The International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP) has been shut
down after several threats of lawsuits from music publishers.

Started by a student in Canada, IMSLP was a major resource of music
scores of western classical music uploaded by a global community in
PDF form. Music scores are the written version of a piece of music,
as set down by the composer, and are necessary for anyone wanting to
play or study that piece. The paper versions cost anything up to $80,
and therefore represent a significant expense for people such as music
students.

IMSLP collected only scores whose copyright had expired. In the case
of the majority of western classical music this was easy since most of
the works were more than a century old and there were many editions in
existence from before the copyright period.

IMSLP was a perfect "commons" project: it allowed a well-defined
community to jointly build a scarce and expensive resource whose
cultural value had been validated by the centuries and was largely
free of copyright constraint. Music publishers, however, have
continued to bring out new editions of these works whose copyrights
still obtain, and they did not see IMSLP in such a favourable
light. Though the site was fully compliant with local - Canadian -
law, it was shut down on threat of legal action under Austrian law
(whose copyright term is longer), thus posing the question of how
jurisdictions work in such online matters.

Links:

IMSLP site:
"The IMSLP was a repository of more than 15,000 musical scores"
http://imslp.on-wiki.net/

Article by internet law professor Michael Geist:
"This case is enormously important from a public-domain perspective"
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/7074786.stm


TEXT FROM IMSLP GHOST PAGE

Introduction on what happened

The International Music Score Library Project was a repository of
more than 15,000 musical scores that are in the public domain here
in Canada. I was forced to close the site due to circumstance after
receiving lawsuit threats from music publishers that do not want the
public domain to exist.

The immediate threat was from Universal Edition, a publisher in
Austria. Whereas copyright in Canada lasts until 50 years after the
author's death, copyright in Austria lasts 20 years longer. Universal
Edition threatened to sue me, perhaps in Canada or perhaps in Austria,
for violating Austrian law. There is no reason why Austrian law should
apply to this site in Canada, but as a student I did not have the
resources to resist even an absurd threat from a company with money to
pay lawyers to attack music.

I greatly thank Richard M. Stallman for his support in this matter, and
for his offer and help in writing this summary introduction (something
that I had neglected).

Thoughts after the closure of IMSLP

I felt an incredible sadness after this incident. Yet this sadness is
only in part the result of having to close down IMSLP (at least for
the time being). A much deeper sadness is the realization of the fact
that classical music, as journalist Michael Kimmelman aptly put it,
"survives every attempt to save it".

As many musicians I know will attest to, contemporary classical music
is not in a good situation. How many non-musicians know Schoenberg?
Even Mahler?

Despite this dire state of affairs, there are people in the classical
music world who have shown themselves to have absolutely no interest
in the well-being and future of classical music. Instead, they are
insistant upon blindly wringing the last drop of profit from dead
composers. I say "blindly", because I do not even believe their
actions increase profit.

And they attempt to seek justification for their actions in the name
of fairness and morality. They claim they have the right to profit
from the work of dead composers for eternity. What they want is not
limited copyright. They want perpetual copyright. They want to keep
their wallets properly lined with minimum effort. They want to change
laws to make this happen, at the expense of the entire society. Like
vultures, they want to peck the last bit of meat from the skeleton of
dead artists.

What is the purpose of copyright? To stifle creativity by prohibiting
access to art that was created more than a hundred years ago? To
make life easier for certain people, who are usually not the artists
themselves, at the expense of everyone else? I do not believe I need
to explain myself further here.

I here challenge them to give even one logical reason, with proof,
why, for the benefit of the society, works of dead artists should be
protected for more than 50 years worldwide postmortem, a protection
these people are claiming. I challenge them, as an artist myself, to
give one reason why artists should receive such exemplary treatment,
seeing how this is absolutely impossible in any other trade. But I
do not expect an answer, because there is none. There is no logical
justification. It is simply pure greed. And not even greed on the part
of the artists themselves.

My friends, weep with me. Weep for the resistance of the classical
music world to all efforts to save it. Weep for the robbery of culture
by a few people at the expense of the society. Weep for our slow but
steady decent into the darkness that is Nash equilibrium. Weep with
me, my friends.

But do not lose hope. We must continue our unwavering belief in the
accessibility of culture, in the correctness of our actions. We must
continue in this course we embarked upon two years ago, in this fight
for the fundamental right of all humans. Do not lose hope, for all is
not lost.

Response to support

Quoting Michael Geist in his article published by the BBC, "thousands
of music aficionados are rooting for the IMSLP in this dispute". This
is no exaggeration; in the aftermath of the closure of IMSLP, I have
received nearly 1000 e-mails regarding this matter, and every single
e-mail is in support of IMSLP. This is, of course, not counting all
the support that was expressed on the forums, supporters who have
shown their support on other sites, or supporters who have not yet
vocalized their support.

I have received support from not only IMSLP users and music
aficionados, but also notable people in other fields who have much
sympathy for IMSLP's situation, and who have offered help in one
way or another. In addition to the help law teams and professors
in the University of Ottawa, Stanford University and University of
Georgia have offered, I have also received support and understanding
from notable Canadian intellectual property lawyers Dr. Michael
Geist and Mr. Howard Knopf. Many other people have offered non-legal
help, including GNU project founder Richard M. Stallman and Project
Gutenberg founder Michael Hart. This outpouring of support further
enforces my conviction that IMSLP was not wrong.

Unfortunately, I am currently very overloaded with other work, and
so was only able to respond to select e-mails. I will, however, try
to answer the rest of the e-mails and correspondences as soon as
possible. But allow me to say this here: "Thank you".

Current IMSLP status

I am currently in the process of reorganizing IMSLP. Like I said on
the forums, what needs to be done is clear. However, when it will be
done is unfortunately not yet clear at this moment. I will be updating
this page when there are new developments.

If you would like e-mail notification of the modification of any page
on this wiki, simply sign in and click the "Subscribe" link above the
particular page.






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