Showing posts with label Eos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eos. Show all posts

Thursday, 2 January 2014

Copyright Tribunal settles Welsh music dispute

In January 2013, Welsh language music ceased to be played on BBC Radio Cymru when the BBC lost the right to use the music in a row with Eos, the then newly formed collection society set up by the Welsh Music Publishers and Composers Alliance (Y Gynghrair)  to represent Welsh sonqwriters and composers in the broadcast environment.  The WMPCA had said that changes to PRS for Music's distribution policies meant that most Welsh language composers had "lost around 85% on average of their royalties" and Eos attracted 297 composers and 34 publishing companies as new members, who 'opted out' of PRS for Music, transferring the broadcast rights to some 30,000 works into Eos. Eos did reach agreement with S4C - Channel 4 in Wales before the end of December 2012. 

The Welsh music, previously core to the BBC's Welsh services, went off air for just over a month, making it hard for the national broadcaster to meet Welsh language targets – and of course with Welsh music not being played on the radio in Wales, Eos's songwriters and publishers were not getting paid either - and nor were the performers of the songs getting any 'needletime'. By February 2013, the two sides had agreed to a short term solution with Rhodri Talfan Davies, Director of BBC Cymru Wales, saying "I am delighted that Eos has agreed to allow Radio Cymru to play its members' music once again. Indeed the BBC said it had set aside £50,000 to support Eos' legal costs "so that its members' arguments over the commercial value of its broadcasting rights could be properly heard". And so they were - as the case headed to the Copyright Tribunal.

In June and before an interim hearing, the BBC and EOS agreed an interim licence in the BBC's favour, for £10,000 per month. The Tribunal, noting that it had a wide discretion, took into account what would happen if the amount it ordered by way of a provisional fee turned out to be wrong. Since Eos was in financial difficulties, any overpayment might be difficult for the BBC to recover. Bearing this in mind, the balance of justice was best served by maintaining the status quo by ordering an interim licence fee of £10,000 per month. The BBC said that "The parties have widely divergent views on what a reasonable licence fee should be -- the BBC says it should be £100,000 per annum and Eos says it should be £1.5m per annum. We are not in a position to pre-judge the final outcome of this matter and cannot now conclude with any certainty what the final fee may be".

The Tribunal has now reached its final decision and in a 25-page ruling the Copyright Tribunal has settled amount and terms of BBC's licence fee to Eos, under section 125 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1998.  It seems to follow the BBC's thinking - and the Tribunal said that it was clear from earlier case law that although it should take comparators into account, it was for the Tribunal to adapt them to the case, taking account of any special circumstances. It found the BBC's methodology to be logical and helpful in establishing a baseline licence fee of £46,000 per year. This methodology relied on the BBC's earlier licence agreement with the PRS (Performing Right Society Ltd) and MCPS (Mechanical-Copyright Protection Society) for Welsh language music as a comparator and then applied the "audience consumption model" (based on listener hours) to determine an allocation of that fee. The Tribunal concluded that £100,000 per year represented a reasonable licence fee, applying a generous uplift to take account of the sensitivities in the model, the uniqueness of Welsh language music and its relationship with the BBC. It held that the licence should run from 1 February 2013 until 31 December 2015, and the fee should be paid monthly in advance. 

Hard on the heels of the news that the Educational Rights Collective of Canada (ERCC), the non-profit Canadian copyright collective society that administers the Educational Rights Tariff, which collected just $10,000 per annum, had somehow amassed debts of $830,000, the Eos decision does beg the question about the effectiveness of a collection society administering such a (relatively) small sum of money. Surely it could be argued that Welsh songwriters would have been better served, financially at least, by staying within the fold of PRS for Music - as funding a new collection society was never going to be cost effective. That said, the case also shows that whilst there are distinct advantages in having 'monopoly' national collection societies, when [some] members become frustrated with their society, the obvious disadvantage is there is nowhere else to turn, something that that has been troubling competition regulators in the United Kingdom, Europe and elsewhere for some time, and which finally prompted a decision by the General Court in Case T-442/08 CISAC v European Commission where the Court held that ""the structures for collective copyright management in respect of the forms of exploitation covered by the contested decision [of the Commission] originated in the structures used for traditional forms of exploitation, with regard to which the national territorial limitations are not considered by the Commission to constitute an infringement of competition rules".  But a solution to this thorny issue? That is less clear.

