Showing posts with label royalties. Show all posts
Showing posts with label royalties. Show all posts

Monday, 15 October 2018

In favour of a retrospective application of the 2012 amendment to s39 of the Indian Copyright Act


In the wake of the adoption of the Music Modernization Act in the US, is the same outcome possible and desirable also in other jurisdictions? The 1709 Blog is happy to host the following reflections by Akshat Agrawal (Jindal Global Law School) with regard to the Indian context.

Here's what Akshat writes: 

In light of the enactment of the Music Modernization Act in the United States a few days ago (11 October 2018), this post focusses upon the intention and the importance of Title 2 of the act and proposes a similar position for the Indian Copyright jurisprudence and policy development.

Performers’ rights were introduced into the Indian Copyright Act under section 38 through an amendment to the act in 1994. These rights have been accorded to performers under the definition provided by Section 2(qq) i.e. a person delivering an acoustic or a visual presentation live. As per the Delhi High Court, ‘live’ under this section needs to be interpreted in a broader sense as to include every performance made in real time, regardless of it being before an audience (concert or a stage performance) or in a studio. This has also been recognised by Explanation 2 of Rule 68 provided in Copyright Rules enacted in 2013. These rights are completely independent of ownership of ‘works’ and are categorised as related rights, protecting the interests of legal entities and persons who contribute to making works available to the public. The creative intervention of such performers is deemed necessary and catalytic to give life to musical, dramatic and choreographic works and to facilitate their communication to the public.

Section 39 A of the Indian Copyright Act, introduced by the 2012 Amendment, provides for the application of Section 18 and 19 to performers as well, along with the authors of works. This incorporates provision of certain amount of royalties to the performers in case of assignment, usage and broadcasting of the qualifying performances for commercial purposes. A retrospective construction of this provision is imperative to include provision of royalties in performances as well as broadcasting acts done prior to the 2012 amendment. The intention is specifically to provide for adequate remuneration to singers who are not accorded authorial rights in musical works due to ownership being vested with the composers or lyricists of a song. The skill which is inputted by singers needs to be recognised in live concerts as well as live studio performances. Anyone using their performances for commercial communication to the public ought to principally owe royalties for all this labour invested. This is applicable to both cover/tribute bands performing songs originally performed by these singers (apart from transformative use or parody), as well as restaurants or bars broadcasting their recorded performances.

Intention of the Legislature

The Statement of Objects and Reasons (page 14)  of the Copyright Amendment Act, 2012 as mentioned in the Amendment Bill 2010, expressly states its purpose to be clarity of interpretation and compliance and conformity with certain international standards set by the World Intellectual Property Organisation in the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty. A beneficial construction of the Amendment Act can sufficiently be implied on the reading of the Statement of Object and Reasons, that is the encouragement and acknowledgment of these performers as well as provision of moral and related rights accrued to them. It has been enacted for the imperative socio-economic welfare of the “performers” class as a whole, to promote creation of output through this much needed acknowledgment of the creative labour put in. It is an established principle of law that the Statement of Objects and Reasons do often furnish valuable material to ascertain the true intent and inducement of the legislature and are effective interpretational tools. Further, India recently acceded to the WIPO WPPT as well, which mandates such an interpretation.

Beneficial Construction

The inhibition against retrospective construction is not a rigid rule and must vary secundum materiam. It is applicable with less insistence in case of welfare legislations or a remedial statute. The objective of any rule is to provide a fair solution. Presumption against a retrospective construction can be overlooked by necessary implication. This necessity is implied when a new law is enacted to cure an acknowledged evil and provide for necessary compensation for mischief to a community or class suffering as a whole. It has been repeatedly held by the Supreme Court of India that an amended provision which is beneficial in nature, providing for benefits to a certain class of people, who accrue certain compensation due to a mischief that has been prevalent, shall be applicable to all such beneficiaries irrespective of the date and hence with a retrospective effect. In such cases, till it is expressly mentioned in the statute that there would be no retrospective construction, it cannot be implied. Hence to provide for such welfare, it is essential to be applied to cases and subject’s pre-amendment as well.

