A Swiftian Solution To Some Of Copyright’s Problems

from the getting-past-the-gatekeepers dept

Copyright is generally understood to be for the benefit of two groups of people: creators and their audience. Given that modern copyright often acts against the interests of the general public – forbidding even the most innocuous sharing of copyright material online – copyright intermediaries such as publishers, recording companies and film studios typically place great emphasis on how copyright helps artists. As Walled Culture the book spells out in detail (digital versions available free) the facts show otherwise. It is extremely hard for creators in any field to make a decent living from their profession. Mostly, artists are obliged to supplement their income in other ways. In fact, copyright doesn’t even work well for the top artists, particularly in the music world. That’s shown by the experience of one of the biggest stars in the world of music, Taylor Swift, reported here by The Guardian:

Swift is nearing the end of her project to re-record her first six albums – the ones originally made for Big Machine Records – as a putsch to highlight her claim that the originals had been sold out from under her: creative and commercial revenge served up album by album. Her public fight for ownership carried over to her 2018 deal with Republic Records, part of Universal Music Group (UMG), where an immovable condition was her owning her future master recordings and licensing them to the label.

It seems incredible that an artist as successful as Swift should be forced to re-record some of her albums in order to regain full control over them – control she lost because of the way that copyright works, splitting copyright between the written song and its performance (the “master recording”). A Walled Culture post back in 2021 explained that record label contracts typically contain a clause in which the artist grants the label an exclusive and total license to the master.

Swift’s need to re-record her albums through a massive but ultimately rather pointless project is unfortunate. However, some good seems to be coming of Swift’s determination to control both aspects of her songs – the score and the performance – as other musicians, notably female artists, follow her example:

Olivia Rodrigo made ownership of her own masters a precondition of signing with Geffen Records (also part of UMG) in 2020, citing Swift as a direct inspiration. In 2022, Zara Larsson bought back her recorded music catalogue and set up her own label, Sommer House. And in November 2023, Dua Lipa acquired her publishing from TaP Music Publishing, a division of the management company she left in early 2022.

It’s a trend that has been gaining in importance in recent years, as more musicians realize that they have been exploited by recording companies through the use of copyright, and that they have the power to change that. The Guardian article points out an interesting reason why musicians have an option today that was not available to them in the past:

This recalibration of the rules of engagement between artists and labels is also a result of the democratisation of information about the byzantine world of music contract law. At the turn of the 2000s, music industry information was highly esoteric and typically confined to the pages of trade publications such as Billboard, Music Week and Music & Copyright, or the books of Donald S Passman. Today, industry issues are debated in mainstream media outlets and artists can use social media to air grievances or call out heinous deal terms.

Pervasive use of the Internet means that artists’ fans are more aware of how the recording industry works, and thus better able to adjust their purchasing habits to punish the bad behavior, and reward the good. One factor driving this is that musicians can communicate directly to their fans through social media and other platforms. They no longer need the marketing departments of big recording companies to do that, which means that the messages to fans are no longer sanitized or censored.

This is another great example of how today’s digital world makes the old business models of the copyright industry redundant and vulnerable. That’s great news, because it is a step on the path to realizing that creators – whatever their field – don’t need copyright to thrive, despite today’s dogma that they do. What they require is precisely what innovative artists like Taylor Swift have achieved – full control over all aspects of their own creations – coupled with the Internet’s direct channels to their fans that let them turn that into fair recompense for their hard work.

Follow me @glynmoody on Mastodon and on Bluesky. Originally published on Walled Culture.

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Comments on “A Swiftian Solution To Some Of Copyright’s Problems”

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32 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: A CAPTCHA is not just a few clicks

Some people want to maintain their online privacy, especially from Google and Cloudflare. CAPTCHAs can’t tell the difference between a browser with a very strong privacy configuration (or under a VPN) and a robot, so the author of the first comment in the thread might not be able to complete CAPTCHAs. Choosing between privacy and knowledge is a sad dilemma for the user, yet robot detection is an valuable anti-DDOS measure for the website owner.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Benjamin Jay Barber says:

The Copyright Clause gives Congress the power to “promote the progress of science and useful arts” by giving authors and inventors the exclusive right to their work for a limited time.

I’m not exactly sure what the meaning of “useful” requires, but i’m not sure that “re-recording” is useful, rather than a ploy to get around a contract that she signed, and most likely create a “derivative work” of the original.

