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Performance rights organisation

A performance rights organisation (PRO), also known as a performing rights society, provides intermediary functions, particularly collection of royalties, between copyright holders and parties who wish to use copyrighted works publicly in locations such as shopping and dining venues. Legal consumer purchase of works, such as buying CDs from a music store, confer private performance rights. PROs usually only collect royalties when use of a work is incidental to an organisation's purpose. Royalties for works essential to an organisation's purpose, such as theaters and radio, are usually negotiated directly with the rights holder. The interest of the organisations varies: many have the sole focus of musical works, while others may also encompass works and authors for audiovisual, drama, literature, or the visual arts.[1]

In some countries PROs are called copyright collectives or copyright collecting agencies. A copyright collective is more general than a PRO as it is not limited to performances and includes reproduction rights organisations (RROs). RROs represent works distributed via mediums such as CD, audiocassette, or computer file rather than use of works in public settings.

The global governing body for PROs is CISAC headquartered in France, with 228 member societies in 119 countries. [1]

History

The first performing rights society was established in France in 1851. In the United Kingdom, the Copyright Act 1842 was the first to protect musical compositions with the Performing Right Society, founded in 1914 encompassing live performances. The rights for recorded or broadcast performance are administered by the Mechanical Copyright Protection Society, founded in 1924. Italy introduced a performing rights society in 1882 and Germany in 1915. In the United States, The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) was founded in 1914; Society of European Stage Authors & Composers (SESAC) in 1930 and Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI) in 1939. Sociedad Puertorriqueña de Autores y Compositores de Musica (SPACEM) was founded in San Juan, Puerto Rico in 1953. SPACEM's name was changed to ACEMLA, or Asociacion de Compositoes y Editores de Musica and remains today PRO No. 76 in the CISAC's[2] roster of performing rights societies.

Activities

Other than their primary purpose as an intermediary between rights holders and customers, PROs are highly active in legal arenas. PROs take alleged rights violators to court, or in the U.S., to the Copyright Royalty Board, of the Library of Congress. PROs lobby on behalf of rights holders, especially in discussions of legal royalty rates.

As a side benefit of tracking public performance of works for royalty collection, PROs publish statistics of publicly performed works.

The licensing services provided by a PRO arguably provide advantage to customers, who can simultaneously license all works the PRO represents.

Criticisms

PROs have been criticised for charging non-profit organisations for their use of copyrighted music in situations where the non-profit organisation was not earning money from the use. ASCAP, for example, was eventually forced in the face of public opinion to abandon its attempts to charge the Girl Scouts of the USA for singing campfire songs. ASCAP's and SESAC's policy of charging non-commercial educational (NCE) radio stations for playing copyrighted music has also been criticised, especially by college radio stations across the U.S., which rely entirely on student and listener support for funding and have difficulty affording the extra fees. Community Orchestras, which mostly play classical works in the public domain, may occasionally play a work within copyright, but are forced to pay licenses to rights societies on all concert revenues including concerts where all music is in the public domain, which is then distributed to songwriters of pop songs.

PROs are often criticised for stretching the definition of "public performance." Until relatively recently[when?] in the U.S., playing copyrighted music in restaurants did not involve legal issues if the media was legally purchased. [citation needed] PROs now demand royalties for such use.

"One exception to the rule allows businesses of a certain size (stores under 2,000 square feet, restaurants or bars under 3,750 square feet) to play music from a radio, television, or similar household device without a license, provided there are fewer than six speakers (with limits on the placement of speakers), and customers aren't charged to listen. Other exceptions include educational and charitable functions... If your business falls into one of the categories listed above (size of business, number and placement of speakers, etc.) radio/TV] you may want to check out section 110(5) of the Copyright Act. As you likely won't need a license. But, before making a decision, check with a lawyer."[3]

By discouraging performances in limited public arenas, again using the restaurant example, critics [who?] say PROs eliminate the free publicity such performances provide for a work thereby depressing media sales. Incidentally, lower media sales conflict with PROs, but disputes between the two parties are not known to occur since each type of organisation represents the interests of the same parties - rights owners - and are forced to work in common interest.

