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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 July 29, 2002 Stuart J. Johnston |
Web Radio Fights for Survival Webcasters rally against royalty ruling they say will yank many off the Net. |
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... |
Salon.com December 13, 2001 Mark L. Shahinian |
Why college radio fears the DMCA If the Digital Millennium Copyright Act is fully enforced, stations will be unable to afford to webcast their tunes... |
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 July 9, 2007 Erin Joyce |
Webcasters Running Out of Time? The Washington saga over Internet radio royalty rates will reach a crescendo this week with the new fees set to take effect on Sunday. Webcasters say the hike in royalties will wreck the industry. |
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. |
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. |
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. |
InternetNews July 12, 2007 Roy Mark |
Court Denies Webcasters' Stay Appeal Webcasters suffered a major blow in their effort to rollback new royalty rates late Wednesday when the U.S. District Court of Appeals denied their appeal for an emergency stay of relief. |
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? |
InternetNews June 1, 2007 Roy Mark |
Webcasters Sing the Internet Radio Blues...Again Is Internet radio still a fledgling enterprise in need of subsidized royalty rates? |
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... |
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. |
PC World July 8, 2002 Stacy Cowley |
Will Web Music Ever Play? Jupiter's Plug In conference ponders cures for the digital music slump. |
Entrepreneur January 2008 James Park |
Listen Here! Giving your site a bit of sound? Royalty rates might change your tune. |
InternetNews May 30, 2007 Roy Mark |
Webcasters Appeal Royalty Rates Facing a July 15 deadline that would triple royalties, Internet radio groups to seek emergency stay of Copyright Royalty Board decision. |
InternetNews July 13, 2007 Roy Mark |
Webcasters, SoundExchange Continue Negotiations With a weekend deadline quickly approaching, the music industry extends new offer to large webcasters. |
InternetNews May 23, 2007 Roy Mark |
New Deal Offered For Small Webcasters Bowing to pressure from Congress, performance rights association SoundExchange offered small webcasters royalty rate relief through 2010. Large webcasters, though, still face a tripling of their rates on July 15. |
Popular Mechanics September 16, 2008 Glenn Derene |
Is the Music Industry Trying to Kill Modern Internet Radio? Why the creator of Pandora might have to shut down and whether Apple or Microsoft will have to bail out the Web's favorite personalized music service, even as they unveil their own. |
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... |
InternetNews February 11, 2004 Ryan Naraine |
Copyright Office Sets Webcasting Rates Royalty rates are fixed for 2003-2004 with webcasters getting several options to choose from. |
InternetNews June 21, 2007 Roy Mark |
Webcasters Plan a Tuesday of Silence On Tuesday, webcasters plan to cut their feeds for a day to protest an increase in Internet radio royalty rates. |
InternetNews April 27, 2007 Roy Mark |
Bill Could Keep Internet Radio on The Air Webcasters still face May 14 deadline to pay nearly tripled rates. |
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... |
The Motley Fool August 22, 2008 Alyce Lomax |
Putting Pandora Back in the Box Who wins when you kill the innovators? |
InternetNews March 9, 2007 Nicholas Carlson |
Webcasters Plan Legal Action Over Rates Rates set by U.S. Copyright Royalty Judges could lead to the demise of Internet Radio, say webcasters. |
InternetNews April 17, 2007 Roy Mark |
Internet Radio Loses Rate Hike Appeal Copyright Office stands behind decision to nearly triple royalty rates for webcasters. |
InternetNews July 26, 2007 Roy Mark |
Broadcasters Back Internet Radio Bill The National Association of Broadcasters claims SoundExchange has ignored June 6 counter proposal to controversial Internet radio royalty rate hike. |
Home Theater July 16, 2007 |
Net Radio Wins Temporary Reprieve Webcasters and the music industry worked out a deal on Thursday of last week that will temporarily delay draconian new royalties that many predict would kill many net radio broadcasters. |
The Motley Fool June 26, 2007 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
The Day Internet Radio Died Several Internet radio providers are going silent today to protest pending royalty rate hikes that may put many of them out of business. |
InternetNews May 3, 2007 Roy Mark |
Music Policy Fills Washington Air Almost 200 independent labels, musicians and policy mavens gathered at the Future of Music Coalition's annual policy day conference to discuss the links between public policy and the dominant companies that control the production, transmission and marketing of music. |
Home Theater April 19, 2007 |
Is Internet Radio Doomed? The federal government's Copyright Royalty Board refused this week to reconsider an earlier decision to impose a massive rate hike on Internet radio broadcasters. |
InternetNews May 11, 2007 Roy Mark |
Senate Bill Would Repeal 'Net Radio Rate Hikes Companion bill to pending House legislation would vacate royalty rates webcasters say will sink them. |
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. |
InternetNews March 19, 2007 Roy Mark |
NPR Appeals Internet Streaming Music Rates National Public Radio filed a formal appeal with the U.S. Copyright Office today protesting a recently approved hike in streaming Internet music royalty rates. The increase, many webcasters claim, will force them out of business. |
InternetNews October 1, 2008 Kenneth Corbin |
The End of iTunes? With a major decision looming about the royalty rates that music publishers receive from online sales, the digital-music arena could be headed for a meltdown. |
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. |
Home Theater April 30, 2007 |
Congress May Rescue Net Radio A bill surfaced last week that would reverse the recent royalty rate hike that net radio outfits say would have doomed them to extinction. |
InternetNews January 12, 2007 Roy Mark |
Bill Would Force Webcasters' DRM Hand U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein re-introduced Thursday her controversial legislation to mandate DRM formats for all streaming media services. |
Salon.com June 14, 2000 Courtney Love |
Courtney Love does the math The controversial singer takes on record label profits, Napster and "sucka VCs." |
Salon.com August 31, 2001 Damien Cave |
Copywrong? A government report giving the Digital Millennium Copyright Act a passing grade is a disaster for the general public, say critics... |
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... |
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. |
PC World November 19, 2002 Michelle Madigan |
Copy Control Complaint Desk Opens Formal public comment on DMCA invited for one month, then feds will reconsider act. |
Reason July 2001 Mike Godwin |
Copywrong Why the Digital Millennium Copyright Act hurts the public interest... |
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. |
Reason November 2004 David G. Post |
Free Culture vs. Big Media In the book Free Culture: How Big Media Uses Technology and the Law to Lock Down Culture and Control Creativity, author Lawrence Lessig leads the charge to retake the public domain. |
The Motley Fool December 22, 2009 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Sirius XM 1, Citadel 0 Citadel's bankruptcy is only the latest step down for terrestrial radio. |