A BUZZFLASH NEWS ALERT
A congressional subcommittee held a hearing Wednesday on a decision the previous day to hike Internet radio royalty rates well beyond what most free stations will be able to afford.
Prior to the ruling, most Internet stations paid royalties based on a percentage of their revenue. Now, outdated copyright laws are being interpreted to require stations to pay a fixed amount per song, per user. What's more, stations are being forced to pay royalties for all of 2006 retroactively.
The royalties paid by FM and satellite radio channels are far less stringent even though they typically all have commercials or subscription fees, unlike most Internet radio stations.
"This represents a body blow to many nascent Internet radio broadcasters and further exacerbates the marketplace imbalance between when different industries pay," said Rep. Edward Markey, chairman of the Commerce subcommittee.
Vice-Chairman Rep. Mike Doyle called the new royalty provisions "outrageous" and noted the many calls his office has received about the matter. Unfortunately, Doyle's press secretary Matt Dinkel tells BuzzFlash that Congress is unlikely to complete any legislative action on this issue before the appeals process expires.
More here:
http://www.buzzflash.com/articles/alerts/196