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Guest post by Sean Fast of MLG Blockchain ConsultingSince the beginning of time, long before the internet, copyright law has been one big battleground. Today, blockchain tech can change this. There’s certainly some truth to the hype: it offers an excellent system for registering patents and demonstrating data ownership for content creators and anyone with the digital property. With blockchain node networks powered by computer-armies, average internet users have the ability to swiftly timestamp documents, ensure eternal ownership of their creations and securely share information with select parties. Blockchain can watermark files, meaning it can “embody whatever identifiers are needed; [watermarks] can’t be removed or altered without perceptibly marrying the content itself”. It provides an autonomously functioning operation and promises to provide a fair channel for content distribution and creator-remuneration in the future.Surging blockchain company Tron’s white paper outlines, among other philosophies, their plan to “motivate users to produce contents with strong power of spread that have clearer copyrights”. The first point of their ‘value system’ indicates that data creators will have ownership of their own data. It sounds straightforward, but in practice creators commonly cease rights when they upload their content to sites like YouTube. By disintermediating from platforms like Google Play, the Apple Store, and YouTube, users will be given back their content-rights. These rights are necessary now more than ever, as videos flagged for copyright on YouTube, for example, have little room for disputation. Occasionally bots make erroneous claims and commonly, users successfully flag videos for removal in order to silence criticism. This can throw a wrench in the entertainer’s livelihoods and YouTube has demonstrated little to no improvements in this failed digital entertainment system. With Tron’s blockchain entertainment protocols, artists can take back what is theirs and overhaul a byzantine, bureaucratic system that doesn’t support its users in times of need.Transformation for the music industry is in order as well. In an article on The Verge, an author writes that after using SoundCloud for years, one of her own songs was taken down for supposed copyright infringement. If something was awry about a sample used in a world of blockchain-registry, this artist could be alerted the moment she uploaded the song, saving headaches and paperwork. With blockchain’s 2nd generation of digital ledger technology upon us, Tron could use available auto-executable software called ‘smart contracts’ to allow its network to interact with the data and reach an instantaneous legal conclusion, keeping all parties satisfied.A lot has been made in recent years about remix culture, about what percentage of royalties should go to sample originators and how this money will be distributed. Royalty sums are always ambiguous because licensing decisions are made after the fact. Often, a sample is taken or a riff ripped off and put into a new song, the song becomes a hit, and the hit sells millions. Then the artist behind the original will sue for a proportionally giant sum, knowing it’ll settle out of court for a fraction of what they were asking. If preordained licensing rights were commonplace, the music industry could stop its attractive civil trials and create a breeding ground for creativity where artists, informed of standardized legal procedures, can breathe easy.Related articles






