Promo CD selling - industry lameless
mannybolone
Los Angeles, CA 15,025 Posts
http://www.onthemedia.org/transcripts/2007/09/07/06interesting piece from On the Media about the Universal Music Group trying to stop someone from buying and reselling promo CDs on eBay. Don't believe the "not for sale" sticker. According to the Supreme Court, promo CDs are perfectly legal to resell.
Comments
Universal should spend more time and effort into doing soemthing effective instead of walking down a dead end alley like this.
That's so fucking hilarious though honestly, I can see the logic in that hustle.
Just holler back: "Bobbs-Merrill Company versus Straus...beeeeeyaaaaaaatch."
Hahaha people really did this? Wow.
These conglomerate music corporations are just searching for a way to shut down the used CD market. Sickening, really.
The part I don't get is that shutting it down doesn't make any sense. What does make sense is finding a way to make money off it. I'm surprised there are more labels auctioning off shit that's been sitting around the office. Can't beat 'em, join 'em!
It would seem to me that their reasoning is that if they prevent the sale of such promotional and rare CDs (impossible), which are supposedly in-demand because they have tracks unavailable on commercial versions, they can then release "special" editions with those tracks and make a buck off it. That's the only reasoning (irrational as it is) that I could come up with.
What is always so surprising about these "intellectual property" lawsuits is that there seem to be more and more of them every year, even though in the cases I've followed, the big companies and rights holders who sue don't win. It really has the appearance of an uncoordinated organization, where the legal department acts on its own without recognizing that their strategy is failing and giving the larger organization a bad reputation.
not exactly.
if you work at a radio station and the labels are sending you FREE promo cds, the first sale doctrine wouldn't apply because 1) there was never a legitimate first sale, and 2) radio stations are probably gonna have some contractual relationship with the labels regarding promos.
he found at a bay area store
the clerk was speechless
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At the store I used to work at, we covered up the "not for sale" blurb with a sticker that said something like "used CD's are your best bargain" or something like that. There were still a lot of Top 40 fans who were used to buying their discs at Coconuts or some other glitzy chain, and these folks weren't quite hip to the concept of used CD's.
Suicidal Tendencies does the same thing to this day.....
no shit? Damn..I hate to hear that about a band I loved as a shorty.
Yeah, the new UNKLE is like that, but it seems to be more for advance copies than promo copies.
Keith,
You didn't read the story. Promos and gifts are considered legitimate first sales under the Supreme Court. UMG will have to argue for an exception to this rule in they want to prevail in their case.
This is NOTHING new and was a procedure established back in the infancy of the music industry. When alot of music stores were jewish owned, they would have product shipped to them directly from bluenote (boxes of reords). I know owners in LA that used to have product dropped off to them direct from Death Row in its heyday as a thank you from Suge.
The only way universal can stop it in reality is by going comletely digital, but then they pretty much lose all of their retail sales, fake or legitimate.