| May 1, 2002
Many Online Radio sources,
Webcasters, Streamers, or whatever you prefer to call us,
are participating in a "Day of Silence" event on May 1, 2002
to protest the pending Webcasting Royalty Rate that is to go
into effect after May 21, 2002 unless it is changed by the
Copyright Office.
We cannot easily do that with
Music Sojourn, and, quite honestly, do not want to silence
the site for those listeners who have supported us through
Memberships, or making purchases through our
affiliate links.
The important thing to convey
at this point is that we CAN survive this crisis with YOUR
help! Your
Membership to Music Sojourn, at whatever level
you can afford, can allow us to be able to pay the Royalty
bill when it comes due and continue to be here adding new
programs and music long after May 23.
We would hate to eliminate
the Free service, but if these fees are imposed and we can't
convince more of our large number of visitors who have not
become members to join and support us, we may be forced to.
So please consider becoming a
Member at whatever level you can afford.
You can easily join at our entry level for just $26.00 via
PayPal and
do YOUR part to help ensure that we can continue
to be here, even if the worst case Royalty Rate burden is
imposed.
SPECIAL THANKS to
those of you who have contributed directly by check or money
order! We realize that it is not as convenient, but it
provides us with an extra 6 - 16% that we would lose to the
3rd party (Amazon, PayPal) credit card processing costs!
For more information, click here.
---------------
Here's some additional info
from the previous announcements:
These Royalties are on top of
the Thousands of Dollars we already pay for ASCAP, BMI and
SESAC artist performance Royalties.
We just don't get significant income from ads on the website
because running non mainstream programs like Echoes, FM
Odyssey or Celtic Currents just does not bring enough
visitors for the millions of page views required to generate
a few bucks from ads. The only way the site has been
able to meet expenses to date is from the few dedicated
listeners who have chosen to support us by becoming
Members. Unfortunately, the majority of
people who visit to listen to Echoes and the other programs
do not support us directly. Purchases through Amazon
and CDnow help a little, but we would have to have EACH
LISTENER purchase dozens of CDs PER MONTH to support us at a
level that we would need to afford just these royalty fees!
The bottom line for us
is that we may need to raise thousands of dollars just to
pay the RIAA Copyright Royalty for the streaming of Echoes
and the other shows to date, and then start paying an
additional royalty rate of possibly hundreds or more per
month in these fees at the current usage rates. Plus,
we will have to raise even more funds to develop systems to
track the details of song usage required by the new laws.
So, basically, we're going to
have to change things. The most reasonable solution is
to significantly reduce the amount of free content, and make
the remainder of the content available under our
Membership system.
There will still be a lot of
FREE programming on the site via the Live 365 MP3 stereo
streams, already available here (click here), but we also
wonder how long Live365 can survive under these terms.
We do think that we will be
able to survive serving a
Membership base, but ONLY IF we are successful with enrolling
enough new members to allow us to develop the tools and
systems necessary to operate. If not, then we won't
have any alternative but to close up and move on to more
boring jobs somewhere else.
There will be more
information about this posted on the web site in the coming
weeks, and please also check back to this page.
Please click here to support us directly and
become a Member!
SPECIAL THANKS to
those of you who have contributed directly by check or money
order! We realize that it is not as convenient, but it
provides us with an extra 6 - 16% that we would lose to the
3rd party (Amazon, PayPal) credit card processing costs!
For more information, click here.
Scott Ericson |