The DLC Nails it on Conditional Redesignation of the MLC

I’m certainly not a fan of really any of the companies that comprise the Digital Licensee Coordinator’s membership (DLC). In fact, you probably couldn’t find a more complete rogues’ gallery of most of my least favorite Big Tech companies—but when they’re right, they’re right.

Redesignation is the Copyright Office’s periodic check on whether the Mechanical Licensing Collective still meets the Music Modernization Act’s criteria to run the §115 blanket license. The Office can renew, or replace the designation to protect songwriters and licensees. In my view and the view of many others including the Digital Licensee Coordinator, The Office could also condition any renewal (or “redesignation”) of the MLC on improving its lackluster performance and postpone the renewal until the MLC improves, if ever. That’s just common sense.

The DLC’s most recent “ex parte” letter answers years of songwriter and publisher requests that the MLC has brushed aside—better matching, transparency, governance, timeliness, metrics, and accountability. Crucially, it confronts repeated, credible criticisms that the MLC’s investment of unmatched royalties is ultra vires (outside the law): the MMA authorizes collection and distribution, not portfoio-management schemes of a fund that is likely in excess of $1.2 billion of the songwriters’ money.

The Digital Licensee Coordinator urges the Copyright Office to conditionally redesignate the Mechanical Licensing Collective (MLC) and pair that step with stronger oversight. This approach reflects common sense and Congressional intent: if redesignation weren’t meant to be used as leverage to correct course, Congress wouldn’t have created a periodic redesignation process at all—it would have handed the MLC lifetime appointments. They didn’t, as one would expect. The MLC isn’t the Harry Fox Agency after all. Conditional redesignation is therefore the appropriate tool to ensure the MLC performs its uniquely powerful statutory role responsibly, transparently, and in the interest of all rightsholders. 

The DLC stresses how the MLC’s powers—collecting and distributing over a billion dollars annually, enforcing the blanket license, and imposing costs on licensees—demand robust governance and accountability distinct from what’s expected of the DLC itself. With that asymmetry in mind, the Office should focus the redesignation decision on whether the MLC needs additional safeguards to fulfill Congress’s vision for §115. Debating whether those safeguards arrive as explicit conditions on redesignation or as stand-alone regulations is a matter of form, not substance; either pathway legitimately implements the MMA and squarely fits within the Office’s authority. 

To “tee up” the record, the DLC attaches a helpful and representative Exhibit cataloging songwriter, independent publisher, and creator-group critiques across six themes: unmatched “black box” royalties; data/matching problems; governance and conflicts; transparency and accountability gaps; operational and technical delays; and the investment of unclaimed royalties. That comment supports conditional redesignation backed by measurable performance metrics(e.g., black-box reduction targets, matching accuracy, timeliness, dispute resolution KPIs) or by new, targeted regulations—and, if needed, both. 

Finally, immediate triage should begin with abandoning the contested investment policy for unclaimed royalties—criticized by many stakeholders as ultra vires (which by the way, eliminates any indemnity protection in the MMA)—and liquidating the portfolio so cash flows to the people Congress intended to benefit: songwriters. Conditional redesignation gives the Office the oversight handle to make those corrections now, align incentives going forward, and ensure the MLC’s stewardship is limited to the scale of its statutory power. 

It also must be said that if the MLC doesn’t clean up its act, what comes next may not be so genteel. Conditional redesignation may look awfully good in the rear view mirror.

Google’s “AI Overviews” Draws a Formal Complaint in Germany under the EU Digital Services Act

A coalition of NGOs, media associations, and publishers in Germany has filed a formal Digital Services Act (DSA) complaint against Google’s AI Overviews, arguing the feature diverts traffic and revenue from independent media, increases misinformation risks via opaque systems, and threatens media plurality. Under the DSA, violations can carry fines up to 6% of global revenue—a potentially multibillion-dollar exposure.

The complaint claims that AI Overviews answer users’ queries inside Google, short-circuiting click-throughs to the original sources and starving publishers of ad and subscription revenues. Because users can’t see how answers are generated or verified, the coalition warns of heightened misinformation risk and erosion of democratic discourse.

