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Altemark on flickr.com New upgrades to icommons.org

We have some exciting new upgrades to icommons.org to report! The latest updates to the site include:
- The ability to upload vertical pictures along with horizontal pictures to the site. We've also set the minimum picture size from 600 to 420 pixels, and you can upload both jpgs and pngs.
- Additions to our list of embedded videos that can be supported on the site - now video... more

 
myspace & collection societies
1
Jamison · Oslo (Norway) · 1 comment
 
graffiti art in Paris, jamtea, CC BY 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)
graffiti art in Paris, by jamtea
This is a blog I wrote on a myspace profile i put together to inform artists about APRA and creative commons compatibility issues. http://www.myspace.com/optoutofAPRA The article I wrote here was partly inspired by a conversation I had with Andrew from http://www.tacticaltech.org on a bus at Dubrovnik.

If you put your profile up on Myspace and you don't let people know about your music, then nothing much happens with your art. Maybe a random search will bring someone to your art, you have to publish your works to be successful on Myspace. In order for an artist to get known on Myspace you are going to spend a lot of time clicking on profiles or you are going to buy a bot program. You could get a fan to do this for you or you might pay someone. It's a difficult situation for the artist that wants commercial success through Myspace. When Myspace sold to News Corp none of the contributors within the system received any type of bonus. The bonus they got was that it would get bigger. Myspace gets its revenue from advertising and does not split any of this advertising revenue with artists, nor does it pay for the rights to use this content. The contract that the artists agree to when they put their music on Myspace is in conflict with all collection societies outside the US, but Myspace has had no major legal problems as a result. Even artists that contribute to Myspace are bombarded within their own profile by banners. Sure you can take your music off Myspace and go back to some other form of publishing, yet most artists/musicians go with what seems to work. Myspace doesn't have to pay a fee to the collection society for the use of any material. A venue does, a radio station does; everyone else has to. One way of looking at Myspace is this: Myspace went into a bus, cut a door in the side of the bus, and started selling tickets to people coming onto the bus. Now if I did this I would be in court/jail straight away, yet if I knew the bus company and the driver of the bus, it might be easier. So the bus that is owned by the public (the contributing musicians who are members of the collecting societies outside the US) is now partly owned by Myspace; well at least that door is. Who has been ripped off here? The artists were always upset that they could not publish without a publisher and Myspace has created a stream of exposure for them. The collection societies created a system where the price of content worked in favor of the artists that were published, so self-published artists are really happy that Myspace is here now. Maybe the bus is not necessary anymore, or maybe the artists have to build their own bus. Why did myspace accept music from artists with APRA ? Why has APRA not done anything about this ? Would be nice if myspace was for artists not with APRA, yet that would be a good reason not to join APRA !

APRA = Australian Performing Rights Assosiation

You can read apra's thoughts on creative commons here.
http://www.apra.com.au/writers/forms_and_guidelines/creative_commons.asp




tags: sydney australia education apra creative commons myspace music artists


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In the last weeks APRA have created a closed bulletin board for artists.
http://www2.apra.com.au/bb/
Also APRA have created a myspace profile http://www.myspace.com/APRAhome


Jamison · Oslo (Norway) · Aug 05th, 2007 7:58 am
your call: is this comment useful?
your take: useful lame
 


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