Archive for the ‘Music industry’ Category

Is Music DRM Dead?

Monday, January 7th, 2008

The Wired blog Underwire appears ready to declare music-protecting DRM dead in light of Sony BMG's decision to begin selling some tracks in the unprotected MP3 format. Since Sony was the last holdout among the big four record labels, this is indeed big news; that said, I remain skeptical that the ...

Music Biz: Blooming or Dying? Same Data, Two Frames

Monday, January 7th, 2008

In two different news stories summarizing the latest Nielsen Soundscan music sales report, the music industry is cast as growing at a remarkable clip or continuing its long, slow decline. Variety takes the latter tack, moaning, "Album sales take a tumble in 2007." In contrast, the Centre Daily Times celebrates the ...

Wired: Vinyl May Be Final Nail in CDs Coffin

Saturday, December 8th, 2007

From the same Wired commentator who recently celebrated the slow death of music DRM, Eliot Van Buskirk now considers the impact of the vinyl resurgence on CDs. The argument is almost certainly overstated, and he makes no good causal connection between the still-sparse (albeit growing) amount of vinyl and turntable sales, ...

Music Exec Bemoans “Inadvertent” War on Consumers

Sunday, November 18th, 2007

In a speech to the GSMA Mobile Asia Congress in Macau, Warner Music chief Edgar Bronfman warned the mobile industry not to make the music industry's mistakes in failing to satisfy consumer wishes: "We used to fool ourselves,' he said. "We used to think our content was perfect just exactly as ...

Linkfest: RIAA Peer-to-Peer Trial

Saturday, October 6th, 2007

On Thursday, a federal jury in Minnesota found a woman liable for uploading 24 songs via the peer-to-peer network Kazaa, ordering her to pay $220,000. The volume of online discussion of this case is unsurprisingly large, but I thought it would be worth highlighting some of the coverage, especially from ...

Can Rick Rubin Save the Music Industry?

Sunday, September 2nd, 2007

In this weekend's New York Times Magazine, an excellent profile of music mogul Rick Rubin suggests Sony's recent hiring of Rubin as Columbia Records co-head just might save both the company and the music industry. Rubin certainly seems bent on changing the music industry. He sounds like a Free Culture activist, ...

South Park Creators Think Digital

Monday, August 27th, 2007

Here's a minilink to a NYT story about Trey Parker and Matt Stone's new South Park deal (worth roughly $75m over 4 years), in which they get a share of ad revenue and seek to take the show online--in other words, to move on from Viacom's 20th-Century business model. Let me ...

Universal not renewing iTunes contract

Monday, July 2nd, 2007

In a move the Times describes "as a boiling over of the long-simmering tensions between Mr. Jobs and the major record labels," Universal Music Group (UMG) has declined to renew its annual iTunes contract. The reasons are simple enough: the music industry wants some tracks to cost more than $.99, while ...

Occasionally Free

Saturday, April 21st, 2007

Interesting article at the Independent about giving away free music downloads: The record industry has reached a strange pass when it makes more economic sense to give away an entire album than to spend the money needed to persuade people to buy it. But, when it comes to the process of ...

DMCA author admits law’s failure

Tuesday, March 27th, 2007

At a conference over the weekend, former Clinton Administration IP chief Bruce Lehman admitted that his brainchild of a law banning the circumvention of digital rights management technologies hasn't worked out as well as he had hoped. The conference, Musical Myopia, Digital Dystopia: New Media and Copyright Reform (pdf), was at ...