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Subject:
From:
Kelly Pierce <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Kelly Pierce <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 23 Oct 2001 20:15:26 -0500
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BofA files complaint against woman who provided voice of
"talking" ATMs

ATMmarketplace.com

October 23, 2001

SAN FRANCISCO -- Bank of America has replaced the woman who
provided the voice for its new "talking" ATMs with so-called
"synthetic voice recordings" because she demanded undeserved
royalties and threatened to slap the bank with a lawsuit,
according to court documents.

The bank filed a complaint in federal court in San Francisco,
seeking to recover the cost of using a replacement recording in
the ATMs, which improve access to banking for visually impaired
customers.

In early October, Bank of America announced ambitious plans to
install more than 7,000 talking ATMs across the U.S. More than
3,000 are planned by the end of 2002, with the remainder
installed by the end of 2005. Currently, the bank has 500
machines installed in Florida and California.

Bank of America hopes to prove that Christie Smith, also known as
Christie Tanner, does not hold a copyright interest in the ATM
recordings she made for the bank. If she does, Bank of America
maintains it did not infringe the copyright.

Bank of America wrote a script and then hired Premiere
Communications Inc. to make the recordings, according to its
complaint. Premiere subsequently hired Smith to read the script.

According to the complaint, Smith "has advised [Bank of America]
that the voice recording she previously furnished for use in its
talking ATMs is protected by a valid copyright" and "has demanded
exorbitant lump-sum royalties and has threatened to seek
injunctive relief prohibiting [Bank of America] from continuing
to use her voice recordings."

In addition, Bank of America claims Smith's lawyer contacted the
California Council of the Blind and said that if her demands are
not met she will seek an injunction to bar further use of [the
bank's] talking ATMs thus leaving the visually impaired in
California without access to ATM machines."

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