Archive for News

OLGA shuts down (again)

I just read over at Fark that the Online Guitar Archive shut down again. As I wrote in my long history of cracking down, OLGA has been shut down twice before in the 90s.

According to wikipedia, the latest shut down occurred on July 27, 2006 after receiving a take down letter from the MPA and NMPA. Here’s what the olga.net site says as of today:

OLGA is currently offline while we attempt to resolve legal issues with the archive.

We received a ‘take down’ letter (pages 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 & 6 ) from lawyers representing the NMPA and the MPA.

We greatly appreciate your support and hope to return to providing resources to the aspiring guitarist as soon as possible. Contact rcwoods for more information.

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Lyrics Sites Next Targets For Content Groups?

“U.S. digital entertainment company Gracenote on Thursday said it obtained licenses to distribute lyrics as music publishers mulled legal action against Web sites that provide them without authorization.”

read more | digg story

Even though Gracenote has a deal to distribute lyrics with digital music, the article doesn’t get into too many details about what they’re going to do about the unauthorized lyrics sites out there. About the only insight they give is “Peer said he hopes the unauthorized sites will seek licenses.” Or else what?

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Tab site, mysongbook.com, crippled by MPA

The popular tab site mysongbook.com (the best resource for Guitar Pro tabs) can no longer distribute tabs. Here’s the drawn out explanation from the MPA. Remember kids, looking at guitar tabs is like stealing a guitar from a music store.

read more | digg story

This happened at least a few weeks ago, but I just read about it today.

Best I can tell MySongBook decided to take down their tabs as a precaution, not because they were sued or otherwise forced to. Here’s the message from mysongbook.com

Providing some tabs - even made by ear - of copyrighted music is illegal. In order to respect the law, downloads have been limited to the [Composition] and [Competition] files. We are going to make our best to find a solution to offer music content without infringing copyrights.

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The Worst Bill You’ve Never Heard About

“Never heard of SIRA? That’s the way Big Copyright and their lackeys want it, and it’s bad news for you. Simply put, SIRA fundamentally redefines copyright and fair use in the digital world. It would require all incidental copies of music to be licensed separately from the originating copy.”

read more | digg story

The digg link goes to ipaction.org, and paints a grim picture of the proposed SIRA bill. While I agree it has potential for becoming a copyright nightmare, I need to know more about the bill before passing judgment. I can’t find the text of the actual proposed bill, but in the digg comments briguyd posted a link to the U.S. Copyright Office’s summary of the bill.

I read through their analysis, and it seems the bill has potential for being a good thing in streamlining the royalites paid for online downloads and streaming services. The parts about licensing incidental copies appears to have only to do with the stops en route to the consumer such as “server, cache and buffer copies”. Although depending on how the bill is worded, this could apply to any copy, including copies made from computer to iPod, etc.

Then again, the Copyright Office statement indicated that the bill would suggest royalty-free licensing for those incidental copies. The Register of Copyrights has recommended that instead of taking a licensing approach, the intermediate copies should granted a statutory exemption. My opinion is this would establish the intermediate copies as being fair use.

Hopefully those in congress who are considering this bill will take heed to what the Copyright Office has to say.

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MPA’s proposed crackdown delayed until March

Legal Fights Eyed Against Lyrics Web Sites

The Music Publishers Association is set to begin sending out cease-and-desist letters in March to dozens of offending sites that failed to secure approval to use sheet music from the respective copyright holders, sources aid.

The decision making process seems to be taking a long time. Are they evaluating the public reaction? Are they waiting for legitimate lyrics services to have a good foothold? It’s tough to tell at this point.

Thanks to this post at geek/talk for this latest MPA update.

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No news is good news

So far I haven’t found any reports of lyrics or tab sites being sent cease-and-desist letters. As I previously noted, some tab sites have taken the initiative and took down their tabs to avoid future trouble.

In an article from December (which I previously wrote about), there’s a quote from MPA president Lauren Keiser about all the email he received from people after making the MPA’s plans public.

I’ve printed out a number of them, which I’ll show the board next month

According to the MPA website, there was just an ASCAP board meeting on January 12. Is that the meeting Mr. Keiser was talking about? Does that mean there will be some action taken soon? It’s all speculation right now. Maybe they’ll hold off making any decisions until discussing it at the Harry Fox Agency board meeting, which is February 16, 2006.

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Wired Magazine: “PearLyrics’ True Love Story”

“PearLyrics, the doomed lyrics looker-upper for iTunes, was created not for money nor art, but something else entirely.”

read more | digg story

The human side of the pearLyrics story, this article describes how the software’s author, Walter Ritter, dedicated the application to a would-be girlfriend, whom he was trying to win the affection of.

Besides the love story, the article also points out the latest news in the legal situation.

But so far, the company [Warner Chappell] has still not given the go-ahead for either Ritter or Apple to make the program available again.

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mxtabs.net -> sputnikmusic.com

I previously posted about several tablature sites shutting down, and one tab site I mentioned was mxtabs.net. If you’ve checked lately, it’s either redirected to sputnikmusic.com, or at other times your browser might indicate you’re not able to resolve the domain.

Looks like mxtabs is down for the count.

Webmaster/admin Jeremy announced that mxtabs has been shut down, and MusicianForums is moving in new direction. Here’s what he had to say.

Many of you have visited sputnikmusic.com, the music review extension of MF, where every MF member can post. I’ve been working a lot on the site lately, adding new features, etc.

To jump to the conclusion: MusicianForums is going to be expanded, and become part of sputnikmusic.com.

Update: I just wanted to reiterate what I’ve said before. The MPA and NMPA have indicated they will be taking action in 2006 to shut down lyrics and tablature sites. Some tab sites took precautionary measures, and have already pulled their content.

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U.S. vs. the world on file-sharing

Is the United States getting increasingly out of touch with the rest of the world where technology matters are concerned?

read more | digg story

This Digg link is an opinion piece about French Parliament’s recent proposal to allow P2P downloading in combination with a tax on ISPs to compensate copyright holders.

I’ve been keeping track of the pros and cons of file sharing, and the “out of touch” criticism goes hand-in-hand with my argument “The Internet is global, and the RIAA is forcing American laws on the world.”

As I understand it, France’s copyright bill is still in progress, so it’ll be interesting to see how this story develops.

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British Music Cops Go After Fiddle Shop

Where does it stop? British music cops attempt to say that playing music while trying out an instrument in the shop is a “Public Performance” for which they must be paid. Pretty soon the music goons will want royalty when you remember a song.

read more | digg story

This story makes me think that copyright laws need to be clearer on what’s fair use and what’s not.

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