PRS for
Music begins legal action against SoundCloud
After careful consideration, and following
five years of unsuccessful negotiations, we now find ourselves
in a situation where we have no alternative but to commence
legal proceedings against the online music service SoundCloud.
When a writer or publisher becomes a member of the Performing
Right Society, they assign certain rights to their works over
for us to administer, so it’s our job to ensure we collect and
distribute royalties due to them. SoundCloud actively promotes
and shares music. Launched in 2008, the service now has more
than 175m unique listeners per month. Unfortunately, the
organisation continues to deny it needs a PRS for Music
licence for its existing service available in the UK and Europe,
meaning it is not remunerating our members when their music is
streamed by the SoundCloud platform.
Our aim is always to license services when they use our members’
music. It has been a difficult decision to begin legal action
against SoundCloud but one we firmly believe is in the best,
long-term interests of our membership. This is because it is
important we establish the principle that a licence is required
when services make available music to users. We have asked
SoundCloud numerous times to recognise their responsibilities to
take a licence to stop the infringement of our members’
copyrights but so far our requests have not been met. Therefore
we now have no choice but to pursue the issue through the
courts.
We understand SoundCloud has taken down some of our members’
works from their service. With our letter of claim, we sent
SoundCloud a list of 4,500 musical works which are being made
available on the service, as a sample of our repertoire being
used, so that they understood the scale of our members’
repertoire and its use on the service. We asked them to take a
licence to cover the use of all our members’ repertoire or
otherwise stop infringing.
SoundCloud decided to respond to our claim by informing us that
it had removed 250 posts. Unfortunately, we have no visibility
or clarity on SoundCloud’s approach to removing works, so it is
not currently clear why these particular posts have been
selected by them given the wider issue of infringement that is
occurring. Ultimately, it is SoundCloud’s decision as to whether
it starts paying for the ongoing use of our members’ music or
stops using these works entirely.
If the streaming market is to reach its true potential and offer
a fair return for our members, organisations such as SoundCloud
must pay for their use of our members’ music. We launched our
Streamfair
campaign in June to raise awareness of this issue and
highlight how music creators need to be properly remunerated
from streaming. We believe that all digital services should
obtain a licence which grants them permission to use our
members’ music and repertoire, in this case the works of
songwriters, publishers and composers.
The streaming market cannot fairly develop unless this
happens. We have always been pro-licensing and pro-actively work
with organisations in order to propose an appropriate licensing
solution for the use of our members’ works.
We remain hopeful that this matter can be resolved without the
need for extended litigation. Members will appreciate that this
is now a legal matter and our ability to communicate around it
is therefore limited by the legal process. However, we will try
to share information and updates whenever we can.
Please visit our website to read our frequently asked questions.
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