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Guest post by David Lowery of The TrichordistSpotify’s counsel Christopher Sprigman recently made the argument in Bluewater Music Services v. Spotify that the service isn’t required to pay mechanical royalties to songwriters because they aren’t really making copies except for those covered by “fair use” and “ephemeral” exceptions. This extremely aggressive argument seems to many (but not all*) music publishing experts to be dubious and more than a little “piratey.”IMHO this is because piracy is in the DNA of Spotify. First Spotify CEO Daniel Ek made his first millions as founder of torrenting client uTorrent. Second, one of Spotify’s early investors Sean Parker of Napster fame declared “Spotify would finish what Napster started.” Third, until 2014 Spotify in the US operated as a peer to peer service copying and distributing millions of files using the devices of their customers (and BTW this completely undermines Sprigman’s copy argument).Now there is this from Torrent Freak:“Spotify Threatened Researchers Who Revealed ‘Pirate’ History”BREAKINGA team set to publish a book on the untold history of Spotify were threatened by the company, one of its researchers has revealed. Earlier this year, Rasmus Fleischer, who was also one of the early figures at The Pirate Bay, said that Spotify used ‘pirate’ MP3s to launch its beta. Soon after, the researchers were contacted by a lawyer, with strong suggestions to stop what they’re doing.”Read the rest of the story here: https://torrentfreak.com/spotify-threatened-researchers-who-revealed-pirate-history-171006/Related articles