Arijirija says:

Re: Re:

The Zombie Apocalypse will be because all those artists, musos, writers, etc, will come back to demand their posthumous fair share of the profits … D**n it all, whyever didn’t the film makers think of that for Resident Evil? I bought the trilogy and posthumous copyright as the zombies’ motive never figured, not even once! I wuz robbed!!!

William Null says:

Re: Copyright doesn't promote arts, useful or not.

And it doesn’t need a Swiftian solution, it needs a swift solution by completely abolishing it. Somehow Da Vinci and his contemporaries, to say nothing of ancient writers, sculptors and painters, didn’t need copyright to survive. Copyright benefits only the publishers and good for nothing brats who want to live off their daddy’s/mommy’s work.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Correct. “useful Arts”, meaning inventions [by “artisans”, at the time] correspond to patents.

For good measure, here is an explanation on Wikipedia:

Some terms in the clause are used in archaic meanings, potentially confusing modern readers. For example, “useful Arts” does not refer to artistic endeavors, but rather to the work of artisans, people skilled in a manufacturing craft; “Sciences” refers not only to fields of modern scientific inquiry but rather to all knowledge.[4]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_Clause

That excerpt cites a book called “Intellectual Property and Information Wealth: Copyright and related rights”. A bad title imo. The so-called “intellectual property” rights (copyright, patents, trademarks, trade secrets, plant patents, and maybe something I forgot) are distinct government-granted monopoly privileges with distinct purposes and mostly unrelated historical origins.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

This doesn’t show that copyright is irrelevant

It shows that it doesn’t protect artists the way they’re told it does.

When Ed Sheeran has to record his songwriting processes just to prove no plagiarism occurred, or Taylor Swift has to re-record her own works to regain control of them away from corporations, or Ariana Grande has to fight copyright takedowns of her own music being played when she accepted an award, it sours the opinion of artists on copyright as it currently stands.

We don’t need to flex. When enough content creators turn their backs on copyright, it will prove what a failure copyright has been in safeguarding their interests.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Actually, copyright as it stands isn’t nearly as much of a problem as the way it’s used

That’s… still not a great excuse for why copyright needs to last for life of the author plus 70 years.

The fact that this is not as much of a problem as copyright enforcement is not because copyright that lasts longer than life isn’t a problem, it’s because the bar of “not a problem” has been set embarrassingly low by the child-suing RIAA.

Anonymous Coward says:

Just one more reason that the wealthy fascists need desperately, to put an end to this horrible thing called the internet.

An informed public is something these asshats absolutely do not want. For them, public ignorance is bliss.

Unable to attack and control the public’s use of the web using their actual desires, they instead attack it through the use of fake kiddie safety fears, pornography harms and constant false accusations of social damage to users. Their sole true desire is to harm the public by legally robbing them of their last dollar. It is all about the money. They must destroy the web’s benefit to the public.

When will the citizens of the USA finally realize that these phony-religious politicians are purposely trying to destroy the nation’s long standing freedoms and incarcerate the buggers for their treasonous crimes against the public and the state?

mick says:

Read the contract first

The labels have been fucking over artists since (at least) the ’50s, and artists keep signing shitty contracts anyway.

Swift chose to be locked into a trash contract that gave her no control, and then pretended to be shocked when she had no control.

Any musician who’s signed with the labels since the ’80s — when all this because Big News covered by pretty much the entire press outside of sycophants like Variety — gets exactly what they deserve.

In a perfect world, copyright periods would be far more limited. But also in a perfect world, people would read the fucking contract before signing it.

Ben (profile) says:

Re: nice idea

Shame that most (often very young and poor) aspiring musicians who want a recording deal just want to get into the studio and record their magnum opus, then get out and tour it. They are not lawyers (nor am I, for that matter).
It’s all very well from a position of comfort to say ‘read the f’ing contract’, but we’re talking about a tremendously imbalance power situation.
For most of the modern history of popular recorded music, the recording/publishing companies held all the power and they are the ones who determined the deals. It has taken the commercial power of Ms Swift to change that.

Even now, the record companies still hold the power, and instead of requiring one to sign over your masters, they put increased re-recording limits and and other dirty weasel language into contracts that would take a $1000/hr lawyer to combat. And who can afford one of them? The record companies, not the musicians.

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