Apps, Mobile & SMS

Why Did Dropbox Buy Audiogalaxy?


Audiogalaxy_home-313x214By Eliot Van Buskirk of Evolver.fm.

Most companies making strides in the cloud are big. Apple (iCloud) and Google (Drive) are front-runners in the general cloud storage space. If you count the music cloud, Amazon’s also a factor, especially with its newfound abilities to autorip all the CDs you’ve ever bought there and sell music to iOS users.

Then, you have Dropbox, which has amassed over 100 million loyal users, in part through an Amway-like approach that gives people free upgrades if they convince their friends and/or coworkers to use it too. Dropbox is social in a way that other cloud storage services are not. Sharing is baked into the way it expands, and the way people using it, designating files or folders as shared.

There’s even an app, DropTunes (for web and iOS), that turns Dropbox into a sharing-friendly, cloud music player for iOS and the web.

Clearly, if DropBox were to release something that did what DropTunes does, without agreements with labels, publishers, or artists, they’d have to lawyer up pretty fast.

So what is DropBox doing with Audiogalaxy, which it purchased late last year?

For the uninitiated, Audiogalaxy began as a file-sharing network in the Napster era, distinguishing itself by surfacing results from users who were offline. This was great, because it let you find super-rare stuff; when the user hosting it logged back on, your download would commence.

In its latest iteration, Audiogalaxy is a “place shifting” music app whose main function was to let people listen to the music on their computer from wherever they are — up to 200,000 songs, for free, either on-demand or in smart radio stations. This is the “DIY cloud,” because the music still lives on your computer, rather than in a data center somewhere. Your computer at home, or wherever, needs to be on in order for it to work.

We’re unclear on what it will look like when Dropbox rolls out whatever it is planning to do with Audiogalaxy, if anything, because Dropbox is a “true” cloud service, in that your data lives in a data center somewhere, and Audiogalaxy is all about the DIY cloud.

Most obviously, Dropbox would use Audiogalaxy — or maybe just the people who built it — to add some sort of music functionality to Dropbox. We can think of two reasons this might take a while: 1) Negotiating the licensing for something like that will be tough, especially considering that Dropbox is as much a collaborative tool for file sharing as it is an online repository for individual people’s data; and 2) Audiogalaxy and Dropbox are sort of apples and oranges, for the reasons mentioned above.

We asked DropBox to give us a hint about what it is up to, and heard back the following, from an outside spokeswoman:

“At this time, we don’t have any insight into what Dropbox is planning around this, but we’ll add you to our media list and keep you posted if/when more information is available.”

So much for the direct approach.

Anyway, watch this space. Nobody — not Amazon, Apple, or Google — has begun to dominate the music locker space. Dropbox, with its hordes of users/salespeople, could make a big dent fast, assuming it has the will and legal resources to make that happen.

 

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11 Comments

  1. Basic dropbox users have always wondered if there is an easy way to increase your dropbox space permanently.The problem is that the startup 2 gb space isn’t enough. The 100GB monthly plan is too expensive and for most users far more space then they will ever use. Most people are already happy with the 2GB they use right now. But what if you were able to upgrade and have 9 times more space than you have now by just paying a small fee once? That would be great for most people.
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    We offer you a fast and safe service! You can get up to 16GB from us for a very good price. We already served more than 300 happy dropbox users

  2. audiogalaxy is technically a predecessor of spotify, there are similarities, and now we will see probably the following workflow: 1) index your local mp3s (fingerprint, tags) 2) upload the diff to dropbox 3) stream your own mp3s anywhere for free and add recommended ones or curated channels for a flatrate or with advertisement.

  3. I believe that we still have to look out for what Dropbox and Audiogalaxy guys will come up with and it might make a huge difference in the music market in years to come. Although the purchase seems like an odd move by Dropbox, I for one think that I will work out like it did for Dropbox and GroupDocs. An integration of Dropbox and GroupDocs has favoured not only the users of both solutions but firms are now seriously considering GroupDocs as well as Dropbox to be part of the organizational workflows. You can read more about this integration here:
    http://groupdocs.com/blog/groupdocs-document-management/archive/2012/08/15/announcing-dropbox-integration-with-groupdocs-apps-suite.html

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  5. Audiogalaxy was a GOD SEND and now it has been taken away. WHY…>WHY>>>>>WHY!!!!! I can only hope dropbox will release it again and VERY SOON. I am now stuck on streaming music that play what THEY want…not what I WANT WHEN I WANT!!

  6. As an avid and rabid Audiogalaxy user (both via browser at work and via iPad remotely) I can tell you that I have closely followed this from Day One. At first I was very excited. Yes! Dropbox will only make Audiogalaxy that much better. I was eager to hear some word about what was in stire. So I watched. And I waited. And waited. And…nothing. Not a word from the Dropbox team. Not a word from the Audiogalaxy team. Then, after being intially told that existing Audiogalaxy users would continue to have access to their music…POOF!…Audiogalaxy disappears. One day we have service. The nest day…gone. Without a single word to their many loyal users. And still no word.
    For what it’s worth – which apparently is nothing – I am waiting to see if Mega can weather their legal challenges. If they make it, then I am going to uninstall Dropbox and never look back.

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