Similar Articles |
|
PC World December 18, 2000 Anush Yegyazarian |
Web Radio Copes With Paying the Piper Copyright ruling requires music licensing fees from Web versions of traditional radio, as well as Web-only stations... |
Salon.com March 26, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Web radio's last stand A new ruling involving the Digital Millennium Copyright Act is set to wipe out independent online music stations... |
PC World May 16, 2002 Anne Ju |
Will Fees Silence Web Radio? Senators hear songs of concern before copyright office rules on royalty rates for Web-based radio stations... |
PC World July 29, 2002 Stuart J. Johnston |
Web Radio Fights for Survival Webcasters rally against royalty ruling they say will yank many off the Net. |
Reason June 2007 Jesse Walker |
Killing Internet Radio The U.S. Copyright Office recently announced a potential death sentence for thousands of Internet radio stations. Thanks to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998, webcasters must pay a special performance fee each time they play a recording. |
Salon.com November 19, 2002 F. Timothy Martin |
Jesse Helms: Web radio's hero Small Internet radio broadcasters on the brink of financial disaster have won some breathing room, thanks to the senator from North Carolina. |
PC World April 19, 2001 Frank Thorsberg |
Web Radio Goes Silent in Legal Crossfire Broadcast stations suspend Webcasting while caught between union battle and copyright fights... |
Knowledge@Wharton |
Is Internet Radio Dying? The days of independent radio on the Net could be numbered, say some experts. A recently established royalty fee payable to record companies may price many small content providers out of the market, leaving some with no choice but to shut down. |
New Architect February 2003 Bret A. Fausett |
Radio, Radio Why not let the webcasters play? |
InternetNews July 8, 2009 Michelle Megna |
Internet Radio Saved by Royalty Resolution Pandora will start charging fees for some, but both sides claim the deal is a winner. |
InternetNews October 1, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
11th Hour Save for Internet Radio Bill that would spare Internet radio stations a 70 percent royalty rate is headed for the President's desk. |
PC Magazine May 2, 2007 Heather Eng |
Dead Air in Cyberspace Does the recent hike in the royalty fees for Internet radio mean fair pay for artists or the death knell for webcasters? |
Salon.com March 20, 2001 Janelle Brown |
The next Napster? A new online music service aims to give listeners what they want -- if music-biz moguls are smart enough to let it. |
PC World June 12, 2001 Scarlet Pruitt |
RIAA Makes Peace With One Site, Battles Others Listen.com follows Napster's lead, bows out of lawsuit against record labels... |
InternetNews July 16, 2007 Roy Mark |
Webcasters Keep on Streaming Webcasters remained on the air Monday, a likely indication that negotiations over streaming royalty rates between Internet radio stations and the music industry are moving into high gear. |
Entrepreneur January 2008 James Park |
Listen Here! Giving your site a bit of sound? Royalty rates might change your tune. |
InternetNews August 21, 2009 |
Yahoo Comes Out On Top in Internet Radio Case Yahoo's Launch Media cannot be classified an "interactive service" subject to licensing fees, the court ruled. |
Salon.com March 13, 2002 Eric Boehlert |
Record companies: Save us from ourselves! With payola up but profits down, labels are wondering if paying $100 million to middlemen "fixers" is still a swell business idea... |
Salon.com June 14, 2000 Janelle Brown |
RIAA tries to shut down Napster By moving for an injunction against the file-swapping service, the recording industry shows just how little it gets the Net. |
PC World July 8, 2002 Stacy Cowley |
Will Web Music Ever Play? Jupiter's Plug In conference ponders cures for the digital music slump. |
The Motley Fool August 22, 2008 Alyce Lomax |
Putting Pandora Back in the Box Who wins when you kill the innovators? |
Home Theater October 11, 2007 |
Music Royalty Rhetoric Rises The recording, broadcasting, music publishing and live performance industries are currently waging a rhetorical free-for-all over what musicians get paid. |
PC World April 2003 Dylan F. Tweney |
Now They're After You: Music Cops Target Users Recording industry expands focus and guns for file traders. |
BusinessWeek February 23, 2011 Brad Stone |
Michael Robertson Bucks the Music Industry Again The San Diego entrepreneur's latest: DAR.fm, a digital audio recorder that downloads songs from radio. |
Salon.com June 1, 2001 Janelle Brown |
The music revolution will not be digitized The dust is clearing from the online entertainment wars. Who won? The record labels. Who lost? Consumers... |
Reason October 2000 Jesse Walker |
Music for Nothing Why Napster isn't the end of the world. Or even the music industry... |
PC Magazine February 25, 2004 John C. Dvorak |