Why the Digital Services Act Matters

As I understand the DSA, the news publishers can either (1) lodge a complaint with their national Digital Services Coordinator alleging a platform’s DSA breach (triggers regulatory scrutiny);  (2) Use the platform dispute tools: first the internal complaint-handling system, then certified out-of-court dispute settlement for moderation/search-display disputes—often faster practical relief; (3) Sue for damages in national courts for losses caused by a provider’s DSA infringement (Art. 54); or (4) Act collectively by mandating a qualified entity or through the EU Representative Actions Directive to seek injunctions/redress (kind of like class actions in the US but more limited in scope). 

Under the DSA, Very Large Online Platforms (VLOPs) and Very Large Online Search Engines (VLOSEs) are services with more than 45 million EU users (approximately 10% of the population). Once formally designated by the European Commission, they face stricter obligations than smaller platforms: conducting annual systemic risk assessments, implementing mitigation measures, submitting to independent audits, providing data access to researchers, and ensuring transparency in recommender systems and advertising. Enforcement is centralized at the Commission, with penalties up to 6% of global revenue. This matters because VLOPs like Google, Meta, and TikTok must alter core design choices that directly affect media visibility and revenue.In parallel, the European Commission/DSCs retain powerful public-enforcement tools against Very Large Online Platforms. 

As a designated Very Large Online Platform, Google faces strict duties to mitigate systemic risks, provide algorithmic transparency, and avoid conduct that undermines media pluralism. The complaint contends AI Overviews violate these requirements by replacing outbound links with Google’s own synthesized answers.

The U.S. Angle: Penske lawsuit

A Major Publisher Has Sued Google in Federal Court Over AI Overview

On Sept. 14, 2025, Penske Media (Rolling Stone, Billboard, Variety) sued Google in D.C. federal court, alleging AI Overviews repurpose its journalism, depress clicks, and damage revenue—marking the first lawsuit by a major U.S. publisher aimed squarely at AI Overviews. The claims include an allegation on training-use claiming that Google enriched itself by using PMC’s works to train and ground models powering Gemini/AI Overviews, seeking restitution and disgorgement. Penske also argues that Google abuses its search monopoly to coerce publishers: indexing is effectively tied to letting Google (a) republish/summarize their material in AI Overviews, Featured Snippets, and AI Mode, and (b) use their works to train Google’s LLMs—reducing click-through and revenues while letting Google expand its monopoly into online publishing. 

Trade Groups Urged FTC/DOJ Action

The News/Media Alliance had previously asked the FTC and DOJ to investigate AI Overviews for diverting traffic and ‘misappropriating’ publishers’ investments, calling for enforcement under FTC Act §5 and Sherman Act §2.

Data Showing Traffic Harm

Industry analyses indicate material referral declines tied to AI Overviews. Digital Content Next reports Google Search referrals down 1%–25% for most member publishers over recent weeks; Digiday pegs impacts as much as 25%. The trend feeds a broader ‘Google Zero’ concern—zero-click results displacing publisher visits.

Why Europe vs. U.S. Paths Differ

The EU/DSA offers a procedural path to assess systemic risk and platform design choices like AI Overviews and levy platform-wide remedies and fines. In the U.S., the fight currently runs through private litigation (Penske) and competition/consumer-protection advocacy at FTC/DOJ, where enforcement tools differ and take longer to mobilize.

RAG vs. Training Data Issues

AI Overviews are best understood as a Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) issue. Readers will recall that RAG is probably the most direct example of verbatim copying in AI outputs. The harms arise because Google as middleman retrieves live publisher content and synthesizes it into an answer inside the Search Engine Results Page (SERP), reducing traffic to the sources. This is distinct from the training-data lawsuits (Kadrey, Bartz) that allege unlawful ingestion of works during model pretraining.

Kadrey: Indirect Market Harm

A RAG case like Penske’s could also be characterized as indirect market harm. Judge Chhabria’s ruling in Kadrey under U.S. law highlights that market harm isn’t limited to direct substitution for fair use purposes. Factor 4 in fair use analysis includes foreclosure of licensing and derivative markets. For AI/search, that means reduced referrals depress ad and subscription revenue, while widespread zero-click synthesis may foreclose an emerging licensing market for summaries and excerpts. Evidence of harm includes before/after referral data, revenue deltas, and qualitative harms like brand erasure and loss of attribution. Remedies could include more prominent linking, revenue-sharing, compliance with robots/opt-outs, and provenance disclosures.

