No, Sony does not have the right to withhold music or ideas. The law might 
protect them based on bad legislation, but they're certainly not in the right.

Also note that the maximum time such ill-gotten rights could be retained used 
to be 20 years, never infinite. The law has been extended to 50 in a reform 
introduced in the late nineties (or similar).

Additionally, where content becomes blocked is completely random. That is 
because the blocks are made based on algorithms, by automated programs. As we 
all know, programs are dumb, and when used to interpret large data base, also 
produces largely faulty results.

Finally, cheesecake in switzerland does not mean a sweet, yoghurt-based cake as 
in germany or the usa. Instead it describes a egg and cheese based, salty 
tartlet / quiche:
http://static.zoonar.com/img/www_repository2/c0/e1/32/10_6b0d57087c3745107ad01f9d3b13aa71.jpg

> Notice, again, that Sony paid for these rights. If they want,
> they could forbid forever the public diffusion of any performance
> of these artists... Forever. No explanation necessary. It's their
> right. They paid for it.
...
> Today we learn which countries could view blocked Sony videos: England and 
> Japan.


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