In a situation where it is provided that the intention of the legislature enacting the amendment is compliance with prevalent international standards, and this intent is ascertained by the experience gathered by the parliament after a previous enactment, realising a further need to provide for certain imperative benefits, then an application with retrospective effect is highly recommended. Further, when the amendment provides for an imperative benefit to a whole community, even in absence of an express provision, the competence of the legislature to intend it to be retrospective cannot be questioned.

As far as the 2012 amendment to Section 39 of the Copyright Act is concerned, the intent has already been established to provide for an imperative right of compensation to the performers upon exploitation of their performances because of it being a creative endeavour alongside involvement of specialised skill and labour. Hence certain provisions of the 2012 Copyright Amendment Act providing for imperative benefits for the welfare of the whole performer community and for conformity to the principal policies levied down by the WIPO, should apply retrospectively.

With respect to singers who aren’t given authorial rights in their work, this compensation is an effective tool for acknowledgment and integrity because the expression in the musical work is highly dependent on the creative capability of these singers. It takes an immense amount of labour and investment of time to hone the skills required to sing in musical works, and totally being denied of any royalties on the usage of their performance is highly unfair and disincentivising for singers. A lot of restaurants and music venues gain commercial benefit and have a huge customer base because of the kind of music which is played therein. This results in direct commercial benefit to these venues due to the skill and labour invested by the singers and performers of the musical work used, who are accorded no benefit for the usage and broadcast of their performance (no authorial rights accorded). Hence a beneficial construction of performers rights is a must to uphold the imperative rights of this community. This would necessarily imply a retrospective operation i.e. provision of royalties for the use of performances which took place before the 2012 amendment as well.

International Position

The United States has recently enacted the Music Modernization Act, 2018 which, under its Title -2, has mandated the provision of royalties for performances and recordings, which took place before the enactment of the Copyright Act as well. The rationale of retrospective protection on such a provision has been implemented in this jurisdiction by virtue of a legislative enactment. It has appropriately been named “Compensating Legacy Artists for Their Songs, Service, and Important Contributions to Society, or CLASSICS Act.’’ This clearly denotes the intention to expand the scope of benefit which is provided to musicians and performers. The enactment has taken place post many musicians expressing their concern regarding this issue, for instance Johnny Cash.

The High Court of England and Wales has also recognised the need for retrospective construction of performers rights against unauthorised exploitation, to be enjoyed by all performers of the work. This decision has confirmed that performances that took place decades before the introduction of performers rights are also covered under this provision and any unauthorised usage would lead to a compulsory provision of royalties. The equitable need for such an inclusive construction as a matter of principle can also be recognised by the express inclusion of such performances, as qualifying for provision of royalties, in the CDPA (Section 180 (3)). Therefore it is a viable policy consideration to immediately recognise this in India and apply Section 39 provisions to performances before the 2012 Amendment Act as well. Following the footsteps of UK, even Ireland and New Zealand have recognised this position.

The performers rights regime needs a purposive and beneficial construction to realise and implement the intent of the legislature. It is imperative to provide for an adequate remuneration mechanism to these performers as it not only acts as an effective incentivising tool, rather also facilitates acknowledgment of specialised labour and provides for much required integrity. Hence it is argued that Section 39 of the Indian Copyright Act should include performances originating prior to the enactment of the amendment as well.

Tuesday, 17 July 2018

The COPYKAT: "Faceswap" for the Statue of Liberty, trade wars, and embezzlement

It's been an exciting few weeks for copyright around the world. This CopyKat takes a look at three "David vs Goliath" disputes, in which parties (respectively) include the US Government, Fifa and an 8 year-old boy, and one of Africa's largest telecoms companies. Also in the news: YouTube rolls out its anticipated Copyright Match tool, copyright collecting societies in Kenya continue to struggle with accountability, and China launches an IPR awareness campaign.


Lady Liberty "faceswap" will cost the United States Postal Service $3.5M

Between 2011 and 2014, the United States Postal Service (USPS) used an image of the Statue of Liberty for its Forever Stamp series (a type of First Class postage stamp). Unfortunately for the USPS, the image they chose was not actually of the famous statue that towers over New York Harbor designed by French sculptor Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi in 1886. Instead, the image they chose was actually Robert S. Davidson's replica Statue of Liberty which looks over the New York-New York Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. Davidson sued for – and won – nearly $3.5 (£2.6) million in royalties, plus interest.

