http://boingboing.net/2013/06/13/lawsui ... ay-is.html
Oh yes, oh yes, this is going to be great this is. It would have been just wicked awesome if Warner Music, the parent company of that Warner/Chappell business, was still owned by TimeWarner. They like suing people over copyright, don't they. Especially old ladies and infants, or so it seems. Whatever.Cory Doctorow on boingboing.net wrote:Lawsuit: "Happy Birthday" is not in copyright, and Warner owes the world hundreds of millions for improperly collected royalties
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A documentary film company working on a movie about "Happy Birthday" has assembled a huge body of evidence showing that the song has been in the public domain since the 1920s, and is suing Warner to get them to return the hundreds of millions they've improperly charged in licensing since. This is gonna be great.
The knock-on lawsuits might still fuck them up, also. So far, they have claimed to have acquired the copyright to Happy Birthday in 1988, then they bought another company that claimed that copyright. Can the current owners of Warner Music, some conglomerate, sue TimeWarner for not doing their due diligence back then or something? Warner Music was a public company for a few recent years, might that protect TimeWarner from any lawsuits? Who knows, but one thing is certain, or so I suspect. That a whole bunch of lawyers can now start boat-shopping until this mess is figured out. Whatever Warner Music's legal department is usually up to, they're probably gonna have to work on this for a while.
A pretty major music label in the shit over copyright. Over not just the copying of copyrighted material, but over their very business model, the holding of copyrights and the collection of fees related to that. And over such a well known and widely used song. This is priceless.