Friday, August 30, 2013

The Questions

1.) Does my church have to pay if the choir sings "Spirit In The Sky"?
2.) Does Weird Al Yankovic need permission to do his parodies?
3.) What royalties do you have to pay for backing tracks (karaoke versions)?
4.) Is audio on surveillance legal?
5.) Is it legal to audio record doctor visits in a state with a one person consent law when it comes to audio recording? (doesn't apply to Nevada)
6.) My band wants to record "Hotel California" can we?
7.) Is secretly recording to prove harassment illegal?
8.) When does copyright start? Do I have to register the work with the government?

Early off one of the questions I asked him was, my band wants to record “Hotel California” can we? In which Thomas responded, “From what I believe songs are copyrighted for the time the author is alive and a bit after”. “Today, A copyright is valid until 70 years after the death of the works last living author or, in the case of works owned by a corporation, the copyright lasts 95 years from publication or 120 years from creation, whichever is shorter” (p. 507). One question that really started to get him talking is, “Is it legal to audio record visits in a state with a one person consent law when it comes to audio recording”? After talking with him I now know that the Federal Government makes all doctor files private, so in the end you simply cannot record audio when you are at a doctor’s office without their consent. One of the last of the questions really got his attention, “Is secretly recording to prove harassment illegal?” If the person didn't know they were being recorded then you generally can’t use it as evidence in court. He did mention a scenario with sexual harassment and how it might be an exception that would get pushed by the defendant in a law suite.

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