DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Meda (Misooda) Bat Mizlee Lelah

Dedicated By
Isaac Moses

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 4.9 MB)
Is It Permissible to Share Digital Music Files?

There is a common question whether it is permitted to copy or download digital music without paying for it. Very often a person wants to receive songs or even entire music collections from his friend, by easily sharing between two devices. The albums usually bear warnings and declarations that the producers are Makpid-forbid such copying. From a Halachic perspective, is copying an infringement on the rights or property of the recording artist?

Hacham Rahamim Sha’ayo, in his recently published Mehkareh Ares (Vol. 8:5-Listen to Audio for full Hebrew citation)) lays down a very decisive lenient approach. He holds that there is no problem whatsoever.

He argues that a person’s voice is not a tangible entity that is owned by him in a legal sense. Just as his appearance can be enjoyed by anyone, so too his voice. If someone was listening to a song in his friend’s car, can someone stop him from pulling out his tape recorder and recording that song? He declares that there is no precedent in rabbinic sources for ownership of voice, scent or appearance. Even though the singer is Makpid and issues various warnings, he cannot forbid that which has no Halachic basis.

However, he is stricter with regard to copying discs containing digital collections of books. He considers the books and the search mechanism to have enough substance to be owned. Therefore, they must be bought and not bootlegged.

SUMMARY
The common practice of copying music from one another has Halachic basis.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Sephardic Custom Concerning the "Yihud" of a Bride and Groom
The Wedding Ceremony – The Proper Pronunciation of “Al Yedeh Hupa Be’kiddushin”; the Custom to Break a Glass
Reciting Sheva Berachot After Sundown of the Seventh Day After a Wedding
Reciting Sheba Berachot at a Meal That Was Not Specifically Prepared for the Bride and Groom
May a Person Who Did Not Eat at a Sheba Berachot Celebration Recite One of the Berachot?
Sheba Berachot – If Somebody Did Not Eat Bread at the Meal, Reciting the Berachot Seated
Are the Sheba Berachot Recited if the Bride and Groom Did Not Eat?
Reciting the Sheba Berachot if the Bride and Groom are Not Present
Nidda – Abstaining During “Onat Ha’hodesh” and “Onat Hahaflaga”
The Obligation to Abstain From Relations at the Time When the Wife is Likely to Become a Nidda
The “Tikkun Ha’kelali” – Repairing the Damage Caused by Making Oneself Impure
The Proper Procedure for Sheba Berachot That is Not Held in the Couple’s Home
Making Weddings at Night
Does Dandruff in the Hair Disqualify a Woman’s Immersion in a Mikveh?
Understanding The Beracha of ‘VeTzivanu Al Ha’Arayot’ At The Wedding Ceremony
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found