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Hilary Beth Rosen (born October 22, 1958) is the managing partner of the DC office of the Brunswick Group, a London based PR and communications strategy firm. She joined Brunswick in December 2008. She is also currently an on-air Contributor for CNN and Washington Editor at Large for The Huffington Post and was the online newspaper's Political Director during the 2008 election. She was with the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) from 1987 to 2003 and served as chairman and chief executive from 1998 to 2003. And she was President of a start up website, OurChart.com from 2006 to 2008.

Rosen was at RIAA during the most turbulent and disruptive times in the music industry. She was a major lobbying force on Capitol Hill and a regular presence on behalf of the industry in the media. She raised RIAA's profile from a little known trade group to the most visible and influential music industry voice in Washington and around the country. Her longtime close relationship with Democratic members of Congress led to the passage of several pieces of legislation during her tenure. While the business models were under development by the record labels, RIAA advanced a legal and PR campaign to limit the digital file swapping of copyrighted music, a practice whose popularity increased dramatically with improved personal computer multimedia capabilities and expanded broadband Internet access. During her tenure, the RIAA achieved a number of legal victories in the United States, including:

  • The dismantling of the Napster and Audiogalaxy Internet file-trading services. Rosen has publicly expressed regret at the result of the Napster litigation. Not from a legal perspective, which she defended, but for the way it limited the debate over online music.
  • Passage of the controversial Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
  • Initiating the Grokster lawsuit on which the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the record industry
  • Passage of the Performance Rights Act creating a public performance right for the first time for sound recordings
  • Passage of the Record Rental Act providing additional rental protection for sound recordings
  • Passage of numerous trade treaties providing increased protection for US intellectual property abroad


Rosen also launched initiatives to encourage industry-wide standards of new digital copyright protection technologies, including copy protected CDs and a number of digital rights management-enabled media formats for personal computers. Copy-protected CDs have not been popular with consumers because they cannot be played in most car CD players or on PCs, and only a few pilot titles were ever distributed with the technology.Rosen left RIAA before the start of a controversial program to sue individuals for file swapping. Despite the RIAA's aggressive tactics, online file-swapping has continued to grow. Industry critics, including those within the Association, have begun to question the effectiveness of the campaign. Indeed, many believe that the RIAA's activities alienated consumers and some popular artists from the very music industry the RIAA is supposed to protect. Rosen has expressed her agreement with this assertion. Nonetheless, while RIAA was the enforcement arm of the industry, the member companies were responsible for moving their businesses on-line. Many say that despite Rosen's public loyalty to the industry, much of her last few years were spent privately encouraging the member companies to embrace internet distribution. The slow pace resulted in her ultimate frustration and in the industry being unable to catch up with the phenomenon of free file sharing.

On January 22, 2003, Rosen announced that she would resign as head of the RIAA at the end of 2003, in order to spend more time with her partner, Elizabeth Birch, and the couple's twins (a boy and a girl). She began a television commentator career first with CNBC and then with MSNBC. She signed with CNN in April 2008. Rosen and Birch separated in 2006.

On November 30, 2004, Rosen became the interim director for the Human Rights Campaign, a leading GLBT lobbyist organization, following the ouster of Cheryl Jacques. Hilary's partner, Elizabeth, was the executive director of HRC for eight years prior to Jacques' assumption of the post. Since May 2005 she's been a contributing blogger at The Huffington Post and a consultant to companies in the media industry such as XM Radio, Viacom and Snocap.

In December 2006 Rosen founded a consulting firm specializing in digital media and the entertainment industry with Jason Berman, former Chairman of the International Recording Industry Association (IFPI) called Berman Rosen Global Strategies. That firm closed when Rosen Joined Brunswick. In January 2007, she launched OurChart.com with business partner Ilene Chaiken, creator of the L Word. OurChart.com is a social networking and entertainment site targeted to lesbians and their friends based on the SHowtime series, The L Word. Showtime Networks is a financial partner in the website.

See also



References

  • HRC, leader Cheryl Jacques part ways PlanetOut, November 30, 2004
  • Hating Hilary Wired Magazine Interview/Article, February 2003
  • "Top Lobbyist Seeks Harmony" August 20, 2001
  • "Hilary B. Rosen." Biography Resource Center Online. Gale Group, 2002. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Gale, 2008. http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/BioRC. Document Number: K1650002788. Retrieved 2008-06-05.


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