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Under the Data Protection Act they can charge a fee of £10 if you request a copy of the information they hold on you.We asked for a copy of the original telephone transcript which is what this is all being based on. They wanted us to pay for it! I've now written back to them yet agian!
Just received the following from my local MP. I have not enclosed my original message as it is a bit longwinded and covers a lot of what we have discussed.Even if it goes no where it is bringing PPL unwanted attention from the legislators.
"Thank you for your email.
I completely agree with you that this practice is completely unacceptable, particularly if you are not playing recorded music on a regular basis.
I would like to take this up with PPL for you and do my utmost to get them to back off. Are you happy for me to do this? If so, could you let me have all relevant contact details. If you are agreeable to this, I then suggest if the debt collection agency contact you again to say that your MP is taking your case up with PPL and for them to take no action in the meantime."
If a composer and performer sold royalty free music on hard copy or electric and only this was played in a business premises, then I guess no license is payable to PRS ?
It is like buying a picture and then having to pay each time you look at it.
Sorry? Why is it morally crazy for an artist to expect it is their right to keep on earning year after year and decade after decade for a single piece of work?
I come back to the public radio broadcast. If the radio station has already paid to publicly broadcast why do I have to pay again to play it in the office?
Because it may well mean that every product ever made could command ongoing payments.
It could do. But what stops competitors creating similar products and not asking for ongoing payments?
(Plus there's the expense and hassle of collecting these payments.)
Charging money for commercial broadcasts of music works because people want the music that's copyrighted. If royalty-free music was more popular, the industry might be forced to change.
Steve
This doesn't help. It's already been covered.I come back to the public radio broadcast. If the radio station has already paid to publicly broadcast why do I have to pay again to play it in the office?
I certainly do not think that charging organisations to let people listen to the radio at work is reasonable - they are not making money on using other people's talent.
No they haven't, you keep avoiding those difficult morality questions, since it massively weakens your position of 'being in the right'.Yep - that's how it works, and all the points have been covered about the radio thing.
Making the atmosphere in a shop or restaurant more inviting leads to better trade and more income. The same on a factory floor improves the morale of workers, making them more productive and thus generating more income.
I see your point, and I would say this is just outside the grey area about 'benefiting a business'. However, these situations are very clearly attempting to make money through the use of the music, so it's only fair that the licence is paid for; the outcome isn't relevant to the intention.Not convinced from what I saw on the shop floor. But that's the theory!
And the number of times we have left a cafe because of intrusive noise from canned music.
I wonder if any research has ever been done or we are all just so afraid of silence?
I would feel more inclined to moan less and I'm sure more people would pay freely if more of the cash went the artists or they just had lower fees.
Last year the PPL showed a net profit of £124m and the highest paid director was paid £729k, the PRS showed a net profit of £400m with the highest paid getting £574k.
Maybe if they weren't so greedy and bloated they could lower the fees AND pay more out, this sort of business should be restricted heavily from making profits like this maybe? They produce nothing tangible and are only making life easier for artists by collecting money on their behalf but then take a massive cut for themselves.
60,000 more recordings have been identified as receiving usage. This more accurately reflects the diversity of music used in 2010, ensuring a broader spread of PPL royalties.
• 3% more members have received a payment this year.
• Performers are able to make claims on five million recordings. Over 200,000 claims have been processed since the launch of the new service in September 2010.
Sirearl - are you a member? I really hope so, speaking on behalf of people who actually are?
If a plumber can charge £70 to unblock a sink, that's the market rate. Complaining about it is pointless.
PPL seems to be working for the members.
Incidentally - what did the two organisations do with the profit
It's simply because people have this opinion that music is not a commodity to be traded, sold, or licensed - when that is exactly what it is.
But you have already stated that it doesn't work and that you get almost nothing from it (so it seems reasonable to assume the same for the majority of members).What makes me smile is that we are a business forum, and you're moaning about a successful business model that works for the membership, simply because personally, it costs you.
From the looks of the thread it seems more people are complaining about the system and the fact thatactually, you aren't getting paid enough. I wish people would do that for me. ;]You're effectively complaining about how much I get paid. Do any of you feel your own pay is something others should be able to complain about?
Not a single person in this thread has said that. Not one.It's simply because people have this opinion that music is not a commodity to be traded, sold, or licensed - when that is exactly what it is.
I think you (and others) might be:Last year the PPL showed a net profit of £124m and the highest paid director was paid £729k, the PRS showed a net profit of £400m with the highest paid getting £574k.
...
How can a "not for profit" organisation declare a massive profit? Many businesses work damn hard just to break even let alone declare a net profit, these two companies effectively do nothing and live off the backs of those hard working companies by invoicing them for questionable use of the damn radio i.e. they are PARASITES.
I think you may have answered your own question.Interesting stuff, but wouldn't the outgoing amounts to artists etc be counted as running or operating costs and therefor be deducted before showing net profit??
That may be total BS as my accounting knowledge is limited at the best of times:redface::redface:
A musician being paid over many years for a product that he has sold is obviously immoral,as the norm is for people to be paid based on what they do on a daily basis.
Creating special catorgories is unfair on the rest of society.
Earl
The musician, composer, creator, artist has not produced a 'product' he has sold. Unless you have paid hundreds of pounds a day to have a composer write music exclusively for your premises you haven't 'bought' it either.
Is it immoral for an author to earn royalties from book sales?
Suppose an author spends a year writing a book and expects to get paid the same as other skilled professionals. Add in the cost of research, warm room to write in and other business expenses and it would probably cost you well over £100,000 to have exclusive use of a book. How is it unfair on society for authors to be paid a small royalty on each book so that books become affordable for everyone?