Canadian Music Industry Faces Competition Complaint Over Public Domain Records 38
An anonymous reader writes: A Canadian record label specializing in public domain releases has filed a complaint with the Competition Tribunal over alleged anti-competitive conduct by Universal, Sony, and host of other music industry leaders. The complaint tells a fascinating behind-the-scenes tale, with the recording industry doing everything in its powers — including posting false reviews, pressuring distributors, and lobbying for changes to the law — to stop the sale of competing public domain records.
Sony created the Rootkit, nothing suprises me now (Score:3)
Whatever their business practice.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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My Bad, used a rootkit, not creating it for the first time.
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How to increase piracy rates: (Score:3)
There is a wikipedia article on this (Score:3, Informative)
and it's called rent seeking [wikipedia.org]
All the Canadian artists to choose from... (Score:4, Funny)
All the Canadian artists to choose from... and somehow they picked Bieber.
If that doesn't indicate a broken system, I don't know what does!
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Hey, don't blame us ... blame the people who buy his damned music and concert tickets.
He lives in LA now, which means he's as much the fault of Americans as Canada.
Most of us want nothing to do with him or his music.
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You (or do I say we as I have dual citizenship but only visit) also gave us Young and Rush. And KitH but that's a different form of entertainment. Bieber doesn't quite bring it down in to the negatives but it is close. I'm neutral about Shania Twain (spelling?) but I am not fond of goat roping music in general.
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Do you perhaps mean Beatles? I don't think Beiber was alive long enough to even be recorded crying as a baby,that would have fallen into the public domain.
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Hi APK!
Nice to see you still have that split personality and inconvenient truth avoidance issues.
SHOCKED (Score:5, Funny)
I'm so shocked that an industry with a decades-long record of shady, unethical, and downright illegal business practices has been found to be engaging in shady, unethical, and downright illegal business practices! Who could have seen that coming??
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Well, in their defence, in this case they've only been accused of engaging in shady, unethical, and downright illegal business practices.
It's going to take a few years before it's proven, assuming nothing unfortunate happens to the complainant...
Freedom! (Score:3)
It's Canadian.
Tell the anti-Canadian PMO to stop trying to sell Canadians' right to have reasonable length copyright, and stop selling out culture to foreign corporations!
(yes, in my day I got Canada Council grants, but not for music)
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The Canadian definition of freedom always has a massive asterisk. Void where you don't like Canadian stuff.
Lest I be able to enjoy broadcast media without Canadian content, and I be able to buy a CD and put non-Canadian music on it without paying ~~taxes~~ levies to Canadian artists.
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Uh dude, the liberals started the selling out culture to foreign corporations BS. Welcome to the mess they created.
from the paid dep (Score:2)
and apparently paying slash dot to not mention the name of said public domain only record label?
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I know it goes against all that /. holds holy, but if your read TFA you would find the name - Stargrove Entertainment - at the top of the second paragraph.
When the recording copyright expires first (Score:4, Informative)
The copyright treaties define a shorter minimum copyright term for sound recordings than for other kinds of works. In some countries, if a song is written and recorded in the same year, the copyright in the composition expires 50 years after the death of the last surviving songwriter, but the copyright in the sound recording expires far earlier: 50 years after publication. This means someone can lawfully make and sell copies of any pre-1965 musical recording in those countries for only the cost of a license to the composition.
The United States is one huge exception. It applies the same 95-year copyright term to recordings published in 1972 or later as it does to any other work made for hire published in the same year. It also applies state copyright to pre-1972 sound recording copyright, and state copyright isn't subject to the "for limited Times" wording of the copyright clause of its constitution. Federal law has set a date after which state copyright must expire, but that's in 2067 to give them the equivalent of one full federal copyright term after the introduction of federal sound recording copyright.
At least Canada has a music public domain (Score:4, Informative)
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Clarification requested: Would talkie movies eventually go into public domain, or because they have sound recordings in them will we only get silent movies?