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Spotify took down the work of hundreds of comedians, including big names like John Mulaney, Jim Gaffigan, and Kevin Hart, the Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday. Mulaney, Gaffigan, Hart, and other comedians are represented by Spoken Giants, a global rights company thats leading the fight to get radio and digital platforms, such as Spotify, SiriusXM, Pandora, and YouTube, to pay comedians royalty payments on the copyright for their written work. According to the outlet, the streaming giant been in negotiations with Spoken Giants but couldnt reach an [url=https://www.stanley-cups.es]botella stanley[/url] agreement. On Thanksgiving, Spotify infor [url=https://www.stanley-cups.de]stanley cup[/url] med Spoken Giants that would pull all work by comedians represented by the organization until they could come to an understanding. Spoken Giants CEO Jim King, a former executive of music rights company BMI, told Gizmodo in a statement that the company has a clear process for engaging with digital service providers, digital platforms, and radio to discuss compensation for comedy writers. Unfortunately, he said, Spotify removed the [url=https://www.stanleycups.at]stanley becher[/url] work of individual comedians rather than continue negotiations. In music, songwriter royalties are a very basic revenue stream, so this is not an unfamiliar concept and our work is based on established precedents and clear copyright language, King said. With this take-down, individual comedians are now being penalized for collectively requesting the same compensation songwriters receive. King said that Spoken Giants reached out to Spotify after it re Varj Razer Made a Pro Version of Its Wild RGB Face Mask鈥擭ow With Bonus Screaming Feature
dynamic pricing trials on Wednesday after Redditors complained of price gouging. Last week, an anonymous user uploaded an internal memo [url=https://www.stanleycups.pl]stanley kubek[/url] from Village Cinemas describing concession stand increases during busy periods. After images of the memo circulated online, Village Cinemas announced that all pricing trials had been stopped鈥攚eeks before the scheduled end of the test period. Essentially, dynamic pricing raised concession stand prices between 50 cents and a dollar after 5:00pm on Fridays and Saturdays, usually the theaters busiest nights. Redditors lambasted the practice, pointing out that this would only encourage more people to opt for a night-in streaming rather than a visit to a Village theater. In addition to being annoying, Redditors noted theres really nothing dynamic about the new pricing model. As one user wrote, I dont think this is even surge pricing, its just a predetermined uplift in prices and not driven by demand. What if its a quiet night Its a bit cheeky to call this dynamic [url=https://www.cup-stanley.at]stanley cup becher[/url] . Village Cinemas p [url=https://www.cups-stanley-cups.us]stanley cup usa[/url] rovided the following statement to Gizmodo, weirdly doubting the authenticity of the leaked memo while also acknowledging that an earlier dynamic pricing experiment was a failure: Village Cinemas acknowledges that some documents that appear to contain internal pricing information for cinema tickets have been posted on social media and in turn via the press. We are currently investigating the authenticity of these documents. Village Cinemas confirms that we w |
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