people on this list need to learn how to change the subject lines
accordingly when the original intent of the post is lost.

On Tue, Sep 9, 2008 at 4:55 AM, pauley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> BBC do exactly the same thing for podcasts of previously recorded radio
> shows.
> A podcast is a download, not listened to live, it's not a performance
> licence that's required by Radio NZ. UR needs to be able to collect for
> the use of their material from the listener, from the downloader. And as
> RNZ aren't in the business of selling music, and UR aren't giving it away,
> all they can do is make available for downlaod the material that they own
> the copyright to, which is the chat, not the music.
> I think it's it's amazing he was interviewed at all by the state
> broadcaster...I can't see BBC1 giving him 30 minutes during any given day.
>
>  essentially it's the listener who needs to > This proves once again how
> NZ takes America's most trumped-up
>> regulations and makes them worse.
>>
>> I know there are geeks in the house who will enjoy Peter
>> Gutmann's classic story about NZ regulation in the 1990s of
>> "digital munitions," otherwise known as cryptographic keys, or,
>> "my life as a Kiwi arms courier."
>>
>> http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/policy/courier.html
>> http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/policy/wass99.html
>>
>> fh
>>
>>
>> ------ mail forwarded, original message follows ------
>>
>> To: 313@hyperreal.org
>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <Andy Mitchell>
>> Subject: Re: (313) Mad Mike interview
>> Date: Tue, 9 Sep 2008 10:20:16 +1200 (NZST)
>>
>>>> They won't let you waiver - music is music to mcps/prs etc and they do
>>>> close people down for it.
>>>
>>> This is a New Zealand site remember, so it's controlled by local
>>> organisation RIANZ not any American organisation. I'm guessing their
>>> fees
>>> are equally prohibitive though, because *no-one* offers podcasts or even
>>> streaming archived shows here unless they consist purely of talk.
>>
>> So I did some snooping and the local situation is this (turned out it was
>> an organisation called Phonographic Performances New Zealand who control
>> broadcast licenses here):
>>
>>> PPNZ does not have an existing assignment to blanket licence podcasts at
>>> the present time. Any broadcaster seeking to make available music on
>>> demand is required to seek the permission of the individual copyright
>>> owners concerned.
>>
>> So it's more or less impossible to archive music radio online from
>> here!Madness...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>



-- 
peace,

frank

dj mix archive: http://www.deejaycountzero.com

Reply via email to