Prince DMCAs YouTube To Block Radiohead Song 296
Enigma2175 writes "CNN is reporting that videos from the Coachella music festival showing Prince covering Radiohead's 'Creep' have been removed by Prince's label, NPG records. Thom Yorke of Radiohead, when told of Prince's action, said 'Well, tell him to unblock it. It's our... song.' No comment from YouTube or Prince yet. Under the DMCA, YouTube is not required to verify the entity making a request is actually the copyright holder and this seems to be just another example of DMCA abuse." As the article points out, Prince seems to have a love-hate relationship with the Interwebs.
There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:5, Funny)
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(Since we can't hold our fingers up and make quote marks as we say it. heheheheh).
Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:4, Funny)
Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:5, Funny)
learn to convert monies properly ploxkthxbai
Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:5, Informative)
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It's kind of like paparazzi shots that get published. If someone ha
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The DMCA is the Digital Millenium Copright Act, not the Digital Millenium Privacy Act.
There is no such thing as a DMPA takedown notice.
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These days, it seems that the phrase DMCA Takedown is used as a generic term by lots of people, like Kleenex is the generic name for facial tissue. Maybe it was something
Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:5, Insightful)
How about we restrict our analysis to the facts as best we know them, rather than making up whatever unsupported hypothetical situation it takes to make your post make sense. (Not that one could actually file a take down notice even under the situation you describe, but that's beside the point.) I see no reason to believe the facts or legal situation are anything other than what the reporter who actually researched the story presents them to be. The idea that Prince filed a takedown notice despite not having any right to do so is both perfectly possible, and sadly consistent with his history.
Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:5, Funny)
I believe he is aware that Elvis is dead, which is why he postulated the Alien resurrection theory.
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Under federal law, it is illegal to create unauthorized fixations of live works (see 17 U.S.C. 1101). But, doing so doesn't make you a copyright infringer (See 1101(a)). Copyright protection in unfixed works is still left to the states.
The distinction is important because the DMCA only applies to copyright infringement (See 1
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I guess what I've been trying to get at is that Prince might have a legal right to request a take-down; whether it's actually the right thing to do (i.e. is he just being greedy?) or whether he went about it the righ
Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:5, Informative)
To say a performance cannot be copyrighted is to ignore the issue entirely. The whole reason that videos get pulled from YouTube is because they are unauthorized distribution of recordings.
Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:4, Insightful)
That sounds a lot more like 'If I write a song, you have to get a license from me to perfom it' than it does 'If you perform a song, you automatically have the rights to any recording anyone happened to make of the performance (unless, of course, you wrote it)"
and the derivative work then falls under the control of the licensee per the terms of their agreement.
Assuming the agreement gives the licensee control - which it doesn't necessarily have to. Most agreements probably would, but I don't see anything stopping anyone from saying "Yes, you can perform my work, but I get the rights to any recordings".
If Prince didn't ask if it was ok to perform it, and if Radiohead still owns the copyrights, then it sounds like Radiohead gets to say what happens to any recordings made, even if Prince (or anyone else) made them.
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You're wrong on this.
Radiohead owns the songwriting copyright. Having a songwriting copyright does not entitle the songwriters (Radiohead) to distribution or production rights over musicians (Prince) who cover their material in a performance. Prince needs to get the permission of the so
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So what? The DMCA only allows the actual copyright holder (or an agent thereof) to issue takedown notices, and the copyright holder in this case is Radiohead, not Prince.
You cannot copyright anything that can't be copied (Score:5, Insightful)
No. You and everyone else saying things that amount to this are wrong. Copyright applies to things that may be copied, which performances are not. You cannot hold a copyright on a performance. You can hold a copyright on a recording. You can take legal and/or technological steps to ensure nobody records your performance that doesn't assign you the copyright to that recording. But the performance and the recording of it are different things, and the performance cannot be copyrighted because it cannot be copied.
The words to a song can also be copied, and can be copyrighted. There are two copyrights possibly at play here, and Prince owns neither of them.
Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:4, Informative)
Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:5, Insightful)
(If Radiohead's works were released under a copyleft, then Prince would have to choose between allowing fans to distribute his versions or not performing Radiohead compositions at all, but since they aren't, he doesn't.)
minor clarification (Score:2)
MOD PARENT UP (Score:4, Funny)
My god. Somebody on slashdot understands copyright. I'm stunned!
Re:MOD PARENT UP (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:5, Interesting)
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I'm sorry, I know this is OT, but just how was remarking that the value may be different for a different type of day taking exception with the GP's statement (in his .sig for those who don't view them), which was that "the number of seconds in a day won't fit into a short, but they will into a long", and hence the wordplay of "it's always a long day."
I mean, to be pedantic I could go for the informational aspect of stating "aha! You're wrong, it's really 86,164.090530833 seconds" based on the Wikipedia e [wikipedia.org]
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Re:There are 3 copyright claims in play (Score:5, Insightful)
Prince seems a little desperate for spotlight attention these days.
Wait a minute... (Score:5, Insightful)
So let me get this straight, some person or group of persons could go and put a claim on every video on Youtube now and they'd have to take them all down...since they're not required to verify the entity making the request? That seems a bit silly doesn't it? What's stopping someone from mass emailing them with requests for a huge chunk of videos?
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:5, Informative)
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Is this a copyright race condition?
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:4, Funny)
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One rule for the RIAA, one rule for others?
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Crime > tort (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Crime tort (Score:3, Interesting)
the part of the DMCA dealing with takedown notices, requires the copyright owner to make an affirmation under penalty of perjury.
Sadly though, the companies who have already commited such acts (false takedown notices) have not yet (to my knowledge) been charged with perjury, nor have any penalties been levied for time/labor spent or other damages to the parties who were "required" to take down the content.
Perjury is more likely to be a crime than petty copyright infringement, which is far more often treated as a tort.
For now... keep in mind, as many forget here, there is a Criminal Copyright Infringement law -it's just not often used (but has successfully been used recently - either by the MPAA or RIAA - forget which, but you can find it o
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't know of a single case of perjury being prosecuted for a false DMCA notice. I've seen several stories on this website that talk about people filing DMCA notices in bad faith, but no follow-up regarding any prosecutions.
Your point was that people won't file false DMCA notices because it's a federal crime (and with the implication that it carries a harsh penalty). I was simply pointing out that lots of crimes carry harsh penalties, but aren't prosecuted very often.
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This approach is probably
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Here's my understanding of how DMCA requests work:
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You, as a service provider, probably cannot verify the claim in the time required by the take-down request. And if you do verify it and decide not to take it down, you are now opening up yourself to being sued.
So why doesn't someone send a butt-load of take-down requests t
Re:Wait a minute... (Score:4, Informative)
Problem is, they probably get dozens, maybe hundreds of these requests per day, so they probably just comply and delete, because hiring people to verify these (they WOULD need new full time staff) would be stupid.
Prince has a performance copyright under U.S. law (Score:5, Informative)
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If Prince had no right to cover the song, he can't copyright it.
Basically, Prince has no legal rights over what he's stolen
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And in any case, YouTube isn't in England.
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Seriously, though, since they're part of Google, don't you think they've got infrastructure--and administrative offices--in JOE?
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Re:Prince has a performance copyright under U.S. l (Score:5, Informative)
1) YouTube is American, based in America, subject to US copyright law. It doesn't matter a damn where Radiohead is from, because the jurisdiction that counts is the one where the law is being applied. The DMCA is a 'merkin invention, being used on a 'merkin site. Ergo, Radiohead's country-of-origin is irrelevant.
2) Performance right is recognised in UK copyright law. So Prince is entitled to copyright in his performance of the song, even though he does not hold the copyright in the lyrics or the musical score.
If Prince failed to get the appropriate licence to perform the song, as others have noted Radiohead have a course of action for breach of copyright in the lyrics and/or score. They have no grounds to get the video restored, because they don't hold the copyright in the performance and that's the right that the video infringes.
