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The Future of Music Coalition and
Washington Area Lawyers for the Arts
present the
Future of Music Policy Summit 2002

• January 7-8, 2002 •
• Gaston Hall, Georgetown University • Washington, DC • 

 

 

It was our goal to bring many of the best and the brightest people working in music and technology to Georgetown University's Gaston Hall in Washington, DC on January 7-8, 2002 to discuss the most critical music/tech issues impacting our community. Some of the most respected and engaging minds in the music/tech community joined us as panelists and audience members. Over the two days the lively debate ranged from the creation of the Musicnet/Pressplay systems, to the SoundExchange negotiations, to the increased activism of big name artists, to the economic challenges facing the major label industry.

Audience members from 2002 Policy Summit
Ben Morgan working the turntables

all Summit photos by Maria Tessa Sciarrino

Conference Archives:

Press Coverage from the conference
List of Participants including panelists, audience members, musicians, and press
Notes, Speeches, how to get CLE materials
Monday's Schedule including photos of panelists
Tuesday's Schedule including photos of panelists
Panelist Bios
Fantastic photos from the event taken by Wired news reporter Declan McCullagh
Online evaluation form for participants to provide feedback about event and make sugggestions for next year

Archived webcasts provided by Multicast Technologies

Main broadcasts will occur February 11, 12, and 13 from 12:00 noon – 6:00 PM Eastern Time.

How it works: It is essentially a live stream during that time period, so when you "tune in" you will see what is being broadcast at that moment.

Technical requirements: The broadcast is multicast and broadband only, which in essence means you need a T1or above and a network that is multicast enabled only. There is a tester link on the site which lets users test if their connection is multicast enabled or not. Many universities and government offices are multicast enabled, along with various ISPs and some corporate environments.

No T1?: Multicast will also make the files available for download in two different formats after the broadcast.

  • MPEG1, which can be played with Windows Media Player, Realplayer, Quicktime5 and many other players.

  • Quicktime 5 progressive download. You'll need to have Quicktime 5 player for Mac or Windows. This file acts like a stream when a user clicks on it, so it will start playing as it is downloading. It will be a bit better quality than the MPEG1.

 

It is our belief that by continuing to organize events such as this one we will help the media, citizens, creators and our elected officials and policy makers have a more sophisticated understanding of the opportunities and effects of these new technologies on the guarding the value of music for musicians, and guarding access to music for citizens.


Keynote Speeches

Over the course of the two days we opened the floor to a handful of the most influential policy makers in the music / technology community:

Representative Rick Boucher
Co-Chair, Congressional Internet Caucus

Representative John Conyers, Jr. [read speech]
Ranking Minority Member,
House Judiciary Committee

CA State Senator Kevin Murray [read speech]
Chair, Select Committee
on the Entertainment Industry

Konrad Hilbers [read speech]
CEO, Napster

2002 Keynote Speaker, Rep. John Conyers

The Panels

One of the best features of last year's conference was its ability to anticipate emerging trends and to build panels that brought forward debates that would soon move from the margins to the center of discussion. We are pleased to present this year's schedule of events, with eleven panels that will focus on the latest developments in copyright law, the digital royalty collection controversy, international issues, antitrust developments, emerging business models, and artist organizations. Click here for the descriptions, participants, and the schedule of events.

Gaston Hall

The Musical Performances

One of the features that makes the FMC conference different is the many musical performances that are organized to occur between panels and at the conclusion of the days' discussions. This year's performers included Danielle Howle, Lester Chambers, Dave Fagin, Last Train Home, Elizabeth Elmore, Shoshana Samole and Andy Goldman, with DJs Ben Morgan and Maria "Jazz Hands" Tessa Sciarrino on the turntables.

 

Lester Chambers at 2002 Policy Summit

 

We would like to thank our 2002 sponsors

 

A Few Words About the 2001 Policy Conference

In January 2001, the FMC hosted its first annual Policy Conference at Georgetown University in Washington, DC, where over 500 musicians, lawyers, artists, academics, and policy-makers came together to debate some of the most contentious issues surrounding digital technology and artists' rights.


The two-day Policy Conference included keynote speeches from Senator Orrin Hatch and Michael Robertson, CEO of MP3.com, as well as over 70 panelists including Leonardo Chiariglione (SDMI), Edward Felten (Princeton University), Hilary Rosen (RIAA), Chuck D. (Public Enemy), Marybeth Peters (Director, US Copyright Office), Jim Griffin (founder of Pho and Cherry Lane Digital), and John Perry Barlow (Founder, Electronic Frontier Foundation).

The Policy Conference garnered positive news stories in some of the nation's most influential media outlets including the Washington Post, New York Times, Chicago Tribune, and National Public Radio, as well as coverage in the music industry press -- Billboard and Spin Magazine -- and online at the Industry Standard, Inside, Wired, and CNET.



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Post-conference
quicklinks

Press Coverage
List of Participants
Notes, Speeches, CLE info
Archived Webcasts
Monday's Schedule
Tuesday's Schedule
Panelist Bios
Online evaluation form


The Many Futures of Music, Maybe One of them Real
By Jon Pareles
New York Times, January 10, 2002

The Scratchy Record Of the Online Music Debate
At Conference on Future, Stuck in the Old Groove
By David Segal
Washington Post, January 10, 2002; Page C01

Bill May Limit Musician Contracts
By Jeff Leeds
LA Times, January 8, 2002

more press coverage...

