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sl8

(13,741 posts)
Mon Oct 30, 2017, 10:33 AM Oct 2017

Floridas top court stops 1960s band from earning pre-1972 copyright royalties


From https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2017/10/the-turtles-lose-their-final-fight-for-pre-1972-copyright-cash/ :

Florida’s top court stops 1960s band from earning pre-1972 copyright royalties
Do states want copyright to sprawl even further? Two have said "no."

JOE MULLIN - 10/26/2017, 3:05 PM


The Turtles in 1967.


Members of 1960s rock band The Turtles have lost a major legal battle in their quest to collect copyright royalties from their old hit songs.

The Florida Supreme Court held today (PDF) that the state doesn't recognize any copyrights in pre-1972 music recordings, despite the band's arguments to the contrary. All seven justices concurred in the ruling.

Flo & Eddie, a company that represents two members of The Turtles, had claimed that even though there is no federal copyright in sound recordings for pre-1972 songs, they are entitled to payments because their songs are protected by state copyrights and common law. The band members sued Sirius XM in 2013, and lawsuits against streaming services like Pandora followed. The major record labels also got involved, essentially copying The Turtles' strategy, by suing Sirius as well as Pandora.

The RIAA lawsuit against Sirius was settled for $210 million, and the labels' case against Pandora was settled for $90 million. The Turtles settled a lawsuit against Sirius just before trial last year.
...


Decision:
https://law.justia.com/cases/florida/supreme-court/2017/sc16-1161.html
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