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By Ian Youngs
BBC News
entertainment reporter |
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Unauthorised guitar tabs and other musical scores are widely
available |
The music industry is to extend its copyright war by
taking legal action against websites offering unlicensed song scores
and lyrics.
The US Music Publishers' Association (MPA), which represents sheet
music companies, will launch its first campaign against such sites in
2006.
MPA president Lauren Keiser said he wanted site owners to be jailed.
He said unlicensed guitar tabs and song scores were widely available
on the internet but were "completely illegal".
Mr Keiser said he did not just want to shut websites and impose fines,
saying if authorities can "throw in some jail time I think we'll be a
little more effective".
Bitter battles
The move comes after several years of bitter legal battles against
unauthorised services allowing users to download recordings for free.
Publishing companies have taken action against websites in the past,
but this will be the first co-ordinated legal campaign by the MPA.
The MPA would target "very big sites that people would think are
legitimate and very, very popular", Mr Keiser said.
"The Xerox machine was the big usurper of our potential income," he
said. "But now the internet is taking more of a bite out of sheet
music and printed music sales so we're taking a more proactive
stance."
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Music
publishers and songwriters will consider all tools under the law
to stop this illegal behaviour 
David Israelite
National Music Publishers' Association |
David Israelite, president of the National Music
Publishers' Association, added his concerns.
"Unauthorised use of lyrics and tablature deprives the songwriter of
the ability to make a living, and is no different than stealing," he
said.
"Music publishers and songwriters will consider all tools under the
law to stop this illegal behaviour."
Sandro del Greco, who runs Tabhall.co.uk, said the issue was not
serious enough to warrant jail time and sites like his were not
necessarily depriving publishers of income.
Learn
"I play the drums mainly but I play the guitar as well. I run the
website and I still buy the [tab] books," he said.
"The tabs online aren't deadly accurate so if someone really wants to
know it they'll buy the book.
"But most of the bands I listen to don't have tab books to buy so if
you get them online, that's the only way you can really learn it
unless you work it out yourself."
The campaign comes after lyric-finding software PearLyrics was forced
off the internet by a leading music publishing company, Warner
Chappell.
'No alternative'
PearLyrics worked with Apple's iTunes, searching the internet to find
lyrics for songs in a user's collection.
"I just don't see why PearLyrics should infringe the copyright of
Warner Chappell because all I'm doing is searching publicly-available
websites," PearLyrics developer Walter Ritter said.
"It would be different if they had an alternative service that also
provided lyrics online and also integrated [with iTunes] like
PearLyrics did. But they don't offer anything like that at all."
A Warner Chappell statement said the company wanted to ensure
songwriters were "fairly compensated for their works and that
legitimate sites with accurate lyrics are not undermined by unlicensed
sites".
"We have requested that PearWorks provide us with information
regarding the sources of their lyrics, and have further asked that
they discontinue the service if these sources are operating without a
licence."
Courtesy of BBC
Source = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/4508158.stm |