When your phone rings, the copyright police may come calling
ASCAP contends royalties are due every time a ringtone plays, on top of the royalty operators pay on sale of the ringtone
By Jeremy Kirk
,
IDG News Service
, 07/02/2009
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A digital rights group is contesting a U.S. music industry association's assertion that royalties are due each time a mobile
phone ringtone is played in public.
The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) filed suit against AT&T asserting that ringtones qualify
as a public performance under the Copyright Act. ASCAP, which has 350,000 members, collects royalties and licenses public
performances of works under copyright.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), however, asserts that copyright law exempts performances made "without any purpose
of direct or indirect commercial advantage," which would include a ringtone heard in a restaurant.
The organization further argued that the move by ASCAP could jeopardize consumer rights and increase costs for consumers.
The EFF filed an amicus brief for the case on Wednesday in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.
"These wrongheaded legal claims cast a shadow over innovators who are building gadgets that help consumers get the most from
their copyright privileges," the EFF said in a blog post.
ASCAP's suit highlights efforts by the music industry to aggressively assert its influence in dealing with new digital media.
ASCAP wants mobile operators to pay royalties or be held liable for the so-called public performances of the ringtones. The
organization has indicated that it would not pursue claims against individual consumers but rather the operators.
Operators such as AT&T and others that sell ringtones already pay royalties to songwriters for use of their material. ASCAP
rejects the argument that ringtones fall under the exemption and that performances can still infringe even if there is no
commercial gain.
On June 12, ASCAP filed a document opposing a motion from AT&T asking for a summary judgment in the case, which the EFF has
posted on its Web site.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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