Submissions

Response to Patent Office Innovation Support Strategy
8th September 2006

British Music Rights (see note 1) welcomes the opportunity to comment on the Patent Office Innovation Support Strategy. We are members of the Alliance Against IP Theft, the Digital Content Forum, and the British Copyright Council and support their respective submissions in full.

We believe that Government needs to instil a greater understanding of copyright as the currency of our successful creative economy and the means by which creators are remunerated. This is essential not just for those working in and with the creative sectors but more generally throughout society, in consumer behaviour and in everyday working life. We have highlighted a series of recommendations which we believe would help enable this to transpire, as well as commenting on the proposals contained within the consultation document.

1. Education and Awareness

2. Ensuring businesses understand how best to use IPR

3. Enforcement

4. Additional observations on the Patent Office Innovation Strategy

Annex

British Music Rights info on Young Promoters scheme:

British Music Rights provides a collective voice for composers, songwriters, music publishers and their collecting societies through informed consensus.  We are a leading voice in raising awareness of the value of music to the British economy, culture and society.  Our audiences include policy makers (UK, EU and international), the media and the public.

We are a trusted, professional, progressive and forward looking organisation drawing on a wide variety of sources and collaborating as appropriate with industry, educational and other relevant partners. 

Education

Advances in technology are giving people greater access to music and increased opportunities to be creative with it.  As well as supporting legitimate online music services, we and others in the creative sectors are working to increase copyright awareness and a value for creativity.   In 2004 we launched ‘Respect the Value of Music’ Lesson Plans for KS3 (11-14), with the support of songwriters including David Arnold, Guy Chambers, Feargal Sharkey and Lucie Silvas. 

We are delighted to sponsor this Young Promoters initiative as a practical way of bringing enterprise education and music-making together. We would very much welcome wider availability of this type of project, enabling participants to learn how the creative sectors of the economy work and how copyright can help people to develop viable careers and businesses from their ideas and creativity.

Click here for more information, and to download a free copy of the ‘Respect the Value of Music’ lesson plans.

Notes

1. British Music Rights is the consensus voice of Britain’s composers and songwriters, music publishers and the UK collecting societies. The members of British Music Rights are the British Academy of Composers and Songwriters, the Music Publishers Association (MPA), the Mechanical-Copyright Protection Society (MCPS) and the Performing Right Society (PRS). We represent over 50,000 composers, songwriters, music publishers and their collecting societies.
2. See appendix for more information on the Young Promoters scheme.
3. A British Gas Time survey of small businesses revealed that UK small businesses are potentially wasting time developing new products and ideas - because they don‘t protect them.   The survey found that 79% of respondents did not know how copyright and patent protection works, with 74% operating without any form of intellectual, patent or copyright protection.
4. See the British Music Rights response to the consultation, “The Review of the Copyright Tribunal”, May 2006