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JZM @
Wednesday, January 16, 2008 7:22 PM
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Very nice article nfx. Very informative , although there is really nothing that I didn't already know it's still informative and a great article.Nice job
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By
mr_whitepholk @
Wednesday, January 16, 2008 11:03 PM
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thank you again nfx, the very thing i was coming here today to research was copyrights, i heard of the poor mans way, but that seemed to easy, especially to be held up in court as legit..... thanks
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By
Da Moose @
Sunday, January 20, 2008 11:41 AM
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nice article, a lot of info but not loads to read... thanks for this
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By
djcrazyarmz @
Sunday, January 27, 2008 2:18 AM
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I have yet to register a copyright for any of my beats at this point, and every time I either upload a beat, or give a disk to the local rappers I work with, I always fear that someone is going to take advantage of it. Just recently there was a debate concerning the "real producer" of Chamillionaire's "You Must Be Crazy," and I would not like that to happen to me.
As far as registering copyrights with the information given: You say that you can register a collection of pieces. Does that imply that i can put like 1:30 minute snippets of each beat to preserve time or even burn the beats as a data disk?
The information about the "Poor Man's Copyright" is true. My friend used to use that method to protect his beats, so I did some research into the subject. I found out that the U.S. courts would NOT recognize this form of copyright in court. The point being that you can mail yourself an empty, unsealed envelope right now and just throw the CD inside and seal it in the future when you need to.
Thanks for the info, NFX. Nice article!
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By
Distracktion @
Saturday, February 02, 2008 8:21 PM
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Actually, the "Poor Man's Copyright" isn't that useful in the UK. I defineately wouldn't bet on it. As for North America, its useless, and you're better off saving your $5 for postage. There's nothing to say you can't mail yourself an open envelope, making this method extremely easy to fake, and therefore, useless.
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By
mr_whitepholk @
Sunday, February 17, 2008 5:15 AM
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yeah i just went back to the copyright site again amnd was trying to figure out about the "collection" of items.... didnt seem to clear anything up tho,.... anybody know abou this... i have a guy now that wants to buy like 10 songs, and if i can "collectively" copyright all of them at the same time that would save me alot of money...........?????????
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By
Distracktion @
Sunday, February 17, 2008 12:09 PM
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How can they differentiate between 1 song, and 10 consecutive songs? Just put them all in one recording, and register that way. They may sound like different songs, but they aren't right? They're all part of the same song, with small breaks of silence now and then, with a name for each section of sound between each break of silence.
What I'm trying to say is, I don't think there's a legal way for anyone to say "this is one song". Who's to say that an whole album can't be considered one piece in its entirety?
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By
xxxxxstitchesxxxxx @
Thursday, February 21, 2008 6:24 PM
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I have a question about this issue. I use several downloaded freeware vst plugins in my tunes. Does this mean that I have to pay the owner or creator of the plugin to use it? I dont do any comercial work but in the future, I may.
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By
Distracktion @
Thursday, February 21, 2008 8:03 PM
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"Freeware" refers to a software liscence which is completely free. You are free to use it for its intended purpose. So the answer is yes. You can use freeware, and sell the music you create with it. But I'll assume that what you really meant is that you are using pirated (stolen, cracked) software like the rest of us criminals :P Firstly, they would have to prove that you used their particular software to make the music... which is impossible. You can make any vst synth sound like 100 other vst synths, and you can't tell what sequencer is being used. Secondly, they would have to prove that you didn't pay... Which is again, impossible, because they can't force you to produce your software liscence or proof of payment. So, basically, you are safe.
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By
ascent @
Wednesday, May 07, 2008 5:50 PM
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Thanks NFX! I was having difficulty deciding on whether to fill out a PA form or an SR form, but I guess for beats it'd be the SR :)
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