BBC v Eos, CT 121/13, 16 December 2013.  http://www.ipo.gov.uk/ct12113-dec13.pdf 

Monday, 10 June 2013

BBC and EOS "widely divergent" on Welsh licence fee

In British Broadcasting Corporation v EOS- Yr Asiantaeth Hawliau Darlledu Cyfyngedig CT121/1 (on which, see Ben's earlier post here) the Copyright Tribunal issued a provisional ruling last month that BBCCymru (BBC Wales) should pay a licence fee to EOC, the licensing body for Welsh language music. This ruling, part of an ongoing dispute between the parties about the terms of the BBC's licence for the EOS repertoire, marks the first time that rule 35 of the Copyright Tribunal Rules has been invoked by a party seeking an interim order to permit it to use the repertoire according to terms set by the Tribunal pending a substantive hearing.

Before the interim hearing, the BBC and EOS had agreed an interim licence in the BBC's favour, for £10,000 per month. The Tribunal, noting that it had a wide discretion, took into account what would happen if the amount it ordered by way of a provisional fee turned out to be wrong. Since EOS was in financial difficulties, any overpayment might be difficult for the BBC to recover. Bearing this in mind, the balance of justice was best served by maintaining the status quo by ordering an interim licence fee of £10,000 per month. A final order is expected before the end of the calendar year.

According to the BBC (here):
""The parties have widely divergent views on what a reasonable licence fee should be -- the BBC says it should be £100,000 per annum and EOS says it should be £1.5m per annum. We are not in a position to pre-judge the final outcome of this matter and cannot now conclude with any certainty what the final fee may be".

Thursday, 7 February 2013

Welsh music dispute heads to Tribunal

Three weeks ago we reported that German song collection society GEMA was taking YouTube to the arbitration board of the German Patent and Trade Mark Office over the alleged use of 1,000 unlicensed music tracks on the internet video platform, and for an independent decision on whether it’s demand for E1.6 million was appropriate. 

Now comes news that the BBC is taking new Welsh language music collection society Eos to the Copyright Tribunal in a row about BBC radio royalties which began back in 2007 when the Welsh songwriters and music publishers were still members of PRS for Music. A three-way discussion between the BBC, PRS and the affected welsh language music creators ensued and continued for a quite few years without resolution, until eventually over 300 Welsh-language creators and rights owners left the PRS and set up their own collecting society, Eos. There remains a ‘significant gap’ between what the musicians and publishers want, and what the BBC is prepared to pay, and currently BBC Welsh language programming is denied the use of the 30,000 songs is Eos’s database – previously core to is Welsh services - making it hard for the national broadcaster to meet Welsh language targets – and of course Welsh music isn’t being played on the radio in Wales, meaning Eos songwriters and publishers are not getting paid. 

Eos claimed they were being short-changed and the group has accused the BBC of conducting "sham" negotiations. The director of BBC Cymru Wales, Rhodri Talfan Davies, says the corporation is not trying to threaten Welsh language musicians in the dispute over royalties and the BBC now wants the Copyright Tribunal to resolve it's row with Eos,  and has even offered to contribute to the group's legal costs to "ensure that Eos is able to put its arguments to the independent copyright tribunal which is the established legal process to resolve commercial disputes of this nature in a fair and binding manner". Its appears the parties are continuing to negotiate. 

Eos chief executive, Dafydd Roberts, said the latest development was "disappointing" saying "We've taken legal advice .... so we'll be considering our position in terms of a Copyright Tribunal. But what's disappointing is that whilst we thought we were negotiating with the BBC on various terms, in fact all they were doing was preparing ground for the Copyright Tribunal". Roberts said that Eos will consider allowing BBC Radio Cymru to play its members' music pending any decision. 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-21351113