Nashville RecordsTM Secures
Joint Venture to Own Anti-Piracy Technology
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (Business Wire EON/PRWEB ) May 23, 2007 --
Nashville Records, Inc. (Pink Sheets: NSHV)
is proud to announce the signing of ownership of a newly trademarked
anti-piracy system. The technology can be licensed to labels, artists
and movie companies. Industry analysts indicate there has never been
technology that could dent piracy, but with the advent of this technology…that
could change.
John Taylor, a company spokesman says, “If
everyone knew the magnitude of this technology, this would be the
biggest news to ever hit the music & movie industries.”
Industry sources indicate millions of illegal downloads are facilitated
daily and, worst of all, it’s practically
impossible to catch the perpetrators. According to past studies, the
music industry loses 4.5 billion dollars to piracy annually; however,
Internet newsgroups have been widely overlooked. New estimates may be
$40 billion lost to piracy. Conventional encoders cannot filter embedded
signals. This allows the signal to be replicated into legal and illegal
copies.
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The technology will embed a unique serial number into each song
-
If the song is replicated, the serial will be replicated
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The number and purchaser’s identification
will forward to a database repository
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The technology will tag songs, leaving a traceable path to the
purchaser with a patent pending audio-sniffer
-
Serial numbers will embed into all radio promotional media. Therefore,
the technology can find radio piracy violators as well
-
The database scans serials without human intervention. If a piracy
violation occurs, a notification will alert the subscriber, plus law
officials capable of prosecution
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Due to complex algorithms, encoding, and multiple random generated
embedding, reverse engineering or “stripping”
a serial will be next to impossible
The Supreme Court ruling in 2005, on Music Copyright Prosecution,
will be a huge benefit to Nashville Records™.
The technology will re-educate buyers concerning user rights, much the
same as a Microsoft EULA:
1. Buyers must understand they don’t “own”
any music. Publishers do.
2. Buyers are given a user license with limited rights.
The technology will be available to any subscriber and will only add
pennies to each song, yet the Company believes the technology could
eventually equate to billions of dollars in revenue.
Legal Notice Regarding Forward-Looking Statements
The statements in this release that relate to the Company's expectations
with regard to the future impact on the Company's results are
forward-looking statements, within the meaning of the Private Securities
Litigation Reform Act of 1995. The statements in this document may also
contain "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of Section 27A
of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934. Since this information may contain statements that involve
risk and uncertainties and are subject to change at any time, the
Company's actual results may differ materially from expected results.
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