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Prince sees purple over YouTube "theft"

By Reuters

Posted on 14 Sep 2007 at 10:10

US pop star Prince plans to sue YouTube and other major websites for unauthorised use of his music in a bid to "reclaim his art on the internet".

The man behind hit songs "Purple Rain", "1999" and "When Doves Cry" claims that YouTube cannot argue it has no control over which videos users posted on its site.

"YouTube ... is clearly able (to) filter porn and paedophile material but appears to choose not to filter out the unauthorised music and film content which is core to its business success," a statement released on his behalf says.

YouTube responded by saying it was working with artists to help them manage their music on the site. "Most content owners understand that we respect copyrights, we work every day to help them manage their content, and we are developing state-of-the-art tools to let them do that even better," claims YouTube chief counsel, Zahavah Levine.

"We have great partnerships with major music labels all over the world that understand the benefit of using YouTube as another way to communicate with their fans."

In addition to YouTube, Prince plans legal action against online auctioneer eBay and Pirate Bay, a site accused by Hollywood and the music industry as being a major source of music and film piracy.

The legal action is the latest bid by the music industry to wrest back control over content in an age where file sharing, mobile phones and video sites make enforcing copyright increasingly difficult.

But it is believed to be rare for an individual artist of Prince's stature to take on popular websites, while some up-and-coming performers actually encourage online file sharing to create a fan base and buzz around a record.

"Prince strongly believes artists as the creators and owners of their music need to reclaim their art," the statement adds.

Sheriff's on the case

British company Web Sheriff has been hired to help coordinate the action. "In the last couple of weeks we have directly removed approximately 2,000 Prince videos from YouTube," says Web Sheriff managing director John Giacobbi.

"The problem is that one can reduce it to zero and then the next day there will be 100 or 500 or whatever. This carries on ad nauseam at Prince's expense," he says.

He said his company had also removed around 300 items from eBay, where whole lines of pirated goods trading on Prince's name had appeared, including clocks, socks, mugs and key rings.

Prince's latest initiative is likely to please record industry executives and music retailers, who have not always seen eye-to-eye with the 49-year-old.

He has referred to the record industry as "the speculation business" and gave away copies of his new album "Planet Earth" for free with a Sunday newspaper.

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