Love/hate ... what a convenient description. (Score:3, Funny)
Later... I hate this web stuff, these Intellectual Property burglars are taking food right out of my childrens mouths. WHAAA
Re:Love/hate ... what a convenient description. (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah... (Score:5, Funny)
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let's settle this (Score:2, Funny)
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If you don't have the balls to do your delivery straight and suffer the downmods of the ignorant, you don't deserve upmods either.
Re:let's settle this (Score:5, Funny)
Prince "Owns" A Copyright (Score:5, Informative)
But Prince does own his own performance of that song. He owns the copyright of his own performance, though not of the song he's performing. He's merely performing a song that copyright law lets him perform so long as he's in compliance with the royalty laws that pay Radiohead. Unless Prince was the first person other than Radiohead to perform it publicly, Radiohead doesn't have control over the public performance of the song, just the right to collect the royalties when it is played by whoever wants to.
Copyrights are fairly simple, if taken step by step. That doesn't stop them from being bullshit, especially when practiced by musicians, who always use copyrighted content from other artists without respect to the "original's" copyright.
When someone does something in public, I have the right to see it. I have the right to remember it. I have the right to record what I see and remember, even if the law these days is wrong and can stop me (like most copyright laws, and of course the Hollywood-written DMCA). And if I recorded it, I have the right to show it to anyone I want. This is a freedom of expression that copyright infringes. And since YouTube promotes Prince's commerce much more than it competes with it, no copyright is promoting "progress in science and the useful arts". In fact, this DMCA abuse is killing that progress, right when it could be exploding, but instead miserly copyright owners are pretending they represent "progress", when all they represent is profit.
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Er, no. Prince (or NPG Records, or any of Prince's other representatives, assignees, or whatever) does NOT own his performance of anything. Only expression fixed in a tangible form is protected by copyright.
Radiohead owns a copyright in the score of the song, assuming one exists, because it was fixed on paper. Radiohead also owns copyrights on any recordings Radiohead may have made of the song, because they were fixed on some sort of media. This does indeed give Radiohead a performance right... they can
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Most concerts expressly prohibit recording devices. If someone made a recording in breach of the terms on the ticket and posted at the gate, then they may be in violation of his privacy rights, and they had no right to make the recording, and thus no
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Well, there are rights issues concerned with performance. For example you cannot in general perform a work without a license, despite the fact that under your definition, no "copy" was made. Further, Prince may own copyright to his arrangement of the work. Just like if i wrote a song, and performance it, and you recorded it, your work would still be a derivative of my work (my composition, fixed in the form of the sheet music I was using, even though you did not ever see the sheet music), generally requirin
Are copyrights really so simple? (Score:3, Interesting)
Copyrights are fairly simple, if taken step by step.
Say I've written and recorded a song, and I want to avoid another "My Sweet Lord" scandal. What are the simple steps to determine whether my song is original or whether I have subconsciously plagiarized a song that I had heard on the radio a decade earlier?
And since YouTube promotes Prince's commerce much more than it competes with it, no copyright is promoting "progress in science and the useful arts".
But the Supreme Court of the United States has interpreted Congress's power "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts" as merely the power to attempt "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts", refusing to review whether acts of Cong
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But there are strong and weak copyrights, now, aren't there? I mean, that's why Kodak corp chose the name, because it didn't mean anything in any language, but it was easy to remember. If I were to make a solut
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But there are strong and weak copyrights, now, aren't there? I mean, that's why Kodak corp chose the name, because it didn't mean anything in any language, but it was easy to remember. If I were to make a solution for cleaning natural fibers and I called it CottonCleaner, that would be a pretty weak copyright, as anything else that cleans cotton would use those words in their own product descriptions.
Those are trademarks, not copyrights. The only connections between trademark and copyright are (1) they both restrict speech and (2) some people misleadingly use the term "intellectual property" to refer to both of them.
