- Joined
- Jun 30, 1998
- Location
- Bierland
Just a quick plug for one of my favorite pastimes - listening to internet Webcasts. There has been a number of drives to ban these but the webcasters have actually gotten together a bill to legalize to. It's in the house right now.
This just in from soma.fm's newsletter...
This just in from soma.fm's newsletter...
Thanks to everyone who called their representatives, the "Webcaster
Settlement Act of 2008" has passed the House, now it's onto the Senate.
We'll need to call them in the next 24 hours and ask for the support of
the Senate version of the bill. I don't have the actual bill number,
just ask them to support "The Webcaster Settlement Act of 2008". (If
they ask for more info, you can say it's the Senate version of
H.R. 7084.)
Look up your Senator's phone number and call them:
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You can leave a voice message after hours. If the phone is busy, please
try again until you get through.
"I am a constituent and a fan of internet radio. I would like you to
support the Webcaster Settlement Act of 2008, and please do not
capitulate to pressure from the NAB. The NAB is threatened by
competition from webcasters, and will do anything to get rid of that
competition."
The Senate will resume Monday morning, September 29th, and will consider
this early that session. If we leave messages this weekend, we can show
that there is considerable grass roots support for it, and it will
greatly lessen the impact of the NAB's opposition to it.
If you're not living in the USA, or a US Citizen abroad, you can call or
send messages to the Senators from California, where SomaFM is based.
(Let them know that you're an international listener to SomaFM which is
based in California.)
Thanks so much, and sorry to bug you so much this weekend.
Rusty Hodge
Founder and General Manager (among other things)
SomaFM
PS- Here is more detail on this bill if you're curious:
The "Webcaster Settlement Act of 2008" contains technical amendments to
the Small Webcasting Settlement Act of 2002 (P.L. 107-321) which will
permit commercial and noncommercial webcasters to negotiate royalty
rates and terms other than those determined by the Copyright Royalty
Board (CRB) in its May 2007 decision. That decision was the basis for
legislation introduced last year and is currently subject to a legal
challenge at the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, which has, thus far,
upheld the market rates and terms set by the CRB.
The principal purpose of the legislation is to facilitate a reduction in
Internet streaming rates, something H.R. 7084 will permit to be
voluntarily negotiated by willing parties rather than imposed by
Congress. Essentially, this bill will allow SoundExchange, the
organization which collects royalties on behalf of the music industry,
to reach a settlement with the Digital Media Association, the national
trade organization for the online audio and video industries.



