search for: sesac

Displaying 14 results from an estimated 14 matches for "sesac".

Did you mean: esac
2004 Aug 06
2
legalities of streaming
Basically, to legally broadcast music you must: A) Obtain permissions from the copyright holder (usually the publisher, record label) of the *composition*. ASCAP, BMI, and SESAC offer compulsory licenses for all of the artists they represent, fees based upon roughly how many listeners your station has & how many songs in your broadcast are by artists/composers they represent. B) Obtain permissions from the copyright holder of the particular *recording* of the comp...
2004 Aug 06
2
DMCA and webcasting
...st (in the traditional sense) and via the web are not extensions of that ownership. Case in point, Station buys Artist foo's disc and the artist is compenstated at x rate. Artist foo gets played n times. Does it make sense that artist foo is only compensated at rate x? No. ASCAP,BMI, and SESAC receieve fees from the stations so that artist foo is compensated to a certain extent for n number of plays. That said, ASCAP and BMI determine the royalty payments pretty much the same, SESAC has their own formula for determining the payments. Again, your purchase of music grants you only cert...
2004 Aug 06
2
DMCA and webcasting
...bels. However, > > we are a very small radio station with a very small webcasting audiance. We > > don't pay any royalties to broadcast over the air. > > Then in other words, you're stealing music even for your online > broadcast. You _must_ pay ASCAP, BMI, and/or SESAC in order to > broadcast _anything_ over _any_ medium. If you're not paying that, then > you are in dangerous trouble of litigation from those companies. They > can and will go after you. hell, they sued the girl scouts and won for > them singing around campfires. It depends. Th...
2004 Aug 06
0
legalities of streaming
...ph.org> Sent: Thursday, June 12, 2003 11:33 AM Subject: RE: [icecast] legalities of streaming <p>> Basically, to legally broadcast music you must: > > A) Obtain permissions from the copyright holder (usually the publisher, record > label) of the *composition*. ASCAP, BMI, and SESAC offer compulsory licenses > for all of the artists they represent, fees based upon roughly how many > listeners your station has & how many songs in your broadcast are by > artists/composers they represent. > > B) Obtain permissions from the copyright holder of the particular *re...
2004 Aug 06
0
DMCA and webcasting
...gs, we broadcast for about 180 days a year, 20x10x180*$0.004 = $140. We are not talking big bucks here, it certainly does not seems like reason to stop webcasting. > > Then in other words, you're stealing music even for your online > > broadcast. You _must_ pay ASCAP, BMI, and/or SESAC in order to > > broadcast _anything_ over _any_ medium. If you're not paying that, then > > you are in dangerous trouble of litigation from those companies. They > > can and will go after you. hell, they sued the girl scouts and won for > > them singing around campfir...
2004 Aug 06
0
DMCA and webcasting
...oyalties to the record labels. However, > we are a very small radio station with a very small webcasting audiance. We > don't pay any royalties to broadcast over the air. Then in other words, you're stealing music even for your online broadcast. You _must_ pay ASCAP, BMI, and/or SESAC in order to broadcast _anything_ over _any_ medium. If you're not paying that, then you are in dangerous trouble of litigation from those companies. They can and will go after you. hell, they sued the girl scouts and won for them singing around campfires. > My belief is that we should &g...
2004 Aug 06
3
DMCA and webcasting
Last year I arranged with my college radio station and ITS department to webcast the radiostation using icecast. The webcast has been a wonderful success so far. My problem now is not technical, but political. A few days ago I recieved the following message from the station director: ================================================================== hey josh, i talked to [faculty advisor]
2004 Aug 06
0
Legal issues
...ke of it. Would we > have to pay $0.07 per song the DJ played? How about a > live performance with all original material? Also see: http://www.dnalounge.com/backstage/webcasting.html I'm not sure what the rates are, but essentially you have to pay flat % royalties to ASCAP, BMI, and SESAC in the U.S. for performance royalities, but the DMCA also imposes these translations of physical reporoduction royalties for webcasts as well (normal radio doesn't have these). Of course, live performances with original music is fine as long as you have the permission of the copyright holders...
2005 Mar 05
4
how can I identify disconnect due to low <queue-size>
> On Sat, 2005-03-05 at 23:52, Mihail Egorov wrote: > > 1. How can I identify disconnect due to low <queue-size>. Suppose, I have > > enabled loglevel=4 (debug). Suppose, I have network jam. What shall I see at > > error.log? > > There is a log message that signifies the removal of a listener for > being too slow and that is > "Client has fallen too far
2011 Feb 11
6
On-Hold Music
Hi gang, In 500 words or less (if possible), please explain what is a legal music-on-hold file? My boss hates the stuff provided with the distribution and I figure that I'm asking for trouble if I take my Les Mis tracks and run them through Audacity and SOX to make new files. Thanks in advance Danny Nicholas -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was
2004 Aug 06
4
legalities of streaming
Hi list, This might not be the right list to bring this subject up on, however I thought it might be a good place to start. What are the current legalities in relation to non commercial music streams, or more accurately put non profit streams, and is this currently being seriously policed? Basically I am wanting to start up my own online station, but I don't really want to get my butt
2004 Aug 06
7
Legal issues
Greetings! I've been asked to set-up an Icecast stream / live webcam for a small club, and I'm worried about what kind of payments the owner would have to make to stream the club's music over the internet. I found this article: <http://www.copyright.gov/carp/webcasting_rates_final.html> but I still don't know what to make of it. Would we have to pay $0.07 per song the DJ
2004 Aug 06
3
legalities of streaming
...music >> streams, or more accurately put non profit streams, and is this >> currently being seriously policed? > >Yes it is being seriously policed. This is controlled by copyright >law; there are three companies that basically control all music >copyrights; ASCAP, BMI, and SESAC. From what I understand, you will >need a "compulsory" license from each, and they now have additional >royalty payments and reporting requirements for the songs you play. >jwz had a good write-up of this (before the big royalty agreement >though). It's a must-read: >...
2008 Sep 14
9
Streaming MoH on 1.4
Hi, I've looked high and low for any changes that streaming MoH needs on Asterisk 1.4 (.21), followed NerdVittle's article about it (http://nerdvittles.com/index.php?p=92) yet nothing worked. After creating dir stream/ and touch stream.mp3, here's my musiconhold.conf [stream] mode=mp3 directory=/var/lib/asterisk/mohmp3/stream stream =>