RightsFlow, CD Baby And BookBaby Announce Initiative To Help Independent Artists And Authors Protect Their Copyrights

Posted in News | 08 November 2011 | 0 Comments

RightsFlow’s MySpark Copyright Registration Utility Now Offered To Distributors’ Creative Community

MySpark copyright registration service home page image

November 7, 2011 (New York, NY) RightsFlow, a leading licensing and royalty service provider, has partnered with Audio and Video Labs, Inc., parent company of CD Baby, the leading digital distributor of independent music, and BookBaby, its distribution arm for independent authors, to offer creators and content owners with a simple and secure service to help register their works with the United States Copyright Office.  RightsFlow’s MySpark online copyright registration utility will now be integrated into the commerce pipeline, educational resources and marketing outreach of the CD Baby and Book Baby distribution channels.

“We are excited to expand our partnership with RightsFlow by offering the MySpark service to our artists, bands, authors and writers,” said Tony van Veen, President and CEO of Audio and Video Labs Inc.  “This initiative provides our customers with a very important stream-lined option ensuring that their works are correctly registered with the Copyright Office, and are protected accordingly against copyright infringement, if it should occur.”

Launched by RightsFlow earlier this year, MySpark provides creators and content owners with a simple, safe and secure way to register their work with the U.S.C.O. and includes the following benefits or features:

  • Easy-to-use online forms are in straight-forward plain English, not legalese, reducing the complexity of the process
  • Expert customer service and support through online, social, and direct channels
  • Document preparation and submission
  • Instant MySpark certification upon completion noting that the works have been successfully submitted
  • A low, one-time fee of $85 (inclusive of U.S. Copyright Office fees)

Copyright registration creates a public record of a creator’s work and ownership, securing a certificate of registration with the U.S.C.O. and ultimately providing legal protection and compensation in Federal Court against infringement.  Categories of work  eligible for submission include literary (articles, screenplays, sermons, poems), visual (photography, painting, graphic design, sculpture, architectural), sound recordings (song, album, lyrics, compositions), performing arts (films, television, theatrical productions), web and software (websites, desktop and mobile apps).

“Our commitment is to develop and deliver innovative products and services that empower the creative community,” added Patrick Sullivan, RightsFlow President and CEO.  “This partnership reflects the mutual desire of our two companies to serve artists, musicians and creators, and to help ensure that they have the necessary tools for the recognition and protections due to them in accordance with the law.”

CD Baby is the largest digital distributor of independent music in the world.   Sister eBook distribution arm BookBaby offers self-published authors the highest pay-out rate for eBook distribution in the industry — 100% of their net sales revenue paid weekly.  It also provides ISBNs, file formatting, cover design, and free basic ePUB conversion.

RightsFlow is one of the leading experts in mechanical licensing, simplifying how rights holders get paid.  As new methods of consuming music have emerged the company has quickly become a pioneer in solving the complex issues of copyright compliance with service offerings that are widely being adopted by artists, labels, distributors, and global entertainment businesses.

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RightsFlow President/CEO Patrick Sullivan Quoted In The New York Times

Posted in News | 07 November 2011 | 0 Comments

New York Times logo

Our President/CEO Patrick Sullivan was quoted today in a New York Times article on recent moves by Sirius and others towards direct licensing options.

Business Day
Sirius’s Move to Bypass a Royalty Payment Clearinghouse Causes an Uproar
By BEN SISARIO
Published: November 6, 2011

Sirius’s action reflects a gradual shift in music business, as many companies try to reduce costs by bypassing the standard method of paying for digital streams.

Read Patrick’s quote and the full article on the New York Times website.

In The Hot Seat With Larry LeBlanc: RightsFlow President/CEO Patrick Sullivan

Posted in News | 27 October 2011 | 0 Comments

Industry Profile: Patrick Sullivan
— By Larry LeBlanc (CelebrityAccess MediaWire)

This week In the Hot Seat with Larry LeBlanc: Patrick Sullivan, president, CEO, RightsFlow.

