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> $.04 for music downloads - legally?, Looks legit...

Audiyoda
post Jun 7 2004, 03:37 AM
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Interesting read:
http://www.g4techtv.com/feature.aspx?article_key=779
http://www.museekster.com/allofmp3info.htm

At $.01 per Meg, that's about $.04 per song at 128kbps. They need a larger catalog, but it's growing every day.

Because this service originates in Russia, it is bound by Russian copyright law - which is a little different than the copyright laws here in the United States (or Canada, Australia and/or Europe).
QUOTE
Russian copyright legislation allows phonograms to be performed publicly without the authorization of the copyright owner for broadcasting and cable transmission. (Article 39) The Internet could be deemed to fall under this exemption. The copyright involved have to be paid to a collecting society.
    Allofmp3 has signed agreements for this with Russian Organization for Multimedia & Digital Systems (ROMS). According to license № ЛС-ЗМ-02-36 the Internet-project www.allofmp3.com, has the right to use musical compositions by providing downloads. Under the license agreement Allofmp3 pays out fees to ROMS for downloaded materials that are subject to the Russian Federation Copyright And Related Rights Law.

    ROMS is a member of CISAC (www.cisac.org) - the International confederation of authors and composers societies. ROMS manages intellectual rights in the Russian Federation. All third party distributors licensed by ROMS are required to pay a portion of the revenue to the ROMS. ROMS in turn, is obligated to pay most of that money (aside from small portion it needs for operating expenses) to artists. Both Russian and foreign.

United States copyright law does not really apply since you are buying the music for personal use from a licensed (and legitimate) content provider. So we really need to look at intellectual property law to determine if this is legal or not - and then we need to consider who's intellecual property laws apply. United States law? Russian law? Currently, the neither the WTO or the World Court has established any minimum standards for international intellectual property standards. So until they do, it can be argued that you downloaded the files from a Russian site, then you will be covered under Russian copyright laws.
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Taggard
post Jun 15 2004, 10:23 AM
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I would like to take a speculative analysis, based on random facts that I know, but not based on any law books.

For music and for entertainment, the american rights are usually sold separately from the international rights. If you buy music internationally, you are bound by the copyright of the music (as the buyer), so if the rights to the music being sold do not belong to and are not licensed to the person selling the music, you (as the buyer) are not performing a legal action by purchasing the music from someone who does not own it. That is like going to asia and buying a burned DVD. You wouldn't want to be caught by the lawyers of the people who owns the international rights to that movie.

speculation only, though. I wonder where the RIAA is monitoring, though, especially if this site does not have a large library.


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