Rights owners – especially independents and newcomers not represented by large publishing companies – criticise the PROs for what they deem to be "mystical" formulas for deciding who gets what share of the total licensing revenue received. They also criticise PROs for slow or non-existent payments and excessive membership dues or service fees.[citation needed]

Organisations

International

North America

United States

Canada

Others

Most countries (that observe copyright) have the equivalent:

Country Agencies
Argentina SADAIC
Australia Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA)
Australia Phonographic Performance Company of Australia (PPCA)
Austria Autoren, Komponisten und Musikverleger (AKM)
Belgium SABAM
Bolivia Servicio Nacional de Propiedad Intellectual (SENAPI)
Brazil ECAD (Escritório Central de Arrecadação e Distribuição)
Bulgaria MUSICAUTHOR
Canada Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada (SOCAN), Re:Sound Music Licensing Company
Chile Sociedad Chilena del Derecho de Autor (SCD)
China Music Copyright Society of China(MCSC)[6][7]
Colombia SAYCO/ACINPRO
Croatia HDS
Czech Republic OSA
Denmark KODA
Estonia EAU
Finland Teosto
France Société des auteurs, compositeurs et éditeurs de musique (SACEM)
Georgia SAS
Germany Gesellschaft für musikalische Aufführungs- und mechanische Vervielfältigungsrechte (GEMA)
Greece AEPI
Greece GEA-GRAMMO, ERATO-APOLLON
Hong Kong CASH
Hungary ARTISJUS
India The Indian Performing Right Society Ltd
Ireland Irish Music Rights Organisation, Phonographic Performance Ireland (PPI)
Israel ACUM
Italy SIAE
Japan JASRAC
Lithuania LATGA-A
Malaysia MACP
Mexico SACM
Nepal Music Royalty Collection Society Nepal (MRCSN)
Netherlands BUMA
New Zealand APRA
Norway TONO
Panama SPAC
Peru APDAYC
Philippines FILSCAP
Poland ZAIKS
Puerto Rico ACEMLA
Romania UCMR
Russia RAO
Serbia SOKOJ
Singapore Composers and Authors Society of Singapore Ltd (COMPASS)
Slovakia SOZA
South Africa Southern African Music Rights Organisation (SAMRO)
South Korea KOMCA, KOSCAP[8]
Spain SGAE
Sweden STIM
Switzerland SUISA
Taiwan MUST
Thailand MCT
Trinidad and Tobago COTT
Ukraine UACRR
United Kingdom PRS, PPL
United States of America ASCAP, BMI, SESAC, ACEMLA (SPACEM), AllTrack, Global Music Rights (GMR), Pro Music Rights
Uruguay AGADU
Venezuela SACVEN

State regulation and income taxes

Although the Copyright Clause of the United States Constitution delegates the power to establish Copyright law in the United States, in recent years, a number of States have enacted transparency laws in respect to Performing Rights Societies. These generally force Performing Rights Societies to discloses the musical works they license. Because many establishments pay blanket license fees to Performing Rights Societies but have little or no idea if the fees they pay actually secure the rights to perform musical works. This can result in unfair business practices called tolling. Many performing rights societies send representatives into businesses who attempt to disrupt or shut down a concert, claiming an insufficient or performing right license, and some states have banned this practice.

Moreover, states with income taxes hope to withhold royalty income for "performances" inside those states rather than in the state where a composer/songwriter lives or the Performing Rights Society is located. In practice, state income tax accounting is very difficult to regulate. Notable is Colorado's law, which requires each Performing Rights Society to disclose its entire catalog.

Further reading

  • Choquette, Frederic, "The Returned Value of PROs", Music Business Journal, Berklee College of Music, May 2011
  • Schulenberg, Richard, Legal aspects of the music industry: an insider's view, Random House Digital, Inc., 1999. Cf. Chapter 13, "Performance, Performing, and Neighboring Rights".

References

  1. ^ a b "CISAC Overview | CISAC".
  2. ^ "Confédération Internationale des Sociétés d'Auteurs et Compositeurs", Wikipedia, 2019-07-08, retrieved 2020-03-11
  3. ^ Deceglie, Paul (23 February 1998). "Cut It Out". www.entrepreneur.com. Entrepreneur. Retrieved 12 March 2013.
  4. ^ "Ex-SESAC Board Member Launches New PRO for 'Digital-Era Creators'". Billboard. Retrieved 2020-02-04.
  5. ^ "Irving Azoff Launches 'Global Music Rights' To Take On ASCAP And BMI". All Access. Retrieved 2020-04-24.
  6. ^ "CISAC". members.cisac.org. Retrieved 2022-04-28.
  7. ^ "NCAC-MCSC-Music Copyright Society of China". en.ncac.gov.cn. Retrieved 2022-04-28.
  8. ^ Yim Seung-hye (July 28, 2015). "Divided royalties enrage musicians". Korea JoongAng Daily. Retrieved June 30, 2016.

