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Warner Music Pulls Videos Off YouTube 237

iammani writes with this excerpt from Reuters: "Warner Music Group ordered YouTube on Saturday to remove all music videos by its artists from the popular online video-sharing site after contract negotiations broke down. ... The talks fell apart early on Saturday because Warner wants a bigger share of the huge revenue potential of YouTube's massive visitor traffic. There were no reports on what Warner was seeking. 'We simply cannot accept terms that fail to appropriately and fairly compensate recording artists, songwriters, labels and publishers for the value they provide,' Warner said in a statement." Warner's deal with YouTube to make those videos available came just prior to YouTube's acquisition by Google.
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Warner Music Pulls Videos Off YouTube

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  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @02:16PM (#26192439)

    "We simply cannot accept terms that fail to appropriately and fairly compensate recording artists"

    So Warner thinks all the contracts they have with the signed artists are unfair and should be void?

  • by similar_name ( 1164087 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @02:17PM (#26192445)
    We all know how much they care about fairly compensating the people who actually made the music.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2008 @02:17PM (#26192453)

    I've bought literally dozens of albums after my friends and/or girlfriend have shared youtube video links. Does Youtube get a cut of those sales?

    TimeWarner is shooting themselves in the foot here. Youtube gives them free exposure. The labels don't mind paying MTV to play their videos, but they want Youtube to pay them?

    Once again, the record industry just doesn't get it.

  • Fair for artists? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Chris_Jefferson ( 581445 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @02:20PM (#26192485) Homepage
    'We simply cannot accept terms that fail to appropriately and fairly compensate recording artists, songwriters.... Having seen the most recent agreements, appropriate compensation for artists from these kind of things seems to be zero, so I think they are already getting a fair deal.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2008 @02:25PM (#26192513)

    Aren't music videos essentially advertisements for record albums anyways? So Warner wants free advertising on Youtube? (or rather they want to be paid when Youtube runs their ads?)

  • by Mononoke ( 88668 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @02:28PM (#26192525) Homepage Journal
    I remember when music videos were essential promotional tools. That's one of the reasons artists spend their own money making them.

    Now get off my lawn.

  • by sribe ( 304414 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @02:31PM (#26192551)

    So Warner thinks all the contracts they have with the signed artists are unfair and should be void?

    Of course not. "We simply cannot accept..." in no way whatsoever implies "we will never provide..." The two are not even remotely related.

  • by kramerd ( 1227006 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @02:37PM (#26192581)

    ...and nothing of value was lost.

  • by Nom du Keyboard ( 633989 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @02:47PM (#26192643)
    It's all greed and stupidity and lies.

    Greed that Warners thinks they deserve more and more and more.

    Stupidity that Warners thinks that YouTube and everyone else will have to cave into them and their terms (like any alleged filesharer sued by the RIAA) in the mistaken belief that: 1) Everyone needs their product; and 2) That they still have a monopoly on that product.

    Lies that any of this additional money would actually go to the artists. (Think of the children<<<<<<<< artists!)
  • business model (Score:5, Insightful)

    by wideBlueSkies ( 618979 ) * on Sunday December 21, 2008 @02:51PM (#26192659) Journal

    >> 'We simply cannot accept terms that fail to appropriately and fairly compensate recording artists, songwriters, labels and publishers for the value they provide,' Warner said in a statement."

    Hey warner, so your videos get pulled. Good for you, and all the best.

    To borrow from the Soup Nazi, if I may: "NO EXPOSURE FOR YOU".

    I was just watching a couple of concert videos the other day from an old prog band called Wishbone Ash (they sound like old 70's Rush). I'd never heard of these guys before, but I really liked the sound, and I went right over to Amazon and I bought 2 CD's.

    If I hadn't seen the vids on You Tube, I don't think I'd have ever known about this band. So they now have a new fan, and on Christmas eve, I'm going to introduce them to some other guys who like the same type of music.

    It's like the modern equivalent of trading records... But hey, if Warner wants to pull the vids, then let them. There's lots of other music out there...

  • Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @03:13PM (#26192823)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Incoming tide... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by owlnation ( 858981 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @03:18PM (#26192859)
    I wonder if someone called King Canute works for Warner Brothers.

