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In your case, your views on the potential to rescue the company and
            the degree of financial distress the company is in, will determine which
            of these proceedings are the most appropriate route (if any) to be
            followed. Consider enlisting the help of a legal practitioner to help
            discuss in more detail the pro’s and con’s of these legal options for
            your company.

            Copyright Amendment Bill: Unsound proposals
            in relation to sound recordings

            June 2017                                                           Commercial

            “I am a musician and own a number of my sound recordings
            which I have independently produced and manage. I’m
            troubled by the latest Copyright Amendment Bill which now
            seems to require me to join a collecting society if I want to
            ensure that my sound recordings are played on air by radio
            stations. Is my interpretation of the Bill correct?”

            The latest revised Copyright Amendment Bill was published on 16 May
            2017 (“Copyright Bill”). The Copyright Bill aims to address concerns
            raised in respect of the previous draft Copyright  Amendment Bill
            published in 2015. Although some concerns have been addressed,
            some remaining  issues still  need to  be ironed  out, including the
            broadcasting of sound recordings.

            A  ‘sound  recording’ is  defined  in the  Copyright  Act  98  of  1978
            (“Copyright  Act”) as “any fixation or storage of sounds, or data or
            signals representing sounds, capable of being reproduced…” A sound
            recording  must  be  distinguished  from  the  underlying  musical  work,
            which is independently the subject of copyright. A sound recording
            may be captured and/or stored on record, tape, compact disk or
            digital media.

            Section 9A (the provisions dealing with royalties) of the Copyright
            Bill proposes that a sound recording can only be broadcasted by
            for e.g. a radio station, if the broadcaster obtained prior consent for
            such broadcast. However, the Copyright Bill does not clearly stipulate
            from whom such consent should be obtained, and lists a number of
            options, which seem to also potentially include the copyright user
            (broadcaster), creating a nonsensical loop. What is probably intended
            is a requirement that permission should be obtained from the copyright
            owner, in this case you, for the broadcasting of the sound recording.

            Such an approach does not however take into account the practicalities




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