On Friday, February 4, 2005, at 07:09 PM, Tom Baker wrote:




On Feb 4, 2005, at 2:22 PM, Brent Randolph wrote:

For example, if she takes pics of a wedding, purchases the background music on iTMS, and creates a DVD to sell to the newlyweds, will we go to jail?

So, what if they use classical music? What's the time span before music goes into the public domain? I wouldn't think anyone owns the right to Beethoven symphonies, Mozart sonatas, or Chopin nocturnes. Or do they? Well, maybe some symphony orchestra owns a particular performance of it, but they're all so similar that who's to know where you got it from?

That's what's copywritten, the performance...the music is indeed in the public domain.


 You can't watermark music, or can you?


Digital music? Certainly.

But I'd better stop before I make Tim sicker...

--
"Wherever you go, there you are." - B. Banzai, Ph.D.
Bruce Johnson



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