Ode to Napster, Music's Last Hope Protection schemes, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, and lawsuits against file sharers are not going to save the music business. The Recording Industry Association of America is announcing another 532 John Doe lawsuits against peer-to-peer file sharers. |
PC World August 31, 2001 Frank Thorsberg |
Will Copyright Law Kill Your Computing Habits? The Digital Millennium Copyright Act faces scrutiny and its first cases--including Sklyarov's prosecution. |
Wired October 2000 John Heilemann |
David Boies: The Wired Interview Wired and Boies talked for several hours about the lawyer's defense strategy for the Napster case, the future of intellectual property and free speech in a networked world, and how it feels for this David to be taking on yet another Goliath... |
IEEE Spectrum June 2006 von Lohmann & Seltzer |
Death by DMCA A flood of legislation released by the passage of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act threatens to drown whole classes of consumer electronics. |
InternetNews June 9, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
Bitter IP Fights Ahead Over Piracy, Compensation Battle lines drawn as congressional efforts on intellectual property laws pick up. |
Salon.com June 25, 2002 Eric Boehlert |
Will Congress tackle pay-for-play? Radio-station owners are shocked -- shocked! -- as the music industry's payola scandal widens. Record-label execs aren't buying it (and neither should you). |
PC World August 2003 Frank Thorsberg |
Consumer Alert: Copy Controls Crackdown Multimedia lovers find themselves caught in a digital vise these days, as Hollywood tightens its copyright controls on movies, games, and music on DVDs and CDs -- most recently squeezing customers accused of copyright infringement in court. Technology is starting to offer some relief, though. |
Salon.com June 5, 2001 Eric Boehlert |
The "Bootylicious" gambit Can a hot new single from Destiny's Child help Columbia Records crack the indie promoters' control of pop radio? |
InternetNews August 31, 2006 Roy Mark |
Beware of Free (Including RIAA Legal Advice?) Trade groups slam new RIAA educational video on copyright laws. |
Salon.com August 28, 2000 Eric Boehlert |
Four little words How the record industry used a tiny legislative amendment to try to steal recording copyrights from artists -- forever. |
InternetNews January 24, 2006 Roy Mark |
HD Radio: New Chance for More Fed Regs? The Recording Industry Association of America is back before Congress seeking more protection and compensation. |
The Motley Fool January 24, 2005 Kelvin Taylor |
Clear Channel Changing Its Tune Clear Channel is betting that HD radio will give consumers what they're looking for. |
InternetNews June 22, 2004 Roy Mark |
Fair Use Bill Gains New Momentum House Energy and Commerce chairman endorses bill to expand consumer rights under the DMCA. |
Salon.com September 19, 2000 Eric Boehlert |
Rio's Pyrrhic victory Last year, the Net won its first legal battle against the music industry. But in doing so, it may have lost the war. |
Entrepreneur February 2008 Mark Henricks |
Is This Thing On? Digital radio promises to revolutionize the world of broadcasting, exponentially increasing the number of stations and making radio a better advertising vehicle for entrepreneurs trying to reach small niche markets. |
BusinessWeek August 15, 2005 Jon Fine |
Late to the Download Dance Hear the song, buy the song -- downloaded through the station's Web site. Too bad radio didn't do this sooner. More than 100 U.S. stations are expected sell music this way by fall. |
Mother Jones August 1999 Alex Markels |
Low Power To The People Muted by the high cost of broadcast licenses, diverse voices may yet step up to the mike, thanks to a new FCC proposal |
Salon.com March 14, 2001 Eric Boehlert |
Pay for play Why does radio suck? Because most stations play only the songs the record companies pay them to. And things are going to get worse... |
InternetNews March 27, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
ISPs Deny 'Three Strikes' Deals With RIAA Big ISPs look to quash speculation that they are on board with graduated response system to fight copyright infringement with service cancellations. |
Wired January 18, 2008 Brendan I. Koerner |
Why Things Suck: Radio The FM band between 92.1 and 107.9, where commercial stations reign, is mostly a desert of robo-DJs and pop pabulum. |
Salon.com April 3, 2001 Eric Boehlert |
Fighting pay-for-play Sources in the music industry call for a federal clampdown on the new payola... |
InternetNews December 19, 2003 Roy Mark |
ISPs Win a Round in File-Swapping Tussle In a major blow to the music industry's campaign to sue individual file-swappers, court sides with Internet service providers over revealing customers' identities. |
Salon.com April 26, 2001 Janelle Brown |
Is the RIAA running scared? A fumbled attempt to silence a Princeton professor backfires on the recording industry... |
PC World November 14, 2002 Michelle Madigan |
Copyright Cops Target Workplace, Schools Music industry renews piracy fight with correspondence and courts, while colleges and companies consider their liability. |