PRS sues Kwik Fit for playing the radio

Music industry gets silly

Written by Iain Thomson

A Scottish branch of car repair shop Kwik Fit has been taken to court by the Performing Rights Society (PRS) for not paying royalties after staff listened to the radio at work.

Lord Emslie, the judge at the Court of Session in Edinburgh, has allowed the case to go ahead, and the PRS is asking for damages of £200,000.

The organisation claims that staff should pay royalties because they take radios into work where other people can hear them.

"If copyright music is being played in public - in shops, restaurants, workplaces or any other business - clearance is needed to do so from the owners of that music," said the PRS in a statement.

"Some 92 per cent of PRS members earn less than £10,000 a year from PRS royalties so the income from unlicensed use is important to them.

"Kwik Fit has been given every opportunity to take out the appropriate licences but has refused. Court action is regrettable but Kwik Fit's actions have left us with no choice."

The PRS filed over 200 complaints that radios were being played audibly. But Kwik Fit responded by saying that it did not allow radios to be used at work.

Lord Emslie said in his ruling: "The key point to note, it was said, was that the findings on each occasion were the same with music audibly 'blaring' from employees' radios in such circumstances that [Kwik Fit's] local and central management could not have failed to be aware of what was going on.

"The allegations are of a widespread and consistent picture emerging over many years whereby routine copyright infringement in the workplace was, or inferentially must have been, known to and 'authorised' or 'permitted' by local and central management."

Tags:

Further reading

YouTube strikes UK music licence deal

Video-sharing site and MCPS-PRS Alliance singing the same tune   More...

Music industry partly settles copyright case

Eight per cent, less VAT, for composers, songwriters and publishers   More...

Web trials music copyright

by Jan Howells   More...

Related articles

US legal case tests GPL's mettle

Is the open source licence a business contract or a copyright notice?   More...

Civil rights activists lay into Intel

Chip giant in hot water over backing of changes to class action law   More...

SCO does not own Unix, judge rules

How the mighty have fallen   More...

Sun threatens NetApp with patent war

Sun promises to donate half of legal bounty to free software foundations   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

25 Jul 2008

7.85 MBPodcast Special: Views from the Valley More...

24 Jul 2008

3.68 MBSpammer jailed, Esquire e-cover, and network passwords More...

23 Jul 2008

2.99 MBSmall time security, official 'spying' requests and a spammer jail break More...

Poll

EUROPEAN E-COMMERCE

EUROPEAN E-COMMERCE

Are you happy making an online purchase from another European country?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

Credit card transaction

Credit card fraud rampant in the UK

Attempted frauds go unreported and ignored, analysts claim   More...

Intel

Intel rolls out new embedded line-up

System-on-a-chip offerings promise footprint and power saving   More...

Advertisement

Network cables

Tech giants collaborate on wireless HD

Another attempt at cable-free transmission in the home   More...

iPhone fever fills AT&T coffers

US provider cashes in on Apple smartphone   More...

Advertisement