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Net Radio Stations Given 60 Days To Find Cash, Fight Or Die

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A postponement of the deadline by which net radio channels must pay revised artist and label royalties has given many independent and larger online broadcasters a reprieve - for now - as well as more breathing space to launch a legal challenge. After an 18-month review, the Copyright Royalty Board in March ruled to hike royalty rates from the previous $0.00076 per listener per song ($0.0002 for non-commercial stations) to $0.0011 per from this year and make a retrospective increase to $0.0008 for 2006. The payments for the retrospective period were due May 15 and many stations had complained they were likely to be put out of business, but a board ruling issued Tuesday sets that date back to July 15.

SEE ALSO: Webcasters Given Chance To Make Offers On Royalties

AP: “That also started a 30-day clock within which webcasters can file a notice to appeal the decision in federal court, something they have said they plan to do.” Royalties collection agency SoundExchange (pdf): “Having the additional two months will give webcasters more time to make the true-up payments, and should provide greater business flexibility for all concerned parties.”

May 3, 2007 12:40 PM ET

Posted In: Entertainment, Music, Legal, Regulatory, Money

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