Most-Recent Entries

M.O.R. Episode 3 -- Michael Dryburgh
By: Ben Cannon, Bram Epstein, and Darrin Snider
Sunday, June 6, 2021


M.O.R. Episode 2 -- Ian Thomson
By: Ben Cannon, Bram Epstein, and Darrin Snider
Sunday, May 23, 2021


M.O.R. Episode 1 -- Mark Kelly
By: Ben Cannon, Bram Epstein, and Darrin Snider
Sunday, May 16, 2021


An In-Snide Look: I Think I Could Get Used to this Life Sometimes
By: Darrin Snider
Sunday, June 7, 2020


Getting Down to Earth with mOOnMen
By: Amy Foxworthy
Sunday, February 16, 2020


The Musical Journey of Jethro Easyfields
By: Amy Foxworthy
Tuesday, February 11, 2020


Monday Mixtape: Etwasprog
By: Darrin Snider
Monday, February 10, 2020


Monday Mixtape: Excerpts from the Summer of 2014
By: Darrin Snider
Monday, January 20, 2020


Mix Tape Monday: Mashin' it Up
By: Darrin Snider
Monday, January 13, 2020


Mix Tape Monday: Back to the Gym Workout
By: Darrin Snider
Monday, January 6, 2020

:: Music Webcasting Bill Gains Momentum

By: Electronic Frontier Foundation (editor at eff dot org)
Wednesday, May 16, 2007 1:35:00 PM

  

A Senate companion to the "Internet Radio Equality Act" has now been introduced and could help save music webcasting. Due to a recent ruling by the Copyright Royalty Board, the government-set rates that most Net radio providers pay to license sound recordings will radically increase. This ruling threatens small and non-commercial webcasters as well as commercial services like Pandora, and it could take away the broad diversity of stations that exists online but never has been available through traditional broadcasters. If passed, the "Internet Radio Equality Act" would nullify the royalty ruling and bring some sensible changes to the standards used to set rates in the future. The House version was introduced last month.

This bill's introduction has been driven by the massive grassroots outrage among webcasters and listeners, and you can help keep that momentum going. SaveNetRadio.org is among the many great sites that have helped spearhead this activism -- go there to learn more and take action now:  http://www.savenetradio.org/

Previous Post:
:: Live Recording at the Jazz Kitchen 06/09/07
Next Post:
Show #018: Strange Face

Blog comments powered by Disqus

Gear Up for Summer

Ladies, don't you hate buying generic (unisex) T-shirts? We've got you covered with a line of womens'-fit clothing in a variety of styles and colors. Check Out Our Specials This Week...

Solicitations and Submissions

Solicitations for blog posts can be made by sending and email to "blog -at- indyintune -dot- com" and should follow these guidelines:

  • Local (Indianapolis-based) acts always have priority.
  • Visisting acts playing a bill with one or more local acts are also considered.
  • We generally don't like to repeat content found on other sites. If your request already has a lot of coverage on other sites, it will be considered low-priority unless you can give us an exclusive angle.
  • For obvious reasons, we don't do solicited album reviews, though we do appreciate you letting us know when you have a new release. Consider coming in and talking about the album yourself live on the air or a podcast.
  • All of our staff writers are unpaid enthusiasts. All requests for blog posts are entirely at their descretion.
  • As such, they generally need a lot of lead-time to put something out -- we're talking weeks of lead time, not hours.
  • That said, individual authors have full authority to ignore the following guidelines and write whatever they want ... if you can convince them to.
  • In addition, feel free to write your own post and submit it for posting as a "guest blogger." Those almost always get accepted.
  • Finally, regional or national acts submitting without meeting the above guidelines are generally ignored. We're not trying to be dicks, but if you send us a generic form-letter with your press release, and it doesn't even remotely concern a local artist or event, then you're not part of our core focus.