I like them RAG cases.

The Essential Issue is Similar in EU and US

Whether in Brussels or Washington, the core dispute is very similar: Who captures the value of journalism in an AI-mediated search world? Germany’s DSA complaint and Penske’s U.S. lawsuit frame twin fronts of a larger conflict—one about control of distribution, payment for content, and the future of a pluralistic press. Not to mention the usual free-riding and competition issues swirling around Google as it extracts rents by inserting itself into places it’s not wanted.

How an AI Moratorium Would Preclude Penske’s Lawsuit

Many “AI moratorium” proposals function as broad safe harbors with preemption. A moratorium to benefit AI and pick national champions was the subject of an IP Subcommittee hearing on September 18. If Congress enacted a moratorium that (1) expressly immunizes core AI practices (training, grounding, and SERP-level summaries), (2) preempts overlapping state claims, and (3) channels disputes into agency processes with exclusive public enforcement, it would effectively close the courthouse door to private suits like Penske and make the US more like Europe without the enforcement apparatus. Here’s how:

Express immunity for covered conduct. If the statute declares that using publicly available content for training and for retrieval-augmented summaries in search is lawful during the moratorium, Penske’s core theory (RAG substitution plus training use) loses its predicate.
No private right of action / exclusive public enforcement. Limiting enforcement to the FTC/DOJ (or a designated tech regulator) would bar private plaintiffs from seeking damages or injunctions over covered AI conduct.
Antitrust carve-out or agency preclearance. Congress could provide that covered AI practices (AI Overviews, featured snippets powered by generative models, training/grounding on public web content) cannot form the basis for Sherman/Clayton liability during the moratorium, or must first be reviewed by the agency—undercutting Penske’s §1/§2 counts.
Primary-jurisdiction plus statutory stay. Requiring first resort to the agency with a mandatory stay of court actions would pause (or dismiss) Penske until the regulator acts.
Preemption of state-law theories. A preemption clause would sweep in state unjust-enrichment and consumer-protection claims that parallel the covered AI practices.
Limits on injunctive relief. Barring courts from enjoining covered AI features (e.g., SERP-level summaries) and reserving design changes to the agency would eliminate the centerpiece remedy Penske seeks.
Potential retroactive shield. If drafted to apply to past conduct, a moratorium could moot pending suits by deeming prior training/RAG uses compliant for the moratorium period.

A moratorium with safe harbors, preemption, and agency-first review would either stay, gut, or bar Penske’s antitrust and unjust-enrichment claims—reframing the dispute as a regulatory matter rather than a private lawsuit. Want to bet that White House AI Viceroy David Sacks will be sitting in judgement?

Missile Gap, Again: Big Tech’s Private Power vs. the Public Grid

If we let a hyped “AI gap” dictate land and energy policy, we’ll privatize essential infrastructure and socialize the fallout.

Every now and then, it’s important to focus on what our alleged partners in music distribution are up to, because the reality is they’re not record people—their real goal is getting their hands on the investment we’ve all made in helping compelling artists find and keep an audience. And when those same CEOs use the profits from our work to pivot to “defense tech” or “dual use” AI (civilian and military), we should hear what that euphemism really means: killing machines.

Daniel Ek is backing battlefield-AI ventures; Eric Schmidt has spent years bankrolling and lobbying for the militarization of AI while shaping the policies that green-light it. This is what happens when we get in business with people who don’t share our values: the capital, data, and social license harvested from culture gets recycled into systems built to find, fix, and finish human beings. As Bob Dylan put it in Masters of War, “You fasten the triggers for the others to fire.” These deals aren’t value-neutral—they launder credibility from art into combat. If that’s the future on offer, our first duty is to say so plainly—and refuse to be complicit.

The same AI outfits that for decades have refused to license or begrudgingly licensed the culture they ingest are now muscling into the hard stuff—power grids, water systems, and aquifers—wherever governments are desperate to win their investment. Think bespoke substations, “islanded” microgrids dedicated to single corporate users, priority interconnects, and high-volume water draws baked into “innovation” deals. It’s happening globally, but nowhere more aggressively than in the U.S., where policy and permitting are being bent toward AI-first infrastructure—thanks in no small part to Silicon Valley’s White House “AI viceroy,” David Sacks. If we don’t demand accountability at the point of data and at the point of energy and water, we’ll wake up to AI that not only steals our work but also commandeers our utilities. Just like Senator Wyden accomplished for Oregon.

