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Webcasting of Hawaiian music likely to end, thanks to new fees
Maui News ^ | 6/23/2002 | HARRY EAGAR

Posted on 06/24/2002 7:06:20 PM PDT by Vidalia

Webcasting of Hawaiian music likely to end, thanks to new fees By HARRY EAGAR

Staff Writer

KAHULUI — Webcasting of Hawaiian music from Maui is about to end, victim of both a decision on royalty payments announced on Thursday and the fact that advertisers are not yet ready to support it.

That hits both commercial

webcasters, like Pacific Radio Group, and non-commercial enthusiasts like L.D. Reynolds of Hawaiian Jamz.

Pacific Radio Group’s KPOA Hawaiian station has been webcasting, but President Chuck Bergson says it will suspend the online programming in July. Part of the reason is a royalty decision by the Librarian of Congress, but part is KPOA’s lack of “ability to make money” via the Internet.

“I think that it will come,” says Bergson, “but it’s still a little too early.”

Reynolds calls the royalty decision “a disaster.” He will have to suspend on Sept. 2. Librarian of Congress James Billington established Sept. 1 as the effective date for the royalty rates to be set.

“There is no possible way,” Reynolds says, that he could cover the new fees. “I make a couple of hundred dollars a month” from some local sponsors.

The question of how to compensate artists and publishers of music whose performances are provided over the Internet has been controversial from the start — which for webcasting was in 1996. Losers in the contest get to enter bankruptcy court, like Napster.

Reynolds, longtime disc jockey at KMVI and KONI, was among the first to start sending out tunes via the Internet, from his bedroom in Kihei.

At first, there was a recorded program, changed twice a month, and archived, so fans could go back and pull up their favorites.

More recently, Reynolds has been able to provide streaming programming around the clock.

Congress passed the issue of fair compensation to a Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panel in 1998. The panel in February proposed a fee schedule sought by the Recording Industry Association of America and its allies that would have provided relatively high royalties.

Billington on Thursday rejected the panel and said a fee schedule half as big would be fair. The schedule is complicated, but it works out to seven-hundredths of a penny per listener, which is what broadcasters pay.

While smaller than what the recording industry wanted, webcasters, organized as Save Internet Radio, complained that the take would be double their entire revenue.

They claimed that only big players would be able to stand the fees, freezing out the small players. Supposedly, the small webcasters were going to save big radio from its boring, corporate sameness.

Instead, according to Save Internet Radio, webcasting regulations are going to squeeze independent program providers to death.

Reynolds said Friday that he and other webcasters were studying Billington’s report carefully but that the decision had everyone “tied up in knots.”

At Radio and Internet Newsletter, Kurt Hanson, who has been beating the drums for small webcasting fees and small webcasters, noted Friday that the RIAA seemed almost as unhappy with the librarian’s decision as the

webcasters.

Some critics predicted RIAA would sue to get even higher royalties. Webcasters are hoping Congress will intervene on their side.

Reynolds says the mechanics of the royalty scheme are impossible for him, even without the costs.

“They want access records,” which he has no way of providing.

He knows how many hits his site (www.hawaiian-jamz.com) gets, but not who stays to listen to music or for how long.

He was counting “hits” in the hundreds of thousands as of April.

Hawaiian Jamz is not Reynolds’ bread-and-butter. “I can pull the plug and walk away,” he says.

But where does that leave “the 250,000 expatriate Hawaiians who are out there in Las Vegas or Seattle trying to maintain as much of their culture as they can by plugging in? They are going to lose out,” he said.

The way things are going, “it doesn’t look good.”

On the Net:

• Save Internet Radio: http://www.saveinternetradio.org

• Radio and Internet Newsletter: http://www.kurthanson.com.

• Library of Congress: http://www.copyright.gov/carp/-webcasting_rates_final.html


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: fees; hawaiian; internet; music; restrictions
This is another slap against inventive free marketing. No entertainers were harmed in this veritable venture, in fact most offered their services for a simple request...a possible recognition of their musical capabilities beyond the physical borders of the islands.

These folks aren't asses like Metallica's hard core whiners. They would simply like others to enjoy a bit of Hawaiiana. Is that so much to ask?

