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By Benji Rogers, PledgeMusic & Dot Blockchain Music founderThis has been quite a ride.At my last look “How the Blockchain & VR Can Change the Music Industry” (Parts 1 & 2) has been read by more than 5,500 people according to my Medium Stats. Since November 24, 2015 we have journeyed together from a rather obscure idea about a new music codec containing a Minimum Viable Data Set that would create a globally distributed database of music rights to an open source architecture and user interface, a Github repository, and a working alpha version of the App. It’s second incarnation sits on my desktop as I type this.“If you are not embarrassed by the first version of your product, you’ve launched too late.”
– Reid Hoffman
- Protocol (The Rails not the Trains) — The best analogy I can think of to describe what the Dot Blockchain Music Projects Protocol will do is to compare it to email. I’m sure that most of you reading this use either Gmail, MacMail, Outlook or various other clients to read your email. These are what I would call the trains. The underpinnings of these programs are protocols, called things like IMAP, SMTP & POP3, and these are what the aforementioned programs are built on. Let’s call them the rails. These rails are standardized, yet flexible enough to allow gifted developers to add to, customize, and build out amazing features like snoozing, spam filtering, send later, and archive, but don’t delete, as well as the ability to add pictures and videos etc. onto the basic architecture that sends your messages to their recipients. What will be released late this month will be our first stab at a set of the rails upon which much of the digital music trains will be able to run. A way of working with the raw data of music that will allow for not only the birth of a globally distributed database of ownership rights, but also the trains and engines that will allow fast and fair commerce to scale for all who participate in the system. To be clear, it’s not just going to be raw code. There will be an interface that we also intend to open source, and a plugin framework, API docs etc., but this is not intended to be our version of (to carry on the analogy) Gmail, Outlook, or Mailbox. We are releasing this with the intention of getting feedback and to learn, while at the same time empowering others to be able to build on and or to integrate their own apps and systems at an industrial scale.
- Statements Of Truth — On July 13, 2016 at 10:13 p.m. I made several statements of truth about a song I wrote called “A Few More Days” and using the Dot BlockChain Music Alpha App. I Broadcast those statements into a Blockchain Test Environment. Amongst other things I stated:
- The Songs’ name and that what I was uploading was a copy of that song
- That I was the writer of the song (adding my ASCAP number to the recording and metadata)
- That I was the performer of the song (with label information) and used Spotify’s API as a lookup.
- That Nicholas D’Amato, Matt Beck, Sarab Singh, Emily Zuzik and others all played or performed on the song and that it was engineered by Dave McNair

(Note: this is Monegraph’s Interface showing that I am the owner of this work)
then this:
(Also Monegraph’s Interface where you can identify the hash on the Bitcoin Blockchain )
and finally this:
(The Bitcoin Blockchain TestNet environment where people can search and view the registry)
Next week with the new user interface I will repeat these same few steps that took no more than a minute to complete, but adding in the ISRC code and whatever other information I choose to add, and it will be all be affixed in there, permanently, immutably, and squashed into a unique string of capital and lowercase letters and numbers in a public blockchain for all to see.All parties listed in the song, from the musicians and engineer to ASCAP, label and publisher, can then become parties to the song and it’s ownership, hardened with each addition and link to the source. And so in theory from this first song each track added afterward begins the journey to the authoritative database of musical rights.3. Who Has The Keys (and who doesn’t ) — The system works by a series of Plugins to the song and its data. So if for example a song were co-written by myself and my fellow teammates, Ken, Allen, Chris, Bill and I would all be listed as co-writers and all parties to the file and its data.To carry on with this line of thinking, if for example our record labels were Sony in the US and XL recordings for the Rest of World, with each of us having a different publisher and performing rights organization, e.g. Ken (Kobalt/PRS), Allen (Downtown Music Publishing/BMI), Chris (Universal Music Publishing/AMRA) Bill (Imagem Publishing/SESAC) and me (Ben Rogers Music/ASCAP), then each of the parties involved can claim or be given access to the file bundle. Each can verify or dispute the info within it and can choose to use companies like Auddly, Songspace and Revelator (to name a few) to add in rules, splits, etc. or said companies can choose to build and maintain their own gateways.It also needs to be said that we (the aforementioned Ken, Allen, Chris, Bill and myself — as the founders of Dot Blockchain Music) won’t have the keys to anyone else’s work. We won’t have a back door, or any ability to pull things down as a more traditional and centralized authority would. In other words, once the boat is pushed out there’s no rope with which to pull it back in, and this is most definitely a feature and not a bug. Users could add Dot Blockchain Music as a party to their files of course, but this would not be mandated and we do not view ourselves as arbitrators, a governing body or the framers of rules. We are laying the foundation, not building the house.4. Getting Your Keys — During this beta testing period it’s vital that we can get as many verified owners into the system as possible, and as such if you are a stakeholder we would like to get you verified access into the system as soon as possible. While in closed beta, Dot Blockchain Music will look to verify identity at signup and by request. If you would like to claim your Artist, Songwriter, Musician, Engineer, Producer, Label, Publisher, PRO, Manager, Digital Service Provider, or other entity, you can do so here and we will work to get you access. Note that we will only be doing this during this closed beta/iteration period (anticipated to be about three months) and as such will not provide this service once the system comes out of closed beta. It should be noted that our assigning access does not give us control over what you or anyone else enters into the system whilst in the closed beta or beyond.Next StepsWe are raising money to complete the next phases of the system, a deck for which can be requested here and we are inviting technical partners to contribute, should they wish to by getting in touch here. The scope of work undertaken and completed so far can be viewed below:Please also make sure that you help us with our Minimum Viable Data Survey as we’d like to get to 1000 responses and we are now at just over 300 the initial results of which are here.
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