As the physical sales of music continue to spiral downward, and as the number of devices and delivery methods for digital music tracks continues to explode, there are growing opportunities for mechanical rights management businesses.

As well, the on-going emergence of new types of online music outlets, including download stores, on-demand, cloud-based streaming services, video-sharing sites, and Internet radio stations have made the business of licensing music–as well as copyright compliance, and royalty accounting–far more baffling to contend with.

Headquartered in New York, with offices San Francisco and Atlanta, RightsFlow provides such services to over 16,000 clients, including: YouTube, Rhapsody, Clear Channel, Muzak, The Orchard, Tunecore, INgrooves, 7 Digital, Wolfgang’s Vault, Copyright Clearance Center, Christian Copyright Solutions, Guvera, Dada Entertainment/Play.ME, Alliance, Kontor New Media, Beatport, Zebralution, E1 Canada, CD Baby, DiscMakers, Qello, IRIS, REBEAT, and X5 Music Group.

RightsFlow was founded in 2007 by Patrick Sullivan, who previously was VP of licensing, royalties, and music services for both the digital distributor, The Orchard and its sister company eMusic; as well as before that the dir. of research and development at the National Music Publishers Association (NMPA), and its subsidiary, The Harry Fox Agency from 1999 to 2004; and Ben Cockerham; who had been dir. of global operations for the music services division of The Orchard.

Today, RightsFlow, with a staff of 25, is capable of processing licenses for 30 million recordings.

A mechanical license is a license that is needed when someone reproduces and distributes a musical composition that someone else wrote, and some other artist is using in order to sell and distribute on iTunes or on a physical product in a retail store or at a concert or at a show. They need a license in order to pay that songwriter for that use.

The right of mechanical reproduction was added to the U.S. Copyright Act in 1909 in response to the rise of the player piano, which was the first widespread use of recorded music.

RightsFlow oversees publishing royalty accounting on behalf of music licensees instead of rights holders.

RightsFlow can handle every step in the licensing process—from preparing a licensing agreement, and providing data matching and copyright research services to reporting and maintaining publishing ownership information.

RightsFlow serves as an administrator for labels, digital distributors and others with direct licensing agreements with publishers not affiliated with The Harry Fox Agency–a subsidiary of the National Music Publishers’ Assn.—that is the leading provider of mechanical licensing services in the U.S.

RightsFlow also deals with international labels that need comprehensive rights management services in the U.S., including licensing, reporting and royalty accounting.

It also helps some clients with specific matters, such as assisting YouTube in identifying songs uploaded to its video-sharing service or working with Beatport to report music usage to European collection societies.

When labels release music tracks, they do so with the understanding that they have to license the rights to the songs from music publishers, and pay the mechanical royalties on the use of those songs. The U.S. statutory rate is 9.1 cents per song, which applies to digital tracks and to songs that appear on CDs, and in downloads.

When a label sells a digital track through iTunes or a CD through a physical music retailer, it is responsible for securing the licensing rights to the songs and for paying publishers mechanical royalties.

Labels aren’t usually responsible for licensing songs when their recordings are consumed through streaming services or tethered subscription downloads.

In most of these instances, the onus of handling the licensing of compositions falls on the service providers. Many of services have hired companies like The Harry Fox Agency, RightsFlow, Music Reports Inc. and RoyaltyShare to deal with this.

One of the expanding parts of RightsFlow’s business is Limelight, an online mechanical licensing music clearance service which enables anyone to license the mechanical rights to song and sell or stream a cover version of it.

As well, the company recently launched the MySpark online utility which simplifies copyright registration with the U.S. Copyright Office for creators.

Sullivan is a former rock guitarist from the Bronx with a Bachelor of Science degree in jazz studies from the State University of New York. He became fascinated with the world of music publishing while studying for a Masters of Arts, Entertainment Business at New York University.

Today, Sullivan is recognized as leading expert in the field of intellectual property and copyright management for both physical and digital media. Prior to The Orchard, he was a strategic licensing consultant at Selverne, Mandelbam, & Mintz, a New York-based entertainment law firm.

