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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 10:58 am 
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JoeChartreuse wrote:
This particular pile of steaming manure is exactly why certain mfrs. have gotten sued. "We always do it this way" does not now nor has ever cut it legally. Until DOCUMENTED LICENSING IS IN HAND, THERE IS NO LICENSING. Those who choose to hope for the best and produce before receiving documented licensing are those who not only get sued, but deserve it. A perfect example: This is what happened to SC - per Jim's own statement - in regard to the Eagles disc 8125, and SC had to pay for it. Though still never licensed, they had to shell out just to limit future liability.


I really wish you would review instead of relying on memory.

SC had an existing license set for the songs on 8125, at least some of which had been released on cassette. Before prepping 8125, SC got a preliminary pre-clearance to fix the disc and begin selling it. Later, the publisher decided that the existing licensing didn't fully cover those songs and demanded additional royalties and destruction of unsold product. SC paid the additional royalties to resolve the question of licensing and pulled the unsold product. Could they have fought it? Absolutely. But that would be expensive and uncertain, no matter how strong their position was. It wasn't worth the trouble to fight it.


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 12:20 pm 
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So LR what would your opinion be if you paid to go to a museum and then found out all the displays were forgeries (but first rate) because the museum put the originals away because they were too valuable. Wouldn't you think you were ripped off.

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 12:45 pm 
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Sorry Harrington, it isn't as hard as you make it out to be. There was plenty of people with "No resources" as you put it (I'm guessing by resources you mean money) that paved the way for a lot of law changes in this country.

Cesar Chavez had no money, a 7th grade education, and he rallied people together to make changes in labor laws. Got rid of the short ho, got migrant workers the right to earn minimum wage, and got them the right to use our local services. In fact, he lived and died here in my home town.

If you rallied the KJ's together instead of splitting them apart, then I wouldn't be saying this. So far, you've succeeded in creating 2 groups that are constantly bickering. It does nothing to solve our problems, or Kurts.

No, I don't think Kurt is an idiot. I just think he takes bad advice from shysters like yourself looking to make a buck.


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 1:15 pm 
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The way I see it is DT has shot themselves in the foot along with shooting every other Karaoke Manufacture in the foot. If the suit continues Universal will never ever let any Manu publish their songs in Karaoke again. So who really looses in the end. THE KJ.

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 3:16 pm 
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toqer wrote:
Sorry Harrington, it isn't as hard as you make it out to be. There was plenty of people with "No resources" as you put it (I'm guessing by resources you mean money) that paved the way for a lot of law changes in this country.

Cesar Chavez had no money, a 7th grade education, and he rallied people together to make changes in labor laws. Got rid of the short ho, got migrant workers the right to earn minimum wage, and got them the right to use our local services. In fact, he lived and died here in my home town.


Cesar Chavez was operating in a different time, and what he was fighting against affected many, many more people in significant ways than this issue. It's a false equivalency.

toqer wrote:
If you rallied the KJ's together instead of splitting them apart, then I wouldn't be saying this. So far, you've succeeded in creating 2 groups that are constantly bickering. It does nothing to solve our problems, or Kurts.


We aren't the ones splitting KJs apart. There are those who operate legally, and there are those who don't. Those lines were drawn before we ever filed a lawsuit. As long as there are KJs who think that piracy is OK, there will be a divide.

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No, I don't think Kurt is an idiot. I just think he takes bad advice from shysters like yourself looking to make a buck.


Kurt came to me. I could have turned this work down. I could have insisted that he pay me up front, or hourly. I could have demanded a confiscatory contingent fee. I'm not doing this to get rich. I'm doing it to help my client save his business. In fact, the work I do pays for my firm's overhead, and that's about it. You couldn't be more wrong about me--but I also really don't care. Your opinion of me means absolutely nothing to the way I do my work, because you are utterly ignorant of the facts.


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 4:08 pm 
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If you didn't care you wouldn't write such a long response. Typical response by you as well, Dismiss any other suggestions except your own. Bravo! BTW, Chavez was in my time, wasn't that long ago we were all sporting "NO UVAS" bumper stickers. I'm not that old yet.


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 4:43 pm 
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kjmann wrote:
doowhatchulike wrote:
First of all, "semantics" have cost many a company millions of dollars for not having proper verbage. Ask any lawyer, on the forum or otherwise: how something is worded is more important than what was intended.

Also, I am not convinced that a company can use a recording that was not done with permission for a re-worked product...just can't see that being proper...


It really doesn't matter what YOU'RE convinced of. the point is that when a karaoke company makes a RE-Production recording of a song, That Re-Recording (Sound Recording) belongs to them and is usually done under a compulsory license. the Re-Recording is their copyrighted work. That being said, at that point, they can license the use of that recording to anyone they want (Eg: Ameritz makes a Re-Recording). it is their work. Whether they own the Original Or not. The underlying work (The Original Song) is NOT theirs. but those rights do not come into play until That Re-Recording is being sold to consumers on the open market. at that point whoever is selling the Re-Recording (Eg: Digitrax) is responsible for obtaining the rights to sell to consumers. Not the company that Made the Re-Recording.