These aren’t pop-up server farms; they’re decades-long fixtures. Substations and transmission are built on 30–50-year horizons, generation assets run 20–60, with multi-decade PPAs, water rights, and recorded easements that outlive elections. Once steel’s in the ground, rate designs and priority interconnects get contractually sticky. Unlike the Internet fights of the last 25 years—where you could force a license for what travels through the pipe—this AI footprint binds communities for generations; it’s essentially forever. So we will be stuck for generations with the decisions we make today.

Because China–The New Missle Gap

There’s a familiar ring to the way America is now talking about AI, energy, and federal land use (and likely expropriation). In the 1950s Cold War era, politicians sold the country on a “missile gap” that later proved largely mythical, yet it hardened budgets, doctrine, and concrete in ways that lasted decades.

Today’s version is the “AI gap”—a story that says China is sprinting on AI, so we must pave faster, permit faster, and relax old guardrails to keep up. Of course, this diverts attention from China’s advances in directed-energy weapons and hypersonic missiles which are here right now today and will play havoc in an actual battlefield—which the West has no counter to. But let’s not talk about those (at least not until we lose a carrier in the South China Sea), let’s worry about AI because that will make Silicon Valley even richer.

Watch any interview of executives from the frontier AI labs and within minutes they will hit their “because China” talking point. National security and competitiveness are real concerns, but they don’t justify blank checks and Constitutional-level safe harbors. The missile‑gap analogy is useful because it reminds us how a compelling threat narrative propaganda can swamp due diligence. We can support strategic compute and energy without letting an AI‑gap story permanently bulldoze open space and saddle communities with the bill.

Energy Haves (Them) and Have Nots (Everyone else)

The result is a two‑track energy state AKA hell on earth. On Track A, the frontier AI lab hyperscalers like Google, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI & Co. build company‑town infrastructure for AI—on‑site electricity generation by microgrids outside of everyone else’s electric grid, dedicated interties and other interconnections between electric operators—often on or near federal land. On Track B, the public grid carries everyone else: homes, hospitals, small manufacturers, water districts. As President Trump said at the White House AI dinner this week, Track A promises to “self‑supply,” but even self‑supplied campuses still lean on the public grid for backup and monetization, and they compete for scarce interconnection headroom.

President Trump is allowing the hyperscalers to get permanent rights to build on massive parcels of government land, including private utilities to power the massive electricity and water cooling needs for AI data centers. Strangely enough, this is continuing a Biden policy under an executive order issued late in Biden Presidency that Trump now takes credit for, and is a 180 out from America First according to people who ought to know like Steve Bannon. And yet it is happening.

White House Dinners are Old News in Silicon Valley

If someone says “AI labs will build their own utilities on federal land,” that land comes in two flavors: Department of Defense (now War Department) or Department of Energy sites and land owned by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). This are vastly different categories.  DoD/DOE sites such as Idaho National Laboratory Oak Ridge Reservation, Paducah GDP, and the Savannah River Site, imply behind-the-fence, mission-tied microgrids with limited public friction; BLM land implies public-land rights-of-way and multi-use trade-offs (grazing, wildlife, cultural), longer timelines, and grid-export dynamics with potential “curtailment” which means prioritizing electricity for the hyperscalers. For example, Idaho National Laboratory (INL) as one of the four AI/data-center sites. INL’s own environmental reports state that about 60% of the INL site is open to livestock grazing, with monitoring of grazing impacts on habitat.  That’s likely over.

This is about how we power anything not controlled by a handful of firms. And it’s about the land footprint: fenced solar yards, switchyards, substations, massive transport lines, wider roads, laydown areas. On BLM range and other open spaces, those facilities translate into real, local losses—grazable acres inside fences, stock trails detoured, range improvements relocated.

What the two tracks really do

Track A solves a business problem: compute growth outpacing the public grid’s construction cycle. By putting electrons next to servers (literally), operators avoid waiting years for a substation or a 230‑kV line. Microgrids provide islanding during emergencies and participation in wholesale markets when connected. It’s nimble, and it works—for the operator.