You started RightsFlow in 2007 from your apartment.

I was employee number one for about month. I was by myself and then my partner Ben Cockerham who was at The Orchard resigned. He’s still my partner. We are joined at the hip.

RightsFlow received capitalization funding in 2009.

We got it in August, 2009. We operated the business for roughly 21 months before we were capitalized. We took $1.5 million, and we really grew the business. Our intent is to never take money but, if we have to take it, to take as low (an amount) as possible.

[In Aug. 2009, RightsFlow secured $1.5 million in an initial round of funding from the Bethlehem, Pa. venture capital firm Originate Ventures, which finances investments in new products and services while allowing the principals to remain majority owners.]

What did you need the money for in 2009?

We were looking to invest more in technology, and it was (about) getting to market faster. It was a big payoff for us. You want to look at your technology road map and say, “Do I wait as we grow the business organically and get to market; or do it quicker?” That’s what we decided to do. We still control the majority of the company. They (Originate Ventures) are still our investors. They are only investors, and we really like them.

Many people are confused about what a mechanical right is.

Music is broadcast on TV or broadcast in a bar, that’s what ASCAP, BMI and SESAC do (license). But when you talk about our business, mechanical rights, it gets more confusing. People come back and say, “That’s ASCAP, right?” Of course, it’s different.

RightsFlow has access to information on 30 million recordings?

About 30 million recordings from multiple sources. They are non-unique, which means that we will get 12 million from Rhapsody or two million from The Orchard. They are unique to the client, but tie into about 8 1/2 million compositions that we are getting from all over the world.

How many music publishers do you work with?

I think that the number on a commercial basis is 42,000 that we are paying out. That doesn’t include when we consolidate payments through agents, and their imprints. It’s a combination of the imprints, and the parent company…

(For the full interview, please visit the Celebrity Access site and the article here.)

RHAPSODY AND RIGHTSFLOW EXPAND PARTNERSHIP TO INCLUDE ROYALTY ACCOUNTING AND PAYMENT SUPPORT

Posted in News | 31 August 2011 | 0 Comments

New York, NY, August 31, 2011 RightsFlow, a leading provider of licensing and royalty services, has now expanded its existing bulk licensing relationship with Rhapsody, the leading on-demand music service, to include royalty accounting and payment support.  The new deal involves the execution and fulfillment for royalty accounting and payments to publishers worldwide, and extends the relationship that the two companies entered into in 2010.

Rhapsody’s Senior Director of Music Licensing Adam Parness noted, “We continue to experience substantial growth in engagement, and in turn, are always committed to maximizing the speed by which songwriters and publishers are licensed and paid for the growing consumption of music. RightsFlow provides tremendous flexibility and transparency to us, and in doing so, drives licensing efficiencies and success that allow us to focus on music engagement and discovery.”

Rhapsody offers subscribers unlimited on-demand access to more than 12 million songs, whether they’re listening on an MP3 player or mobile phone (including the iPhone, iPod touch, iPad, and Android-powered handsets) PC, or home audio device.  Rhapsody subscribers can access their music through more touch-points than any other digital music service.  RightsFlow will provide a full range of identification, licensing, reporting and payment support for this broad spectrum of experience.

RightsFlow’s Chief Strategy Officer and CFO Ben Cockerham added, “Rhapsody sets itself apart with its unparalleled understanding of the business issues affecting artists andlicensors, which has served it well in becoming the most popular music service in the United States. We’re thrilled to have such a vibrant, dynamic partner.  They’re creating tremendous value for the music industry, and we’re proud to provide essential operational support for licensing, accounting, and paying songwriters and publishers. “

RightsFlow is one of the leading experts in mechanical licensing, simplifying how rights holders getpaid.  As new methods of consuming music have emerged the company has quickly become a pioneer in solving the complex issues of copyright compliance with service offerings that are widely being adopted by labels, artists andglobal businesses.

