When Congress amended copyright law in the 1970s, only sound recordings authored after 1972 were given protection.
In a series of lawsuits beginning in 2013, the owners of pre-72 songs looked to state misappropriation and unfair competition laws to do something about those like SiriusXM and Pandora that were publicly performing their works. Although free radio airplay has been comfortably assumed for quite some time, California and New York judges have recently given legal victories to those owners of sound recordings who are suing.
Colleen McMahon |
The consequences were big — and not just because Sirius XM has spent years broadcasting millions of older songs without paying royalties specifically for such tunes.
As SiriusXM told the 2nd Circuit in its attempt to get a higher authority, "Absent immediate review, the district court’s ruling leaves SiriusXM and other broadcasters with tremendous uncertainty, faced with a choice between stopping the broadcast of pre-1972 recordings to the public’s detriment; submitting to shotgun negotiations with sound recording owners; or facing massive liability as this case and others wend their way through the courts."
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