An article written by Associate Professor , "Royalty Secularization," was published in Harvard Law's Journal of Law and Technology digest. The article discusses the intersection of law and technology that copyright and digital performance afford known as royalty securitization. An excerpt of the article is below:聽 聽
鈥淭he commodification of copyright royalties isn't new, but technological advances like streaming have made it newly lucrative. Streaming transforms music from a one-shot asset (such as an album sale) to one with continuing returns. This might seem like a silver lining for artists who have otherwise been negatively affected by streaming to date, but it probably isn't: digital performance royalties鈥攖he royalties paid on streams鈥攁re paid to the owner of the copyright in the sound recording, and that owner is usually not the artist.
Investors today have many options when it comes to how and where to invest their money. These opportunities range from the traditional鈥攕tock market, real estate, government bonds, small business, and derivatives鈥攖o the non-traditional鈥攚ine, race cars, fine art, and agriculture. If one can purchase shares of a pig, why not be able to purchase shares of a rap legend? All it takes is a willing rights holder, a willing investor-fan, and the technology to bring the two together.
As an asset, recorded music earns money through sales (including sync licensing), and through royalties collected on public performance rights. Copyrighted recordings earn royalties in two ways: statutorily (for interactive, digital plays), and through privately negotiated licenses (for everything else). To make matters even more interesting, every song is protected by two distinct copyrights鈥攐ne on the musical composition, and one on the sound recording. It is this latter copyright鈥攁nd specifically, the digital performance right for sound recordings鈥攖hat serves as the impetus for this new intersection of law and technology: royalty securitization.鈥
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Garc铆a鈥檚 research centers on intersections of law, technology, and economics. Particularly, she focuses on efficiency, competition, private ordering, and distributive justice. In addition to teaching trademark, property, and copyright-related courses, Garc铆a serves as director of the content initiative at the . Prior to joining the university, she worked in the music industry in Los Angeles, taking on roles including serving as outside counsel to Napster while working at Quinn Emanuel, leading content licensing at MySpace Music as director of business development, and working with digital strategy as a director at Universal Music Group.