# # #

About Rhapsody

www.rhapsody.com

The Rhapsody® digital music service (www.rhapsody.com) gives subscribers unlimited on-demand access to more than 12 million songs. Rhapsody allows subscribers to access their music through more touch-points than any other digital music service, including mobile phones, through Rhapsody applications on the Apple iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad, Android and Blackberry mobile platforms as well as through devices from Vizio, SanDisk, HP, Sonos and Philips. Rhapsody, and the Rhapsody logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Rhapsody International Inc.

Contact for Rhapsody:

Jaimee Steele

Senior Director, Public Relations

+1-206-707-8715

jsteele@rhapsody.com

 

About RightsFlow
www.rightsflow.com

RightsFlow is a leading technology-enabled licensing and royalty service provider for artists, record labels, distributors, and online musiccompanies. Our technology powers rapid song identification and provides an unprecedented level of transparency for both licensees and licensors.  RightsFlow specializes in obtaining bulk physical, DPD, and ringtone licenses including streaming, tethered, and limited download rights. Our proprietary “FLOW” licensing technology and 30-million song database allow us to serve over 16,000 clients obtaining licenses from publishers and songwriters all over the world – including major, independent and artist controlled works.

RightsFlow also powers:

  • Limelight (www.songclearance.com), its online mechanical licensing utility providing the simplest way for musicians, bands, choirs and labels to clear any cover song
  • MySpark Copyright (www.mysparkcopyright.com), the right way to register and protect your intellectual property; simplifying copyright registration for content owners and creators.

Clients include YouTube, Rhapsody, Clear Channel, Muzak, The Orchard, INgrooves, Wolfgang’s Vault, Thumbplay, Guvera, Dada Entertainment/Play.ME, Scattertunes, [PIAS], Alliance, Kontor New Media, Beatport, Zebralution, E1 Canada, CD Baby, Disc Makers, Qello, REBEAT, & X5 Music Group.

RightsFlow is a member of AIM, A2IM, ASCAP, Chorus America, DDEX, DiMA, MEIEA, MENC, NAB, NAMM, and NARM.

RightsFlow is headquartered in NYC and has offices in San Francisco and Atlanta.

Contact for RightsFlow:

Michael Kauffman / SVP of Sales & Marketing

+1-646-461-6397

michael.kauffman@rightsflow.com

 

RightsFlow

Facebook.com/RightsFlow

Twitter.com/RightsFlow

LinkedIn/RightsFlow

Limelight

Facebook.com/coversong

Twitter.com/coversong

MySpark Copyright

Facebook.com/mysparkcopyright

Twitter.com/mysparkHQ

 

LIMELIGHT 2.0: NEW FEATURES MAKE COVER SONG CLEARANCE QUICKER AND EASIER

Posted in News | 29 August 2011 | 0 Comments

RightsFlow’s Online Mechanical Licensing Utility Enhances The Customer Experience With A New Design And New Features

August 29, 2011 (NEW YORK, NY) RightsFlow, the leading licensing and royalty service provider, today launched a new suite of updates and features for Limelight (www.songclearance.com), its online mechanical licensing utility. Musicians, bands, labels, choirs, and allother musical groups will now experience additional important time-saving efficiencies and enhancements on the website: Read the rest of this entry »

RIGHTSFLOW AND JINGLE PUNKS PRESENTING AT NOTEWORKING EVENT FOR MUSIC INDUSTRY PROFESSIONALS AND MUSICIANS

Posted in Engagements | 27 July 2011 | 0 Comments

July 26th, 2011 (New York, NY) – NoteWorking announced its next meet-up will take place at Premier Studios on July 27th and feature representatives from music licensing firms RightsFlow and Jingle Punks.

