Remix Copyright Infringement?
- Willen
- Now in Hi-Def!
- Joined: Sun Jul 10, 2005 1:50 am
- Status: Melancholy
- Location: SOS-Dan HQ
- Infinity Squared
- Mr. Poopy Pants
- Joined: Wed Aug 11, 2004 10:07 pm
- Status: Shutting Down
- Location: Australia
- Contact:
Re: Remix Copyright Infringement?
I quite agree with what you say here KOH...Keeper of Hellfire wrote:He has created that remix, so he holds the copyrights of the remix. If he hasn't the license to do that remix, he can be sued by the copyright holder of the original music and he can be forbidden to use it in any way. But the copyrightholder of the original music can't use that remix in any way without the permission of the remixer.
See, the way I see is that whatever the remix is, Nintendo would still own the "song." However they do not own the "remix." But now you have to define what the remix is.Psygnius wrote:If Nintendo wrote the Mario Bros. Theme Song and copyrighted it, then they hold the rights to all remixes for that song. So JD Harding is not allowed to remix the song without permission from Nintendo.
The remix is the process, the changes, the additions to the song. Those differences are not copyrighted to Nintendo (or whoever owns the song originally). Nintendo can still sue JD Harding, sure, because the original song is still contained within the remix, but as KOH said, they cannot say simply that they also own the remix of JD Harding entirely.
In our case in video making, we have but one avenue for which we can claim ownership. We own the method, the idea, the concept and the editing... we do not own the sources which is where we run into dangerous ground... but we nonetheless have copyright to the editing done. Ideas after all can be copyrighted/patented.
- Keeper of Hellfire
- Joined: Sun Jan 09, 2005 6:13 am
- Location: Germany
And even if JD Harding hasn't the permission to remix the music it isn't necessarly copyright infringement, at least not according to German copyright law. Though I don't know the US law, the differences shouldn't be too large, afaik both are based on the Bern Agreement. The German law says that you don't need the permission of the copyright holder if your work is based loose on a copyrighted work. It has to have a certain distance, and sometimes the idea behind it is enough to keep that distance. Of course this is very vague, a case to case decision.
Not long ago there was a good example for this. The creator of the "Bundesadler" ("Federal Eagle", the German weapon) had sued a caricaturist for using that symbol in a caricatur without his permission. But the judges said despite looking like the original eagle the necessary distance was given by the context.
Something similar may apply if music is used in a remix.
Not long ago there was a good example for this. The creator of the "Bundesadler" ("Federal Eagle", the German weapon) had sued a caricaturist for using that symbol in a caricatur without his permission. But the judges said despite looking like the original eagle the necessary distance was given by the context.
Something similar may apply if music is used in a remix.
- Fluxmeister
- Joined: Wed Feb 07, 2001 8:45 pm
- Location: Seattle, WA
- Contact:
I am starting the JD Harding Project 2006. Anyone else in?
| NHMK Music Video Downloads | Editing like it's 2006. |
- mexicanjunior
- Joined: Wed Jun 27, 2001 11:33 pm
- Status: It's a process...
- Location: Dallas, TX
- Contact:
- Zarxrax
- Joined: Sun Apr 01, 2001 6:37 pm
- Contact:
Hmm... so just take down the local downloads and host this stuff on your own servers... what's he going to do then? :p
Seriously though, I can kinda understand someone not wanting their stuff thrown around without permission or whatever, but I'm sure its probably not even feasable to cut videos out of these projects...
Seriously though, I can kinda understand someone not wanting their stuff thrown around without permission or whatever, but I'm sure its probably not even feasable to cut videos out of these projects...
- Castor Troy
- Ryan Molina, A.C.E
- Joined: Tue Jan 16, 2001 8:45 pm
- Status: Retired from AMVs
- Location: California
- Contact:
- Psygnius
- Joined: Sun Aug 05, 2001 12:57 am
- Contact:
Re: Remix Copyright Infringement?
I said it very poorly in my original statement, sorry about that. I mean Nintendo would own the rights to create all remixes of the song. And no one else, without permission, is allowed to remix the original song from Nintendo. All remixes created without Nintendo's permission are basically illegal. I did not mean that all Mario bros. remixes written by other people are automatically legal property of Nintendo.Infinity Squared wrote:See, the way I see is that whatever the remix is, Nintendo would still own the "song." However they do not own the "remix." But now you have to define what the remix is.Psygnius wrote:If Nintendo wrote the Mario Bros. Theme Song and copyrighted it, then they hold the rights to all remixes for that song. So JD Harding is not allowed to remix the song without permission from Nintendo.
The remix is the process, the changes, the additions to the song. Those differences are not copyrighted to Nintendo (or whoever owns the song originally). Nintendo can still sue JD Harding, sure, because the original song is still contained within the remix, but as KOH said, they cannot say simply that they also own the remix of JD Harding entirely
In reference to this article, EMI sued Brian Burton aka DangerMouse, for remixing Beatle's White Album with Jay-Z's Black Album. EMI won for infringment since EMI own the rights to the creation of remixes involving Beatles songs as well as the original songs. DangerMouse is still the original creator of the remixes though.Willen wrote:http://www.boycott-riaa.com/article/11117
Off Topic: I'd like to add that being sued and fined by EMI was probably one of the best things to happen to DangerMouse. Because due to that lawsuit, the Gorillaz hired him to mix their songs for their album, Demon Days.

