No wonder the road has to go on forever -- 4.5 cents doesn't go as far as it used to:
In a case that could seismically alter the way labels and artists share download revenue, members of the Allman Brothers Band and Cheap Trick have filed a class action lawsuit alleging that Sony BMG has underpaid artists for digital music transactions.
At issue in the action, filed April 27 in U.S. District Court in New York by Labaton Sucharow & Rudoff and Probstein & Weiner, is whether the label's deal with online services for downloads is a license or a sale.Sony BMG labels consider that their deals with the services are for sales of records rather than licenses for the recordings. But the suit alleges that Sony BMG is violating contractual obligations to share 50% of the net licensing revenue from digital music transactions with artists.
The two bands claim that from 99-cent downloads, they receive only about 4.5 cents, rather than the 30 cents per track they believe they are owed.
For years, artists have complained that royalties are further cut; many contracts permit a 50% reduction in royalties for music sold through a new technology, as well as a packaging deduction. Many artists say these clauses only made sense in the physical world, when music migrated to CDs from cassettes. Sony BMG declined comment.
You can't blame Sony for trying to recoup the cost of all that expensive WLAN cable. After all, they're only following in the footsteps of other great entrepreneurs, such as P.T. Barnum and Andrew Sullivan.
(Via Coalition of the Swilling.)
I've been hearing bits and peices of this for several days now... "a packaging fee" for a *digital* download??? Who are they trying to fool?
Posted by: Gmac at May 2, 2006 12:15 PMIt's amazing. The 99 cents is pure profit. What costs do they have? Give them their 30 cents!
Posted by: Mr. Bingley at May 2, 2006 12:22 PMThe packaging fee thing is hilarious. P.T. is chuckling in the Great Beyond.
Posted by: Donnah at May 2, 2006 12:27 PM