Do Songwriters Deserve A Cut Of Yahoo Search Revenue?
You may recall a couple weeks ago that a judge set new rates to be paid to ASCAP by AOL, Yahoo and RealNetworks. ASCAP represents the songwriters, and those three companies and ASCAP could not agree on licensing terms for music streamed online. While ASCAP ran around touting the (somewhat made up) $100 million owed, there was plenty more in the decision that deserved discussion. At last week’s San Francisco Music Tech Summit, I got into an interesting discussion with a few folks who had read through the 153 page decision thoroughly, and noticed a variety of problems. You can read the whole decision (pdf) yourself, if you want, but there are a few key points that are extremely disturbing, and could spell a lot of trouble. Basically, there’s a meaningless “formula” that’s applied to a very large segment of these companies’ revenue, taking a huge chunk of money that seems beyond reasonable. The judge seems to consider what AOL and Yahoo do somewhat equivalent to the way TV stations use mu