2007: May 4 ~ help save net radio
Lobbyists for the mainstream recording industry in the U.S. are aiming to crush the global development of internet radio - currently one of the best ways to hear and enjoy a range of music. Bowing to the wishes of major record labels, the Copyright Royalty Board recently ordered an increase in webcasters' royalty rates of between 300 and 1200 percent over the next 5 years.
The SaveNetRadio coalition, made up of artists, labels, listeners, and webcasters, notes that this ruling, due to go into effect on July 15, 2007 (retroactive to Jan 1, 2006), jeopardizes the online industry and threatens to homogenize Internet radio: "If the increased rates remain unchanged, the majority of webcasters will go bankrupt and silent on this date. Internet radio needs your help!"
You can let your voice be heard. Visit/contact the SaveNetRadio coalition
For more explanation of the issue(s), as well, here's an article by
Miles Raymer from this week's Chicago
Reader:
Pay Per Play
A new royalty scheme for webcasters may shut most of them down.
By Miles Raymer
THERE'S A REASON you haven't seen much in-depth coverage of what's
probably the most important federal ruling to affect the music business
since the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 -- a ruling that, if
it goes into effect, will change how tens of millions of people listen
to music and very possibly silence Internet radio altogether. The
reason is it's painfully boring. To weigh in with more than a sound
bite, you've got to navigate legislative language that even the most
impassioned players in the debate admit is difficult and dry. But all
that legalese is hiding an ugly truth: the music industry, led by the
RIAA, has once again enlisted the government to do its dirty work. This
time it may very well have derailed the evolution of radio into the
digital age.
On March 2 the Copyright Royalty Board -- three judges who determine
who pays how much for the use of copyrighted materials -- handed down
new regulations for webcasters to cover the period from 2006 till 2010.
(Webcasting can mean anything from an online simulcast by a
conventional broadcaster to a customizable streaming service like
Pandora to a personal Internet radio station run from a laptop.) The
rates are the same as those proposed by SoundExchange, a
royalty-collection agency that spun off from the RIAA in 2003 and still
has RIAA employees on its board; in fact the judges appear to have
accepted the industry's highball opening offer. An appeal for a
rehearing, made by a coalition including NPR, was rejected April 16. If
back royalties based on the new rates come due July 15 as scheduled,
experts in the field say it's likely that even giants like Yahoo! and
AOL will shut down their webcasts.
Presently small webcasters pay a percentage of revenue as royalties and
big ones pay per listener-hour. The new ruling requires an
across-the-board switch to a per-play model and a steep rate hike. The
retroactive rate for 2006 is $.0008 for each song increasing to $.0019
by 2010, paid not just per play but per listener. Local webcasting
company AccuRadio (accuradio.com), which last year posted revenues of
roughly $400,000 and has an average audience of just a few thousand,
would owe about $600,000 for 2006 under the new rules. Another
regulation sets a $500 minimum fee per channel -- not a big deal for
AccuRadio, which has 300 channels or so, but bad news for services like
Pandora, where millions of users can create up to 100 channels apiece.
AccuRadio was launched in 2001 by some of the same people who founded
the Radio and Internet Newsletter, an industry news site (kurthanson.com)
that's been around since 1999 -- basically since there's been a
webcasting industry for it to report on. Paul Maloney is editor of RAIN
and vice president of music development at AccuRadio; Daniel McSwain is
assistant editor at RAIN and music director at AccuRadio and also runs
his own site, Future Perfect Radio. As longtime webcasters and
observers of the business, they know as much about the current
situation as anybody. As a couple of guys about to lose their jobs,
they are pissed.
Many members of Congress, says Maloney, "are very much not in
touch with the cutting edge of technology. And I say 'cutting edge,'
but even things that people take for granted day to day. Cell phones,
Blackberries, instant messaging." (Remember Ted Stevens, the
Republican senator from Alaska, and his "series of tubes"?)
And because they don't understand the digital world, he says, they're
easily manipulated by lobbyists for digital businesses. The DMCA is one
famous result: it gives the home-electronics and entertainment
industries unprecedented control over how consumers can use products
they've legally purchased and even criminalizes acts that don't
infringe on copyright, like breaking DRM to make a fair-use copy of a
song. "Lawmakers don't write these laws. Lobbyists write these
laws," says Maloney.
