Omnia Audio Omnia A/XE User Manual

Page 26

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20 | Getting Started

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

information on the statutory license and other aspects of webcasting, please visit the following sites:
The U.S. Copyright Office

http://www.copyright.gov

The Recording Industry Association of America

http://www.riaa.com/issues/music/webcasting

ASCAP

http://www.ascap.com/weblicense/webintro.html

BMI

http://www.bmi.com/iama/webcaster/index.asp

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