    Admittedly, there is an upside to this, if it removes the many thousands of "video" slideshows from Youtube. You know the ones: lots of pics of a celebrity, unrelated music track, and tagged spammed into oblivion. You click on it thinking it's what you are looking for and... no...

    Video is video. Slideshows aren't. Someone should set up Powerpointtube. Ken Burns has a lot to answer for.
  • by dontmakemethink ( 1186169 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @03:25PM (#26192901)

    We all know how much they care about fairly compensating the people who actually made the music.

    What's worse is that videos were never intended to generate revenue on their own, they are advertising for the artist. No record label ever had a problem with MTV making money from commercials in between videos. No doubt there are absolutely no provisions in the artists' contracts for revenues generated by videos either, and no doubt we'll start to see YouTube clips of signed artists protesting this, which the RIAA can't yank.

    Massive fail.

  • by panoptical2 ( 1344319 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @03:29PM (#26192917)
    You are absolutely right. Here's the problem:

    Getting execs of any sort to change their business model is one of the hardest things to do in any business. For the most part, you have to replace the execs to get the business to change. For example, Microsoft is finally beginning to change their business model, right after Gates left. Apple changed their business model when they brought Jobs back in. Warner Music (as well as the rest of the labels that the RIAA represents) has yet to change its business model, and it may take some time, and some board replacements, to get the change to happen.
  • the real money (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2008 @04:06PM (#26193235)

    The experience of the music fan at a live performance is not "easily copied", and live performances are where they make the real money. Digital copies should be treated for what they are, enjoyable advertising, and priced accordingly, from free to maybe a dime a song, tops. Charging a dollar for three megs of digital bits is serious price gouging, the fans know it, anyone who can use a computer knows it, that's why the public is not adopting their prices at the levels they expect. The music majors want to insure the same unit pricing they had back when it really cost a lot of money to deliver a copy, that doesn't exist now with downloads, it cost maybe a penny or something to actually do that. They can make and deliver the same "unit" now for a teeny fraction of what is used to cost 10-20 years ago, but they want the same gross purchase price? Hell no! They need to backoff the drugs a little once in awhile and sober up and enter the 21st century.

      As to movies, again, it's not the same going to a theater with a 20 foot screen and a hundred grand sound system as it is sitting around your TV, even if it is a good one. If they offered a cheap DVD on exit from the theater, say for around 3 bucks or so, they'd get immediate feedback on the movie, plus instant impulse buy revenue. 15-20 bucks for a plastic disk though..price gouging, they can stamp them things out and put them in a paper sleeve for like a buck easy at big scales, which means they could sell them for three and make profit.

        Basically, since the late 90s or so I just stopped buying full price entertainment media, it's a price ripoff. I'll buy it used for cheap, that's it, picked up a few used DVDs the other day for a few bucks apiece..because that is all they are worth. They annoyed someone who was a faithful purchaser since the late 1950s with their blatant ripoff price gouging. In the same period that computers went from 3,000 bucks to 300 bucks, and got loads better in quality and performance, the music and movie guys have the SAME PRICES for stuff that is not much better at all, it's the same notes, the same scenes. Screw that, screw them. Price gouging loons.

        CDs with music I'll pay a buck, tops. I'm not going to keep purchasing the same damn song or album just because a new format comes out, already did that, not going to keep doing that though. I went vinyl to 8 track to cassette then CD, then..no way, I don't care about blue hi-def lazer ray disks, they can stuff it, I don't need to see the nose hairs and zits in detail of some scrawny metrosexual "artist". I think they should get paid for their work and creations, I certainly do not "pirate", but trying to make a killing off of people when we all know what digital copies REALLY cost is just stupid, they are out to lunch on their business model and prices.

        Technology moves forward, some things got a lot cheaper to make, so they should drop prices accordingly and make profit on larger volume sales, and with music, the traditional way, touring or local live "work".

  • by cdrguru ( 88047 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @04:14PM (#26193315) Homepage

    And how exactly does Google deserve millions of dollars revenue from showing these videos and the creators and owners deserve nothing? Talk about leeching!

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @04:22PM (#26193387)

    What usual argument? I can't remember that being the argument widely used when criticizing the practices of the music industry.

    Artists deserve the money for their work. I doubt there are many people who question that, even less so on grounds that it's easy to copy it. What most people don't accept is the greed of studios who try to rip off not only the customers but also the artists.