In 1995 webcasting existed mostly in theory, but the RIAA was already
lobbying Congress to regulate it. Existing laws didn't allow labels to
collect per-performance royalties when their songs were played on the
radio -- composers and performers got paid, but labels were considered
compensated by the promotional value of the broadcast. The RIAA argued
that Internet-based radio would be a completely different animal and
persuaded Congress to pass the Digital Performance Right in Sound
Recordings Act of 1995, which lifted the per-performance ban for
webcasting based on the labels' claim that it "has no promotional
effect on record sales."
According to a recent survey by media-research group Arbitron, roughly
52 million Americans now listen to webcasts each month (the
satellite-radio industry claims just 14 million subscribers). But John
Simson, executive director of SoundExchange, says he still doesn't
believe that Internet radio helps music sales, as he told an
interviewer for online trade publication RoyaltyWeek: "Even though
you don't get the exact song you want there are so many channels and so
many people out there that you can pretty much get what you want when
you want it or that you're [sic] listening experience is one that is so
rich that you don't need anything else."
Considering that the RIAA is supposed to help the major labels, its
efforts to squelch Internet radio are counterintuitive -- there's no
hard data about webcasting and record sales, but it just seems reckless
to dismiss 52 million listeners. "If you were to talk to someone
who works in promotion for a major record label off the record,"
Maloney says, "I'd bet you they'd agree with us." He suspects
the majors support the CRB ruling because they're planning to set up
backdoor deals with webcasters. Nothing in the law forbids copyright
holders from waiving or modifying royalty fees on a case-by-case basis,
which a label could agree to do in exchange for a promise that a
webcaster would play certain artists. This would allow the industry to
"dictate the look and sound of play-lists," according to
McSwain. "It takes away any autonomy from webcasters and puts it
completely in the labels' hands."
McSwain and Maloney are also pretty sure the new royalty rates are an
indirect way for the majors to strike a blow against the indies.
Tech-savvy early adopters -- those most likely to use webcasts -- tend
to listen to music from outside the mainstream. SoundExchange denies
that its goal is to shut down Internet radio, but the fact remains that
doing so would eliminate an outlet where indies have a big leg up on
the majors. Though the RIAA only represents the Big Four, SoundExchange
collects royalties on behalf of all copyright holders whether they
claim them or not -- which means it can take action even against
webcasters who traffic exclusively in content from indie labels that
would prefer to let things slide. To prevent such action a webcaster
would have to negotiate exceptions with each label individually.
"To eliminate the amount of digital competition in a field where
[the majors] are not established, instead of trying to get into it,
they're saying 'Fuck it. Just go away and we'll keep doing what we're
doing,'" says McSwain. "If you don't stop this thing from
happening now, there's no telling what future rulings will take away
from you."
What might stop it is the Internet Radio Equality Act, H.R. 2060,
introduced April 26 by Washington Democrat Jay Inslee and Illinois
Republican Donald Manzullo. The law would nullify the CRB's ruling and
put webcasting on the same footing as satellite radio -- that is, with
a royalty rate of .33 cents per listener-hour or 7.5 percent of total
revenue, chosen by the provider. (According to estimates by tech site
BetaNews, AOL would owe $916,000 for 2006 under H.R. 2060, as opposed
to $23.7 million under the CRB's scheme.) July 15 may seem a ways off
-- until this Tuesday the deadline was May 15 -- but Maloney and
McSwain urge everyone to call their representatives in Congress now.
The two went to Washington earlier this week to lobby legislators
face-to-face, and they plan to return. Saturday at Subterranean there's
a show to raise awareness about the issue, hosted by Radio Free Chicago
and savenetradio.org (a good source for updates). And Tuesday, May 8,
the webcasting industry is planning a Day of Silence, for which many
major webcasters will go off-line in protest.
If we lose webcasting, we'll lose one of the best resources available
to people who really care about music. As Maloney puts it: "When
was the last time you heard anyone say, 'I'm pretty happy with the
choices on AM and FM, and I don't need anything else'?"



