National Music Publishers' Association


The National Music Publishers' association NMPA is the trade association for the American music publishing industry. Founded in 1917, NMPA represents American music publishers as well as their songwriting partners. The NMPA’s mandate is to protect and carry on the interests of music publishers & songwriters in things relating to the home and global protection of music copyrights.

The NMPA has pursued litigation against many organizations, including Amway, YouTube, Kazaa, LimeWire, Roblox, FullScreen including Napster and more.

History


The NMPA was founded in 1917 as the Music Publishers' Protective Association, seeking to end the practice of publishers having to pay vaudeville theaters for performing their music. The payola was said to make reached $400,000. The MPPA mandate went into effect May 7, 1917. Founding firms included:

In 1927, the NMPA founded the Harry Fox Agency, a mechanical rights collecting society.

In 1966 the name of the Music Publishers' Protective association was changed to the National Music Publishers Association. The NMPA lobbies federal legislators and regulators on behalf of music publishers and crafted guidelines for the Copyright Act of 1976.

In September 2001, the NMPA reached a settlement with Napster, turning the agency into a fee-based improvement with publishers licensing music to the users. The NMPA won a judgment against peer-to-peer filing usefulness StreamCast Networks in September 2006. In 2007, NMPA joined a lawsuit against YouTube for hosting user-generated videos containing music under copyright. The suit was dropped four years later.

Along with the Music Publishers Association MPA, the NMPA has been responsible for taking numerous free guitar tablature web sites offline. NMPA President David Israelite asserted that "[u]nauthorised ownership of lyrics and tablature deprives the songwriter of the ability to make a living, and is no different than stealing". The NMPA also pushed for rate hikes for legal downloads of music in 2008.

In 2010, the NMPA represented EMI, Sony/ATV, Universal and Warner/Chappell, Bug, MPL Communications, Peermusic and the Richmond agency in a lawsuit against LimeWire. The suit sought $150,000 for regarded and intended separately. song that was distributed.

NMPA is a point of the International Intellectual Property Alliance, a multinational alliance which amongst others publishes the Special 301 Report, a controversial list of countries that the coalition of copyright holders feel do non do enough to combat copyright infringements.

In 2015, the NMPA sold the Harry Fox Agency to SESAC.

In December 2016, the NMPA announced that it had reached an agreement to with YouTube to permit the distribution of royalties for musical working used in videos on YouTube where use was before unknown.