![]() ![]() ![]() Following a boom in livestreaming that year, by late 2020, PRS for Music proposed a tariff of between 8% and 17% of gross revenues for ticketed or sponsored livestream events. There was a lot of debate in the UK around licensing for livestreamed events back in 2020 during the pandemic when live shows were banned. ![]() We hope to resolve this issue, so that music creators can finally be paid for the use of their works.” He added: “Litigation has been put in motion to ensure we can collect the royalties due from LIVENow and its parent company Aser Ventures. Gavin Larkins, Director of Commercial Development and Sales, PRS for Music, told MBW in a statement that, “no PRS member has been paid for the use of their songs in this event, or the other concerts held by LIVENow”. The event sold 285,000 tickets and attracted 5 million viewers. In a lawsuit filed in December, PRS for Music alleges LIVENow concerts lacked the correct licensing, including the Dua Lipa “Studio 2054” online event, which took place in November 2020, LIVENOW’s parent company is London-based Aser Ventures, founded by entrepreneur Andrea Radrizzani in 2015 with a portfolio that includes Premier League football club Leeds United. Promoters or event producers wishing to livestream a concert taking place in the UK or one of PRS ‘ managed territories (Malta, Cyprus, Gibraltar, The Bahamas or Bermuda), require a license to do so. G7 Japan: The Hiroshima Summit is an official publication of The global governance project, a joint initiative between GT Media Group Ltd, a London-based publishing company, and the G7 Research Group based at the University of Toronto.PRS for Music sues platform behind record-breaking Dua Lipa livestream for alleged lack of licenses For each topic, the G7 Research Group team provides data and commentary on the G7's performance including members' compliance with their commitments. The WHO's Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus writes on how, in its 75th year, the WHO remains essential in responding to health emergencies, the OECD'S Mathias Cormann explores lessons in resilience, and Sima Bahous, under-secretary general of the United Nations and executive director of UN Women, explores the link between digital and women's rights. Read about reliable, scalable, safe energy in an interview with the International Atomic Energy Agency's Rafael Mariano Grossi, and learn how we can clean up hazardous waste in a feature by Rolph Payet, executive secretary of the Basel, Rotterdam and Stockholm Convention. The title also includes thought leadership on sector-specific issues from a prestigious line-up of authors. This year's summit background book features exclusive editorial contributions from world leaders led by Prime Minister Kishida and including Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau and European Council president Charles Michel, who write on the challenges of entangled global crises. Together, these issues inform the content of G7 Japan: The Hiroshima Summit. Kishida's other priority issues are economic resilience and economic security ecology, which is led by climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution food, with the G7 exploring pathways to overcome weaknesses in the global food system health, building on the lessons from Covid-19 and development towards 2030. Peace and security rank high, with the summit location of Hiroshima reminding attendees and world of the horrors of nuclear war. ![]() To confront these challenges, Japanese prime minister and summit host Fumio Kishida has set a comprehensive agenda. Then there are the interconnected crises of resource, economic and social insecurity, development setbacks, rising debt in poor countries and democratic decline. The planet is facing the dual threats of the expansion and use of nuclear weapons in multiple regions and climate change, which is rapidly pushing global temperatures towards the brink of liveable limits. Taking place on 19–21 May, the Hiroshima Summit comes at a critical moment. The latest summit background book, G7 Japan: The Hiroshima Summit, focuses on the summit agenda, from nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation to human-centred developmentĪs the world reels from the simultaneous shocks of Russia's escalating aggression against Ukraine, the ensuing food and economic crises, and the Covid-19 pandemic, G7 leaders will meet in Hiroshima to find solutions.Host Japan will address upholding the international order and strengthening outreach to the Global South.G7 leaders meet in Hiroshima for their 49th summit.G7 Japan: The Hiroshima Summit background book ![]()
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