Compulsory License:
A compulsory license provides that the owner of a patent or copyright licenses the use of their rights against payment either set by law or determined through some form of arbitration. In essence, under a compulsory license, an individual or company seeking to use another's intellectual property can do so without seeking the rights holder's consent, and pays the rights holder a set fee for the license.

Situation Example:

Company A makes a Re-Recording of blue by leann rimes. and pays the compulsory license. (Even if they don't pay the Compulsory License they still have a legal claim of ownership of that re-recording)

Company B gets permission to use that re-recording and acquires a proper license from the original artist/publisher.

Company B is not responsible for company A's Lack of proper licensing on the re-recording. if a publisher/artist wishes to pursue damages in court for an improper license when the re-recording was made, they must sue Company A. Even if this happens, The Agreement to use the re-recording between company A and Company B is still valid and is a separate issue.



Your analysis makes more than one assumption that cannot be confidently used as a basis for the scenario. There has been many indications that CB lacked proper licensing for any number of recordings; well, at least more potentially incriminating evidence than your analogy represents (i.e. assuming certain compulsory licenses were paid is weak without proof; the fact that a company goes out of business shortly after losing a couple of lawsuits calling this possibility into question could be fairly damning)...


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 5:05 pm 
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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 5:18 pm 
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toqer wrote:
...I just think he takes bad advice from shysters like yourself looking to make a buck.

totally uncalled for Toqer, that's way below the belt. :evil:

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 5:19 pm 
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HarringtonLaw wrote:
We aren't the ones splitting KJs apart. There are those who operate legally, and there are those who don't. Those lines were drawn before we ever filed a lawsuit. As long as there are KJs who think that piracy is OK, there will be a divide.

piracy and shifting discs to HDD are two different things, you keep lumping them together.
the divide is not over piracy, but over hunting everyone who shifted.

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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 5:36 pm 
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toqer wrote:
If you rallied the KJ's together instead of splitting them apart, then I wouldn't be saying this. So far, you've succeeded in creating 2 groups that are constantly bickering. It does nothing to solve our problems, or Kurts.


HarringtonLaw wrote:
We aren't the ones splitting KJs apart. There are those who operate legally, and there are those who don't. Those lines were drawn before we ever filed a lawsuit. As long as there are KJs who think that piracy is OK, there will be a divide
.


And then there are those who were operating legally (as in, they bought and paid for all of their song tracks through legitimate and recognized dealers), but never asked for your (SC's) permission to media shift. So, once they either got a Voluntary Audit or they were named in a Lawsuit (and as a result, got an Audit), they were suddenly legal in SC's eyes. And these KJs were NOT Pirates. Were they illegal before????????????????


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 6:15 pm 
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cueball wrote:
toqer wrote:
If you rallied the KJ's together instead of splitting them apart, then I wouldn't be saying this. So far, you've succeeded in creating 2 groups that are constantly bickering. It does nothing to solve our problems, or Kurts.


HarringtonLaw wrote:
We aren't the ones splitting KJs apart. There are those who operate legally, and there are those who don't. Those lines were drawn before we ever filed a lawsuit. As long as there are KJs who think that piracy is OK, there will be a divide
.


And then there are those who were operating legally (as in, they bought and paid for all of their song tracks through legitimate and recognized dealers), but never asked for your (SC's) permission to media shift. So, once they either got a Voluntary Audit or they were named in a Lawsuit (and as a result, got an Audit), they were suddenly legal in SC's eyes. And these KJs were NOT Pirates. Were they illegal before????????????????


It has been said many different ways on this forum, which might make it difficult to understand how anyone can equate the terms "legal" and "conforming" in regards to a company's policy. It doesn't take much to be able to conclude that just because a company makes a policy does not automatically make it legal...


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PostPosted: Thu Apr 03, 2014 6:36 pm 
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Paradigm Karaoke wrote:
piracy and shifting discs to HDD are two different things, you keep lumping them together.
the divide is not over piracy, but over hunting everyone who shifted.


The number of operators who are 1:1 but lack permission is extremely tiny in comparison to the number of operators who are outright pirates.

We do not "hunt everyone who shifted." We don't require financial settlements from operators who can show 1:1 correspondence. If we were hunting people who shifted, we would demand that they settle on the same terms as people who stole.


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 04, 2014 1:22 am 
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HarringtonLaw wrote:
JoeChartreuse wrote:
This particular pile of steaming manure is exactly why certain mfrs. have gotten sued. "We always do it this way" does not now nor has ever cut it legally. Until DOCUMENTED LICENSING IS IN HAND, THERE IS NO LICENSING. Those who choose to hope for the best and produce before receiving documented licensing are those who not only get sued, but deserve it. A perfect example: This is what happened to SC - per Jim's own statement - in regard to the Eagles disc 8125, and SC had to pay for it. Though still never licensed, they had to shell out just to limit future liability.


I really wish you would review instead of relying on memory.

