Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - (Page 33) Cover Story Wal-Mart continued from cover any signed documents proving it owns its meetings footage rather than the firm that recorded it, Flagler Productions of Lenexa, KS. According to an April 9 article in the Wall Street Journal, Flagler Productions founder Michael Flagler claimed he was hired in the mid-1970s through a handshake agreement with Wal-Mart to help produce and record the firm’s events. Two years ago, Wal-Mart relieved Flagler Productions of those duties, just days after Michael Flagler sold the firm to employees Mary Lyn Villanueva and Gregory Pierce. As a result, the production firm, which derived about 90 percent of its revenue from Wal-Mart, laid off all 16 of its employees and moved from a 20,000sf facility to an 800-sf office. But several months ago, after Wal-Mart rejected an offer by Flagler Productions to sell the footage to Wal-Mart for $150 million (Wal-Mart’s counter-offer: $500,000), Flagler chose to remain in business by selling access to WalMart’s meeting content—nearly 15,000 tapes’ worth—to any paying customer. Among those who paid to have footage scanned for specific content were the United Food and Commercial Workers Union and the Service Employees International Union, who are at odds with Wal-Mart over unionization policies. Attorneys who represent plaintiffs with gender-discrimination and injury-liability suits against Wal-Mart have also bought access to films in hopes of finding relevant comments by executives. While Wal-Mart said in a January letter to Flagler Productions that it has “claims to rights in the video library” and the film transcripts, Wal-Mart has not claimed that it possesses a signed agreement that transferred ownership of the footage to Wal-Mart. According to Tim Armstrong, assistant professor of law at the University of Cincinnati College of Law, “copyright in video footage ordinarily attaches to the party who fixed it in a tangible medium. To divest Flagler of the copyright Wal-Mart needs to show that the footage was a ‘work made for hire’—which is going to be problematic because the video firm wasn’t an ‘employee,’ and because the parties had no written agreement.” These are the two criteria that can define a “work made for hire” under Section 201(b) of the U.S. Copyright Act. On the flip side, Armstrong noted that Wal-Mart may have legal redress from a trade-secret angle. “Wal-Mart can argue [in court] that these meetings were secret, [that they] have value to the company and can be exploited to its detriment if generally known,” he said, adding that it is possible even in a handshake deal that Wal-Mart had resonable expectations that the films would not be divulged. As of late April, however, it appeared that WalMart had not taken any formal legal action against Flagler Productions. www.meetingnews.com The Dangers, the Solutions Wal-Mart’s situation lays bare the consequences firms can face when they record internal meetings. While it can have beneficial purposes—informing non-attending employees of what was discussed, or compiling footage for a motivational presentation— the pitfalls are too large for planners to ignore. Two veteran planners from New Jersey, one from a major pharmaceutical firm and the other from a biotech company, spoke about this issue to MeetingNews on the condition of anonymity. “Planners need to understand the value of their organizations’ intellectual property and evaluate options for using copyright and trademark protection,” said the pharma planner. Before using outside vendors,“an agreement should be in place that specifies in advance how information will be used both at an event and beyond. This should include a plan on how [it] will be stored, accessed, and distributed after the event,” as well as clear ownership rights. The biotech company planner agreed. “Vendors should be required to sign consulting agreements and confidentiality clauses. Beyond this, many com- panies no longer record sessions due to the inability to protect information from getting beyond the company in any number of ways—even with computer firewalls, passwords, and other precautions.” Furthermore, “as a planner, I would recommend no taping of meetings outside of what’s needed for training purposes,” the biotech planner added. “I don’t see the need to record a meeting as a motivational tool. It is the wrong media for such purposes.” On this point, however, the pharma planner differed. “Meetings are about information exchange, and the content would not be fully leveraged if we did not use it to continue momentum beyond the actual event. Meetings are also a huge investment. So the reuse and the sharing of information can be accomplished—but with the proper safeguards.” Another concern: What about attendees who can record sessions with video-enabled cell phones and show footage to outsiders? “Planners used to worry about the distraction from audience members textmessaging their friends when they got bored ” the biotech planner said. “But there are worse scenarios that must be taken into account.” H AD INDEX Advertiser Page Advertiser Page Arlington CVB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28 www.arlington.org Arnold Palmer’s Bay Hill Club & Lodge . . . . . . . . . . . .19 www.bayhill.com/mn Atlantis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8-9 www.atlantis.com Beau Rivage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 www.beaurivage.com Blue Man Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 www.blueman.com Boston Convention and Exhibition Center . . . . . . . . . . .32 www.AdvantageBOSTON.com/challenge Breakers, The . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 www.thebreakers.com Colonial Williamsburg . . . . . . . . . . .11 www.colonialwilliamsburgmeetings.com Greenbrier, The . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 www.greenbrier.com Harrah’s Harvey’s Lake Tahoe . . . . . .36 www.harrahstahoe.com www.harveystahoe.com Hotel Nikko San Francisco . . . . . . . .26 www.hotelnikkosf.com Knoxville Tourism & Sports Corp. . . .21 www.knoxville.org Mexico Tourism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17 www.visitmexico.com Paradisus Resorts . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15 www.paradisusresorts.travel Renaissance Resort at Golf World Village, The . . . . . . . . . . .20 www.worldgolfrenaissance.com Rosen Plaza Hotel . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23 www.rosenplaza.com San Antonio CVB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .29 www.visitsanantonio.com Starwood Meetings . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 www.StarwoodMeetings.com/artistry Universal Orlando . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25 www.uomeetingsandevents.com The Index to Advertisers is published for the convenience of our readers. Every effort is made to list advertisers’ names, web addresses and page numbers correctly. The publisher is not liable for errors or omissions. May 5, 2008 MeetingNews 33 http://www.hotelnikkosf.com http://www.arlington.org http://www.knoxville.org http://www.bayhill.com/mn http://www.visitmexico.com http://www.atlantis.com http://www.beaurivage.com http://www.worldgolfrenaissance.com http://www.blueman.com http://www.rosenplaza.com http://www.AdvantageBOSTON.com/challenge http://www.visitsanantonio.com http://www.thebreakers.com http://www.StarwoodMeetings.com/artistry http://www.colonialwilliamsburgmeetings.com http://www.uomeetingsandevents.com http://www.greenbrier.com http://www.harrahstahoe.com http://www.harveystahoe.com http://www.meetingnews.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Meeting News - May 5, 2008 Meeting News - May 5, 2008 Contents What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com Advertisers Index Live from the Forum Meeting News - May 5, 2008 Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - Meeting News - May 5, 2008 (Page 1) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - Meeting News - May 5, 2008 (Page 2) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 4) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 5) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 6) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 7) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 8) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 9) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 10) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 11) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 12) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 13) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 14) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 15) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 16) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 17) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 18) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 19) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 20) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 21) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 22) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 23) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 24) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 25) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 26) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 27) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 28) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 29) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 30) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 31) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - What’s Up @ MeetingNews.com (Page 32) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - Advertisers Index (Page 33) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - Live from the Forum (Page 34) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - Live from the Forum (Page 35) Meeting News - May 5, 2008 - Live from the Forum (Page 36)
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