  • by GlobalColding ( 1239712 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @04:35PM (#26193503) Journal
    and you do not have to know Russian. This is why competition is good, if they succeed on youtube, there are plenty of alternatives out there, especially if you speak a foreign language. Globalization is backfiring at the megacorporations.
  • by Insightfill ( 554828 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @04:36PM (#26193515) Homepage

    It looks like the labels are doubly incompetent: MTV takes their money, but then it doesn't bother to play any music videos at all.

    Parent got modded funny, but many of us remember the 80s when MTV started, and they truly ran the same model as the radio - 10-12 random songs per hour, interspersed with "VJ" dialog and commercials.

    Slowly, slowly, they began to add "shows", usually 30 minutes in length. Some were heavily music-oriented such as the 'unplugged' series, while others were lighter such as "Remote Control". However, they all gave the ADVERTISERS what they were seeking: an easily labeled audience.

    You see: since MTV was the first and largest of its kind, its audience was also pretty vague. "College student" was about all you could say and be close. But advertisers like narrower demographics: rich/poor, black/white, male/female. In its early days, when ad dollars were cheaper, they were willing to take a chance. As MTV got bigger and more expensive, they couldn't take such chances.

    MTV splintered. "Yo, MTV Raps!" and other shows were aimed at smaller and clearer groups. Advertisers were largely happy, and viewers who didn't know better were also happy. We lost that random hour of music, though. I miss that opportunity that came when I could flip on a channel and discover a new rap song I would never have seen, or country, or any one of dozens of genres that I would have never 'picked' but was suddenly exposed to.

    So: I put it to the /. masses. What is the current, best channel of media for opening one's horizons? Is it Pandora? Is it still Youtube? Or is there some other place that one can be 'fed' a steady flow of music from a wide net of types? Is there a venue where the music is more international? Where can I find Bollywood followed by rap?

  • by YesIAmAScript ( 886271 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @05:06PM (#26193801)

    Ah, there we go again. Just because hulu isn't available in your area, that means that the people putting their content on it (NBC Universal) don't "understand the internet".

    The fact is that NBC is out to make money. They can put stuff on Hulu in the US and make money. But overseas, they already sold the rights to someone else (for money), and thus they don't have the option of offering the content on the internet in those countries.

    So, if the content you want isn't available in your country on the internet (or any given site), bitch at the company that owns the rights in your country as not getting it.

    I am in the US and I use my PVR to get my content. But that's because it's higher quality (relatively high rate HD quality). It isn't simpler. Hulu is simpler than setting your PVR. For example, if you have a DirecTV PVR, and you set a season pass for Survivor, it didn't record the finale last week because it wasn't listed as part of the season. Yeah, you can go back and fix the recording ahead of time (I did), but if you didn't, you missed it. But with Hulu, regardless of whether you figured this out ahead of time, the program is there to watch when you're ready to watch it.

  • by jorghis ( 1000092 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @05:20PM (#26193943)

    I keep seeing people point this out, but I believe they are missing the point to a large degree. Youtube for a large segment of listeners isn't advertising for buying a song, its a replacement for it. Why would I spend money and go through the hassle of actually buying a CD when I can have any song/video I want from almost any popular band playing within a matter of seconds on youtube? Its easier and cheaper. (and perfectly legal) Personally, I haven't actually bought music in years for this exact reason and I know that there are a lot of other people out there like me. Statistics for album sales certainly seem to back up my view that this is common. (yeah I know, someone is going to chime in about how sales are abysmal because music isn't as good as it was back in their day. The ratio of good music to bad hasn't changed much in the last few decades, can we please not pretend that the dramatic decrease in music sales is not related to the internet?)

    Giving away something for free (or dirt cheap) isn't much of a business model. I do not blame them for taking their ball and going home.

  • by lysergic.acid ( 845423 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @05:37PM (#26194097) Homepage

    hey, i'm hoping this will get RIAA music off of YouTube completely and leave more room for indie artists/labels.

    if they don't want the free promo, then we'll sure as hell take it.

  • by crustymonkey ( 731497 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @06:27PM (#26194571) Homepage

    Please, correct me if I'm wrong here, but aren't music videos basically just promotional tools used to sell albums? Maybe things have changed since the early MTV days, which also probably the last time I watched a music video, but I've always been under the impression that the reason these were made in the first place was simply a way to sell an album (or song, nowadays). I mean, really, do people actually *buy* music videos (and I'm not talking about extended length live performance videos, just the old school MTV stuff).