Read the rest of this entry »

SCHOOL OF ROCK TEAMS UP WITH RONALD McDONALD HOUSE, RIGHTSFLOW SPONSORS

Posted in News | 21 July 2011 | 0 Comments

New York, NY (July 21, 2011): RightsFlow is a proud sponsor of the School of Rock’s “ROCK THE HOUSE” summer tour, which kicked off on July 9th in San Diego, CA and runs until August 2nd in Cleveland, OH.  The tour, which features the talents of the School of Rock’s “All Stars” – a top tier talent group from the school’s national music program – is driven by a purpose “to inspire kids to rock on stage and life.”  All net proceeds from the 22-city benefit tour will go to Ronald McDonald House Charities.

Read the rest of this entry »

RIGHTSFLOW’S BEN COCKERHAM FEATURED IN ‘THE NEXT WEB’

Posted in News | 21 July 2011 | 0 Comments

(NEW YORK, NY / JULY 21, 2011): RightsFlow’s Chief Strategy Officer Ben Cockerham was recently featured in an article from The Next Web regarding licensing issues in the face of online media innovation.  The full article is available here.  A few choice excerpts:


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As Ben Cockerham, Chief Strategy Office and CFO at New York-based royalty and licensing service provider RightsFlow says, “To be sure, the existing web of overlapping rights infrastructure and pre-existing vested interests have not made life easy to experiment with new models of music consumption. But it’s important to also remember that there are real legitimate concerns about how the monetization of music will evolve, and the copyright community is constantly balancing the need to get new revenue streams with the risk of massively devaluing their assets.”

***

Ben Cockerham is upbeat about the future. “The world is getting smaller every day. It might not look like it from an outsider’s perspective, but both the copyright community and those developing businesses around music monetization are actively working towards the same goal of integrated, seamless licensing. ”

“What’s missing in the current landscape is a centralized infrastructure – a licensing backbone – that both copyright owners and copyright users can lean on to make the flow of rights and royalties more efficient. The result of such a backbone and the resulting economies of scale would make save costs across the board for both sides of the table, and will be absolutely necessary to achieve truly global results.”

# # #

About RightsFlow

www.rightsflow.com

RightsFlow is a leading technology-enabled licensing and royalty service provider for artists, record labels, distributors, and online musiccompanies. Our technology powers rapid song identification and provides an unprecedented level of transparency for both licensees and licensors.  RightsFlow specializes in obtaining bulk physical, DPD, and ringtone licenses including streaming, tethered, and limited download rights. Our proprietary “FLOW” licensing technology and 30-million song database allow us to serve over 16,000 clients obtaining licenses from publishers and songwriters all over the world – including major, independent and artist controlled works.

RightsFlow also powers Limelight (www.songclearance.com), its online mechanical licensing utility providing the simplest way for musicians, bands, choirs and labels to clear any cover song.

Clients include YouTube, Rhapsody, Muzak, The Orchard, INgrooves, Wolfgang’s Vault, Thumbplay, Guvera, Dada Entertainment/Play.ME, Scattertunes, [PIAS],Alliance, Kontor New Media, Zynga, Beatport, Zebralution, E1 Canada, CD Baby, Disc Makers, Qello, REBEAT, & X5 Music Group.

RightsFlow is a member of ASCAP, AIM,A2IM, Chorus America, DDEX, DiMA, MENC, MEIEA, NAB, NAMM, and NARM.

RightsFlow is headquartered in NYC and has offices in San Francisco and Atlanta.

Contact for RightsFlow:

Michael Kauffman / SVP of Sales & Marketing

+1-646-461-6397

michael.kauffman@rightsflow.com

RightsFlow

Facebook.com/RightsFlow

Twitter.com/RightsFlow

LinkedIn/RightsFlow

Limelight

Facebook.com/coversong

Twitter.com/coversong


RIGHTSFLOW LAUNCHES MYSPARK COPYRIGHT, A SIMPLE COPYRIGHT REGISTRATION UTILITY

Posted in News | 06 July 2011 | 0 Comments

(NEW YORK, NY July 06, 2011) RightsFlow, a technology-enabled licensing and royalty service provider, has launched MySpark Copyright, an online copyright registration utility that streamlines the process for content creators and owners to register their works with the United States Copyright Office.  Through an easy-to-use interface and fast, intuitive online forms, MySpark Copyright captures the necessary information about the work, author and owner, in three simple steps, and then prepares and submits all required documentation on behalf of the user. Registration is important to all creators not only for the legal protection and compensation it provides in federal court in the case of copyright infringement but also for creators to establish a permanent record of their creation with the national register.

