Recording Industry Buys Political Insider

We don’t want to be cynical, we really don’t. But Monday’s announcement by the Recording Industry Association of America that its new leader will be US Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist’s former chief of staff gives us pause at a time when Congress is trying to decide new rules for the digital age and the recording industry is lobbying for laws to keep an old power structure in place. Former RIAA head Hilary Rosen left the job earlier this year. She “had close ties to the Democratic Party, but that turns out to be not so useful now. If we get a new law relating to digital copyright, it will come through Republican-dominated committees.”

Recording Industry Goes After Consumers

“The RIAA, the Washington trade group that represents the world’s biggest record labels, has filed more than 900 subpoenas since June 26 to gather information to file civil lawsuits against hundreds of users of file-sharing programs. Legal experts say this is the first time copyright law has been used to crack down on average consumers. Previously, copyright battles have typically pitted companies against other businesses, or against people who have intentionally tried to make money pirating copyright-protected material.”

Berlin Slashes Away At Its Cultural Support

“Since the 18th century almost every German city has had a subsidised theatre, opera and orchestra. In Berlin the local authority spends up to €200 (£141) on each theatre or concert hall seat every year whether filled or not. But the city can no longer afford it. With debts of nearly €50bn, the city is effectively bankrupt.” So it is slashing its culture budget, laying off arts workers and reigning in expenditures on the city’s arts, to the anguished cries of artists and citizens.