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An Extraordinary Music-Streaming Scam

5 1
11.09.2024

David Post | 9.11.2024 9:48 AM

Some of you may recall that several months ago the band I play in ("Bad Dog") was embroiled in a rather unpleasant copyright infringement episode (see my earlier blog posting here) in which recordings from an album we had recently released had been copied and distributed to all of the major music-streaming platforms (Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, etc.) without our permission and under new song titles and new (and pretty obviously fictitious) "artist" names.

David Segal of the NY Times picked up the story and published an (excellent) article about it that ran on the front page of the Sunday Times Business Section, which generated a fair bit of buzz in music industry circles.

Shortly after the article came out, I was contacted by someone in the US Attorney's office in NYC, and I was subsequently interviewed for an hour or so by an investigator from that office, to whom I gave as many details as I could about what had happened to us, and to our files. He didn't say—and I didn't ask—what his purpose was in gathering all this information, but I had the impression that they were engaged in some sort of ongoing investigation involving the music-streaming business, and wanted to see if our problem was possibly related somehow to something that they were already looking into.

It turns out there was indeed an ongoing investigation, which has now yielded an indictment, released last week, alleging that Michael Smith, a musician from North Carolina, "orchestrated a scheme to steal millions of dollars of musical royalties by fraudulently inflating music streams on digital streaming platforms such as Amazon Music, Apple Music, Spotify, and YouTube Music."

The DOJ announcement of the unsealing of the indictment is available........

© Reason.com


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