Music hobbyists take note: the years-old practice of posting
lyrics and song charts on the Net may land you in legal hot water.
The latest example of this now-familiar maxim is the International Lyrics Server, a Web site
hosted in Switzerland that, until last week, posted the words to some
100,000 songs. The site is temporarily shuttered, claiming that "14 police
officers from the cantons of Basel and Zurich arrived simultaneously at the
apartments of two of our team and our Internet service provider (ISP). They
took all they could find related" to the Web site.
Representatives from the site were not available to comment, but according
to the National Music Publishers
Association, the action was prompted by a criminal complaint filed by its
licensing arm, the Harry Fox
Agency, on behalf of eight individual music publishers. Harry Fox has
been instrumental in shutting
down similar sites, including the Online Guitar Archive last June.
Back in the days when the Internet was a free-wheeling medium used mostly by hobbyists and academics, Netizens posted songs, music charts, and other information about music with little thought about copyright implications. Now that major music publishers are calling the Net home as well, however, hobbyists who post copyrighted materials without permission can face stiff legal consequences, attorneys warn.
"What they're doing is not permitted," said Elliot Brown, a lawyer with Irell & Manella. "They are engaged in
massive copying of copyrighted materials. It acts as a market substitute
for the original."
Part of the fault, however, lies with the publishing industry for not
making it easier for Web site operators to license sheet music, says Bob
Kohn, author of Kohn on Music Licensing, a book that is regarded by many in the industry as an authority on the matter. While there are streamlined ways for people to obtain licenses to perform copyrighted songs in public or cover them in recordings, there is no equivalent for lyrics or sheet music, he pointed out.
Online lyrics and sheet music sites "are valuable services that consumers
want, but unfortunately, there's no easy mechanism for commercial
businesses on the Internet to efficiently obtain the licenses they require
to put up lyrics," Kohn said. "The new technology has come along, and the
traditional industry needs to catch up."
The Harry Fox Agency, for its part, said that the problem stems from Web
site operators, who frequently ignore requests to negotiate a license.
Actions such as the one taken against the International Lyrics Server are
"the only recourse left to our publisher members and their songwriter
partners," the group said in a statement. It added that the lawyers from
Harry Fox tried to negotiate a license with the Web site, but that representatives refused.
Clouding the issue in many instances is whether the copying is excused
under the "fair use" exemptions of the federal Copyright Act. Under that
doctrine, it is permissible to reproduce copyrighted material without permission in limited situations, such as in news stories or scholarly articles. A number of factors are considered in determining fair use, such as what proportion of the total work is copied and whether it is used for commercial or nonprofit purposes.
Operators of some music sites have said that it takes substantial effort to
figure out exactly what words or chords are used in a song and then to
render them in a "tablature" or lyric sheet. Such considerations, they
argue, figure strongly in their fair use claims.
But Harry Fox president Edward Murphy rebuffed those arguments in the
statement, saying: "It is recognized in virtually every copyright law
around the world...that only the copyright owners have the right to make
and distribute copies of their works, including the lyrics."