performance, rights, organisation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Performance rights organisation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message A performance rights organisation PRO also known as a performing rights society provides intermediary functions particularly collection of royalties between copyright holders and parties who wish to use copyrighted works publicly in locations such as shopping and dining venues Legal consumer purchase of works such as buying CDs from a music store confer private performance rights PROs usually only collect royalties when use of a work is incidental to an organisation s purpose Royalties for works essential to an organisation s purpose such as theaters and radio are usually negotiated directly with the rights holder The interest of the organisations varies many have the sole focus of musical works while others may also encompass works and authors for audiovisual drama literature or the visual arts 1 In some countries PROs are called copyright collectives or copyright collecting agencies A copyright collective is more general than a PRO as it is not limited to performances and includes reproduction rights organisations RROs RROs represent works distributed via mediums such as CD audiocassette or computer file rather than use of works in public settings The global governing body for PROs is CISAC headquartered in France with 228 member societies in 119 countries 1 Contents 1 History 2 Activities 3 Criticisms 4 Organisations 4 1 International 4 2 North America 4 2 1 United States 4 2 2 Canada 4 2 3 Others 5 State regulation and income taxes 6 Further reading 7 ReferencesHistoryThe first performing rights society was established in France in 1851 In the United Kingdom the Copyright Act 1842 was the first to protect musical compositions with the Performing Right Society founded in 1914 encompassing live performances The rights for recorded or broadcast performance are administered by the Mechanical Copyright Protection Society founded in 1924 Italy introduced a performing rights society in 1882 and Germany in 1915 In the United States The American Society of Composers Authors and Publishers ASCAP was founded in 1914 Society of European Stage Authors amp Composers SESAC in 1930 and Broadcast Music Inc BMI in 1939 Sociedad Puertorriquena de Autores y Compositores de Musica SPACEM was founded in San Juan Puerto Rico in 1953 SPACEM s name was changed to ACEMLA or Asociacion de Compositoes y Editores de Musica and remains today PRO No 76 in the CISAC s 2 roster of performing rights societies ActivitiesOther than their primary purpose as an intermediary between rights holders and customers PROs are highly active in legal arenas PROs take alleged rights violators to court or in the U S to the Copyright Royalty Board of the Library of Congress PROs lobby on behalf of rights holders especially in discussions of legal royalty rates As a side benefit of tracking public performance of works for royalty collection PROs publish statistics of publicly performed works The licensing services provided by a PRO arguably provide advantage to customers who can simultaneously license all works the PRO represents CriticismsPROs have been criticised for charging non profit organisations for their use of copyrighted music in situations where the non profit organisation was not earning money from the use ASCAP for example was eventually forced in the face of public opinion to abandon its attempts to charge the Girl Scouts of the USA for singing campfire songs ASCAP s and SESAC s policy of charging non commercial educational NCE radio stations for playing copyrighted music has also been criticised especially by college radio stations across the U S which rely entirely on student and listener support for funding and have difficulty affording the extra fees Community Orchestras which mostly play classical works in the public domain may occasionally play a work within copyright but are forced to pay licenses to rights societies on all concert revenues including concerts where all music is in the public domain which is then distributed to songwriters of pop songs PROs are often criticised for stretching the definition of public performance Until relatively recently when in the U S playing copyrighted music in restaurants did not involve legal issues if the media was legally purchased citation needed PROs now demand royalties for such use One exception to the rule allows businesses of a certain size stores under 2 000 square feet restaurants or bars under 3 750 square feet to play music from a radio television or similar household device without a license provided there are fewer than six speakers with limits on the placement of speakers and customers aren t charged to listen Other exceptions include educational and charitable functions If your business falls into one of the categories listed above size of business number and placement of speakers etc radio TV you may want to check out section 110 5 of the Copyright Act As you likely won t need a license But before making a decision check with a lawyer 3 By discouraging performances in limited public arenas again using the restaurant example critics who say PROs eliminate the free publicity such performances provide