SC had an existing license set for the songs on 8125, at least some of which had been released on cassette. Before prepping 8125, SC got a preliminary pre-clearance to fix the disc and begin selling it. Later, the publisher decided that the existing licensing didn't fully cover those songs and demanded additional royalties and destruction of unsold product. SC paid the additional royalties to resolve the question of licensing and pulled the unsold product. Could they have fought it? Absolutely. But that would be expensive and uncertain, no matter how strong their position was. It wasn't worth the trouble to fight it.
BC (old studio manager) had said that back in the 90's and exactly how you stated it now. They had permission for the music on cassette & initial permission for the cdg but it was pulled after the fact which led to it's recall.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 04, 2014 6:21 am 
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In most other types of business, if a contract is negotiated , check written, check cashed, the transaction is binding if the final contract has been signed or not. In order to get things moving, the financial transaction locks in the "gentleman's agreement" and the legal departments might not finalize the wording until the project is near completion. How binding (legal) may even depend on what state the agreement was made. Here in Pa. people have sued successfully when companies have tried to "void" handshake agreements as long as there are witnesses (or paper trails) who can verify them. In other states these types of agreements do not hold water. The problem lies more in the accountability of the mega-corporations where too many people/divisions/lawyers can offhandedly negate "good faith" agreements that other people/divisions/lawyers have made.

Pa has many "good faith" laws on the books because of our agricultural background where farmers made "handshake" agreements over seeds / farmland etc. For years, local banks made loans without the formal paperwork because planting had a small window.

The "we have an agreement, no we don't" bs has done as much damage to the karaoke business as pirating as far as I see. Compulsory rights, no, sync rights, no, video rights, shift rights. How are any of the karaoke manufacturers supposed to survive when the "record" companies change the rules every week.

It took about 10 years for the music industry to accept the digital age of music and adjust its "big picture". Now if it could just lock down the rules for karaoke, maybe everyone could make a few bucks.


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 04, 2014 6:26 am 
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Maybe Mr. Harrington has this info more readily than I can find it--didn't a judge/judges in the Florida cases rule that SC does have the right to require permission for copying/media shifting?


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 04, 2014 6:43 am 
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I think they did in Florida, but it still might not be enforceable in Maine. The U.S. has very jumbled state rights.


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 04, 2014 7:19 am 
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doowhatchulike wrote:
It has been said many different ways on this forum, which might make it difficult to understand how anyone can equate the terms "legal" and "conforming" in regards to a company's policy. It doesn't take much to be able to conclude that just because a company makes a policy does not automatically make it legal...
I brought up the comment of "Operating Legally" because of Mr. Harrington's comment...
HarringtonLaw wrote:
There are those who operate legally, and there are those who don't. Those lines were drawn before we ever filed a lawsuit.
IMO, that statement lumped everyone together as one type or the other (Pirate or Not a Pirate). That statement of his did not appear to have anything to do with conforming or media-shifting.


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 04, 2014 8:38 am 
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doowhatchulike wrote:


Your analysis makes more than one assumption that cannot be confidently used as a basis for the scenario. There has been many indications that CB lacked proper licensing for any number of recordings; well, at least more potentially incriminating evidence than your analogy represents (i.e. assuming certain compulsory licenses were paid is weak without proof; the fact that a company goes out of business shortly after losing a couple of lawsuits calling this possibility into question could be fairly damning)...


Point out the error then. Otherwise shut up.

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PostPosted: Fri Apr 04, 2014 12:49 pm 
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Lonman wrote:
HarringtonLaw wrote:
JoeChartreuse wrote:
This particular pile of steaming manure is exactly why certain mfrs. have gotten sued. "We always do it this way" does not now nor has ever cut it legally. Until DOCUMENTED LICENSING IS IN HAND, THERE IS NO LICENSING. Those who choose to hope for the best and produce before receiving documented licensing are those who not only get sued, but deserve it. A perfect example: This is what happened to SC - per Jim's own statement - in regard to the Eagles disc 8125, and SC had to pay for it. Though still never licensed, they had to shell out just to limit future liability.


I really wish you would review instead of relying on memory.

SC had an existing license set for the songs on 8125, at least some of which had been released on cassette. Before prepping 8125, SC got a preliminary pre-clearance to fix the disc and begin selling it. Later, the publisher decided that the existing licensing didn't fully cover those songs and demanded additional royalties and destruction of unsold product. SC paid the additional royalties to resolve the question of licensing and pulled the unsold product. Could they have fought it? Absolutely. But that would be expensive and uncertain, no matter how strong their position was. It wasn't worth the trouble to fight it.
BC (old studio manager) had said that back in the 90's and exactly how you stated it now. They had permission for the music on cassette & initial permission for the cdg but it was pulled after the fact which led to it's recall.


Yeah, um "preliminary pre-clearance" translates out to "ain't got no licensing to fix yet". The licensing for cassettes has / had nothing to do with either fixing to disc media or lyric display, Both you and Jim know that...

Getting back to the OP, one thing has always been suspicious to me. The reticence on DT's part too provide proper itemized receipts (showing each track title downloaded.). Just thinking out loud.

Please keep in mind that I don't hold the pu lishers to any higher standard. They have their own foibles...

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