Once again, I
would like to say a huge thank you to Chris Torrero for sending us this link. The National
Party of New Zealand used the Eminem song LoseYourself as
part of their political campaign.
Eminem’s
publishers, Eight Mile Style LLC, and Martin Affiliated LLC filed proceedings
for copyright infringement in the High Court of Wellington, seeking damages. Under s.29 and s.32 of the Copyright Act 1994 of New Zealand, copyright in Eminem's song would have been infringed if the political party played the song in public without having an adequate
licence agreement.
Joel
Martin, a spokesperson of the publishers, said that nobody had contacted them
to use the song. If they are found liable for copyright infringement, the
National Party risks paying a five-figure sum to Eminem’s publishers.
However, the
National Party argues that they purchased the appropriate rights to use the
music. They bought them from Beatbox (a music supplier based in Australia and
Singapore), through APRA AMCOS. APRA AMCOS is the Australasian
body that acts as local agents for music licensing companies around the world
and is a reputable body.
Chris Hocquard,
a copyright lawyer from Auckland, said that if the National Party were found to
have infringed copyright, they may be able to go back to Beatbox and require
that they contribute to the fine. He explains that there should be an indemnity
clause in the agreement that they have signed with Beatbox. He explained: “Your
standard licensing agreement would have an indemnity clause in it, and a
warranty would say you're entitled to use this music and it doesn't infringe on
anyone else's rights. It doesn't absolve you from responsibility - but it does
mean you can go after the person that caused it.”
Steven Joyce
said that National had done everything in the proper manner and that the legal
action was probably aimed at getting money and free publicity. He also said
that when the publishers contacted them, National stopped using the music in
its adverts.
On another note,
Eminem’s song Lose Yourself was also
used as a set to this mash up video featuring David Cameron and released after the
new parody exceptions in UK Copyright law came into force.
Not to mention the dispute with Audi in 2011. Ems publisher sued Audi over use of 'Lose yourself' in commercial for Avant 6. The case was settled before the courts of Hamburg, Germany.
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