Peter Friedman
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Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity

April 05th, 2010 | copyright and fair use, Free Speech, Law as a reflection of its society, Legal Advice, legal history, originality

Why the music industry won’t sue certain samplers such as Girl Talk and the producers of Copyright Criminals.

I’ve discussed extensively in the past (most prominently, perhaps, here) my view regarding the music industry’s view that considers any unlicensed sample of a copyrighted recording, no matter how small and how transformed, a copyright infringement. In short, I think it likely the case law on which that view is based would be overturned if it is challenged in any case in which the sampling is used in a way sufficiently transformative that the sampling work stands on its own as a creative work. In short, that’s why I don’ t think Girl Talk has been sued.

Transformative uses of copyrighted work are permitted under the fair use doctrine, and so are critical uses. That’s why I don’t think Kembrew McLeod needs to worry about a lawsuit in connection with the documentary film he co-produced “titled Copyright Criminals, which examines the messy three-way collision between digital technology, musical collage, and intellectual property law.” So why does McLeod worry? Because he’s right in explaining the following:

The music industry believed that the law didn’t distinguish between copying one second or half a minute of a sound recording. Therefore, record companies now insist that every fragment of sound needs to be cleared, something that fundamentally altered the aural evolution of hip-hop music. The more complex you make your sound collage, the more impossible it is to share with the world. And in the course of documenting the legal and cultural history of this art form, Ben [McLeod's co-producer] and I are risking being sued.

But if McLeod is willing to fight a lawsuit — and I think he is — the recording industry won’t sue him. The existing precedents requiring licensing of every single recorded sample would be overturned, and the record industry would lost the appearance created by these precedents, an appearance that makes the vast, vast majority of samplers pay license fees for their samples. It’s better business for the industry to let the occasional brave and creative soul feel as if he’s getting away with something than to have the industry’s precious — and ill-founded — legal precedents put at genuine risk.

This article has 3 comments

  1. Why Copyright Criminals Filmmakers Won’t Get Sued? Because They’d Win | PHP Hosts Says:

    [...] Copyright Criminals, Friedman is making the same point again: suggesting that the filmmakers won’t get sued, because they would likely win, and redraw the boundaries of the law on music sampling and fair use: But if McLeod is willing to [...]

  2. You Get The . Info » Why Copyright Criminals Filmmakers Won’t Get Sued? Because They’d Win – 3654th Edition Says:

    [...] Copyright Criminals, Friedman is making the same point again: suggesting that the filmmakers won’t get sued, because they would likely win, and redraw the boundaries of the law on music sampling and fair use: But if McLeod is willing to [...]

  3. Why Copyright Criminals Filmmakers Won’t Get Sued? Because They’d Win « Hindgrindr Says:

    [...] Copyright Criminals, Friedman is making the same point again: suggesting that the filmmakers won’t get sued, because they would likely win, and redraw the boundaries of the law on music sampling and fair use: But if McLeod is willing to [...]

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