Now Hollywood is chasing UK downloaders: And getting the wrong guy 29/08/08
"Tiscali threatened to disconnect a customer for illegally downloading a TV show last week, after receiving a copyright infringement notice from a Hollywood studio. The only problem was the customer had quit the ISP months before the alleged transgression was made." [TheRegister]
Pandora prepares to join titsup.com club: Web radio outfit struggling to cover royalties 18/08/08
"This weekend saw a cry for help from personalised web radio outfit Pandora. It blubbed that music industry royalties are too high for it to survive on meagre web 2.0 advertising revenues. In a Washington Post confessional, the firm's founder and CEO Tim Westergren said: "We're approaching a pull-the-plug kind of decision. This is like a last stand for webcasting."" [TheRegister]
World shocked (shocked!) by Legal P2P: Old news sinks in 13/08/09
"Why does the idea of legal P2P - something music fans have been clamouring for since the original Napster - still cause so much confusion? Britain is set to be the first country outside Korea where punters will be offered such services (as we revealed back in June), but the idea still seems too incredible for many journalists and bloggers to comprehend." [TheRegister]
EU Gives Green Light to Sony's Acquisition of BMG 16/08/09
"Yesterday the European Union approved Sony Music's acquisition of Bertelsmann's half of its Sony BMG joint venture. Last month Sony agreed to purchase BMG from Bertelsmann for around $900 million. The need for regulators' approval is a standard procedure and an especially potent topic in a recorded music market with such concentrated ownership. The EU approval effectively ends an appeal by indie trade group Impala that asked the EU to rescind its original approval of the merger. As I wrote last year, indie label sales in the US -- either because of or in spite of the merger -- fared well since the merger. From the time of the merger through October of 2007, a period of just over three years, Sony BMG's share of US album sales dropped to 21.76% from 29.78%. Indies rose to 20.55% from 17.58%." [Coolfer]
Another Case Against Long Tail Economics 15/08/09
"At Harvard Business School's Working Knowledge, John A. Quelch has a post titled "Long-Tail Economics? Give Me Blockbusters!" Quelch is the Lincoln Filene Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School. Quelch explains the benefits and lures of blockbusters and offers five characteristics that define a blockbuster. His bottom line is this:
More risky than pursuing blockbusters is not to pursue them, to condemn your enterprise to a lifetime of slave labor harvesting the long tail of micro-opportunities rather than imagining, pursuing, and marketing the global solution to an important, widely shared problem." [Coolfer]
8/29/08
Music News Bulletin - 29/08/08
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