Track B inherits the volatility: planners must consider a surge of large loads that may or may not appear, while maintaining reliability for everyone else. Capacity margins tighten; transmission projects get reprioritized; retail rates absorb the externalities. When utilities plan for speculative loads and those projects cancel or slide, the region can be left with stranded costs or deferred maintenance elsewhere.

The land squeeze we’re not counting

Public agencies tout gigawatts permitted. They rarely publish the acreage fenced, AUMs affected, or water commitments. Utility‑scale solar commonly pencils out to on the order of 5–7 acres per megawatt of capacity depending on layout and topography. At that ratio, a single gigawatt occupies thousands of acres—acres that, unlike wind, often can’t be grazed once panels and security fences go in. Even where grazing is technically possible, access roads, laydown yards, and vegetation control impose real costs on neighboring users.

Wind is more compatible with grazing, but it isn’t footprint‑free. Pads, roads, and safety buffers fragment pasture. Transmission to move that energy still needs corridors—and those corridors cross someone’s water lines and gates. Multiple use is a principle; on the ground it’s a schedule, a map, and a cost. Just for reference, a rule‑of‑thumb for acres/electricity produces is approximately 5–7 acres per megawatt of direct current (“MWdc”), but access roads, laydown, and buffers extend beyond the fence line.

We are going through this right now in my part of the world. Central Texas is bracing for a wave of new high-voltage transmission. These are 345-kV corridors cutting (literally) across the Hill Country to serve load growth for chip fabricators and data centers and tie-in distant generation (so big lines are a must once you commit to the usage). Ranchers and small towns are pushing back hard: eminent-domain threats, devalued land, scarred vistas, live-oak and wildlife impacts, and routes that ignore existing roads and utility corridors. Packed hearings and county resolutions demand co-location, undergrounding studies, and real alternatives—not “pick a line on a map” after the deal is done. The fight isn’t against reliability; it’s against a planning process that externalizes costs onto farmers, ranchers, other landowners and working landscapes.

Texas’s latest SB 6 is the case study. After a wave of ultra-large AI/data-center loads, frontier labs and their allies pushed lawmakers to rewrite reliability rules so the grid would accommodate them. SB 6 empowers the Texas grid operator ERCOT to police new mega-loads—through emergency curtailment and/or firm-backup requirements—effectively reshaping interconnection priorities and shifting reliability risk and costs onto everyone else. “Everyone else” means you and me, kind of like the “full faith and credit of the US”. Texas SB 6 was signed into law in June 2025 by Gov. Greg Abbott. It’s now in effect and directs PUCT/ERCOT to set new rules for very large loads (e.g., data centers), including curtailment during emergencies and added interconnection/backup-power requirements. So the devil will be in the details and someone needs to put on the whole armor of God, so to speak.

The phantom problem

Another quiet driver of bad outcomes is phantom demand: developers filing duplicative load or interconnection requests to keep options open. On paper, it looks like a tidal wave; in practice, only a slice gets built. If every inquiry triggers a utility study, a route survey, or a placeholder in a capital plan, neighborhoods can end up paying for capacity that never comes online to serve them.

A better deal for the public and the range

Prioritize already‑disturbed lands—industrial parks, mines, reservoirs, existing corridors—before greenfield BLM range land. Where greenfield is unavoidable, set a no‑net‑loss goal for AUMs and require real compensation and repair SLAs for affected range improvements.

Milestone gating for large loads: require non‑refundable deposits, binding site control, and equipment milestones before a project can hold scarce interconnection capacity or trigger grid upgrades. Count only contracted loads in official forecasts; publish scenario bands so rate cases aren’t built on hype.

Common‑corridor rules: make developers prove they can’t use existing roads or rights‑of‑way before claiming new footprints. Where fencing is required, use wildlife‑friendly designs and commit to seasonal gates that preserve stock movement.

Public equity for public land: if a campus wins accelerated federal siting and long‑term locational advantage, tie that to a public revenue share or capacity rights that directly benefit local ratepayers and counties. Public land should deliver public returns, not just private moats.

Grid‑help obligations: if a private microgrid islands to protect its own uptime, it should also help the grid when connected. Enroll batteries for frequency and reserve services; commit to emergency export; and pay a fair share of fixed transmission costs instead of shifting them onto households.

Or you could do what the Dutch and Irish governments proposed under the guise of climate change regulations—kill all the cattle. I can tell you right now that that ain’t gonna happen in Texas.

