Source · Select Committees · Culture, Media and Sport Committee
Second Report - Economics of music streaming
Culture, Media and Sport Committee
HC 50
Published 15 July 2021
Recommendations
2
Para 46
We urge Universal and Warner to look again at the issue of unrecouped balances with...
Recommendation
We urge Universal and Warner to look again at the issue of unrecouped balances with a view to enabling more of their legacy artists to receive payments when their music is streamed.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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4
Para 69
The major music companies and independent record labels have consistently asserted that music streaming is...
Recommendation
The major music companies and independent record labels have consistently asserted that music streaming is straightforwardly ‘making available’, and therefore performers should be remunerated as though it was a sale. However, this classification does not consider the complexities of streaming …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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6
Para 77
We recommend that the Government legislate so that performers enjoy the right to equitable remuneration...
Recommendation
We recommend that the Government legislate so that performers enjoy the right to equitable remuneration for streaming income. Amending the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988 so that the making available right does not preclude the right to equitable remuneration, …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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7
Para 88
Despite being an important part in the music creation and music streaming process, song rightsholders...
Recommendation
Despite being an important part in the music creation and music streaming process, song rightsholders are not effectively remunerated for their work. The Government should work with creators and the independent publishing sector to explore ways in which new and …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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8
Para 94
Metadata issues compound the poor terms on which creators are remunerated.
Recommendation
Metadata issues compound the poor terms on which creators are remunerated. Whilst there is a significant challenge, it is not insurmountable. First, the Government must oblige record labels to provide metadata for the underlying song when they license a recording …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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9
The licensing and royalty chains of song rights causes considerable confusion and complexity to the...
Recommendation
The licensing and royalty chains of song rights causes considerable confusion and complexity to the system, and songwriters and composers pay the price. There is no single solution to create more efficient and timely royalty chains but the Government can …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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10
Para 111
There is no doubt that the major music groups currently dominate the music industry, both...
Recommendation
There is no doubt that the major music groups currently dominate the music industry, both in terms of overall market share in recording and (to a lesser extent) in publishing, but also through vertical integration, their acquisition of competing services …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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11
Para 122
The Government must make sure that UK law is not enabling the outcome of market...
Recommendation
The Government must make sure that UK law is not enabling the outcome of market dominance. This means that independent labels must be supported to challenge the majors’ dominance and creators must be empowered to offset the disparity in negotiating …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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12
Para 123
We recommend that the Government concurrently expand creator rights by introducing a right to recapture...
Recommendation
We recommend that the Government concurrently expand creator rights by introducing a right to recapture works and a right to contract adjustment where an artist’s royalties are disproportionately low compared to the success of their music into the Copyright, Designs …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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14
Para 134
As long as the major record labels also dominate the market for song rights through...
Recommendation
As long as the major record labels also dominate the market for song rights through their publishing operations, it is hard to see whether the song will be valued fairly as a result. It is well-evidenced that redressing the disparities …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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16
The Government has repeatedly told us that it will not implement in UK law provisions...
Recommendation
The Government has repeatedly told us that it will not implement in UK law provisions akin to those established by the Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market. We accept that the Directive is not a silver bullet to …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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17
Para 151
Music curators play an important role in the discovery and consumption of digital music and...
Recommendation
Music curators play an important role in the discovery and consumption of digital music and are influential in how creators are remunerated. It is, therefore, unsurprising that music creators are putting more resources into catching the eye of these curators. …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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18
Para 153
Algorithms are fundamental to the operation of streaming services.
Recommendation
Algorithms are fundamental to the operation of streaming services. However, many questions remain about how they influence music consumption and how much oversight exists. The Government should commission research into the impact of streaming services’ algorithms on music consumption, including …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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19
Para 159
The market for streaming services itself is fiercely competitive.
Recommendation
The market for streaming services itself is fiercely competitive. However, there is the potential that companies may leverage other aspects of their business or elsewise use vertical integrations to gain a competitive advantage; indeed, some jurisdictions have considered that this …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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20
Para 160
The Government must ensure that the challenges posed by music streaming to the UK’s prominence...
Recommendation
The Government must ensure that the challenges posed by music streaming to the UK’s prominence regime are duly considered.
Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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23
Para 178
As we have acknowledged, the Government has repeatedly told us that it will not implement...
Recommendation
As we have acknowledged, the Government has repeatedly told us that it will not implement the Directive on Copyright in the Digital Single Market. However, to ensure that music creators and companies prosper in the globally important UK music market, …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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25
As technology continues to evolve, the Government must ensure that copyright law is fit for...
Recommendation
As technology continues to evolve, the Government must ensure that copyright law is fit for purpose and that appropriate mechanisms are in place for rightsholders to enforce their rights. The Intellectual Property Office must not be a passive witness but …
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Department for Culture, Media and Sport
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Conclusions (8)
1
Conclusion
Streaming has undoubtedly helped save the music industry following two decades of digital piracy but it is clear that what has been saved does not work for everyone. The issues ostensibly created by streaming simply reflect more fundamental, structural problems within the recorded music industry. Streaming needs a complete reset. …
3
Conclusion
Para 58
The pitiful returns from music streaming impact the entire creative ecosystem. Successful, critically acclaimed professional performers are seeing meagre returns from the dominant mode of music consumption. Non-featured performers are frozen out altogether, impacting what should be a viable career in its own right, as well as a critical pipeline …
5
Conclusion
The right to equitable remuneration is a simple yet effective solution to the problems caused by poor remuneration from music streaming. It is a right that is already established within UK law and has been applied to streaming elsewhere in the world. A clear solution would therefore be to apply …
13
Conclusion
Para 129
Despite the general consensus that direct licensing between the record industry and streaming services is positive, there are ongoing concerns about the majors’ 106 Economics of music streaming position in negotiation, which allows them to benefit at the expense of independent labels and self-releasing artists, particularly regarding playlisting. This is …
15
Conclusion
Para 139
Artists and their representatives face a systemic lack of transparency from both music companies and the streaming services that license their works. This exacerbates the inequities of creator remuneration by creating information asymmetries and preventing them from undertaking their right to audit. Creators and their representatives have a right to …
21
Conclusion
Para 171
Safe harbour provisions that have been transposed into UK law have profoundly impacted the market for digital music consumption. YouTube’s dominance of the music streaming market shows that the market has tipped. Safe harbour gives services that host user-generated content (UGC) a competitive advantage over other services and undermine the …
22
Conclusion
Para 172
We note that the CMA has developed a pro-competition framework for tech companies with ‘strategic market status’ that dominate digital markets. The CMA should consider exploring designating YouTube’s streaming services as having strategic market status to encourage competition with its products.
24
Conclusion
Para 183
The debate between the predominant pro-rata payment model and alternative methodologies such as user-centric has been compelling. It is positive that new services are inventing new and creative ways to address creators’ and consumers’ concerns about the fairness and transparency of creator remuneration from streaming. We are concerned, however, that …