The National Music Publishers' Association sent DMCA take-down notices to the biggest Web sites seeming to profit from posting unlicensed lyrics. November 11, 2013 11:54 AM PST Lyrics sites are the latest in the crosshairs of the National Music Publishers' Association, an organization set up to protect the copyrights of songwriters. The NMPA sent take-down notices citing the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to the biggest 50 lyrics Web sites that it said profit from advertising without compensating songwriters. "This is not a campaign against personal blogs, fan sites, or the many websites that provide lyrics legally," NMPA president and CEO David Israelite said. "NMPA is targeting 50 sites that engage in blatant illegal behavior." The take-down notices tell a recipient that its site displays lyrics of thousands of copyrighted musical compositions and that substantially all the lyrics are unlicensed. Unless it ceases the violations, the NMPA said it would continue to send take-down notices and would contact the site's Internet service provider and search engines, which could result in the site being removed completely. CNET has reached out to a handful of the biggest sites on the the list that the NMPA based its campaign on -- those found by University of Georgia's researcher David Lowery. It will update when we hear back. Related stories Music publishers sue YouTube-channel startup Fullscreen Don't kid yourself -- the RIAA doesn't care about the artists The founder of one, Web site Rap Genius, said that he hasn't heard anything from the NMPA yet but that he "can't wait to have a conversation with them about how all writers can participate in and benefit from the Rap Genius knowledge project." Ilan Zechory, in an email to CNET, called the project much more than a lyrics site. Lowery's research listed Rap Genius as the site with the highest "score" measuring how often and how high sites are returned in search results for a song title, artist name and popular lyrics snippet. Earlier this year, the NMPA sued Fullscreen, one of the biggest so-called "multichannel networks" on YouTube. Another -- Maker Studios -- settled a similar complaint.

Posted by : Unknown Monday, November 11, 2013

The National Music Publishers' Association sent DMCA take-down notices to the biggest Web sites seeming to profit from posting unlicensed lyrics.



November 11, 2013 11:54 AM PST




Lyrics sites are the latest in the crosshairs of the National Music Publishers' Association, an organization set up to protect the copyrights of songwriters.


The NMPA sent take-down notices citing the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to the biggest 50 lyrics Web sites that it said profit from advertising without compensating songwriters.


"This is not a campaign against personal blogs, fan sites, or the many websites that provide lyrics legally," NMPA president and CEO David Israelite said. "NMPA is targeting 50 sites that engage in blatant illegal behavior."


The take-down notices tell a recipient that its site displays lyrics of thousands of copyrighted musical compositions and that substantially all the lyrics are unlicensed. Unless it ceases the violations, the NMPA said it would continue to send take-down notices and would contact the site's Internet service provider and search engines, which could result in the site being removed completely.


CNET has reached out to a handful of the biggest sites on the the list that the NMPA based its campaign on -- those found by University of Georgia's researcher David Lowery. It will update when we hear back.



The founder of one, Web site Rap Genius, said that he hasn't heard anything from the NMPA yet but that he "can't wait to have a conversation with them about how all writers can participate in and benefit from the Rap Genius knowledge project." Ilan Zechory, in an email to CNET, called the project much more than a lyrics site.


Lowery's research listed Rap Genius as the site with the highest "score" measuring how often and how high sites are returned in search results for a song title, artist name and popular lyrics snippet.


Earlier this year, the NMPA sued Fullscreen, one of the biggest so-called "multichannel networks" on YouTube. Another -- Maker Studios -- settled a similar complaint.



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