The music industry is taking a stand against the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, with more than 100 artists and managers petitioning the U.S. Copyright Office to change the current safe harbor laws. The industry has submitted three letters to the office – one from music managers, one from creators, and one from artists and songwriters – explaining their concerns with the existing interpretation of the regulation and calling for change.
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AccuRadio celebrates First Contact Day. If you have to ask…
Posted on by Brad Hill
AccuRadio has announced a new channel launched in honor of First Contact Day. Wait -- you don't know what First Contact Day is? Read on.
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Taylor Swift shills and spills for Apple Music
Posted on by Anna Washenko
Taylor and the Cupertino crew have been pretty close since the official launch of Apple Music. The relationship got even more serious today, as she is now appearing in an ad for the streaming platform.
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Italian music industry saw digital and physical sales grow in 2015
Posted on by Anna Washenko
The Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana, Italy’s music trade body, released its 2015 report, which showed continued growth for both digital and physical formats. The industry posted 21% overall growth to €148 million ($169 million) for the year.
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Rumor Fact(ory): Tidal may add feature films to streaming options
Posted on by Anna Washenko
Tidal doesn’t take a day off. The company is back in headlines again, but this time with nothing related to music. Page Six reported that the music platform is looking to expand on its burgeoning video content initiative with the addition of full-length movies. This new film component could reportedly launch as early as June.
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Kanye’s Pablo album gets broader online release
Posted on by Anna Washenko
Never is a very long time. Or, if you’re Kanye West, it’s somewhere in the range of seven weeks. West's latest album was released on Apple Music, Spotify, and Google Play today. It’s also now available for purchase through West’s website.
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Quick Hits: Closer looks at iHeartMedia, SoundCloud, audio advertising, and suing Spotify
Posted on by Brad Hill
Brief news items and worthy reads from around the web: Will iHeartMedia Survive? To SoundCloud, Love Dave. Audio advertising changing the tune for advertisers. David Lowery talks streaming, royalties, and solutions.
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On the Move: Sonos, Vine, and Vevo
Posted on by Anna Washenko
On the Move tracks hires, promotions, and other notable personnel changes within the online audio industry. Today's moves include a major exit from Sonos, a promotion at Vevo, and a new face joining Vine.
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Eighty-five companies aren’t wrong — should you be at RAIN Summit West?
Posted on by Brad Hill
Eighty-five companies (so far) have grabbed seats at RAIN Summit West, the must-attend gathering of the online audio industry. The company attendee list includes broadcasters, Internet radio firms, digital audio advertising groups, research companies, technology service providers to the audio industry, law firms, music royalty administration companies, digital marketing services, and more. Click through to see.
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Milk Music closing in Australia after just one year
Posted on by Anna Washenko
Samsung is ending its Milk Music service in Australia on April 28. The streaming platform launched in the country last February. Samsung is reportedly offering Milk customers three free months of access to Google Play Music subscriptions as a consolation.
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New Deezer dataset reviews most-binged-on tracks
Posted on by Anna Washenko
Deezer has been exploring new niches in music data. The latest project analyzes which tracks have the highest binge-listening potential, the ones that get many repeat listens. Deezer also released its tunes with the most streams so far in 2016.
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Jay-Z may sue Tidal’s original owners
Posted on by Anna Washenko
Jay-Z is preparing to take legal action against the original owners of the Tidal streaming service. He alleged that Aspiro’s major shareholders exaggerated how many subscribers Tidal had when his business operation took over. He’s looking to reclaim roughly 100 million Norwegian krone (~$15 million).