US based web radio is about to get a massive hit and it will be interesting to watch how it plays out:
The new fees, which will apply until 2010, will charge a flat fee per-song, per-user in addition to a $500 fee for every channel owned by a station. Fees will increase every year until 2010. Radio stations with multiple channels, such as NPR, would be charged thousands of dollars, which they claim will cripple them. Previously, stations paid an annual fee plus 12% of their profits. The fees will start on 15 May 2007 and will be collected retrospectively for 2006. Webcasters will be allowed to calculate retrospective payments by averaging listening hours.My first reaction is to call NCPR and make sure I pay my fair share. That one station is the main source of music in my life now. I rarely by CDs anymore as I have about 400 plus 150 lps and cassettes and 45s and I pretty much never get around to using them as much as I might - though I have to admit the vinyl did spin last Friday night. [Ed.: T-Rex was right - we were born to boogie.] But what of the amateur hobbyists like Darcey's Friday Night Blues and Beer or Steven's Acts of Volition Radio? Sure these are both Canadian but how and when will a fee like this apply? How can I pay it when it does arise.
Don't get me wrong. I think there should be a fee. Sadly, there were plans to have nice and useful hidden fees attached to purchases of media of one sort or another but the hyper-libertarians and whacko self-proclaimed "user rights" advocates got to that idea and gave it the boot - my nickles! my dimes!!! they shouted so that a direct fee structure will be imposed granting people the right to be coat tail on both the artists and the medium that provide the access to the good stuff. So now we are stuck with the wrong end of the pipe holding the bag and a reasonable likelihood that the access to intelligently selected music on the web will dry up.
How should we pay the piper anyway?

Comments
Gorthos - April 17, 2007 9:33 am
This will likely kill my fave online source of musik.. www.live365.com
durn it.
Alan - April 17, 2007 9:40 am
Not so favorite that you would pay to support it, though.
Gorthos - April 17, 2007 9:56 am
Well, if I had high speed at home, I would pay to support it, but only so much. Like you I have a bazillion CDs etc. and also have radio and satellite dish music stations. For the most part I despise all radio except CBC because I cannot stand to listen to 4 crappy songs plus 1.3 forcefed canadian top 40 songs just to hear one I kind of like.. live365 allows me to choose a genre station and skip around as I see fit (without the need for a satellite radio and associated fees). I would pay for live356.
Gorthos - April 17, 2007 9:57 am
Correction: I despise most MUSIC based stations.. I like NPR as well and talk radio stations.
Darcey - April 17, 2007 11:04 am
Interesting interesting...
John of Argghhh! - April 17, 2007 12:35 pm
Heh. My time of service comes to the rescue. Being partially deaf, I gave up on music long ago, that and the fact that what music I do like rarely makes it to the radio.
Oddly enough, I find I don't miss it that much, either.
And what I do like, I get via XM radio.
Alan - April 17, 2007 2:13 pm
Is that why artillery guys all like brass bands?