As reported by Artsy, an eagle eyed stamp collector identified the mix-up in 2011. The USPS was made aware of the goof in 2013, but went on to print another 1.13 billion stamps with the replica’s image. For context, the judgement cited that the USPS made some $70 million in revenue resulting from sales of this Lady Liberty stamp alone.

The statues in NYC (left) and Las Vegas (right).


The Post Office purchased the photo used on the stamp from the image service Getty for $1,500 (£1,140). However, the license only covered the rights to Getty's photograph of the statue — and not the statue itself. The USPS neglected to seek permission from Davidson, likely because they simply assumed what it was using was in the public domain.

In its defense, the USPS asserted that the statue is a replica and accordingly, contains no truly original work. If true, this would render Davidson’s copyright claim invalid, and the government would owe nothing for its use of the replica statue’s image.

Davidson was therefore tasked with proving that his copyright in the statue was valid, which under US law requires only a showing of “some minimal degree of creativity” and that it was his own “independent creation” of those original elements.

By way of reminder, the focus is on the expression of an original idea and not the idea itself (Oracle Am., Inc. v. Google Inc., 2014). As such, Davidson’s statue did not need to be wholly original, but rather a “new and original expression” of some previous work or idea – namely, the famous Bartholdi statue.

Davidson argued in his lawsuit that he wasn't trying to create a replica of the original, but rather to craft a fresher, more feminine version. As was later quoted in the ruling, he “envisioned his mother-in-law as inspiration ... and viewed her picture every night during the construction of the face of the statue."

The Court examined photographs and was satisfied that Davidson “succeeded in making the statue his own creation, particularly the face.  A comparison of the two faces unmistakably shows that they are different.” Ultimately, the Court agreed that Davidson’s statue “evokes a softer and more feminine appeal.  The eyes are different, the jaw line is less massive and the whole face is more rounded. “

The USPS’s defense that the stamp fell under the fair use exemption was rejected by the Court. As the USPS printed “billions of copies and selling them to the public as part of a business enterprise … so overwhelmingly favors a finding of infringement that no fair use can be found.”


In case you’re wondering how the USPS – which is a US government agency – can be successfully sued for copyright infringement, 28 U.S.C. § 1498(b) waives sovereign immunity for claims of copyright infringement against the federal government “for the recovery of his reasonable and entire compensation as damages for such infringement.”


YouTube's "Copyright Match" offers enhanced screening technology (for a selected few)

As the CopyKat mentioned last month, YouTube has been beta testing a feature called Copyright Match, designed to find re-uploads of content on other channels. The tool will point content uploaders (creators) to instances where their work has been stolen, and allow them to request that YouTube delete the guilty party’s video on the grounds of copyright infringement. Last week, YouTube channels with more than 100,000 subscribers received access to the new tool.

When a creator uploads a video to the Copyright Match tool for review, other video uploads on different channels will then be scanned to detect similar content has been uploaded. Fabio Magagna, the product manager for the Copyright Match Tool, explained on the YouTube Creators blog that “when there is a match, it will appear in the ‘matches’ tab in the tool and you can decide what to do next”.

Although YouTube already offers an automated copyright-flagging system called Content ID, Copyright Match is different because it’s designed especially for YouTube creators who have problems with unauthorized re-uploads.

By YouTube’s own admission, the Copyright Match is “a powerful feature,” which will be monitored closely in its early stages. Magagna noted that the software will continue to expand over the coming months, “with the long-term goal of making it available to every creator in the YouTube Partner program.” The company insists that takedown requests will be reviewed to make sure they comply with YouTube’s copyright policies.

The introduction of Copyright Match comes at a time of intense debate surrounding user-uploaded content on social media platforms such as YouTube. In particular, The European Parliament recently voted to reject a new copyright directive.  At the heart of controversy for many was Article 13, a section of the proposed directive that focuses on the use of copyrighted material uploaded by users.

And yes, in case you’re wondering: new YouTube video reviews of Copyright Match are already available to watch.


Fifa takes down celebratory World Cup dance video: is this a step too far?

The World Cup is the largest single sporting event on Earth, with nearly half the world’s population tuning in. With England’s (somewhat surprisingly!) good run up to the Semi-Finals, fans of the Three Lions were especially eager to show their support.

