USA National Law Review Article: Tik Tok & Music

Here’s teh introduction to their piece…

Copyright Owners’ Love/Hate Relationship With TikTok and Instagram Raises Legal Issues

While the sirens sounding security concerns about TikTok reach fever pitch, the purveyor of 15-second viral videos desperately seeks to silence a distress signal from another detractor:  the music industry.  Meanwhile photographers publicizing their work on Instagram battle unlicensed embedding of their images by websites like Mashable and Newsweek.  What’s happening?  For those whose livelihood depends on copyrighted works, social media sites like TikTok and Instagram present a quandary.  These platforms can launch an artist’s work onto the world stage.  But they can also facilitate and accelerate the copyright infringement of that same work.  Thus a love/hate relationship has arisen between artists and social media platforms.  And as with many love/hate relationships, the simmering attendant legal issues promise to be hotly contested and perhaps lead to some developments in copyright law.

TikTok and the Music Industry

TikTok, the multi-billion dollar platform first founded in China in 2012 and launched worldwide in 2018, allows users to create and upload 15 second videoclips ranging from lip syncs to dance routines.  Songs used in TikTok videos have taken over the charts.  The problem?  The majority of TikTok clips include music—much of it unlicensed music.  Consequently, the music industry around the world has been trying to negotiate agreements with TikTok and its parent company, Beijing-based Bytedance.

Last October, the National Music Publishers Association (“NMPA”) joined those calling for an investigation of TikTok over security concerns and asked that copyright theft be included in the scope of the examination.  In April 2020, NMPA’s chief executive, David Israelite, reportedly told the Financial Times a lawsuit was likely, estimating that 50 percent of the music publishing market was unlicensed with TikTok.

But in July, NMPA signed an agreement with TikTok.  The NMPA agreement gives members the ability to opt-in to a licensing framework and is retroactive as of May 1, 2020.  That offers TikTok some relief from the looming legal storm, but the platform remains in contested negotiations with ICE, a joint venture representing music rights in the US, Germany and Sweden.

Meanwhile, TikTok users grant TikTok a very generous license.  Although the user retains ownership of the copyright in the user’s created work, a user in the US grants TikTok:

Read the full article at.  https://www.natlawreview.com/article/copyright-owners-lovehate-relationship-tiktok-and-instagram-raises-legal-issues