“We’re excited to introduce MySpark Copyright as a dynamic utility for the copyright registration submission process,” said Gideon Kalischer, Director of Web Products.  “Our focus is on maximizing efficiencies and cost-savings for our community through innovative product offerings.  MySpark Copyright does just that, providing artists, developers, musicians, photographers, and creators of all types with a simple, time-saving, and affordable option to register their intellectual property and protect their work.”

MySpark Copyright is suited for a broad range of created works including literary, performing arts, visual arts, software, and sound recordings.  In addition to a simplified submission process, the service also offers the benefits of a responsive and knowledgeable customer support team coupled with a flat-fee standard pricing structure ($85 per submission, inclusive of the U.S. Copyright Office filing fees) that avoids expensive legal fees or the additional complicated add-ons of other third-party vendors.

MySpark Copyright was developed and is powered by RightsFlow, a licensing and royalty service provider with an expertise in the intellectual property ecosystem.  Based in NYC, with satellite offices in Atlanta and San Francisco, the company supports over 16,000 clients in obtaining bulk and small-use licenses from music publishers and songwriters all over the world including major, independent and artist controlled works.  RightsFlow also powers Limelight, an online mechanical licensing utility providing the simplest way for musicians, bands, choirs and labels to clear any cover song.

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About RightsFlow

www.rightsflow.com

RightsFlow is a leading technology-enabled licensing and royalty service provider for artists, record labels, distributors, and online music companies. Our technology powers rapid song identification and provides an unprecedented level of transparency for both licensees and licensors.  RightsFlow specializes in obtaining bulk physical, DPD, and ringtone licenses including streaming, tethered, and limited download rights. Our proprietary “FLOW” licensing technology and 30-million song database allow us to serve over 16,000 clients obtaining licenses from publishers and songwriters all over the world – including major, independent and artist controlled works.

RightsFlow also powers:

  • Limelight (www.songclearance.com), its online mechanical licensing utility providing the simplest way for musicians, bands, choirs and labels to clear any cover song
  • MySpark Copyright (www.mysparkcopyright.com), the right way to register and protect your intellectual property; simplifying copyright registration for content owners and creators.

Clients include YouTube, Rhapsody, Muzak, The Orchard, INgrooves, Wolfgang’s Vault, Thumbplay, Guvera, Dada Entertainment/Play.ME, Scattertunes, [PIAS], Alliance, Kontor New Media, Beatport, Zebralution, E1 Canada, CD Baby, Disc Makers, Qello, REBEAT, & X5 Music Group.

RightsFlow is a member of AIM, A2IM, ASCAP, Chorus America, DDEX, DiMA, MEIEA, MENC, NAB, NAMM, and NARM.

RightsFlow is headquartered in NYC and has offices in San Francisco and Atlanta.

Contact for RightsFlow:

Michael Kauffman / SVP of Sales & Marketing

+1-646-461-6397

michael.kauffman@rightsflow.com

RightsFlow

Facebook.com/RightsFlow

Twitter.com/RightsFlow

LinkedIn/RightsFlow

Limelight

Facebook.com/coversong

Twitter.com/coversong

MySpark Copyright

Facebook.com/mysparkcopyright

Twitter.com/mysparkHQ

RIGHTSFLOW TAPS LYDLE FOR BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT ROLE, OPENS ATLANTA OFFICE

Posted in News | 27 June 2011 | 0 Comments

(NEW YORK, NY June 27, 2011) RightsFlow, a technology-enabled licensing and royalty service provider, has hired Chris Lydle as Vice-President of Business Development.  Lydle will drive RightsFlow’s efforts to maximize awareness and adoption of the company’s broadening palette of service offerings in key customer verticals including the academic and religious sectors. Read the rest of this entry »