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Guest post by Camran Ferrier from the Berklee College of Music: Music Business JournalIntroductionIn our digital age, companies that distribute and host content online run into constant conflictions with copyright infringement. Difficult questions arise: who is responsible for monitoring and removing copyright infringing work? How does a service stop these infringing works from getting monetized? Who pays the damages? These questions prevail as copyright protections online need constant revision as technologies evolve and access to services predisposed to copyright infringement become universal. The industry’s top streaming services are guilty of hosting and participating in such infringement: Spotify has had a difficult time keeping up-to-date data collections and paying affiliated rights holders while YouTube has been on the defensive when it comes to the monetization of infringing material. These class action occurrences raise larger questions about our own system and what we can do to help end the ceaselessness and casualness of copyright infringement in the music industry.SpotifySpotify is facing major scrutiny when it comes to online copyright infringement in the music industry and has been bombarded with lawsuits because of their inability to compensate artists appropriately. While their responsibility is to pay songwriters a mechanical royalty for the use of their music—more specifically the reproduction and distribution of their work—they have been accused of administering songs without the correct licensing and compensation. At the beginning of 2018, Wixen Music Publishing sued Spotify for $1.6 billion, citing that the streaming giant had been improperly using 10,000 of their songs. 1 Last year, the company paid $43.5 million to cover its unpaid mechanical royalties in a class action settlement brought to them by Melissa Ferrick and David Lowry. 2 That being said, they have made some attempts in the past to deal with this issue. Two years ago, Spotify tried to partner with a blockchain startup in effort to better identify rights holders. 3 More recently, the Music Modernization Act was just signed into law and one of its provisions plans to create the Mechanical Licensing Collective, a centralized database of rights holders maintained by publishers that is designed to exclusively handle statutory mechanical licenses. This entity will collect mechanical royalties from streaming services and distribute them to copyright holders based on the ownership claims set forth in the database. These are claims that songwriters need to make on their songs in order to receive their proper royalty payments. 4 Although this seems to be an overall benefit to the industry and to artists, some may argue that Spotify now has a “get out of jail free” card when it comes to identifying rights holders because they can now point to this database to denounce any claims of negligence.YouTubeYouTube also has a problem with reuploaded videos and unidentified rights holders that infringe on an actual copyright holder’s exclusive rights. In YouTube’s case, they used to rely on a provision in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act which prevents them from being responsible for the copyright violations of its users as long as they remove the infringing content when notified by the rights holders. This is called the safe harbor provision, which “limits copyright infringement liability for online service providers that store information on systems or networks at the direction of their users if the service providers meet certain criteria.” 5 This protected YouTube in 2013, when Viacom International Limited accused YouTube of hosting videos that infringe on the company’s intellectual property, such as MTV videos and TV shows like South Park. The court ruled in favor of YouTube, citing the safe harbor provision as a defense and put the $1 billion lawsuit to rest. 6However, YouTube still struggled with infringement issues. In attempt to solves these problems, in October 2007 YouTube launched their Content ID System, a technology that analyzes and screens videos uploaded by users against a database of content known to be copyrighted, and any duplicate uploads are reported to the copyright holder who then decides what to do with it. 7 Users can set Content ID to block the reuploaded content from YouTube when a claim is made, but they can also allow the video to get monetized through ads, and then partake in all of the advertising revenue. 8 The algorithm has had mixed reception over the years, increasingly so as it begins to evolve. In 2016, YouTube reported that 99.5% of all copyright issues specifically related to sound recordings were automatically resolved by Content ID, and Google reported that it had “generated over $2 billion for partners since it first launched.” 9 However, YouTube had to make some changes to a flawed algorithm, as it would typically not pay the rights holder or the creator while disputes were being examined. Another big problem is that there is no penalty for fraudulent claims against another video, meaning that the system can be abused by individuals claiming fair use without validating that first, and by companies trying to censor negative press. 10YouTube in the European UnionMore recently, YouTube have been encountering lawsuits in Europe. The company adheres to under different laws in the EU, and the Austrian Commercial Court found that YouTube is in fact responsible for the copyright infringements committed by its users. In a preliminary decision, the court rejected YouTube’s defense that they are a “neutral intermediary” and that they are in fact responsible for the content they carry. 11 YouTube’s “neutral intermediary” defense was that they are a “host provider” and therefore fell under the protection of the EU’s E-Commerce Act, which specifies that technical service providers are mediators and therefore not liable for the content posted by their users. 11 The court rejected this argument, finding that by “sorting, filtering, and linking” content on its platform and “creating tables of contents according to predefined category,” it shows they are more than just mediators. YouTube is expected to appeal, but it shows that their solution to protecting the exclusive rights of its users is still not completely fixed.EU Copyright DirectiveCopyright Infringement Liability In The Music Business
Living as we are in the digital age, any company which plays host to entertainment media on a large is at constant risk of copyright infringement. Whether it's Spotify or. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2019/10/copyright-infringement-liability-in-the-music-business.html]