When England’s captain Harry Kane scored a goal against Tunisia, a mother filmed her 7-year old boy celebrating the moment. She subsequently posted the short 5-second clip of him dancing in the living room on Twitter. However, FIFA - Football's ruling body - ordered the clip removed from Twitter. FIFA claimed the clip infringed their copyright, as viewers could see blurred football action from the family's TV in the background.

Speaking to the Mirror, Kathryn Conn explained that her son “is a massive Spurs fan and he absolutely worships Harry Kane so he started dancing around in the living room. All you can see on the TV in the background is a really blurry replay of the goal. It's hardly visible."
England captain Harry Kane won the Golden Boot for most goals scored in the tournament.


According to Conn’s tweet on the subject, the copyright notice from Twitter was brought under the US Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Several sources including iNews report that Fifa issued a letter stating: “On behalf of Fifa, we hereby assert that your making available and/or promoting of the protected content on your platform is not authorised by Fifa, its agent nor the law and that your activities in this regard serve as a serious infringement of Fifa’s exclusive rights.”

By way of background, Fifa reports on its finances page that around 95% of its revenues come from the sale of television broadcasting, marketing, and licensing rights related to the FIFA World Cup.
From the 2014 World Cup in Brazil, Fifa hauled in $4.8 billion in revenue, which turned a $2.6 billion profit for the association (which is then re-invested into development projects). Compared to ticket sales earned $527 million, Fifa’s broadcast revenue topped $2.43 billion, while sponsorship fees brought in $1.6 billion.

To date, Fifa’s intellectual property portfolio contains 14,000 trade mark registrations, about 300 registered designs, and 150 copyright registrations covering 157 jurisdictions overall. As is made clear in its 30-plus pages of official guidance on brand protection, Fifa has millions of reasons to be protective of its intellectual property.

Fifa engages in active surveillance and brand protection, which includes court proceedings to halt an infringing situation and seek financial compensation for any damages suffered. However, sharing official content belonging to FIFA by fans without any commercial benefit is expressly permitted, as per the branding guidance. Curious by nature, this CopyKat’s therefore wonders why an account with barely 200 followers was singled out in this instance.


Did Safaricom steal Songa app from former employee?

Web developer Evans Gikunda has sued Radio Africa and Safaricom, accusing them of infringing his copyright when they launched a mobile app, Songa by Safaricom several weeks ago. Safaricom is a leading mobile network operator in Kenya, and its Songa music app enables subscribers “to get their local and international songs in one place and keep them consistently entertained and updated.”
Gikunda claims that he created the music app between 2012 and 2016. In 2013, while working as a developer at Radio Africa, the Chief Executive at Radio Africa Patrick Quarcoo “persuaded Gikunda to partner with him to ensure that the product gets to market” (IPKenya). According to Gikunda, Quarcoo proposed that that once Radio Africa’s Board of Directors sanctioned its participation in his app, they would share out the ownership of the app. The ownership was proposed at Radio Africa – 40%; Gikunda- 30%; Quarcoo- 20%; and the remaining 10% to a strategic partner.
In 2016 Gikunda left Radio Africa (under less than favourable circumstances) and says that after his resignation, Quarcoo sold the app to Safaricom without consulting him. Gikunda had not been “involved in the process at any stage, and neither has he benefited from it; despite the claims he created the platform” (innova8tiv). As with most intellectual property disputes arising between (former) employees and their bosses, establishing the ownership of the copyright subsisting in the Songa app lies at the heart of this matter. Gikunda is asking the High Court to compel Safaricom and Radio Africa to reveal how much money they have made from ‘Songa by Safaricom’ and is seeking damages.

To be successful in his claim, Gikunda will need to establish that he created his app outside the scope of his employment with Radio Africa, and that the app currently used by Safaricom is a reproduction or adaptation of his original app. To complicate matters, Gikunda’s app has been known under a variety of other names, including ‘NakedGroove’, ‘The Platform’, ‘The Music Platform’ and ‘RAMP’ – the latter being an abbreviation of either ‘Radio Africa Music Player’. Additionally, neither Gikunda nor Radio Africa obtained copyright registration, which further confuses the evidence.
This calls into question whether or not Gikunda made the program as part of his employment with Radio Africa (see also the work-for-hire doctrine), as well as the enforceability of moral rights for digital works. To achieve an injunction against the companies, which Gikunda is also seeking, he will need to prove that damages alone are an insufficient remedy.


