Webcasters with significant advertising revenue, like Pandora or Slacker, will pay the greater of 25 percent of revenue or a fee each time a listener hears a song, starting at .08 cent for songs streamed in 2006 and increasing to .14 cent in 2015. Pandora had $19 million in revenue last year and expects that to rise to $40 million this year.
SongbyToad said:Adam, I was at a talk recently with Simon from Beggars saying that you guys earned pretty significant cash from Spotify. I was genuinely surprised, as I've never heard anyone say that they earn anything other than a laughable pittance from them.

If you’re rebroadcasting copyrighted video streams how will the
authorities ever track you down? Well it looks like you don’t even need
to be the content originator, and they’ll track you down because you
didn’t really cover your tracks in the first place. [Brian McCarthy]
found this out the hard way when his domain name was seized by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement earlier this year.
So how did they find him? They started by getting the records from
the domain name registrar. He had used an alias instead of his real name
so the next step in the investigation was to get a name from Comcast to
go with the IP which had logged into the name registrar’s interface.
They matched the Comcast account holder’s home address with the one
given during domain registration, then matched the Gmail account
registration infor from the registrar to the same person. The final
piece of the puzzle was to stake out his house (no kidding) to confirm
that [Brian] lived at the address uncovered by investigators.
ICE really went the whole nine yards. Especially if consider that the
website they seized provided links to copyrighted media but didn’t
actually host any of it. Nonetheless, [Brian] could find himself
spending five years in the clink… ouch.
"The NWO are going to use every tool possible to track your every movement on this planet."
"Theres no running away, just watch yourself"
The white paper along with its potential impact has since been widely
discussed in the media, but apparently only a select few have the
capacity to properly assess the consequences of an eventual change in
copyright law. Music industry expert, book author and Grammy winner Moses Avalon is one of them.
“Here’s one story you won’t see going viral on a geek blog near you:
the Obama administration is going to make torrent streaming, also known
as P2P sharing of music, a felony,” Avalon wrote – four days after we
covered the news.
Being the music industry and copyright expert he is, Avalon carefully
explains how the White House recommendations will change the Internet
as we know it. Not only will unauthorized streaming of copyrighted
material become a felony, new legislation will also shutter legal music
services that rely on P2P technology, and news sites that dare to
mention the P word in public.
http://torrentfreak.com/new-law-will-shut-down-torrentfreak-music-industry-expert-says-110322/
Amazon launched two new services, Cloud Drive and Cloud Player,
earlier this week. US-based Amazon customers can get free online storage
from Amazon to use for whatever they please, but users are heavily
encouraged to upload their local music libraries. All Amazon MP3
purchases are automatically synced to the user's Cloud Drive without
counting against the quota, too. Once the music is copied to the remote
drive, users can then use the Cloud Player Android or Web app to stream
the music to any compatible device or browser, even if the files
themselves had not been synced there.
Both Apple and Google are expected to launch very similar services in the future, but neither has made an announcement. Google's music service
is rumored to offer both music downloads and streams to go with its own
digital locker—the service would scan a user's computer and
automatically add any tracks that Google has licensed to that user's
online locker. Apple's may involve
unlimited music redownloads and streams to iOS devices as part of a
MobileMe revamp, and Apple is currently believed to be in talks with the
Big Four music labels—Sony Music, Universal Music Group (UMG), Warner
Music Group (WMG), and EMI—to make it happen.
--------------------
For an industry that is shrinking and dying, these people sure got plenty of attitude.I am not sure why they just don't get together and device a plan to permanently kill all big labels. WMG, Sony, UMG. It'll be so much easier, cheaper than putting up with it.
Plenty of people want them die and knows how to do it.
Today, Music Unlimited
announced their new Android application. Music Unlimited is an online
music streaming service that offers over 7 million titles. This
application is open to all Sony Xperia based phones as well as some
third party devices. The application is a free download from the market,
which we will provide below. With the Music Unlimited service, you can
also stream music to your Sony Bravia TV, Blu-ray player, PSP, and PS3.
So is it too late for a rival to catch up?
Clear Channel Communications
doesn't think so. The nation's largest radio operator — with a base of
237 million listeners and 800 stations in 150 markets — is seriously
beefing up its 3-year-old iHeartRadio service. A major push includes top
superstars Lady Gaga, the Black Eyed Peas and American Idol's Jennifer Lopez and Steven Tyler singing on the service's behalf.
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/products/story/2011-09-13/iheart-radio-clear-channel/50393228/1
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