    Maybe things have changed in this arena in recent years, but I can't really see this as anything except another stark example of a music industry dinosaur that just wants to stay locked in it's old anti-digital model. That and, of course, the fact that they want to squeeze anyone they can to try and extort as much money as they can before they finally die off because they refuse to accept change.

  • by cyn1c77 ( 928549 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @06:29PM (#26194589)

    Why would I spend money and go through the hassle of actually buying a CD when I can have any song/video I want from almost any popular band playing within a matter of seconds on youtube? Its easier and cheaper. (and perfectly legal) Personally, I haven't actually bought music in years for this exact reason and I know that there are a lot of other people out there like me.

    Buying a CD literally takes LESS than a minute on Amazon and you get free shipping.

    So do you rip the music off Youtube? Or do you just interrupt what you are doing every 4 minutes to restart the song or change tracks? Either way, it sounds less than optimal. How do you get any work done while listening to music?

    I use Youtube to listen to a song I am interested in a few times and maybe scope out the rest of the tracks on the album. If I like it I buy it DRM free as an MP3 or CD. Then (1) I enjoy listening to my legal music, (2) have supported an artist who doesn't suck (and the record company, I know), (3) and have not directly supported DRM.

    Think about what the repercussions would be if lots of people just listened to songs on Youtube and didn't buy them... Oh wait, you don't need to, you can just read TFA.

    Sometimes being a responsible member of society actually costs money. If you act like a 3 year old and just take what you want without paying for it, the record companies will treat you like a bad 3 year old and take away your toys.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 21, 2008 @07:26PM (#26194977)

    One day, Abdullah Jaffarov, the secretary of the Copyright Holders' Association reprimanded Nasreddin Hodja for downloading music recordings off file-sharing networks:
    "This is unfair, Nasreddin. These musicians, they are working hard, and you're listening to them playing without paying. You know, they also need to pay their bills."
    Nasreddin contemplated Jaffarov's argument for a while, then told him: "You are quite right, what I have been doing was unfair to all those musicians. How can I right my wrong?"
    "Oh, that is no problem," responded Jaffarov. "you just pay the Copyright Holders' Association, and we shall distribute your payment to all the recording studios and they will pay the musicians."
    Nasreddin Hodja immediately agreed to this proposal.

    The next day, when Nasreddin Hodja went to the bazaar to buy some groceries, he asked his friend to record a video of him paying the vendor. "Why do you want me to record how you pay?" asked Nasreddin's friend.

    "Oh, I must correct a horrible injustice," replied Nasreddin. "I shall send the recording to Mr. Abdullah Jaffarov, so that he can distribute it to all the studios he represents. See, it is only fair that if I can listen to the recordings of their musicians playing music, they can also watch the recording of me paying money."

  • by Runaway1956 ( 1322357 ) on Sunday December 21, 2008 @08:27PM (#26195433) Homepage Journal
    That is not an arguement that I've seen used. Artists do deserve compensation. The more common argument I've seen, is that the labels compensate the artists unfairly, while at the same time ripping off the public. IMHO, it's time for the labels to go under. What they provide is worth less than 1/10th of what they demand, in prices. But, don't worry people. IF the labels all went bankrupt tomorrow, and were sold off for the value of their assets, the artists would STILL be around, they would STILL make music, and it would STILL be published. And, most likely, the artists would get a "fairer" return on their work.
  • by tepples ( 727027 ) <tepples.gmail@com> on Sunday December 21, 2008 @09:46PM (#26195985) Homepage Journal

    The experience of the music fan at a live performance is not "easily copied", and live performances are where they make the real money. Digital copies should be treated for what they are, enjoyable advertising, and priced accordingly

    Have you thought about the ramifications of this for musical styles not amenable to live performance, such as a lot of the Beatles' post-Revolver work?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 22, 2008 @02:30AM (#26197531)

    Next Year's T-W News Release: Music sales are down due to piracy, not the fact that we no longer are hosted on YouTube.

    Fixed.

And it should be the law: If you use the word `paradigm' without knowing what the dictionary says it means, you go to jail. No exceptions. -- David Jones

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