for a work thereby depressing media sales Incidentally lower media sales conflict with PROs but disputes between the two parties are not known to occur since each type of organisation represents the interests of the same parties rights owners and are forced to work in common interest Rights owners especially independents and newcomers not represented by large publishing companies criticise the PROs for what they deem to be mystical formulas for deciding who gets what share of the total licensing revenue received They also criticise PROs for slow or non existent payments and excessive membership dues or service fees citation needed OrganisationsInternational Further information List of copyright collection societies and Category Copyright collection societies North America United States AllTrack U S 4 ASCAP U S BMI U S Global Music Rights U S 5 SESAC U S Pro Music Rights U S Canada SOCAN Canada Re Sound Music Licensing Company CMRRA Canada Others Most countries that observe copyright have the equivalent Country Agencies Argentina SADAIC Australia Australasian Performing Right Association APRA Australia Phonographic Performance Company of Australia PPCA Austria Autoren Komponisten und Musikverleger AKM Belgium SABAM Bolivia Servicio Nacional de Propiedad Intellectual SENAPI Brazil ECAD Escritorio Central de Arrecadacao e Distribuicao Bulgaria MUSICAUTHOR Canada Society of Composers Authors and Music Publishers of Canada SOCAN Re Sound Music Licensing Company Chile Sociedad Chilena del Derecho de Autor SCD China Music Copyright Society of China MCSC 6 7 Colombia SAYCO ACINPRO Croatia HDS Czech Republic OSA Denmark KODA Estonia EAU Finland Teosto France Societe des auteurs compositeurs et editeurs de musique SACEM Georgia SAS Germany Gesellschaft fur musikalische Auffuhrungs und mechanische Vervielfaltigungsrechte GEMA Greece AEPI Greece GEA GRAMMO ERATO APOLLON Hong Kong CASH Hungary ARTISJUS India The Indian Performing Right Society Ltd Ireland Irish Music Rights Organisation Phonographic Performance Ireland PPI Israel ACUM Italy SIAE Japan JASRAC Lithuania LATGA A Malaysia MACP Mexico SACM Nepal Music Royalty Collection Society Nepal MRCSN Netherlands BUMA New Zealand APRA Norway TONO Panama SPAC Peru APDAYC Philippines FILSCAP Poland ZAIKS Puerto Rico ACEMLA Romania UCMR Russia RAO Serbia SOKOJ Singapore Composers and Authors Society of Singapore Ltd COMPASS Slovakia SOZA South Africa Southern African Music Rights Organisation SAMRO South Korea KOMCA KOSCAP 8 Spain SGAE Sweden STIM Switzerland SUISA Taiwan MUST Thailand MCT Trinidad and Tobago COTT Ukraine UACRR United Kingdom PRS PPL United States of America ASCAP BMI SESAC ACEMLA SPACEM AllTrack Global Music Rights GMR Pro Music Rights Uruguay AGADU Venezuela SACVENState regulation and income taxesThe examples and perspective in this section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate February 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Although the Copyright Clause of the United States Constitution delegates the power to establish Copyright law in the United States in recent years a number of States have enacted transparency laws in respect to Performing Rights Societies These generally force Performing Rights Societies to discloses the musical works they license Because many establishments pay blanket license fees to Performing Rights Societies but have little or no idea if the fees they pay actually secure the rights to perform musical works This can result in unfair business practices called tolling Many performing rights societies send representatives into businesses who attempt to disrupt or shut down a concert claiming an insufficient or performing right license and some states have banned this practice Moreover states with income taxes hope to withhold royalty income for performances inside those states rather than in the state where a composer songwriter lives or the Performing Rights Society is located In practice state income tax accounting is very difficult to regulate Notable is Colorado s law which requires each Performing Rights Society to disclose its entire catalog Further readingChoquette Frederic The Returned Value of PROs Music Business Journal Berklee College of Music May 2011 Schulenberg Richard Legal aspects of the music industry an insider s view Random House Digital Inc 1999 Cf Chapter 13 Performance Performing and Neighboring Rights References a b CISAC Overview CISAC Confederation Internationale des Societes d Auteurs et Compositeurs Wikipedia 2019 07 08 retrieved 2020 03 11 Deceglie Paul 23 February 1998 Cut It Out www entrepreneur com Entrepreneur Retrieved 12 March 2013 Ex SESAC Board Member Launches New PRO for Digital Era Creators Billboard Retrieved 2020 02 04 Irving Azoff Launches Global Music Rights To Take On ASCAP And BMI All Access Retrieved 2020 04 24 CISAC members cisac org Retrieved 2022 04 28 NCAC MCSC Music Copyright Society of China en ncac gov cn Retrieved 2022 04 28 Yim Seung hye July 28 2015 Divided royalties enrage musicians Korea JoongAng Daily Retrieved June 30 2016 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Performance rights organisation amp oldid 1212007829, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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