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Slim Shady and Universal Go to Court
Eminem wants a bigger cut of digital downloads; music companies say they still have high costs.
At the second day of Eminem’s trial in downtown Los Angeles, Universal Music Group (UMG) executives came under fire on the witness stand over whether they really own the music that they sell.
“I don’t know what ownership of a digital file means,” Michael Ostroff, general counsel and executive VP of business and legal affairs of UMG worldwide, said under questioning by lawyers representing the rapper’s production company, F.B.T. Productions. “The zeroes and the ones are probably on their servers.”
The “zeroes and ones” are exactly what’s at stake in this lawsuit, as they are what music becomes when it is converted into a digital file. At the trial, the music companies were trying to demonstrate that they still have significant costs related to selling music at a time when the music is reduced to digital bits rather than CDs and records, and the expenses of distributing the music that existed a decade ago have evaporated.
The lawsuit, filed two years ago by F.B.T., is unusual in that it has actually gone to trial. It claims that the world’s largest music company owes Eminem more money for the music it sells via third-party distributors like Apple’s iTunes or phone companies who offer musical ringtones.
F.B.T. argued that all UMG is providing to the online retailer is a digital file – with no costs incurred from things like jewel cases, liner notes, sales teams or in-store displays.
Universal executives, meanwhile, maintained that regardless of whether music is in a digital or physical format, it is still a product that they own.
The courtroom was also filled with legal minutiae and wrangling over how to interpret the language of the contract between the two parties. At one point, questioning focused on whether the use of an artist’s music in a download pact is a licensing agreement or a distribution deal.
Under licensing agreements, the artist splits royalties 50-50 with the record company. Under Eminem’s current distribution arrangement, the rapper may only be receiving around 20 cents for every iTunes purchase of his music. If the licensing agreement were extended to include digital downloads, that sum could be upped to around 35 cents per purchase.
UMG considers online stores like iTunes to be music retailers just like Best Buy or Walmart – and consequently, in their view, a record sale is the same no matter where it occurs. F.T.P. is trying to emphasize that a digital download is different from a record purchased at a physical store because a legal download is licensed. There are limitations on transferring digital downloads from one MP3 player to another, whereas you can do – legally – what you want with a CD purchased at a store – give it as a gift, for example.
The music industry is watching the trial – which began Tuesday and is only expected to last about a week – for clues about the direction the music business will take as the digital era moves forward. The courtroom has already heard testimony from Jimmy Iovine, a founder of UMG and its distribution label Interscope Records and the Bass Brothers, the Detroit producers behind F.B.T., responsible for Eminem’s best original song Oscar in 2003.



Comments
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rembrandt Says
not, in the end, a very well-written story -- it doesn't summarize the issues at hand in clear language, preferring instead to muddle through various legal arguments.
Anonymous Says
This is the same issue as with books. Even if there are no physical manufacturing costs, the record company bears the costs of production of the music, the management and storage of the files, and the distribution of them (along with the metadata) to thuird party music distributors (like iTunes). While musicians (just like books authors) should be able to profit from electronic manifestations of their works, it is not reasonable to argue that the publisher/production company's costs are eliminated just because they are not selling jewel cases! A special digital licensing royalty should be negotiated because e-rights are not the same as distribution or a license - they are a hybrid deal with costs somwhere in the middle of the two business models.
David Says
Another cost that aren't mentioned here are storage, transportation, and buybacks. Huge cost savings for the industry deducted from what is paid the artist.
If Slim wins, and he should, I will feel bad about the repercussions this will have on everyone not in Management in the UMG and others, because they're the ones who will get slammed when cost cutting hits. But the entire model is busted and the new one has yet to rise (iTunes is not a model).
RT Says
Anonymous: the point of the suit is the interpretation of the contract. UMG says that giving a digital file to Apple or Amazon or Real constitutes "distribution," so the fee rates for distribution apply, while FBT says that those actions constitute "licensing," so the fee rates for licensing apply.
The problem is that the contract is ambiguous on this issue: it does not define what digital downloads count as. I'm sure that all recent contracts that the labels force artists to sign all define digital sales as "distribution" to avoid this problem.
Anonymous Says
Hmmmm...maybe I'm wrong but,from a legal stand point, if this was not in the contract he signed can he legally get anything? Just wondering.
Pissed off artist whose gonna blow up despite label politics Says
I hope Eminem gets every cent. Record executives have been screwing artists over for years and it's about time that someone stepped up and said enough is enough. To say that a digital download is the same as a physical record is absolutely ridiculous. What does it really cost for a record company to hand over a song to iTunes and they upload it on their site? NOTHING. But "there are costs", yea like what? Your internet bill? Go get em Marshall!
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