
music are owned by or even assigned by "creators." Moreover, much
"created" and licensed music is not licensed for use as music
standing alone. For all these reasons, you might want to reconsider
what the question is you are asking, and why you are asking
it. | | | |
< < | ---+ II. How the “old” music industry with full copyright works | | | |
> > | How the "old" music industry with full copyright works | | | |
< < | Let’s have a look at the major players in the recording. Usually a songwriter will enter into a publishing agreement with a publisher who pitch the songs to recording company. The recording company hires recording artists (also performers) and creates, markets and distributes the recordings. Performance right organizations (“PROs”) license the public performance on behalf of the copyright owners. Mechanical rights agency provides service of mechanical royalty collection. [2] Songwriters’ compensation which is associated with the middlemen mentioned above comes from three major sources: (1) mechanical royalties from sale of physical records which are based on a statutory rate at $0.08 or a lower negotiated rate; [3] (2) performance royalties. For streaming online, the royalty rate is $0.0017 per song, while other PROs like ASCAP pay a higher rate. [4] However, a songwriter is not the only person enjoying the fruits of his/her creative works. They have to split mechanical royalties with publishers (usually at 50/50) and split performance royalties with recording companies. If a songwriter has a song sold for one million copies, he/she at most can get $40,000 mechanical royalties. For new songwriters, they might coercively enter into an agreement with publishers or recording companies which makes them worse off. For songwriters who are also recording artists, their share of royalties will be further reduced by a controlled composition clause. [5] | | | |
> > | Let’s have a look at the major players in the recording. Usually a songwriter will enter into a publishing agreement with a publisher who pitch the songs to recording company. The recording company hires recording artists (also performers) and creates, markets and distributes the recordings. Performance right organizations (“PROs”) license the public performance on behalf of the copyright owners. Mechanical rights agency provides service of mechanical royalty collection. [2] Songwriters’ compensation which is associated with the middlemen mentioned above comes from three major sources: (1) mechanical royalties from sale of physical records which are based on a statutory rate at $0.08 or a lower negotiated rate; [3] (2) performance royalties. For streaming online, the royalty rate is $0.0017 per song, while other PROs like ASCAP pay a higher rate. [4] However, a songwriter is not the only person enjoying the fruits of his/her creative works. They have to split mechanical royalties with publishers (usually at 50/50) and split performance royalties with recording companies. If a songwriter has a song sold for one million copies, he/she at most can get $40,000 mechanical royalties. For new songwriters, they might coercively enter into an agreement with publishers or recording companies which makes them worse off. For songwriters who are also recording artists, their share of royalties will be further reduced by a controlled composition clause. [5] | | | |
> > | These are the terms set
by the small oligopoly that controls more than 90% of the world's
commercial "popular" music, and an infinitesimal proportion of the
world's total recorded music. Why are you describing the way they
contract as the way "the industry" works? | | | |
< < | ---+ III. How the “new” Internet-based music industry with CC licenses works | | | |
> > | How the "new" Internet-based music industry with CC licenses works | | As technology and new media improve, the music industry and its major players are moving into an entirely different level of sharing, purchasing, marketing and distributing. [6] On one side, songwriters can take advantage of low cost of marketing and distributing through Internet service providers and have their works published without dealing with the big record labels and other intermediate agents or simply by contracting with small Internet record labels with whom songwriters can get better deals. On the other side, publishing their works online songwriters inevitably face the problem of free downloading by Internet users.
CC tries to solve the problem by making such downloading legal under its standard licenses signed by copyright owners. There are six types of licenses provided by CC which concern attribution, commercial use and derivative works. The most accommodating license is “CC BY” which lets others distribute, remix, tweak, and build upon the original work, even commercially, as long as they credit the author for the original creation. The most restrictive license is “CC BY-NC-ND” which only allows others to download the works and share them with others as long as they credit the author, but they can’t change them in any way or use them commercially. [7] | |
> > | You should not have
overlooked the importance of vcopylefted music under CC-BY-SA.
