“Between $50 million and $6 billion may be owed to musicians and artists in Canada, but not from your run-of-the-mill file sharers. The Canadian recording industry itself is being accused of massive copyright infringement, and the list of miffed artists just keeps getting longer.
Given how aggressively the recording industry likes to pursue file sharers, one would assume that the industry itself is in the clear when it comes to copyright infringement. But that assumption has been put to the test in Canada, where a massive infringement lawsuit is brewing against some major players. Members of the Canadian Recording Industry Association, including the Big Four (Warner Music Canada, Sony BMG Music Canada, EMI Music Canada, and Universal Music Canada), face the prospect of damages ranging from $50 million up to $6 billion due to their use of artists’ music without permission. That’s right: $6 billion.
The lawsuit in question goes back to October 2008, but continues to be dragged up in the news because new plaintiffs keep joining the case. Most recently, jazz musician Chet Baker’s estate has joined the growing list of musicians and artists who are getting on the music industry’s case for their abuse of a certain aspect of Canadian copyright practices—something that the labels themselves don’t even deny doing.
As University of Ottawa law professor Michael Geist pointed out on his blog, the issue stems from a change to the law in the 1980s that eventually produced something known as the “pending list.” Essentially, record companies no longer had to get a compulsory license every time they wanted to use a song for, say, a compilation album. Instead, they went ahead and used the song without waiting for authorization or making payment, adding the song to a list of music that is pending authorization and payment. If you’re questioning whether you read that right, that basically means the record industries could use songs as long as they pinky swore they would get authorization and pay the artist for it eventually.
As you can imagine, the business didn’t quite work that way. Instead of keeping up with its tab on the pending list, the recording industry just kept adding songs—without obtaining any rights. The pending list among the lawsuit’s defendants has topped 300,000 songs from both large and small artists alike—300,000 songs that the labels are openly admitting that they have not secured the rights for. In the complaint, the plaintiffs claim that the record companies have been unjustly enriched by the use of their unauthorized music (they have, after all, been selling the music without permission and not paying out).”
Read more at arstechnica





Fu**ers!
hoist on there own petard! Couldn’t happen to nicer fella’s:))))
Hey, don’t worry though – those acts are bound to make more money from Digital Downloads aren’t they?
Oh….wait….
http://www.toomuchjoy.com/?p=1397
Hahaha serves them right!
The sweet taste of Karma
Why do I get the feeling that this may be the start of something rather beautiful?
(Maybe I’m just weird like that, haha)
Pax, amor et concordia.
x
Oh, btw good people.
http://www.openrightsgroup.org/ourwork/reports/deb-first-look
Worth a look to EVERYONE.
(Phillis/Abeo, you know how much I wuv you guys really…. let this up, pretty please?
)
Pax, amor et concordia.
x
Finally…roles have been so twisted and reversed for too long…
This just gave me the biggest smile.
Oh the irony…I’m more shocked than anything else that they were so stupid.
They just do that in Canada or is the record industry about to be globally hoisted upon its own petard?
Serve the grasping bastards right.
Sweet! Let’s hope the rest of the music-makers catches on and sues the ass off the music-peddlers!
Hurrah!