The Music Publishers Association of the United States is a non-profit music publishing organization based in New York City. Founded in 1895, the MPA is the oldest music trade organization in the United States which addresses issues pertaining to print publishing with an emphasis on copyright education and advocacy.
Tab and lyric sites
Websites that offer lyrics and guitar tabs without licensing or permission from the artist or record label constitutes copyright infringement. Former MPA president Lauren Keiser stated that he wanted jail time in addition to fines and the removal of offending websites. In March 2006, the MPA issued a statement in which they explained their position on websites that distribute unauthorized sheet music and tablature. Several points are made in the statement:
MPA members invest a significant amount into arranging, engraving, editing, marketing, and distributing sheet music products, and illegal tablature cuts into their sales.
Sharing the tabs is bad enough, but even worse is when sites make money off the illegal tabs.
Guitar tabs do not circumvent copyright laws just because they're claimed to be personal interpretations.
Viewing illegal tabs is equivalent to stealing sheet music from a local music store.
The MPA is not targeting authorized websites, and will work with sites that want to build a legitimate business.
Criticism
The MPA's position on tablature has been criticized by the tabbing community. The community do not believe they are infringing copyright laws because they are only displaying their auraltranscriptions of these songs, which are, more often than not, not entirely correct. They feel that the practice of tabbing and sharing songs has existed for decades without any issues. An article on the now-closed guitartabs.cc website said:
"At what point does describing how one plays a song on guitar become an issue of copyright infringment? This website , among other things, helps users teach each other how they play guitar parts for many different songs. This is the way music teachers have behaved since the first music was ever created. The difference here is that the information is shared by way of a new technology: the Internet..."