Failing to discuss copylefting is a crucial
omission.
| | Pitifully, even under the most restricted CC license, the songwriter cannot make any mechanical royalties. But we should consider songwriters as different individuals instead of as a whole. As Zac Shaw, a musician, points out in his blog, “[f]ree exposure is only a lost profit opportunity for the minority of musicians who succeeded in the pre-digital record business paradigm. Most of the time musicians didn’t profit beyond statutory royalties anyway, because they could never recoup the cost of marketing and advertising.” [8] | |
> > | Also because recording
companies stole from them outrageously and without shame or
deterrence, except for the tiny fraction who could afford a lawyer to
conduct audits for them. No such audit in my experience has ever
failed to detect substantial theft of
royalties. | | Moreover, the “lost profit” due to free exposure can be financially compensated after songwriters gain fans and success as long as they do not give out their rights to commercial use of their works under CC licenses. Through other tools on the Internet, such as Facebook, Kickstarter and Bandcamp, songwriters can establish a direct connection to their fans and be funded by fans through low-cost Internet service providers instead of wasting money on the middlemen in the old music industry. Songwriters, who are not performers at the same time, might be in a slightly disadvantaged position than the recording artists of their works as they cannot benefit directly from performance. But by restricting their works for only non-commercial use under CC licenses, songwriters can gain performance royalties and split from sale of physical recordings for fans in the future. And the main players in the “new” music industry have more equal bargaining powers over the agreements they are reaching.
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< < | ---+ IV. Summary | > > | Summary | |
To summarize, though empirical studies might better prove that the “new” Internet-based music industry can benefit songwriters no less than, if not better, the “old” music industry, the analysis above can at least make the point that the criticism against CC based on the welfare of songwriters should not be taken as granted. | |
> > | | | | |
> > | This is not a conclusion. You haven't actually shown anything. You
haven't discussed the methods for distributing free music, the nature
of the parties making businesses out of recording and distributing
free music, the nature of the free music library composition system
that is replacing library composition contracts in several major media
production markets. All you have done is to point out that the
existing distribution system is so unfavorable to both composers and
performers that it is not difficult to improve on their arrangements
even without granting anyone exclusive ownership terms to modify or
redistribute music. Given that musicians in every culture since the
beginning of time were working and earning livings without anyone's
owning music (which was only possible after the inventions of the
collective we call "Thomas Edison"), that's neither a novel nor a
surprising result.
Indeed, so far you haven't said anything I didn't already write and publish
more than a decade ago, even before my friend and comrade Larry Lessig
formed CC to implement our efforts to destroy the power of the "owner"
intermediaries. The ecology is indeed changing. But you neither show
where the current frontier is, nor show where the frontier line will
move next.
Endnotes
Why are you using
endnotes in hypertext? Link your references to the callouts, as is
usual on the Web, so the reader can get to your sources conveniently,
the way her reading tools are designed to help her do. | | | |
< < | ---+ Endnotes | > > | | | |
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ShanJiaoFirstPaper 1 - 16 Oct 2012 - Main.ShanJiao
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META TOPICPARENT | name="FirstPaper" |
Are Songwriters better off under Creative Commons Licenses?
By ShanJiao
---+ I. Introduction
Creative Commons (“CC”) is a non-profit organization provides standardized copyright licenses under which copyright owners can publish their works that the public can use and share. Instead of getting rid of copyright, CC licenses work alongside copyright and let copyright owners change their copyright terms from the default of “all rights reserved” to “some rights reserved.” [1] This article will examine the business and legal models of “old” music industry with full copyright and the “new” Internet-based music industry with CC licenses and pay special attention to songwriters’ benefits and losses in order to answer the question whether the latter model can provide sufficient incentives for musical creation.
