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Clickwrap |
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| A clickwrap agreement (also known as a "clickthrough" agreement or clickwrap license) is a common type of agreement (often used in connection with software licenses)... |
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Copyright Collective |
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| A copyright collective (also known as a copyright collecting agency or collecting society) is a body created by private agreements or by copyright law that collects royalty payments... |
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Licence-Free Software |
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| Licence-free software is software that is copyrighted but which is not accompanied by a software licence... |
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Open-Source License |
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| An open-source license is a copyright license for computer software that makes the source code available under terms that allow for modification and redistribution without having to pay... |
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Shrink Wrap Contracts |
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| Shrink wrap contracts are license agreements or other terms and conditions of a (putatively) contractual nature which can only be read and accepted by the consumer after opening... |
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Copyright Collective
A copyright collective (also known as a copyright collecting agency or collecting society) is a body created by private agreements or by copyright law that collects royalty payments from various individuals and groups for copyright holders. They may have the authority to license works and collect royalties as part of a statutory scheme or by entering into an agreement with the copyright owner to represent the owners interests when dealing with licensees and potential licensees.
Authors of literary or artistic works as well as holders of related rights enjoy exclusive rights to authorise or prohibit the use of their works. In cases where the rights cannot be enforced vis-à-vis individual members of the public or where individual management would not be appropriate, given the number and type of uses involved, right holders are granted a remuneration right instead. These rights are typically managed by collecting societies.
The underlying idea of collective copyright management is widely shared and collecting societies have a key role in all developed countries. Because of historical, legal, economic and cultural diversity among countries, regulation of collecting societies and the markets where they act vary from one country to another. In Europe collecting societies require their members to transfer them exclusive administration rights of all of their works. United States and Canada have less restricting rules as members maintain their rights simultaneously with collecting societies.
Societies tasks
Collecting societies are effectively an organization handling the outsourced function of right management. Right owners transfer to collecting society rights to: 1) sell non-exclusive licenses; 2) collect royalties 3) distribute collected royalties 4) enter into reciprocal arrangements with other collecting societies 5) enforce their rights. Collecting societies also negotiate license fees for public performance and reproduction and act as lobbying interests groups.
Collecting societies sell blanket licences, which grant the right to perform their catalogue for a period of time. Such a licence might for example provide a broadcaster with a single annual authorisation encompassing thousands of songs owned by thousands of composers, lyricists and publishers. The societies also sell individual licenses for users who reproduce and distribute music. For example, Apple has to send in the download reports for the iTunes Music Store, which are used to determine their royalty payments.
In the U.S. and Canada, when dealing with works that are performed such as music these groups are called performance rights organisations or PROs. Other organizations such as artist rights groups license and collect royalties for the reproduction of paintings of living or recently deceased artists whose work has not yet entered the public domain. There are also collectives that collect royalties for copies from magazines and scholarly journals such as Access copyright in Canada.
External links
Global
- International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers (CISAC)
- International Federation of the Phonogram Industry (IFPI)
- International Federation of Reproduction Rights Organisations (IFRRO)
- Bureau International des Sociétés Gérant les Droits D'Enregistrement et les Reproduction Mecanique (BIEM)
- Christian Copyright Licensing International (CCLI)
Australia
- Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA)
- Australasian Mechanical Copyright Owners Society (AMCOS)
- VISCOPY Australia
- Phonographic Performance Company of Australia (PPCA)
Canada
- Canadian Artists Representation Copyright Collective (CARCC)
- Access - The Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (formerly CanCopy)
- Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers (SOCAN)
- Canadian Musical Reproduction Rights Agency Ltd. (CMRRA)
- Societe quebecoise de gestion collective des droit de reproduction (COPIBEC)
- Societe du droit de reproduction des auteurs, compositeurs et editeurs au Canada (SODRAC)
Finland
- Kopiosto (Copyright organization for authors, publishers and performing artists, collecting fees for photocopying, radio and tv programmes, extended collective licensing agreements and copyright levies)
- Teosto (authors and composers of musical works)
- Gramex (performers and publishers of musical works)
- Kuvasto (arts)
- Tuotos (audiovisual works)
- Sanasto (litteral works)
Germany
- Gesellschaft für musikalische Aufführungs- und mechanische Vervielfältigungsrechte (GEMA) (musical recordings and performances)
- Gesellschaft zur Verwertung von Leistungsschutzrechten (GVL) (performing artists)
- Verwertungsgesellschaft Wort (VG Wort) (texts of all kind)
- Verwertungsgesellschaft Bild-Kunst (VG Bild-Kunst) (pictures, movies and fine arts)
- Verwertungsgesellschaft Musikedition (VG Musikedition) (musical collections, music textbooks for school use, songbooks for church use)
Sweden
United Kingdom
- Authors' Licensing & Collecting Society (ALCS)
- Broadcasting Data Services (BDS)
- British Equity Collecting Society (BECS)
- Copyright Licensing Agency (CLA)
- Design and Artists Copyright Society (DACS)
- Directors' and Producers' Rights Society (DPRS)
- Educational Recording Agency (ERA)
- Mechanical-Copyright Protection Society (MCPS)
- Motion Picture Licensing Company (MPLC)
- Newspaper Licensing Agency (NLA)
- Open University Worldwide (OUW)
- Performing Artists' Media Rights Association (PAMRA)
- Performing Right Society (PRS)
- Phonographic Performance Limited (PPL)
- Publishers' Licensing Society (PLS)
- Video Performance Limited (VPL)
United States
- Artists Rights Society of New York
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