It's very likely they are not trolls at all and are 100% right to sue. I admit to taking an instance dislike to them based on how they look in
promo photos.
However, the way they are proceeding isn't conducive to getting the average person onboard with improving copyright protection legislation.
Okay, that cracked me up. The average person has no idea how copyright protection works, doesn't care, let alone cares about improving copyright legislation. You can tell that by looking at all these people on the internet ripping off other artists right and left and calling it "fair use"!
Copyright is a mess IME. Every country has its own rules, a lot of the rules are hard to understand and have very gray areas, and in the US anyway, have been designed by rich people and corporations to serve their interests.
That's why you can have a copyright on something so long that it continues well after your death so that corporations and the estates can continue to make money. Disney, of course, thinks this is completely reasonable but that wasn't the original idea behind copyright which was to protect the original artists during their lifetime.
If they aren't getting paid through the various licensing companies one has to ask why.
Two possibilities: (1) they release their music in a way that it isn't covered or (2) the various licensing people are ripping them off.
I had assumed they were covered by BMI/ASCAP because someone said they were copyright trolls. But maybe they aren't and are going their own way because the music industry sucks.
I still think it’s shady. I think the choice of not listing with ASCAP/BMI is deliberate.
To add to what
@millyskate said:
The music industry is notorious for ripping off artists. If you want to make money, you need to tour and sell merch because you get pennies for your work from publishing companies.
It's also undergoing lots of changes what with streaming services and more people releasing their music outside of record company deals. With all this upheaval, it's hard to know what the best path forward is for a particular artist.
OTOH, I disagree with
@millyskate about skaters licensing their music always. Most of the time, it's covered by the BMI/ASCAP licenses and it's not like skaters are rolling in money. If it's covered, they shouldn't have to pay extra. It's not on them to reform the music industry.
The most I think should change is if you are a skater whose skating will be shown on TV, their home network should check if it's licensed and report back to the skater if it's not. So basically anyone on the GP circuit in the Fall and then anyone who makes Nationals later on.