2002 Panelists
and Speakers

last update: 06/23/2002

Keynote Speakers:

Rep. Rick Boucher (D-VA)
Rep. John Conyers (D-MI)
CA State Senator Kevin Murray
Konrad Hilbers, CEO, Napster


Panelists:

Chris Amenita
VP New Media and Technology, ASCAP

Colleen Andersen
Business Development Manager,
MSN® Music

Dagfinn Bach
Artspages.org

John T. Baker IV
President and CEO, Loudeye

Jon Baumgarten
Attorney, Proskauer Rose LLP

Tim Bierman
Pearl Jam "Ten Club" manager

Eric Boehlert
Salon.com

David Bollier
Co-founder, Public Knowledge

Jose Bowen
Caestecker Chair in Music and
Director of Music Program, Georgetown University


Michael Bracy
Director of Government
Relations, FMC

Paul Brindley
Freelance Journalist/Head of Communications, MPA/MusicAlly

Whitney Broussard
Partner, Selverne Mandelbaum
and Mintz


Jim Burger
Attorney, Dow,
Lohnes & Albertson

David Carson
General Counsel,
US Copyright Office


Ann Chaitovitz
Director of Sound
Recordings, AFTRA


Ted Cohen
VP of New Media
EMI Recorded Music


Richard Conlon
VP Marketing and Business Development, BMI

Manus Cooney
VP Corporate and Public Policy, Napster

Jay Cooper
Partner, Manatt, Phelps
& Phillips


Miles Copeland
Ark21 Records

Mark Cuban
Founder, Broadcast.com

Alan Davidson
Associate Director and Staff Counsel, Center for Democracy and Technology and adjunct professor, Georgetown Center for Communication, Culture and Technology

Ric Dube
Fenway Recordings

Adam Eisgrau

Adjunct Professor,
Communication, Culture and Technology, Georgetown University

Marshall Eubanks
CTO, Multicast Technologies


Edward Felten
Associate Professor of Computer Science,
Princeton University


Dave Fagin
The Rosenbergs

Phil Galdston
Songwriter Member, ASCAP

D. Linda Garcia
Director, Georgetown
University Communication Culture
and Technology Program


Ron Gertz
President, Music Reports

Danny Goldberg
President, Artemis Records

Jim Griffin
CEO, Cherry Lane Digital

Robin Gross
Attorney, Electronic
Frontier Foundation

Greg Hessinger
National Executive Director
AFTRA


Bill Holland
Washington Bureau Chief,
Billboard Magazine


Pam Horovitz
President, NARM

Dick Huey
Consulting VP New Media,
The Beggars Group


Chris Israel
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Technology Policy
U.S. Department of Commerce


Peter Jaszi
Professor, American University,Washington
College of Law


Peter Jenner
Chairman, AURA

Dean Kay
ASCAP

Rick Karr
Cultural Correspondent,
NPR News


Jon Kertzer
Director, Smithsonian
Global Sound


Bruce Lehman
International Intellectual Property Institute

Phil Leigh
Vice President, Raymond James
& Associates

David W. Lightfoot
Dean, Georgetown University
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences


Jessica Litman
Professor, Wayne State University

Ian MacKaye
Dischord Records/Fugazi

Dave Marsh
Journalist and critic

John McCutcheon
folkmusic.com / AFM local 1000

Walter McDonough
General Counsel, FMC

Eben Moglen
Professor of Law, Columbia University

Krist Novoselic
JAMPAC / Nirvana

Sandy Pearlman
VP Media Development,
Multicast Technologies


Marybeth Peters
Registrar, US Copyright Office

Jonathan Potter
Executive Director, DIMA

Ann Powers
Experience Music Project

Amy Ray
Indigo Girls / Daemon Records

Bernice Johnson Reagon
Sweet Honey in the Rock

Toshi Reagon
singer/songwriter

Rob Reid
Founder, Listen.com

Brian Robertson
President, Canadian Recording
Industry Association


Debra Rose
Counsel, House Subcommittee on the Courts, the Internet and Intellectual Property

Hilary Rosen
President and CEO, RIAA

Jay Rosenthal
Recording Artist Coalition

Charles J.Sanders
Senior Vice President of Legal and International Affairs, NMPA

David Sanjek
BMI Archivist and Author

Cary Sherman
Senior Executive Vice President and General Counsel, RIAA

Tom Silverman
CEO, Tommy Boy Records

John Simson
Director of Artist and Label Relations, Sound Exchange

Derek Sivers
CD Baby

Ted Tanner Jr.
Audio-Video Architecture Strategist, Microsoft Corporation

Jonathan Tasini
National Writers Union

Johnny Temple
Girls Against Boys /
Akashic Press


Michael Tiemann
CTO, Red Hat

Vivek Tiwary
Star Polish

Jenny Toomey
Executive Director, FMC

Joe Uehlein
Director, Strategic
Campaigns, AFL-CIO


Brian Austin Whitney
Just Plain Folks

Brian Zisk
Technologies Director, FMC