(c) of release wrong because iMusician has set it to the copywrite of the artwork front cover

For the release
EAN 4069493200508
In the metadata, please set (c) to the name of the musical artist.
Currently it is set to the name of the front cover artwork creator.
Please change in the metadata (c) to my musical artist name.
(C) name of the musical artist (since I own the music composition and release).

The form on your website is not correctly designed because it has a field for the art cover and for the metadata of (c) you are taking the data from that field and that is wrong.

hi @Carlos , could you please take a look at this? :v:

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Hey @dariointernet, you’ve indicated Public Domain as the copyright owner for the artwork, so that’s what’s being displayed :point_down:

If you want to change that, you must request a modification directly from your dashboard: Modifications After Delivery | iMusician

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@Carlos I included Public Domain for “the artwork” because your form asks for the copyright of the artwork, but it is not for the recording. Your form is not correct. You are using the (c) for the artwork as the (c) in the metadata for the sound recording. I don’t want to have to pay 10 Euros to correct a mistake in your form. “You” should change the (c) in the metadata to my name.
Currently in Spotify it is showing
Screenshot_1_
This is wrong as (c) Public Domain gives the impression that the music is public domain, when in reality only the artwork (the painting) is Public Domain.

I included Public Domain for “the artwork” because your form asks for the copyright of the artwork, but it is not for the recording.

→ Yes that’s correct, the © field is for the artwork, not the recording. What you indicated in your order is exactly what is currently displayed on Spotify:

  • copyright owner for the artwork (©) = Public Domain
  • copyright owner for the recording (â„—) = Dario Margeli

There’s no mistake on our end, we respected what you filled in during the order. If you wish to replace “Public Domain” by your own name in the © field, that’s something you will have to pay for.

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