Will We Get Fooled Again?

If we let a hyped latter day “missile gap” set the terms, we’ll lock in a two‑track energy state: private power for those who can afford to build it, a more fragile and more expensive public grid for everyone else, and open spaces converted into permanent infrastructure at a discount. The alternative is straightforward: price land and grid externalities honestly, gate speculative demand, require public returns on public siting, and design corridor rules that protect working landscapes. That’s not anti‑AI; it’s pro‑public. Everything not controlled by Big Tech—will be better for it.

Let’s be clear: the data-center onslaught will be financed by the taxpayer one way or another—either as direct public outlays or through sweet-heart “leases” of federal land to build private utilities behind the fence for the richest corporations in commercial history. After all the goodies that Trump is handing to the AI platforms, let’s not have any loose talk of “selling” excess electricity to the public–that price should be zero. Even so, the sales pitch about “excess” electricity they’ll generously sell back to the grid is a fantasy; when margins tighten, they’ll throttle output costs, not volunteer philanthropy. Picture it: do you really think these firms won’t optimize for themselves first and last? We’ll be left with the bills, the land impacts, and a grid redesigned around their needs. Ask yourself—what in the last 25 years of Big Tech behavior says “trustworthy” to you?

Speaker Updates for September 18 Artist Rights Roundtable in DC

We’re pleased to welcome Josh Hurvitz, Partner, NVG and Head of Advocacy for A2IM and Kevin Amer, Chief Legal Officer, The Authors Guild to the Roundtable on September 18 at American University in DC!

Artist Rights Roundtable on AI and Copyright: 
Coffee with Humans and the Machines     

Join the Artist Rights Institute (ARI) and Kogod’s Entertainment Business Program for a timely morning roundtable on AI and copyright from the artist’s perspective. We’ll explore how emerging artificial intelligence technologies challenge authorship, licensing, and the creative economy — and what courts, lawmakers, and creators are doing in response.

🗓️ Date: September 18, 2025
🕗 Time: 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon
📍 Location: Butler Board Room, Bender Arena, American University, 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, Washington D.C. 20016

🎟️ Admission:
Free and open to the public. Registration required at Eventbrite. Seating is limited.

🅿️ Parking map is available here. Pay-As-You-Go parking is available in hourly or daily increments ($2/hour, or $16/day) using the pay stations in the elevator lobbies of Katzen Arts Center, East Campus Surface Lot, the Spring Valley Building, Washington College of Law, and the School of International Service

Hosted by the Artist Rights Institute & American University’s Kogod School of Business, Entertainment Business Program

🔹 Overview:

☕ Coffee served starting at 8:00 a.m.
🧠 Program begins at 8:50 a.m.
🕛 Concludes by 12:00 noon — you’ll be free to have lunch with your clone.

🗂️ Program:

8:00–8:50 a.m. – Registration and Coffee

8:50–9:00 a.m. – Introductory Remarks by KOGOD Dean David Marchick and ARI Director Chris Castle

9:00–10:00 a.m. – Topic 1: AI Provenance Is the Cornerstone of Legitimate AI Licensing:

Speakers:

  • Dr. Moiya McTier Human Artistry Campaign
  • Ryan Lehnning, Assistant General Counsel, International at SoundExchange
  • The Chatbot

Moderator: Chris Castle, Artist Rights Institute

10:10–10:30 a.m. – Briefing: Current AI Litigation

  • Speaker: Kevin Madigan, Senior Vice President, Policy and Government Affairs, Copyright Alliance

10:30–11:30 a.m. – Topic 2: Ask the AI: Can Integrity and Innovation Survive Without Artist Consent?

Speakers:

  • Erin McAnally, Executive Director, Songwriters of North America
  • Jen Jacobsen, Executive Director, Artist Rights Alliance
  • Josh Hurvitz, Partner, NVG and Head of Advocacy for A2IM
  • Kevin Amer, Chief Legal Officer, The Authors Guild

Moderator: Linda Bloss-Baum, Director, Business and Entertainment Program, KOGOD School of Business

11:40–12:00 p.m. – Briefing: US and International AI Legislation

  • Speaker: George York, SVP, International Policy Recording Industry Association of America

🔗 Stay Updated:

Watch this space and visit Eventbrite for updates and speaker announcements.