Music publishers want double royalties for DRM CDs

On Copyfight, my cow-orker Wendy Seltzer discusses the latest claim from music publishers, that they should be entitled to double or even triple royalties for media that contains multiple copies of their music in different formats and at different resolutions.

About the only thing I've heard make record execs steam nearly as much as "peer-to-peer" is the music publishers' claim that they're entitled to double royalties for "copy protected but computer playable" CDs. The music publishers argue that they're entitled to royalties for each copy of the tracks on disc: one set of CD-audio tracks, often poorly hidden from the computer, and one set of WMA or other DRM'd files "meant" for computer playback. It's arguable that end-users have the music publishers, as well as incompatibility problems, to thank for the market failure of copy-protected CDs.

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