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Monday May 14, 2007 20:57 by SteveL
![]() early day motion on behalf of the man The Liberal Democrat MP for Bristol West, Stephen Williams, has decided to join the side of the record companies in his signing of an early day motion "COPYRIGHT TERM FOR PRODUCERS AND PERFORMERS". In this motion, he and the other signatories ask the government to ignore all the work done by the recent Gowers report on intellectual property, and extend the copyright on audio recordings to 70 years after the death of the musicians, rather than a straightforward 50 years. Audio recordings of music are only protected by copyright for 50 years. After that anyone can share them, remix them, do anything they want, without paying the artists -or their record companies- any money. |
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Jump To Comment: 1 2 3...what about artists/writers/musians etc who recorded and wrote in the 1940s/50's/60s but didn't enjoy Beatle-esque sales. Are you saying that artists active in those times and now drawing a meagre state pension should be denied the right to be paid properly should their works be performed, played or reinterpreted 40 - 60s year on?
royalties are negotiated in most instances to pass to the artist's estate - wife/husband/children/dog - after their death.
You've misunderstood the EDM:
http://edmi.parliament.uk/EDMi/EDMDetails.aspx?EDMID=33173&SESSION=885
Here is a transcription of the Parliamentary debate:
http://www.theyworkforyou.com/debates/?id=2007-05-09a.188.0&s=Gowers
As far as the issue goes, can you summarise when you think royalties should stop being paid and why?