---+ II. How the “old” music industry with full copyright works
Let’s have a look at the major players in the recording. Usually a songwriter will enter into a publishing agreement with a publisher who pitch the songs to recording company. The recording company hires recording artists (also performers) and creates, markets and distributes the recordings. Performance right organizations (“PROs”) license the public performance on behalf of the copyright owners. Mechanical rights agency provides service of mechanical royalty collection. [2] Songwriters’ compensation which is associated with the middlemen mentioned above comes from three major sources: (1) mechanical royalties from sale of physical records which are based on a statutory rate at $0.08 or a lower negotiated rate; [3] (2) performance royalties. For streaming online, the royalty rate is $0.0017 per song, while other PROs like ASCAP pay a higher rate. [4] However, a songwriter is not the only person enjoying the fruits of his/her creative works. They have to split mechanical royalties with publishers (usually at 50/50) and split performance royalties with recording companies. If a songwriter has a song sold for one million copies, he/she at most can get $40,000 mechanical royalties. For new songwriters, they might coercively enter into an agreement with publishers or recording companies which makes them worse off. For songwriters who are also recording artists, their share of royalties will be further reduced by a controlled composition clause. [5]
---+ III. How the “new” Internet-based music industry with CC licenses works
As technology and new media improve, the music industry and its major players are moving into an entirely different level of sharing, purchasing, marketing and distributing. [6] On one side, songwriters can take advantage of low cost of marketing and distributing through Internet service providers and have their works published without dealing with the big record labels and other intermediate agents or simply by contracting with small Internet record labels with whom songwriters can get better deals. On the other side, publishing their works online songwriters inevitably face the problem of free downloading by Internet users.
CC tries to solve the problem by making such downloading legal under its standard licenses signed by copyright owners. There are six types of licenses provided by CC which concern attribution, commercial use and derivative works. The most accommodating license is “CC BY” which lets others distribute, remix, tweak, and build upon the original work, even commercially, as long as they credit the author for the original creation. The most restrictive license is “CC BY-NC-ND” which only allows others to download the works and share them with others as long as they credit the author, but they can’t change them in any way or use them commercially. [7]
Pitifully, even under the most restricted CC license, the songwriter cannot make any mechanical royalties. But we should consider songwriters as different individuals instead of as a whole. As Zac Shaw, a musician, points out in his blog, “[f]ree exposure is only a lost profit opportunity for the minority of musicians who succeeded in the pre-digital record business paradigm. Most of the time musicians didn’t profit beyond statutory royalties anyway, because they could never recoup the cost of marketing and advertising.” [8]
Moreover, the “lost profit” due to free exposure can be financially compensated after songwriters gain fans and success as long as they do not give out their rights to commercial use of their works under CC licenses. Through other tools on the Internet, such as Facebook, Kickstarter and Bandcamp, songwriters can establish a direct connection to their fans and be funded by fans through low-cost Internet service providers instead of wasting money on the middlemen in the old music industry. Songwriters, who are not performers at the same time, might be in a slightly disadvantaged position than the recording artists of their works as they cannot benefit directly from performance. But by restricting their works for only non-commercial use under CC licenses, songwriters can gain performance royalties and split from sale of physical recordings for fans in the future. And the main players in the “new” music industry have more equal bargaining powers over the agreements they are reaching.
---+ IV. Summary
To summarize, though empirical studies might better prove that the “new” Internet-based music industry can benefit songwriters no less than, if not better, the “old” music industry, the analysis above can at least make the point that the criticism against CC based on the welfare of songwriters should not be taken as granted.
---+ Endnotes
[1] For a detailed introduction to Creative Community, see http://creativecommons.org/about
[2] [3] Lee Ann Obringer, How Music Royalties Work, http://entertainment.howstuffworks.com/music-royalties6.htm. See also, Jeff Price, Music Industry Survival Guide, http://www.tunecore.com/guides/sixrights.
[4] Jacob Ganz, Where to Buy Music to get More Cents on the Dollar to the Musician, http://www.npr.org/blogs/therecord/2011/02/18/133872018/where-to-buy-music-to-get-the-most-of-your-cash-to-the-musician.
[5] Jay Rosenthal, The Recording Artist/Songwriter Dilemma: The Controlled Composition Clause – Enough Already!, http://www.nmpa.org/pdf/copyrights/RosenthalLandslide3_4Mar_April2011.pdf
[6] For a discussion about digital age and music industry, see Sadie A. Stafford, Music in the Digital Age: The Emergence of Digital Music and its Repercussions on the Music Industry, The Elon Journal of Undergraduate Research in Communications, Vol. 1, No. 2 (Fall 2010), available at http://www.elon.edu/docs/e-web/academics/communications/research/vol1no2/09StaffordEJFall10.pdf.
[7] For a full explanation of CC licenses, see http://creativecommons.org/licenses/.
[8] Zac Shaw, How do Musicians Make Money in a Free Culture?, http://www.mediapocalypse.com/answering-the-question-how-do-musicians-make-money-in-a-free-culture/.
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