1 posted on 06/24/2002 7:06:21 PM PDT by Vidalia
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To: Vidalia
I'm sure gonna miss Don Ho singing Tiny Bubbles
2 posted on 06/24/2002 7:07:46 PM PDT by hole_n_one
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To: hole_n_one
You haven't lived until you've listed to Tiny Bubbles while sitting in the bathtub.
3 posted on 06/24/2002 7:08:38 PM PDT by Paul Atreides
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To: Vidalia
I sure like slack key guitar, didn't think to find it on the net.
4 posted on 06/24/2002 7:11:21 PM PDT by tet68
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To: Paul Atreides
You haven't lived until you've listed to Tiny Bubbles while sitting in the bathtub

Insert the Eddie Murphy line where he's sitting in the jacuzzi from the movie Trading Places here.

5 posted on 06/24/2002 7:13:48 PM PDT by hole_n_one
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To: Paul Atreides
OK, follow me here: The performers don't get royalties when the stuff is played on the internet. So it doesn't get played and they don't get royalties.

That's smart, just cut off a potential source of income completely. I mean, people aren't going to buy the stuff off the shelves, especially if they've never heard of it. But if it's on the web, they might run across it by accident.

6 posted on 06/24/2002 7:18:22 PM PDT by AmishDude
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To: Vidalia
Not enough bad stuff can happen to the people in the RIAA.
7 posted on 06/24/2002 7:21:22 PM PDT by Lazamataz
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To: Vidalia
It is a black day for the ukelale -- or however you spell it.
8 posted on 06/24/2002 7:23:02 PM PDT by Tribune7
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To: AmishDude
I can picture it now. A bunch of guys in funny hats, with snazzy whiskers all parked in their buggys along Lancaster Pike singing and dancing to the Hawaiian War Chant. Then one falls in love with a pretty girl wearing a bonnet and the next thing you know they are singing the Hawaiian Wedding Song with a German accent. Just wishful thinking on my part, but I do enjoy Hawaiian music.
9 posted on 06/24/2002 7:30:47 PM PDT by Temple Owl
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To: AmishDude
We're talking Hawaii here. Some of these folks are ass-kikkin. Pacific Blues, comedy, Serious Slide...

But that's not the primary point. It is that any of these guys with servers, from Hawaii to Detroit are going to be TAXED again.

It's about the government taxing every body from womb to tomb.

If ya have any initiative or creative processes, the F*ing government want some of, if not all of it.

If they cannot get money out of someone, regardless of how small, then shut them down.
10 posted on 06/24/2002 7:37:23 PM PDT by Vidalia
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To: Vidalia
Someone straighten me out. Do these fees apply to music not controlled by the riaa? If i webcast music that the riaa has no right to exercise control over, do I owe them anything?

If this is the riaa's music, then its their blasted decision on what to charge, no matter how stupid or self-defeating it is. But is this hawaiian music you guys are mentioning under riaa jurisdiction?

11 posted on 06/24/2002 8:40:57 PM PDT by zeromus
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To: zeromus
As Nash Bridges sez... "Your going down, Bubba"...

You will have to pay a set fee for every 100 listeners, worldwide...

How the hell these Music tax nazis can tell how many listeners your server may have must lie in a netherworld that must only exist in the smallminds of stupidlittleshits in the bureaucracy of government moneygrabbers department #s 6,700,900 to 7,000,000.
Do the Borg math.........

There IS NO other explanation.

This also gives them the Government a legal right to come into your living room, bedroom, whatever, and check out you server...., doesn't it?
12 posted on 06/24/2002 9:28:34 PM PDT by Vidalia
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To: Vidalia
I don't understand. What if i broadcasted music written and performed by my schoolmates? What if me and some friends made some music and broadcasted it? What if I just farted out the most toneless, tuneless, Radiohead-esque noise I could and webcasted it and it became all the rage around the world with millions of listeners? Do I owe the RIAA for people listening to my own music?

Im interested in the hard distinction here, between what they can nail you for and what they can't. Because if I can get nailed for webcasting my buddy's music that the RIAA hasnt gotten its grubby paws within a thousands miles of, then it would be my privilege and honor to be nailed.

13 posted on 06/24/2002 9:41:13 PM PDT by zeromus
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