Licensing Killed The Video Star: Google Shuts Down All Music Clips in the UK

Mon, Mar 9th, 2009

Are you an American Web surfer who's bummed out because you can't see your favorite Madonna videos on YouTube? Then be thankful you don't live in the UK, where Google is taking all music videos down over a licensing dispute.

Google's video site is taking down all "premium" music videos (read: basically everything except stuff you don't want to hear) from its UK outpost, because of a fight with that country's Performing Right Society, which collects royalties for songwriters.

Both sides have issued statements, but the short version is that Google (GOOG) says the songwriters' group wanted too much money for the rights to stream the clips. Meanwhile the songwriters says they're "shocked" that the clips are disappearing because they thought they were still negotiating.

This is basically the same version of the YouTube-Warner Music Group (WMG) fight that broke out late last year. Rights holders think Google is sitting on a pile of money but won't share any of it when it uses their work. And Google is arguing that deals it agreed to in the halcyon days of 2006 don't make any sense anymore, now that the company is more interested in making money than in fending off copyright suits.

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