|
|
|
|
|
|
#288052 - 06/05/10 06:35 AM
Re: OS 4.3...
|
Senior Member
Registered: 11/18/01
Posts: 1631
Loc: Ireland
|
Exactly.
It also extends out to styles and song books on keyboards. Keyboard manufactures product styles based on very popular songs and pay no royalties. They then even arrange them into Song Books on the keyboards and give them a name extremely close to the song they are intended to sound like so there are no royalties to pay or any legal issues.
This even extends to actual product lines and the names the keyboards are called. They give them very generic names or model numbers because in the past there have been lawsuits over the names given to keyboards. Not just keyboards either, Apple for example have even sued supermarkets for using an Apple in their logo.
It's all about trademarks and using existing named products to help promote your own. So long as you stay away form that, then there's quite a lot you can do that's legally sound.
As I said above, every keyboard manufacture on the face of the planet samples other keyboards and real world instruments. None of them have to pay any royalties either because they don't use the names of the products they are sampling, or there's a generic name. Silver Flute, Golden Trumpet, 80's Synth, Take Me On, and so on...
A musical instrument, as in a keyboard is a physical object. The sound it produces is it's function and cannot be copyrighted. If it could then Ketron and everyone else would not be allowed to sample the instruments they did to create the sounds their products produce. This is also not something a keyboard manufacture can just change their mind on when it suites them either. They sample their sounds from other instruments to product their products, then they have no right to protect the sound their instrument produces, just as the manufacture they took their sounds from had no rights to protect their sound.
James.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#288055 - 06/05/10 04:19 PM
Re: OS 4.3...
|
Senior Member
Registered: 01/31/06
Posts: 3354
Loc: The World
|
Originally posted by to the genesys: In the example above, how do you think the maker of the Fender Rhodes feels about all the hard work and money they put in to making the instrument in developing that instrument and now some one goes and samples the sound? This is getting ridiculous!! Following that, how about how Stradivarius would feel, or whoever it was that created the first piano, or Adolph Sax...I could go on and on... Soundwaves can be freely sampled. Where DO you think Yamaha, Roland Korg et al, got THEIR rhodes samples?? And you can bet your bottom dollar they paid not one cent to Leo Fender, either before he died or to his descendants. Nor to messrs Sax and Stradivarius. I repeat, a ridiculous argument. What I DO agree with is that if I sold or gave away say, a full sample set CREATED by East West, then THAT is a breach of the licence of use. The samples THEY created. But their source sounds for sampling in the first place are not covered by any copyright. A good analogy I think, could be sidewalk artists...They would own a copyright of whatever they paint on the sidewalk, BUT they have no copyright over either the paints they used, nor the sidewalk itself.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#288058 - 06/06/10 12:06 PM
Re: OS 4.3...
|
Registered: 04/25/05
Posts: 14266
Loc: NW Florida
|
Is this the 'open' community that believes that ALL software should be free, or that ALL music, movies, e-books etc., should be free? You know, the ones that are STEALING it and ruining the industries that produce that content?
This is unbelievable... that none of you can make the differentiation between sampling an ACOUSTIC instrument, one of the most difficult processes in music, and sampling a sample... obviously, one of the easiest. You are getting outraged at the wrong thing. No-one is saying it's any crime to go out and sample a violin, or a piano or even a Rhodes. It's possibly a crime to market those as 'Fender Rhodes' or 'Steinway' without permission from the maker (if he's still in business), but it's a long held accepted practice that sampling acoustic instruments (and out of production synths, too) is legal. But it is NOT clear that you can sample for commercial use the samples contained in a production, current keyboard. The operative word is 'commercial' use, and free distribution. In other words, yes it's perfectly OK for you to sample a T3 for your own use ONLY, but it is illegal to distribute it. Just like a CD, for instance. You can copy it legally for your own use, but you can't sell or share it.
But that some of you can't make the difference between sampling a Stradivarius and sampling an Audya is baffling. It's the difference between writing a song, and someone copying that song... What's even more disturbing is the complete lack of empathy (or guilt!) about your espoused theft of intellectual property. Can't ANYONE put themselves in the position of someone who just spent a fortune making a TOTL soundset for an arranger (you can't buy them at 'Samples-are-Us'!) and someone says it's OK to copy your samples for free and distribute them to EVERYONE..?
Would you be happy if they did that? And if you wouldn't, you've answered your own question...
What amazes me is that James, who makes COMMERCIAL sample sets, isn't jumping in here and trying to clear the issue up. Honestly, what you are saying is, it's OK to STEAL James' work... Just copy his data, don't pay him a penny. Now, what do you think are the chances of him making another high quality set for you to steal? Slim to none...
I am not saying it's wrong to sample a T3. All I am saying is it is illegal to distribute it. As is obvious from your comments, the T2 set for the MS is so bad, it isn't a factor, but can you imagine Yamaha staying silent should anyone do a GOOD job and clone their very expensively produced product to the point of indistinguishability..? The samples that they MADE are theirs. Not yours, unless you buy their product, and then they are for your use only.
It's simple, when you think about it...
BTW, James CHOSE to make his string samples 'open'. But has he made his entire sample library 'open'? The creator of a sample set MUST have the right to say whether they are 'open' or NOT. Or those that create those great commercial sample sets will STOP making them. Does anyone REALLY want that?
[This message has been edited by Diki (edited 06-06-2010).]
_________________________
An arranger is just a tool. What matters is what you build with it..!
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|