Mpeg license & music copyright – Telos Zephyr iPort User Manual

Page 38

Advertising
background image

32 | section 3

MPEG License & Music Copyright

The MPEG encoders in the iPort are properly licensed for professional, non-public applica-

tions such as broadcast remotes, private distribution systems, and the like. We’ve paid the

fees as part of the cost of making the iPort (in fact, it is a significant part of our expense),

and the use license is passed to you when you buy the equipment. For this kind of applica-

tion, you have no need to pay any additional fees.
However, public streaming applications may require additional license payments. It’s your

responsibility to investigate whether you have this obligation.
Musical compositions and sound recordings are creative works that are protected by the

copyright laws of the United States (title 17, U.S. Code) and other countries. Under

U.S. law, the owner of a copyright has the exclusive right to (and to authorize others to)

reproduce the work, use parts of the work in a new creation, distribute the work in whole or

in part, and to publicly display or perform the work (including on web pages and through

webcasting). With few exceptions, it is illegal to reproduce, distribute or broadcast a sound

recording without the permission of the copyright owner. It is your responsibility to comply

with the copyright laws of the United States and other countries in which you broadcast

and to pay all applicable royalties to the copyright owners when you become a webcaster.
There have been recent amendments to the copyright law regarding webcasting of sound

recordings. These new provisions allow webcasting under the terms of a statutory license,

as a way to help webcasters get permission without having to go to each sound recording’s

owner. The statutory license, however, has strict requirements that you must follow. Some

of these requirements include the payment of license fees, limitations on the number of

songs from the same album or artist that may be played in a three hour period (called the

sound recording performance complement); a prohibition on publishing advance playlists;

and a requirement to identify the song, artist and album on the website. There are other

requirements as well. The Recording Industry Association of America provides quite a bit of

information on copyright law as it applies to webcasting, and both ASCAP and BMI have

created license agreements that they are willing to grant to webcasters that they believe con-

form to the provisions of the new copyright rules for webcasting. For additional information

Advertising