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#1
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Legal to use this audio?
I recording and editing a small project for a client (narration) that will
require some short musical cues between sections. I have found some appropriate music in Final Cut Pro's Soundtrack Pro loop library. Does anybody know if I can legally use these musical cues in a commercial product? dave |
#2
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Of talk radio and copy rights
Dave Morrison wrote:
I recording and editing a small project for a client (narration) that will require some short musical cues between sections. I have found some appropriate music in Final Cut Pro's Soundtrack Pro loop library. Does anybody know if I can legally use these musical cues in a commercial product? dave Sort of a non sequitur: I don't know about Dave's situation but the subject reminded me of another question: who owns the rights of a broadcast call-in show's dialog? Years ago I did a bunch of call-in stuff as the New Jersey Editorial Minstrel. I recorded the stuff off the air. I'm wondering who has copy rights in such situations? Later... Ron Capik -- |
#3
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Of talk radio and copy rights
"Ron Capik" wrote ...
Sort of a non sequitur: I don't know about Dave's situation but the subject reminded me of another question: who owns the rights of a broadcast call-in show's dialog? Years ago I did a bunch of call-in stuff as the New Jersey Editorial Minstrel. I recorded the stuff off the air. I'm wondering who has copy rights in such situations? Were you just a regular caller from the public, or did you have some sort or arrangement (or even contract?) with the show? If you had any kind of arrangement with the show, and especially if you received any compensation, they could make a good case for owning the rights. But if you were just a regular caller, and especially is the show no longer exists, seems questionable that anyone would dispute your ownership?? Of course real legal advice would come from an attorney whom you were paying for counsel. |
#4
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Of talk radio and copy rights
Looks like I got thread-crapped.
dave "Richard Crowley" wrote in message ... "Ron Capik" wrote ... Sort of a non sequitur: I don't know about Dave's situation but the subject reminded me of another question: who owns the rights of a broadcast call-in show's dialog? Years ago I did a bunch of call-in stuff as the New Jersey Editorial Minstrel. I recorded the stuff off the air. I'm wondering who has copy rights in such situations? Were you just a regular caller from the public, or did you have some sort or arrangement (or even contract?) with the show? If you had any kind of arrangement with the show, and especially if you received any compensation, they could make a good case for owning the rights. But if you were just a regular caller, and especially is the show no longer exists, seems questionable that anyone would dispute your ownership?? Of course real legal advice would come from an attorney whom you were paying for counsel. |
#5
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Of talk radio and copy rights
Dave Morrison wrote:
Looks like I got thread-crapped Topposting and no editing of context leads to lost context - not gonna waste my time putting the resulting mess right and not gonna waste Richards time leaving it in (guy here who uses a speaking newsreader), however you seem to ask about loops that come with some software. The expection would be that you can use them however you see fit free of charge, but what do they say in the license to the software? - it is likely to be specified, software coding may be sloppy occasinally, but not the license coding ... O;-) Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#6
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Of talk radio and copy rights
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#7
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Of talk radio and copy rights
Dave Morrison wrote:
Looks like I got thread-crapped. dave Sorry about that. In hindsight I probably should have added OT to my revised subject line. Later... Ron Capik -- |
#8
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Of talk radio and copy rights
"Dave Morrison" wrote ...
Looks like I got thread-crapped. Not clear why you were asking that question here when you could have read the terms & conditions that came with the software. |
#9
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Of talk radio and copy rights
On Thu, 15 Nov 2007 21:32:09 -0500, Ron Capik wrote
(in article ): Dave Morrison wrote: I recording and editing a small project for a client (narration) that will require some short musical cues between sections. I have found some appropriate music in Final Cut Pro's Soundtrack Pro loop library. Does anybody know if I can legally use these musical cues in a commercial product? dave Sort of a non sequitur: I don't know about Dave's situation but the subject reminded me of another question: who owns the rights of a broadcast call-in show's dialog? Years ago I did a bunch of call-in stuff as the New Jersey Editorial Minstrel. I recorded the stuff off the air. I'm wondering who has copy rights in such situations? Later... Ron Capik -- Were you an employee of anyone during that time? If so, was your minstrel act part of your work? Regards, Ty Ford --Audio Equipment Reviews Audio Production Services Acting and Voiceover Demos http://www.tyford.com Guitar player?:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4RZJ9MptZmU |
#10
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Of talk radio and copy rights
Ty Ford wrote:
...snip.. Sort of a non sequitur: I don't know about Dave's situation but the subject reminded me of another question: who owns the rights of a broadcast call-in show's dialog? Years ago I did a bunch of call-in stuff as the New Jersey Editorial Minstrel. I recorded the stuff off the air. I'm wondering who has copy rights in such situations? Ron Capik Were you an employee of anyone during that time? If so, was your minstrel act part of your work? Regards, Ty Ford My day job was research, the call-in stuff was totally freelance (political parodies) no pay or contract involved. Most were phoned in because they involved current hot topics, a few were mailed in. I was encouraged to call and even developed a bit of a following, and some of the bit even got repeat air play. 'twas part of my 15 minutes of fame. G [Yes, I know parody has lots of legal gray areas that further complicate things.] Later... Ron Capik -- |
#11
Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Legal to use this audio?
Dave Morrison wrote:
I recording and editing a small project for a client (narration) that will require some short musical cues between sections. I have found some appropriate music in Final Cut Pro's Soundtrack Pro loop library. Does anybody know if I can legally use these musical cues in a commercial product? Not sure about Final Cut but I'm pretty sure the Logic Studio license says "yes". -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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