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MPP 014: Marc Ostrow on 100% Licensing

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Manage episode 317589860 series 3304147
Content provided by Dennis Tobenski. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dennis Tobenski or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Three months after his first appearance on the show, entertainment/copyright lawyer and MPP Superfriend Marc Ostrow is back to talk some more about Fair Use, with me supplying a few hypothetical situations. But more importantly, Marc lays out the Department of Justice’s recent and unexpected ruling that PROs must abandon 70+ years of established industry practice and adopt a 100% Licensing regime, and what that means for you.

During the conversation, we covered:

  • A history of ASCAP, BMI, and their consent decrees
  • Rate courts and “reasonable rates”
  • How consent decrees allow new streaming services to operate without paying for a license
  • The differences between the ASCAP & BMI consent decrees
  • How the PROs want their consent decrees to be relaxed to allow for sync and mechanical licensing
  • How the Department of Justice ruled on 100% Licensing rather than addressing long-standing industry concerns
  • An explanation of 100% Licensing vs. Fractional Licensing
  • Who owns what in a collaborative effort
  • “Absent a written agreement”
  • How 100% Licensing impacts working musicians, the heirs of musicians who have passed, and musicians working outside the US
  • How the DoJ’s ruling vitiates existing contracts
  • The Copyright Office’s reaction to the DoJ’s ruling
  • How the DoJ’s ruling might prevent many artists from collaborating with each other
  • Who benefits from 100% Licensing (hint: it’s not you)
  • The PRO’s challenges to the ruling, and potential outcomes
  • A recap of Fair Use principles
  • Some Fair Use hypothetical situations for composers, performers, and educators

Links:
Marc Ostrow: Why DOJ’s Mandate of 100% Licensing of Works by ASCAP and BMI is 100% Lunacy
Marc Ostrow: 100% Licensing summary and reaction
Marc Ostrow: Letter to DoJ
U.S. Copyright Office’s reaction to 100% Licensing ruling
MusicTechPolicy Podcast explaining 100% Licensing
Marc Ostrow: “Do You Have The Chutzpah To Take A Gamble On Fair Use?”

  continue reading

64 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 317589860 series 3304147
Content provided by Dennis Tobenski. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dennis Tobenski or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Three months after his first appearance on the show, entertainment/copyright lawyer and MPP Superfriend Marc Ostrow is back to talk some more about Fair Use, with me supplying a few hypothetical situations. But more importantly, Marc lays out the Department of Justice’s recent and unexpected ruling that PROs must abandon 70+ years of established industry practice and adopt a 100% Licensing regime, and what that means for you.

During the conversation, we covered:

  • A history of ASCAP, BMI, and their consent decrees
  • Rate courts and “reasonable rates”
  • How consent decrees allow new streaming services to operate without paying for a license
  • The differences between the ASCAP & BMI consent decrees
  • How the PROs want their consent decrees to be relaxed to allow for sync and mechanical licensing
  • How the Department of Justice ruled on 100% Licensing rather than addressing long-standing industry concerns
  • An explanation of 100% Licensing vs. Fractional Licensing
  • Who owns what in a collaborative effort
  • “Absent a written agreement”
  • How 100% Licensing impacts working musicians, the heirs of musicians who have passed, and musicians working outside the US
  • How the DoJ’s ruling vitiates existing contracts
  • The Copyright Office’s reaction to the DoJ’s ruling
  • How the DoJ’s ruling might prevent many artists from collaborating with each other
  • Who benefits from 100% Licensing (hint: it’s not you)
  • The PRO’s challenges to the ruling, and potential outcomes
  • A recap of Fair Use principles
  • Some Fair Use hypothetical situations for composers, performers, and educators

Links:
Marc Ostrow: Why DOJ’s Mandate of 100% Licensing of Works by ASCAP and BMI is 100% Lunacy
Marc Ostrow: 100% Licensing summary and reaction
Marc Ostrow: Letter to DoJ
U.S. Copyright Office’s reaction to 100% Licensing ruling
MusicTechPolicy Podcast explaining 100% Licensing
Marc Ostrow: “Do You Have The Chutzpah To Take A Gamble On Fair Use?”

  continue reading

64 episodes

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