Posted on 02/03/2020 7:52:28 PM PST by nickcarraway
An elementary school in Berkeley has been ordered to pay up for playing a Disney video during a fund-raising event at the school.
It happened in November when the Dads Club of the PTA presented a parents night out fundraiser at Emerson Elementary to support the school.
In its school calendar listing, the club said it was going to play the most-recent version of the Disney animated film, The Lion King.
I think one of the dads owned the movie. He had bought it at Walmart and we just basically threw it on while the kids were playing in the auditorium, said PTA president David Rose.
But last Thursday, five months later, the school got a letter from a company called SWANK Movie Licensing USA. The company enforces Disneys cinematic copyrights and the letter demanded $250 from the school for playing the film without a license.
Copyright law says you cannot display a movie outside of your home to any size audience for entertainment purposes without paying a licensing fee. The dads didnt realize that and now appear to be on the hook for the $250 one-time showing fee.
The event made $800, so if we have to fork over a third of it to Disney, so be it. You know, lesson learned, said Rose.
But Emerson parent and Berkeley City Council member Lori Droste believes there is a larger issue than just Disneys rights. The PTAs fundraisers dont just support frivolous items. They help pay for teachers and vital services at the school.
Here you have a company that makes so much money and we have schools that are struggling so much, Droste said. What I thought about was just the irony of having a multi-billion dollar company essentially ask a school to pay up.
But how did the licensing company find out that the DVD had been played? Did a parent turn them in or is the company scanning the internet and noticed the listing in the school calendar? At this point, no one at the school knows for sure.
The PTA president says the organization will pay the fee and they hope that amount can be recouped through donations.
Uh, no. This is a new movie released in 2019. Thats when it was copyrighted. Havent you ever seen the big blue FBI notices at the beginning of every DVD and Blu-ray Disc? The fine print on the screen explicitly states that what this dad did could have gotten him more than just a $250 retroactive license charge. He could have faced a $10,000 criminal fine, because technically they were making money from the screening.
Steve Jobs negotiated a universal digital music license.
Yeah -they had Napster and other file sharing apps - I think that the making the files available was the biggest “sin”. They never seemed to mention Newsgroups which have so much music available that you could fill up multiple large hard drives with it ...
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