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Music The Courts Entertainment

Spotify Launches in India Amidst Legal Battle With Warner (venturebeat.com) 14

Warner Music Group is suing Spotify in India, but that's not stopped the music streaming service from launching in the nation. From a report: Spotify said it sees a big opportunity in India, one of the fastest growing music markets. To court Indian users, the company is deviating from its global playbook. The company said for the first time, Spotify Free -- its free tier -- will enable users to listen to any song on demand -- as opposed to accessing a limited set of playlists in other markets. Spotify Free is available on mobile, tablet, and web. Additionally, its monthly premium tier starts at Rs 119 ($1.67) in India, compared to $9.99 in the U.S., $11.30 in France, and $13.25 in the U.K. The company is also offering a pay-as-you-go option, allowing users to access Spotify Premium for Rs 13 (18 cents) per day and Rs 39 (55 cents) per week. The lower cost -- the cheapest rate Spotify offers in any market -- and an open free tier, underscore a unique challenge that India, the second largest internet market, presents to global companies. Very few people in the nation are willing -- let alone can afford -- to pay for premium services. Now the legal issue: According to Spotify, Warner Music, the world's third largest music group, "revoked a previously agreed-upon publishing license for reasons wholly unrelated to Spotify's launch in India." The Verge adds: Yesterday, Warner sued to stop Spotify's use of its catalog, which Spotify had tried to obtain rights to through a controversial amendment to the Indian copyright act that allows for broadcasters to obtain licenses without the copyright owner's consent. At the heart of this is whether or not Spotify falls under the umbrella of "broadcaster" in India's Copyright Act of 1957. In the act, a "broadcast" is only defined as "communication to the public." Bombay's high court said that Spotify would still be allowed to launch for now, according to Times of India, and it appears Spotify wasted no time in doing just that. It seems that if Spotify chooses to stream Warner's music in the meantime, Spotify will be required to track usage of Warner's music and set aside money to pay royalties while the case continues through the courts. For now, Spotify is live in India, but without the Warner/Chappell Music catalog, which hosts many of the world's biggest artists.
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Spotify Launches in India Amidst Legal Battle With Warner

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  • Just wait til they hear about the pirate bay.
  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Wednesday February 27, 2019 @07:04AM (#58187734) Journal
    The enforcement of copyright and other rights are very weak in India. Bootleg copies are available within 24 hours of release of movies. All songs are almost immediately copied and sold. Very little of the music/movies get any steady revenue after release. Movies have about one week, music none.

    There is no separate music industry in India other than classical Indian music. All other music is part of movies. Almost every movie will have four to five songs. Typical Bollywood numbers. So popular music rights are comingled with movie rights.

    The whole country is so used to getting the music for free, they will never pay for it. The only way to make money is by adding advertisement. Even that is in jeopardy because, there are enough techies who will download, edit out the ads, and "resell" ad-free music at a pittance, and boot leggers will boot leg those copies too!

    Despite all that, the only serious film industry that is able to at least partially withstand the Hollywood onslaught are the Bollywood and its regional variants Kollywood, Mollywood, (wondering what the telugu-wood and kannada-wood are called). Bollywood is making some decent money in China, Japan, and the Middle-East.

    Very interesting, because Government of India neglected Bollywood and never made any official attempt to "promote" it. Same with IT. It never had any Indian Sofware Export Promotion Board, like the Indian Coffee Board. No one ever heard of Indian Coffee. Only these industries, (movies, software, magazines, classical music) duked it out in a free market system, dog-eat-dog competition, winner take all rules. Very important lesson to be learned.

  • How much of that music Warner claims is actually legally theirs? They unlawfully claimed the ownership of happy birthday for over a century. What else are they squatting on and nobody questions just because the history is murky and they are so large?

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