Displaying 20 results from an estimated 4000 matches similar to: "Legal issues"
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
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
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
> 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 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
2004 Aug 06
2
Legal issues
On Wed, Apr 21, 2004 at 10:52:38PM +0200, Jack Moffitt wrote:
> > Does it matter if the stream is mp3 or ogg?
>
> No. It could be WAV, FLAC, or some 2-bit per sample mono format where
> the music is unrecognizable. You'd still have to pay the royalties.
It DOES matter if it's mp3. You have to pay the publisher royalties
regardless, but in addition, there's a 2%
2004 Aug 06
1
Legal issues
great info on the dna lounge site, but very
discouraging.
o, basically, we would not be able to do this unless
we wanted to pay a ridiculous amount of money.
we could keep it on the down low, but this kind of
defeats the owner's purpose for the stream, as he
wanted to advertise it so potential visitors could
check it out before they come.
is there no way to make this happen? (legally)
jg
2004 Aug 06
3
legalities of streaming
Oh, I almost forgot...
If you're going under compulsory licensing:
1) Listener requests cannot be honored, otherwise you will end up labeled an
"interactive service" along with Audiogalaxy Rhapsody & the like. Which means
more & more expensive royalties.
2) You cannot play more than 3 songs of the same album in any 3 hour period
(no more than 2 in a row). Nor can you
2004 Aug 06
2
reencode scripts if anyone is interested
I decided to make a few shell scripts that can be used to connect to
icecast, decode/reencode a stream, and then send the result back to icecast.
I guess this can be done with liveice, but this seemed like a simpler
solution for my needs. I have it triggered by a cgi script that i click on
when at work and want to listen to my tunes at a lower, more reliable
bitrate.
There are basically
2004 Aug 06
2
DMCA and webcasting
On Thu, 13 Sep 2001, Jack Moffitt wrote:
> > ==================================================================
> > hey josh,
> > i talked to [faculty advisor] today and was told we must stop our online
> > streaming. reasons for this rash decision involve around a new law that
> > was put in place over the summer saying that stations who broadcast online
> >
2004 Aug 06
0
Legal issues
On Apr 21, 2004, at 4:43 PM, jensen galan wrote:
> 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.
>
This is not legal advice...
My belief and understanding is that if you are doing
2004 Aug 06
0
legalities of streaming
Hmmm, so in summary, anyone wanting to put together a station for a couple
of hundred listeners with out a massive bank account, it can not be done
legally.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris G (Moguta)" <chrisg1@umbc.edu>
To: "icecast" <icecast@xiph.org>
Sent: Thursday, June 12, 2003 11:33 AM
Subject: RE: [icecast] legalities of streaming
<p>>
2004 Aug 06
0
DMCA and webcasting
Forewarning... this is my understanding and advice. I am not a lawyer.
First off, Jamie Zawinski has an article about this here:
http://www.dnalounge.com/backstage/webcasting.html
> ==================================================================
> hey josh,
> i talked to [faculty advisor] today and was told we must stop our online
> streaming. reasons for this rash decision
2004 Aug 06
1
icecast1: metadata in aliases?
is it possible to have metadata updated on an alias from the aliased
stream (save with some external application)?
--
ben wilson
ben@thelocust.org
http://thelocust.org
http://phliteklub.org
<p>--- >8 ----
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2004 Aug 06
2
legalities of streaming
Ditto Scott - you nailed it !!
But the DMCA actually sets rules on requests and processing them without
being considered "interactive" - for instance the time frame allowed from
when requests are made and then processed and actually air (minimum 60
minutes), to displaying your playlist - (can not be displayed public in the
order of actual performance) basically as long as you never
2004 Aug 06
0
Legal issues
The license for MP3/mp3PRO useage is not quit as you think - first the
webcasters must meet certain base requirements -
Note: No license is needed for private, non-commercial activities
(e.g., home-entertainment, receiving broadcasts and creating a personal
music library), not generating revenue or other consideration of any kind or
for entities with an annual gross revenue less than US$
2004 Aug 06
2
DMCA and webcasting
On Thu, 13 Sep 2001, Joshua Vickery wrote:
> Great, so should we file with SoundExchange or wait for the RIAA to pick
> a rate?
Yes, you are supposed to file with the RIAA (SE as you suggest?). Period,
end of story. Jwz covers this on his site IIRC.
> Even if they insisted on collecting $0.004 per performance I don't think
> we have even 100000 "performances" a
2008 Dec 23
6
Security advice, please
My LAN is behind a Netgear router, which does NAT. On the CentOS server I
have fail2ban running. This morning my router reported 3 different IPs
attempting to send UDP packets to port 38950, Since each address is only seen
4-5 times, I presume that fail2ban took over after that.
GRC reports that ports are stealthed (port 143 was open, but is now closed),
but then:
Unsolicited Packets:
2004 Dec 28
2
Still the big Icecast problem!
If propagation of Ogg Vorbis is the (or a) goal of Icecast then
probably the best strategy is to build an embedded Ogg Flash Player of
some sort, so that people unwittingly become Ogg users without lifting
a finger, and broadcasters can start using it without fear that they'll
lose listeners due to their protocol choice. I've been streaming for
more than 7 years now with Quicktime,
2007 Apr 18
1
[Bridge] Re: Bridge Digest, Vol 31, Issue 6
Hello
You must add first:
vlan (tagged) to eth2
eth2 interface is not tagged by default and not know vlan-s .
It is like a cisco if you have 24 ports in cisco by default all ports
are in vlan1. if you want to do trunk (with vlans) you myst add (vlans)
to this ports (tagged or untagged)
So you can compare that all interfaces in linux by default are in one
vlan(but not tagged). (only for
2013 Oct 07
2
Android App for Icecast Administration
Hi Thomas,
> In addition to that you can extract additional mount point related
> information (also in XML format!) from other virtual files in /admin/ as
> mentioned in the documentation.
I had a look at
http://www.icecast.org/docs/icecast-2.3.3/icecast2_stats.html - is it
possible to get the aggregate time of listener connections from the
admin interface, or only by parsing the