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Actually, in the US at least, if you get real technical with the law, you cannot share live sets or anything recorded off the radio.
Why? Because distribution is a form of rebroadcasting, and it doesn't matter if it's free. Most legal lines will say, "Any distribution or rebroadcasting of so-and-so withough expressed written permission is prohibited..."..you hear this a lot at the end of sporting events just so they are clear. Note that they don't have to say these statements, they are considering "Reminder statements" by law...and you using the excuse of you never saw anything that said you couldn't do it in court will not hold up. Just like the FBI Warning screen on DVDs -- those aren't required or anything, the movie studios just add it as a reminder.
You can record for your personal use and your personal use only. No sharing.
It's actually very similar with other mp3 tracks. A lot of people (in the US) believe it's perfectly legal to download mp3s and that it's legal to have them as long as you own the CD (some people don't know how to rip the CDs) under the law that says you are allow to have one backup of any media you own legally. BUT, when you get deep within the laws, you will see that it's only legal if the copy you have is a copy YOU backed it up YOURSELF and did not receive from anyone else. So if you rip an audio-CD to mp3 as a backup, that's perfectly legal. But if you download the mp3s from somewhere even if you own the actual CD, it is an illegal backup.
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Dave Toole - [email protected]
Spundae Productions (San Francisco, Los Angeles, Orange County, Las Vegas)
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