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Guest post by Melvin Gibbs of the Content Creators CoalitionThe music industry's digital reboot has forced artists and songwriters to learn a lot of new tricks.We've had to find new ways to reach our fans, get on top of social media and learn to squeeze a living from a hodgepodge of sources — cobbling together digital royalties, live performances and merch into a basic wage that hopefully recaptures what was lost when albums went away.And we've had to learn to protect our rights, to join together to fight for a fairer, better music industry, and to demand pro-music policies in Washington, D.C. We've learned we can't leave these battles to the record labels, to the ASCAP's, or to the politicians any more.So now I am President of the Content Creators Coalition, riding that D.C. Acela corridor and doing my best to make the case for pro-artist policies in Washington, D.C. Because if we don't speak for ourselves, others will — in fact, others already have, in a pretty shameless way.Earlier this summer, the Internet Association trade group that represents the biggest tech companies in Silicon Valley wrote the U.S. Trade Representative — who is currently renegotiating NAFTA, the venue where artist's protections in international law will be decided — and claimed to be "the new faces of the American content industry."Related articles