Copyright woes continue for Kenyan collecting societies

Kenya's High Court

Elsewhere in Kenya, the complicated saga of the copyright collecting societies continues. Most recently, the High Court (pictured) ordered the Music Copyright Society of Kenya (MCSK) to account for the money it has collected as royalties and licence fees since January 1st 2017. Justices RN Sitati, DS Majanja and TW Cherere have given the MSCK thirty days to comply with the order (The Star).
In 2015, it was noted that MCSK's disbursement of royalties to artists has been decreasing for several years. The Kenya Copyright Board (KECOBO), the government organisation tasked with enforcing copyright in Kenya, established a minimum standard of 70% of revenue to be given back to artists. However, MCSK’s disbursement rates to musicians has fallen to 58.9% of collected revenue. Although MCSK was once Kenya’s largest royalty-collecting body, KECOBO revoked its licence in February of 2017 when MCSK failed to provide audited financial statements. The move came amidst allegations from local artistes over embezzlement of their royalties by MSCK.

As the CopyKat discovered back in May, Kenya is not the only African country to be experiencing problems with copyright collecting societies: power struggles with the Copyright Society of Nigeria (COSON) and the Nigerian Copyright Commission continue. 


Copyright awareness comes to China 

China has launched a four-month campaign to protect the intellectual property rights: you can visit the campaign website here. First announced in September, the campaign is seen by many as an attempt to alleviate major concerns among foreign investors, including those in the United States. 

China’s lack of strong intellectual property rights protection measures “frequently draw complaints from foreign investors and have been a long-standing focus of attention at annual talks with the US and Europe” (South China Morning Post). The Trump administration has officially launched a probe into alleged Chinese intellectual property theft which, amongst other things, led the United States to impose punitive tariffs on Chinese products. 

The campaign, which will last for at least four months, has been jointly launched by the National Copyright Administration of China (NCAC), the Cyberspace Administration, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology and the Ministry of Public Security.

It will target key areas including unauthorized republication of news and plagiarism on social media, unauthorized broadcasting of copyrighted content on short video sharing apps, and copyright violations by setting up overseas servers. The campaign will also push service providers to enhance their internal supervision systems (China Daily).
Chairman Mao Memorial Hall in Beijing
In 2012, an article on Forbes argued that “IP protection will always be an uphill struggle in China and for companies doing business there,” as individual rights – including intellectual property rights – may be in some instances at odds with traditional Chinese society. 

A more recent Reuters article from April of this year explained that while Chinese IP protection laws are comparable to U.S. and European legal standards, the weakness lies in implementation, with high levels of bureaucracy. In particular, “court decisions applying on a provincial level rather than nationally, and judges often having different interpretations of the laws.”

In China, many consider that “even the education system works against an embrace of IP protection,” and until IP infringement is seen as an immediate threat to economic success, “few will really care.” Will a potential trade war be the impetus China needs to close the gap?

Monday, 7 March 2016

Live music sector put CMO 'kickbacks' into the spotlight

John Webster with Anthony Addis and Paul Crockford
They may not want to be in the spotlight, and the until recently practices of 'discounts' or 'rebates' offered by European Collective Management Organisations such as Buma-Stemra in Holland and GEMA in Germany to large and established live music promoters and venues were relatively unknown. But 2016 saw the topic rear up as one of the main talking points at this year's International Live Music Conference (ILMC). The Conference held a packed main conference session dedicted to the topic and with managers for Mark Knopfler and Muse on the Stage along with representatives from two Collection Societies, and many artiste and songwriter representatives expressed their anger at the practice,

Back in July 2015 Music Law Updates reported that Dutch collection society Buma’s practice of rewarding the country’s biggest promoters with a kickback for ‘helping’ to collect the levy on live music concerts (which is meant to remunerate songwriters and music publishers for the use of their works) had come under fire after a number of tour accountants for performers who pen their own material could not reconcile deductions made by promoters against revenues received by their songwriter clients from their own collection societies – even after taking into account usually collection society commissions which are generally accepted. Buma apparently set up the practice around 1999 after forcing through a rate rise for the use of music to 7% of Box Office net of VAT  – but was offering a 25% kickback of that levy to some promoters and venues in the Netherlands.

