Four principal members of the Canadian Recording Industry Association are the target of a class action suit on behalf of artists whose songs were included on compilation CDs without copyright permission and arrangements to pay royalties. Canadian and international artists—Bruce Springsteen and Beyonce are mentioned by name, as are Sloan!—are all part of a suit demanding $20,000 for each of up to 300,000 infringed-upon songs. That’s $6 billion total. More info from the Toronto Star:
Chet Baker was a leading jazz musician in the 1950s, playing trumpet and providing vocals. Baker died in 1988, yet he is about to add a new claim to fame as the lead plaintiff in possibly the largest copyright infringement case in Canadian history. His estate, which still owns the copyright in more than 50 of his works, is part of a massive class-action lawsuit that has been underway for the past year.
The infringer has effectively already admitted owing at least $50 million and the full claim could exceed $6 billion. If the dollars don’t shock, the target of the lawsuit undoubtedly will: The defendants in the case are Warner Music Canada, Sony BMG Music Canada, EMI Music Canada, and Universal Music Canada, the four primary members of the Canadian Recording Industry Association.
The claims arise from a longstanding practice of the recording industry in Canada, described in the lawsuit as “exploit now, pay later if at all.” It involves the use of works that are often included in compilation CDs (ie. the top dance tracks of 2009) or live recordings. The record labels create, press, distribute and sell the CDs, but do not obtain the necessary copyright licences.





1 E.E. // Dec 9, 2009 at 1:34 pm
Thanks for sharing. wow. the irony is thick for those industry heads that have been whinning yet pilaging.
ErikE
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