MLC hires Richard Thompson as Chief Information Officer and selects partners to develop data portal

The Mechanical Licensing Collective (the MLC) has appointed former Digital Data Exchange (DDEX) Chair Richard Thompson as Chief Information Officer.

Thompson will be responsible for overseeing the development and launch of the MLC’s data platform to distribute royalties payable to songwriters and copyright owners.

Thompson had been serving in an interim capacity for the MLC since February 2019.

The MLC has also named some of the vendors that will support the creation of the public database, which, as directed by the Music Modernization Act (MMA), will contain critical copyright information on all musical works and will launch on January 1, 2021.

Technology company ConsenSys and mechanical licensing administrator Harry Fox Agency (HFA) received unanimous approval from the MLC Board to become the primary vendors responsible for managing the matching of digital uses to musical works, distributing mechanical royalties, and onboarding songwriters, composers, lyricists, and music publishers and their catalogs to the database.

Over a dozen technology companies participated in an intensive RFI/RFP evaluation process that began in November 2018.

The MLC has also selected global consulting firm Prophet to create the portal’s user interface.

Additionally, the MLC is working closely with the DDEX to design interface(s) to access the data that will be included in the public database.

The MLC expects to make additional vendor announcements in the coming months for other project phases.

“We are confident these companies are best positioned to help the MLC efficiently deliver a high-quality, responsive platform that can serve today’s songwriters and music community while also preparing for developing areas of digital music use to ensure that the systems that are being built today can expand to accommodate the ever-changing landscape.”

Alisa Coleman, MLC 

MLC Board Chair Alisa Coleman said: “Creating a single platform capable of handling a blanket mechanical license that will pay royalties to all songwriters, composers, lyricists, and music publishers is a monumental effort that has never before been undertaken in the United States.

“To help guide this initiative, the Board takes great pleasure in formally appointing Richard Thompson as CIO.

“Richard’s impressive experience in building the technology behind Kobalt, as well as his past role as chair of DDEX and his participation in the international music metadata standards group for nearly a decade, make him the ideal person to drive the development of the MLC’s platform.”

Continued Coleman: “The MLC Board reviewed several strong competitors in the marketplace before choosing our partners for this unprecedented and truly revolutionary project.

“We are confident these companies are best positioned to help the MLC efficiently deliver a high-quality, responsive platform that can serve today’s songwriters and music community while also preparing for developing areas of digital music use to ensure that the systems that are being built today can expand to accommodate the ever-changing landscape.”

“The MLC needs a proven, end-to-end licensing, matching, and royalty processing system that can go live on January 1, 2021. After completing a rigorous evaluation process, HFA in collaboration with ConsenSys is the clear choice to ensure that the MLC has a solid platform to deliver on its mission.”

Richard Thompson

Thompson said: “Knowing that we would be operating with tight deadlines proscribed under the new law, we began a rigorous review process of potential vendors to build our infrastructure well before we were tapped by the Copyright Office to be the official mechanical licensing collective.

“In fact, since last November when the Request for Proposals process began, the MLC has invested thousands of hours investigating the options to create the core technology and public interface that will comply with the less than seventeen-month implementation timeline and specific directives of the Music Modernization Act.”

Thompson continued: “The MLC needs a proven, end-to-end licensing, matching, and royalty processing system that can go live on January 1, 2021.

“After completing a rigorous evaluation process, HFA in collaboration with ConsenSys is the clear choice to ensure that the MLC has a solid platform to deliver on its mission.

“These vendors will successfully help the MLC deliver not only what is required under the MMA, but also improve the overall mechanical licensing process in the United States.”

The MLC reached a deal on funding levels earlier this month and receive $33.5 million for start-up costs and an initial annual assessment for 2021 of $28.5m.Music Business Worldwide

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