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Harrison lost that case not on its merits, but because his lawyer wasn't good enough. Copyrights are simple, which means a better lawyer can simply beat you. Complex laws might make a better lawyer more important, but it's still essential.
All power to "promote" can only be an attempt to promote, unless Congress is going t
Say, Doc... (Score:2)
Thom Yorke and those other Rhs. (Score:2)
Prince isn't exactly burdened with reality. (Score:4, Interesting)
As Kevin Smith once revealed:
t's 3 in the morning in Minnesota. I really need a camel . Go get it. - Prince
(Yes, I know it was partly farcical, but the basic premise is sound - he's a loon.)
Tough call (Score:5, Funny)
I can see both sides of the issue here.
One on hand, this is an ugly example of DMCA abuse and goes against the wish of even the copy right owner.
One the other hand it's one less Prince recording on the internet.
I'm inclined to side with Prince here since the public welfare outweighs the individual IP.
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the moral of this tale is... (Score:2)
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Are the video reviews of games on YouTube at risk? (Score:2)
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Fine by me (Score:3, Interesting)
You're much better off watching Radiohead perform their own
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nxpblnsJEWM [youtube.com]
DMCA Counter-Notice (Score:5, Informative)
> the copyright holder and this seems to be just another example of DMCA abuse.
Under the DMCA the person who put the material up can file a counter-notice asserting that they have the legal right to distribute the item. YouTube can then put it back up with complete impunity and the only way Prince can get it taken back down is to file a copyright infringement suit (within 30 days) against the person who put it up and convince a Federal judge to issue a preliminary injunction. There are criminal penalties for filing a false DMCA takedown notice, and the target could also claim damages.
Prince? (Score:2)
He's just milking this to get free press to help save a long dead career. Ignore him (?) and he will go away.
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Fixed (Score:5, Funny)
Fixed
What abuse? (Score:2, Interesting)
God... (Score:2)
We should start a reality show where Prince is the lead singer of Metallica. They can all whine and be douches TOGETHER!
I'm amazed nobody said it yet (Score:4, Insightful)
By 100 people now, instead of just one. Just out of spite.
DMCA easily abused. (Score:3, Insightful)
DMCA takedowns are no-questions asked "Under perjury, I own this, remove it, NOW" legal letters that range from "I am sueing you for 10,000 euros for every 30 seconds it's visible" to "this person has something that only looks like mine, but I want it removed."
In the case of something that Prince has covered, he doesn't own the copyright on the original song, but does on the performance. So he could request it be removed.
I regularly see stuff from Prince's lawyers, who also do stuff for other independent artists, but it appears Prince is the only one that gets attention for it.
If it's wrong, send a counter notice, counter notices are valid in the US as long as the issue is about copyright. In which case be prepared to goto court and sue the otherguy.
Artist's Relationships with the "Interweb" (Score:3, Interesting)
This aspect is what's really interesting. There probably aren't enough data points yet, and we are plainly in a transition period for music distribution technology. The intersting thing to study is to rate artist's approaches to the 'net based on one or more criteria, and attempt to correlate them to success or failure.
I think it would be difficult, if not impossible to come up with any real answer though. First, art is not a commodity so you can't compare Prince as a producer of "1000 barrels of music per day" vs. Radio Head as "1000 barrels of music per day". Secondly, the overall economic climate for musicians may be in decline, and the falling tide may be sinking all the yachts, whether they play on the 'net or not. Whether this decline is due to the the 'net or not is a separate issue that's really rather moot: the cat's out of the bag. The more practical quetion, from the PoV of the musician, is "do I have more to gain by participating in the old model or the new". The answer (pure speculation on my part) probably depends a lot on how you got started. Artists who's careers span the pre-Internet era might be well served by sticking with the old model, whereas new artists might be better off paying less attention to the old model, or maybe even ignoring it totally.
Once we enter a stage where all the currently performing artists started their careers post-Napster, the picture should be more clear.
Limelight (Score:3, Funny)
It's just not a good cover... (Score:3, Funny)