Two managers, Paul Crockford who manages Mark Knopfler and Brian Message of ATC who manages Nick Cave & the Bad Seed,  both made arrangements with their artistes’ publishers and UK music collection society PRS for Music (the so called 7G arrangement) to make direct collections from promoters. Message also manages P J Harvey and Radiohead and Crockford also manages Level 42.


Whilst many artiste managers are now asking for ‘transparency’, the UK’s Music Managers Forum says that the people who lose out in this situation are the performer artists (who are suffering the deduction), and the writers and publishers (who are not receiving the full amount being deducted on their behalf). The MMF says discussions between Byma, PRS for Music and the MMF have failed to resolve matters

Ruben Brouwer, head of legal affairs at Live Nation owned Mojo Concerts, has suggested a flat rate of 5.25% should apply to all promoters and venues in Holland. The rate in the UK is 3% of Box Office, although the PRS are now running a consultation with the presumed hope they can raise this. Some promoters and venues have refused to accept a new version of the rebate scheme offered by BUMA, and are taking BUMA to the Supervisory Board for collection societies in The Netherlands.

The ILMC proved to be a timely update on the topic - with the revelation that not only was the practice widespread across mainland Europe - but had been going on for many many years. The main panel  Performance Royalties: Shows, Songs & Settlements pulled no punches in regard to one of the most contentious issues facing payments from international collecting societies and the controversy around discounts that are applied.

The ILMC panel
Jon Webster - President of the MMF opened by asking if performance royalties should be seen as a tax. “It’s equitable remuneration,” he said. “It is part of the show.” Paul Crockford then explained how he first became aware of the issue in 2010 when Mark Knopfler  was touring in the Netherlands and their tour accountant spotted some issues going through the receipts. “In his follow up work he noticed there was a massive discrepancy between the amount that Buma had received and passed onto PRS versus what was in the settlement that Mojo Concerts had deducted on the settlement itself,” he said. Despite raising this with PRS in the UK, he felt that nothing was actually achieved when it contacted Buma.

“There was a discount, rebate, kickback or however you want to define it that Buma had agreed with Mojo Concerts,” he says. “When we fronted it up with Buma, the argument presented was that in an effort to increase the live rate, which Mojo had refused to go along with, they gave Mojo a discount based on the fact that they do a vast number of shows in Holland. It was on the basis that, hopefully, they would generate more income across the board from other promoters who work in that same semi-monopolistic position.”

Crockford claimed that very few people knew that any of this was happening. “Also Mojo wasn’t declaring that discount as part of the show income. Their argument was that it was money they got back from Buma and it doesn’t matter to them where it comes from, as it’s not part of the show’s settlement. My argument, of course, was that it was exactly the opposite. Buma should not be discounting my artist’s income. If they are, that money should go into the show instead of making its way into Mojo’s already stuffed pockets.”


Anthony Addis (of Brontone Management) said he asked for a “bible” in 2009 explaining which markets did discounts and at what rates. “Discounts or rebates – they are both the same to me as an artist manager,” he said. “Every collecting society only has to pay out to the PRS exactly what it receives. When you are talking about discounts or whatever, if the collection society receives the full amount, then that money should fall through the PRS, less its administration charge for that collection society in that country.”

Then it was the turn of the Collection societies. John Sweeney (of US society SESAC, but formerly of the PRS) revealed this topic has a much longer history. “20 years ago, U2 tried to do a cradle-to-grave royalty account for a European tour and found that the figures didn’t quite add up,” he explained. “We looked to see what we could do to make the sums add up but we never managed to achieve it or even get close. This discount or rebate was probably always going on but not known about. To make it a bit more complicated, the collecting society agreements are blanket licenses. Even though you can see what came from the box office and what you should be paid, there are always adjustments from past performances paid.”

