vsa said:EasyPeazy wrote: "If you don't believe the recording industry needs radio, you're fooling yourself....A station I worked at pre-consolidation made as much off independent record promoters as it did off ad revenue."
(1) I never said that. And (2) you must be proud.
EasyPeazy also wrote: "Do you really think the RIAA wants to piss off radio? If so, you're dreaming."
The RIAA had no problem pissing off radio by forcing radio to pay royalties for every song they stream from their websites, thanks to the 1998 DMCA. The NAB went to court and eventually LOST.
I'm trying to warn you. Here's what SOMA-FM's Rusty Hodge said today:
"...In a panel here at SXSW last week. The panelists (mostly label-related people) were talking about how the US is the only country that doesn't make broadcasters pay a fee for the performance of a sound recording. They also pointed out that the US is the only country that has a "Fair Use" clause in their copyright laws. They of course were saying this in the context of we need more euro-style copyright legislation here."
Be on your guard. Don't just assume. Be pro-active to keep webcasting options open for everyone, including broadcasters.
Boy, imagine what is facing XM & Sirius who's livelyhood depends on music. While mnusic is very important to radio, it's more important to the record companies. Why do you think they provide free record service to stations? They might just find that they killed the goose that layed the golden egg. Losing broadcast radio is more of a loss for the record companies (Jukeboxes are really a thing of the past when it comes to new music) then losing any other music distribution method they have had for many years. All other methods have miniscule audiences compared with traditional radio. Maybe things will be different iin 2015 but this isn't 2015.