Make a Deal with Music Licensing Companies
Have you considered making a deal with music licensing companies (BMI, ASCAP, etc) to allow streamers permission to use their catalogs if we opt to pay them (or you?) a small monthly fee for this right/service?

-
jennykim5 commented
is it true that copyright DMCA strike remove automatically after 90 days i have research about this from https://www.mt-spot.com/ forum.
-
leapnlizards commented
How can I provide my ASCAP, BMI and other licenses to my twitch account for my streams?
-
DapperPaperBag commented
Honestly, most companies own Spotify. They could easily just set up a deal with Spotify and offer a "streamer subscription" of which we pay $5 per month for usage of music. Most Licensing and record companies now own a part of Spotify now.
-
AlexKakoMusic commented
I can't understand why Twitch doesn't have the right licenses... It can fix all the problems about copyright and allow Twitch to promote again the whole music category, make easier collabs with companies, labels, bigger artists and attract more people there. Am I the only one who see the huge potential of the music category? Random people just don't know they can listen to good quality music on Twitch like the legends David Morales and Roger Sanchez. They think first about YouTube or Spotify or so.
Also, MixCloud have them, the monthly subscription is around $15 to be allow to stream without tools to properly monetize the channel... Even with a decent (small) audience a streamer gives to Twitch much more than $15, it's only some subs and bits. Despite this, if you ask to me, I would pay a small monhtly fee to be allow to play copyright music (I'm a DJ).
-
stevedantew commented
Can any company provide that type of Licensing service. I also need for my company. I've Tron Node Crypto type website. I mostly use music. But some companies send copyright too. Now i want to switch to Twitch but i hear there is also issue of copyright. Right now i want to make a deal with https://cryptonodes.io/ but i don't know they are good or not.
-
jennykim5 commented
how much the license will cost and will it be supportive for all content or it will be applicable for specific content because i usually did'nt use like this music most always prefer to use my own assets because i have my own collection https://generatorlead.net/.
-
KisaiTenshi commented
I think we should just split the difference.
Create a "Radio/Podcast/DJ/Karaoke" category. Any music played here is subject to licensing, and every track name played (eg a set list) must be sent to Twitch. If a streamer has a license from a rights agency, they will not get muted. The music will still be muted in the VOD (since that requires different rights), but any DMCA's will be sent directly to the streamer who claims to have a licence.
For all video games, link to the game's streaming guidelines if known. If a company (eg Microsoft, Square-Enix) has guidelines, then treat this as a license to stream the entire game. It should not be the streamer's responsibility to know what licensed music is in a game before playing it. No strikes for unknown copyright landmines.
For everything else (eg Just chatting, Reactions to youtube videos) treat music as incidental, "fair use" unless the streamer appears to be operating a jukebox outside the DJ/Radio station category.
-
OeHazel commented
Yes and no, I agree they should create a different avenue for DJs. Like many other DJs I am already paying for 3 different record pools & several streaming sites I don’t want to add on to that. What would be ideal is that they allow us license to only play a certain amount of time on one track (i.e being restricted to play only 1:30 of each track) and keep everything else as is. Then that would help DJs avoid being muted/copyright strike.
-
DuncansGameChest commented
I'd also like to see something worked out in regards to this. Perhaps similar to Twitch Prime, you could offer a service that could cover a broad range of licensing costs? Maybe different tiers, depending on what a particular streamer might be interested in being able to stream. A drop down menu could come up with a list of games that a particular tier covers the licensing for. Sure, we would have to pay extra to stream these games, but it would be a nice option to have.
-
abuelitovip commented
I would like services such as audiio.com that grants lifetime licenses for their music to be linked and for these licenses to be verified by twitch before penalizing the streamer.
-
the_voidcrew commented
In a way the Amazon app is like that for twitch, but the problem is HOW MUCH is available to us on Amazon? I mean, <_< i'd be OK with it so i could do a once a week radio stream for the radio I volunteer for..
I do'nt wanna listen to the stuff while gaming.. that's all sortos nightmares.
Most of the time i play my own stuff and if the DMCA filter trips on that i cry to my distributor lol -
Pteraspidomorphi commented
Spotify is unlikely to be licensed for this type of use. Only organizations directly representing the rightsholders can grant such a license. Having Spotify in the loop would only increase the cost to the end user, unless Spotify themselves arrange for such a license independently from Twitch (which would be interesting, but then there's no reason to ask Twitch for it).
-
DigitalFiz commented
Maybe even work a deal with Spotify to have some kind of "streamer" plan thats a bit more than a normal plan and those plays pay the artist/spotify more per play type deal.
-
Seekaplayer commented
I have 0 issues with paying a monthly fee to play copyrighted music. I'm sure there is a way to track what songs we play so the artists/labels can get their money. I'm not sure if you could work with Spotify on some sort of integration? I assume it would be like the Amazon music Extention so you log in with your Spotify account and as you stream it tracks what songs you play and then the artist/label will get paid.
-
Wintyer2 commented
All they need to do is make it so the music is a separate audio portion of the stream and you need to login to a music streaming service that you pay for to hear the music the streamer is listening too. Simular to movie watch parties
-
SpicyAesthetics commented
Since Amazon, the owner of Twitch is wealthy, why not use said wealth on buying licenses to use music on stream and on VODs as well.
-
grubbshub commented
I contacted BMI about purchasing licensing and they responded "Thank you for reaching out to BMI. BMI currently has license agreements in place with Facebook/Instagram, YouTube, and Twitch for the public performance of BMI's repertoire on their respective platforms. Currently, there is no need for you to obtain a separate BMI License.
In order to use sound recordings and/or music in conjunction with visual images (i.e. film, video, DVD’s, slide presentations, etc.), you may need to acquire permission from the applicable music publishers and record labels for additional rights including synchronization rights. For your convenience, publisher contact information for songs in the BMI Repertoire is available on our website. Please contact the publishers directly for these rights. Unfortunately, I cannot advise you beyond the scope of a BMI license.
Thank you"
I don't know if it is purposefully vague but it SOUNDS like we're good as long as it isn't recorded?
-
GeorgeHopkins commented
One issue with DMCA/Copyright strikes is that many people don't understand how to legally acquire music rights for streaming - I propose that this process is streamlined such that users can buy or use certain music easily for their stream, track how long they're allowed to/terms of the agreement, and have access to the limited use of those tracks.
-
Clownspaz commented
I have permission from a record label to use the music they produce who do i get in contact with?
-
XORCIST_official commented
Actually... Twitch... What are you doing? You HAVE AN ASCAP LICENSE! I checked. Legally, we, the users, are allowed to LIVESTREAM DJ/VJ sets as well as have music on in the background with the caveat that after the stream, we can not save or archive the VOD file. That's it. So why is this an issue here?
I can only guess you're somehow obtaining a revenue flow from the music industry and you're getting strong-armed? DMCA should not even be an issue here. How do I know? Because I used to run a website with an ASCAP license that's how. The only rule was you couldn't play certain artists in a row or perhaps a live concert recording of them. So seriously.... what's going on here?
As for MixCloud, yes, that $15 a month most likely is going to what's called a SYNCHONIZATION LICENSE which is what you need to legally archive such recordings.