Martin Vierrath of GEMA had bravely agreed to be on the panel - BUMA had declined to speak publicly on the issue at the ILMC. Vierrath explained how the system in Germany worked, something that appeared far more complex than anyone presumed. He says there are different rates deducted from gross tickets sales to remunerate songwriters - depending on the size of the venue. For mega acts (playing to 15k+), it’s a 7.65% deduction on the box office; for venues between 2k and 15k, it’s 7.2%; and for venues under 2k, it’s 5%. He then said there were moves to standardise that, which initially met with approval. When he revealed that the rate GEMA was now looking at would be 10%, there were loud gasps from the audience. However from this GEMA take their own administration fee (said to be 15%). On TOP of this is a discount for the larger promoters of 14.5% and then an additional 20% discount or rebate available to members of the German concert promoters association BDV (Bundesverband der Veranstaltungswirtschaftand) one other trade body. BDV president Jens Michow was in the audience and explained these rebates as way of regarding the promoters for probiding accurate set lists - although as Paul Crockford remarked from the stage - it was an expensive service and he couldn't understand why BDV member's rebates didn't come from the GEMA deduction - which of course was meant to cover the costs of adminsitration of collection. Michow, a lawyer, and Vierrath both said the rebates were specifically provided for in German law.

In the UK the PRS tariff is 3%, but as said above, the PRS are currently undertaking a consultation to revise the rate, looking at the possibility of widening the sources of revenues that the rate can be applied to (such as secondary ticketing, sponsorship and car parking) and of rising the 'headline' rate. Festival promoters are looking for a reduction in the rate to reflect their own business models. 

Crockford revealed that for Knopfler’s most recent tour in Germany he invoked clause 7G to withdraw the relevant live performance right from the PRS and collect direct from promoters (a situation made simple by the fact that Knopfler only plays his own songs and there is no support act). “I collected direct this time,” he said. “I didn’t use GEMA. I took my artist out and we collected direct. We got it on the night  and we got it all.”

Maria Forte (Maria Forte Music Services) explained how complex it can be for acts of a certain size, saying she was brought in by Iron Maiden’s management as they felt they weren’t getting what they were due - again with the amounts deducted in settlements not reflecting the amounts received back to remunerate the band's songwriters. In order to make sense of it all, she got access to their accounts and she logged six years (covering three tours) of accounts (by tour, territory, show, setlist and writer). She then logged that all through the PRS statements that came in. “I discovered that there had been discounts that had been applied but that hadn’t come through. I could see there were big variances with certain territories.” She added, “There were big territorial variances. We found there were discounts that were applied but not at the settlement point. We also found the box office amounts were under-declared and that would naturally reduce the percentage.”

Webster ended by saying “This is going to run and run but we are moving in the right direction,” he said. “Everyone –managers, agents – is learning what is possible and where we are all going with this. I’d like to see us end up with a simpler system and a much more transparent system. Because of what has happened over the past three or four years, people are beginning to shine a light on this area and it will end up in everyone’s better interest".

This writer remains concerned: The German rebates may well be provided for in German law -  but it doesn't mean that law is fair to songwriters, correct of even valid within the European Union. In another series of cases in the live music sector, German tax withholding laws were struck down (notably FKP Scorpio Konzertproduction Gmbh v Finanzamt Hamburg-Eimsbüttel ECJ C290-04) and it would be interesting to see what European Commission competition regulators and the Court of Justice of the European Union make of a system set up by a CMO (itself a monopoly) that then rewards dominant players and national trade association members - within an open common market, where competition laws trump all. The revelations have also come at an interesting time for European collection societies - already being looked at as they are almost always defacto monopolies.

The topic also came up at a second panel which included CAA co-head Mike Greek (One Direction, Sigur Rós, Sam Smith), Red Light Management’s UK MD James Sandom (Bastille, Kaiser Chiefs, The Vaccines), and ITB's Lucy Dickins (Adele, Mumford & Sons, Jamie T): pecifically, the practice of collecting societies granting promoters discounts that don’t end up with the artists. The panel agreed that this was an unacceptable practice although noted that in the USA - where songwriters get just 1% of Box Office, “the whole topic is not a real issue in America”. The same is true for Australia, with promoter Michael Gudinski explaining “There’s never been a rebate in Australia. You get a penalty if you don’t pay on time.” That does sound like a cheaper and somewhat more transparent solution!

http://28.ilmc.com/report/meetings#forum part 2

http://www.musiclawupdates.com/?p=6378

http://www.musiclawupdates.com/?p=2745

Collective Management Organisations, Creativity and Cultural Diversity
http://www.create.ac.uk/publications/collective-management-organisations-creativity-and-cultural-diversity/