Copyright Royalty Board Keeps Download Rates The Same; iTunes 'Saved'

from the compulsory-mess dept

I tend to think the whole concept of compulsory license rates in the music space is rather backwards. There are a bunch of different rates for all different participants, and it’s basically the opposite of letting a market work. It’s the government setting a handout rate for many different groups who don’t want to create their own business model. The whole process serves to significantly hold back a number of new and innovative business models by letting many to rely on the government to effectively set their revenue for them. That said, one of the worst things is that a single decision by whoever sets the royalties can completely change how an industry works with a single vote. Earlier this week, we noted that Apple was threatening to shutter iTunes if the Copyright Royalty Board raised the rates for publishers on downloads. The threat was probably pretty baseless, but apparently it worked. The CRB has kept rates the same, which is going to upset many songwriters and publishers.

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Companies: apple

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Comments on “Copyright Royalty Board Keeps Download Rates The Same; iTunes 'Saved'”

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17 Comments
SteveD says:

More deregulation?

I get your argument Mike, but doesn’t the evidence seem to support the other side? All we’ve seen of royalty rates lately is that only groups with as much power as Apple stand any real chance in facing the power of the RIAA and other media cartels.

How could you trust these groups to set rates that would encourage innovative businesses without government intervention? They seem much more interested in keeping rates high to keep the number of media services low and under control.

SteveD says:

Re: I don't get it...

My knowledge of music royalties isn’t fantastic, but in this case I think Apple gives a standard cut of its sales to the label, and then a percentage of that goes to the artist. It isn’t just a percentage of the sale itself.

If that cut was hiked Apple would either have to absorb the cost or pass it on to its customers. Its anyones guess how tight iTunes margins are, or if they make any significant profit from it.

comboman says:

Re: I don't get it...

I’m confused as well. I thought compulsory licenses were for things like radio where it would be impractical for each radio station to negotiate a royalty fee with each artist/songwriter/record label every time they play one of their songs. iTunes is a retailer, not a broadcaster.

Brian Hayes (user link) says:

Power Too Far

Y’know, power is rude because it’s taken. I wonder if we understand much.

…the power of the RIAA and other media cartels.

It wasn’t two or three that took Motown down. There’s a dozen the same. At RIAA’s beginning, there were faces. I worry RIAA has become big enough to hide them. I resent the way it was done and that’s enough to annoy me.

Please lift the towel and wet these guys. Keep them wet. Nude wet until we learn RIAA enough to see it and decide and desert what’s wrong and grow what’s right.

These are not power unless we’re not. 😐

Bob says:

Mike's right on this one

There is more then enough case precedence that clearly states a government entity cannot set into law or set any punitive damages in the law, that are clearly different from what others are experiencing. For example, the government can’t say, people who have Italian Ethnic Backgrounds must pay 3x’s the amount of Income Tax over those that who are White.

The same thing is going on here, as you have different rates for TerraRadio’s, then INet Radios, Satellite Radios, and finally downloading sites. This is completely wrong, and someone should bother to make that point in court. Or course, if they do, then the CRB would just say, “FINE, everyone pays the exact same rate.” Which would then close down many of the non-terra radios/downloads.

We’ll see if Congress has a little more backbone to deal with this issue after the November Elections.

Rob says:

This is what I heard

From what I heard on the radio, with every 99c iTunes sale, the artist gets 7c, the record labels/recording companies gets 70c and iTunes gets the rest. The Royalty Board wanted to raise what the artist got to a mere 12c, but the record label didn’t want to take a cut and iTunes didn’t want to raise their prices (far enough).
If there’s anyone to get upset about with the whole deal is the recording companies for not taking a cut and letting the artists have more.

Rob says:

Re: Re: This is what I heard

Ahh.. Thanks for the clarification.
But either way – it’s still the record companies, that are supposed to be looking after their artists – that refuse to take a lesser cut of a percentage.
And it should be their responsiblity to take a profit cut if there was going to be one. It’s not fair to make iTunes to take the cut, nor the customer to pay more, since it’s their agent (ie. the artist) that should be paid more.

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