YouTube is “embroiled in a very public spat with songwriters and music publishers in Denmark,” according to one music-industry news site. They cite Koda, the group that collects royalties and licensing fees for musicians, as saying that YouTube is now threatening to remove all music written by Danish songwriters:

The cause of this threat is a disagreement between the two parties over the remuneration of songwriters and publishers in the market. YouTube and Koda’s last multi-year licensing deal expired in April. Since then, the two parties have been operating under a temporary license agreement… In a statement to media Friday (July 31), Koda claims YouTube is insisting that — in order to extend its temporary deal in Denmark — Koda must now agree to a near-70% reduction in payments to composers and songwriters.

YouTube has fired back at this claim, suggesting that under its existing temporary deal with Koda (which expired Friday), the body “earned back less than half of the guarantee payments” handed over by the service.
Koda says it “cannot accept” YouTube’s terms, according to the article, adding that Google and YouTube “have now unilaterally decided that Koda’s members cannot have their content shown on YouTube”.
The director of YouTube Music, EMEA counters that “They are asking for substantially more than what we pay our other partners,” according to the article — which also shares this statement from YouTube. “We take copyright law very seriously.”
“As our license expires today and since we have been unable to secure an agreement we will remove identified Koda content from the platform.”

of this story at Slashdot.

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Source:: Slashdot