Digital Music News' Paul Resnikoff on new advances in music composition and the challanges they pose to traditional copyright interpretation

As I was reading my daily dose of Digital Music News I stumbled upon this provocative adage to copyright and one challenge that we face moving ahead thanks to the advances of a California professor's new composition software.  This is but one point of the idiosyncrasy of composing a law in real time to keep up with our technological advances AND protect intellectual property owners...  This is an uphill climb and is all but impossible to keep up with despite the CRB and copyright office's best attempts.  Now without further ado ... Paul Resnikoff... +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

What 'Sounds Like' Even More Disruption Ahead...

Despite the complicated debates, copyright infringement is essentially simple concept. A piece of intellectual property is owned by one party, and its unauthorized use by a third party is subject to penalty. That is, in theory - 'casual' piracy happens billions of times monthly, and plenty of debates arise over ownership (orphan works, splits, other disputes), or intent (Satriani v. Coldplay, for example).

That just scratches the surface, and volumes of literature are dedicated to the subject. Moreover, the body of law is being interpreted and created in real time. But outside of those mainline discussions, plenty of smart workarounds exist for those unable or disinterested in direct, expensive licensing processes. And it's not infringement, as long as proper statutory publishing rates are paid.

Jump into a karaoke bar, and sing-a-longs frequently feature generic video scenes, lyrics and underlying (ie, publishing) tracks - not the recordings themselves. Or, hop onto the iTunes Store, and 'sounds like' versions of songs employ similar statutory workarounds. In fact, when Kid Rock withheld his content from iTunes, entrepreneurial studios quickly created sounds-like versions to capture sales from confused fans.

But what happens when a derivative work is created, one that resembles the original but is different? In pop music, copycat artists and songs happen all of the time, and they are perfectly legal. But as technology becomes more powerful, unique identifiers employed by successful composers can more easily be isolated and replicated.

Just recently, ArsTechnica author Jacqui Cheng profiled a computer-based composition technology called 'EMI,' or 'Emmy,' a software package created by University of California Santa Cruz professor David Cope. Emily essentially identifies and replicates a number of signatures unique to a particular composer, then creates a derivative work - sounds like Mozart, Beethoven, Cream, whatever. The package has since been succeeded by a more original computer composer called 'Emily Howell,' which attempts to move beyond derivative to truly self-generated works.

That seriously challenges the concept that 'real' music can only be created by real brains, not computers. But machine-based dissection and creation technology may also become part of the disruptive digital music fabric, and further upend traditional copyright concepts in the process.

American Idol + Ellen Degeneres = FAIL

Well everyone, It was announced this week that Ellen would be the new American Idol judge replacing Paula Abdul.  No matter how you feel about Paula, it is hard to even infer that Ellen has 1/10th the musical prowess of her predecessor.  This coupled with the news I just received of Ellen's utter disrespect for music and the makers of music through her show's refusal to pay royalties on the music "featured" on her show tells me that she no more belongs on AI than I do as the King of England.

According to Digital Music News, All four majors have now filed suit demanding that royalties be paid.  The show's producers have denied royalties to the copyright owners because they "did not roll that way."   This pathetic disregard for music, music makers, and copyright law proves to me that she has no place anywhere near this industry.

Her appointment as a judge on American Idol proves to me that the show's producers are catering to the lowest common denominator,  looking for the popular vote and continuing to dumb down this show until it falls into the oblivion.  Let's face it, it has been going down ever since season 1 and with this move it will continue to do so.  No offense is meant to Ellen, as I do find her funny enough however she would be better suited alongside "The Hoff" on America's got talent...  save the music judging for musicians.

Okay I'm Done.  Happy Weekend Everyone.

PS: Sorry about my laziness in posting lately... my cup overfloweth.

Copyright Law told through a Disney Parody

pirate_mickey-400x400

Brilliant.  Bloody Brilliant.

I know this is quite old, but nonetheless thought I would resserect it.  I am finding myself a big fan of the many Copyright VS Fair Use videos out in the interwebs.  I may just have to make this a weekly post...

Evan Roth's "Intellectual Property A$$hole Competition"

This is AWESOME! I just happened across this site and quite obviously, the title sucked me in. Evan Roth, self-proclaimed Bad Ass Mother Fucker is an American artist based out of Hong Kong. His bio states that he has interests in technology, tools of empowerment, open source and popular culture (definately someone I would like to have a beer with). Coolest of all, he is the number one result from a "bad ass mother fucker" google search. Impressive as I would have surely thought it would have been Samuel Jackson or this

So onto the competition. Evan has staged a competition to see who will deliver a cease and desist quicker... an artist who uses pop culture to become abundantly wealthy, or the Associated Press- who claims to own the copyright on the photo (of our president). To fuel the fire, Evan has painted canvas versions of BOTH the inFamous "Hope" poster and the actual picture and is now selling them on his site. I cannot wait to see what the outcome of this is...

Below is a link to the blog as well as the text from the "contest." http://evan-roth.com/

Intellectual Property Asshole Competition: OBEY vs AP

Who is the bigger intellectual property asshole? Is it the artist who has amassed a small fortune based on "appropriation" yet still sends cease and desist letters to other artists for appropriating his work?


Or is it the largest (and only) US based nationally-oriented news service which fails to recognize "fair use" even when it literally stares them in the face?



I have created hand painted canvases of Shepard Fairy's Obama Hope poster, and Mannie Garcia's Associated Press photograph and put them for sale on my website here and here.



The first person to send me a cease and desist notice wins!



..... stay tuned for updates on the winner.





(For those unfamiliar with the Shepard Fairy / Associated Press intellectual property battle over the Obama Hope poster, here is a good place to start.)



(via evan-roth.com)

Thanks go to Evan for stirring it up!! At the very least, one could say he is "ballsy."