Major Labels

More Major Label vs. Startup: EMI Sues Grooveshark

EMI   VS. Grooveshark

Grooveshark has become the latest music startup to be sued by EMI.  Under the motto "Millions Of Songs. Find Yours", Grooveshark combs a database of 6 million songs spread across the internet for quick and easy playback.

But like Seeqpod and others who have tried to offer music online without first cutting difficult and xpensive deals with the major labels, it inveitably has come under fire.  Grooveshark says that it had been trying to make deals for a 50/50 as revenue splt, but to date no majors had signed on.  The full text of a statement on the lawsuit from Grooveshark via Media Memo is after the jump.

hypebot briefing:  Playable search engines like Grooveshark host no music, but rather grab it for play Google-like from across the web. Downloading is not enabled and unlike after a Google search, the location of the song files are never revealed. So why can't the industry offer blanket licenses that monetize these sites instead of enriching lawyers? The alternative is an endless game of global whack-a-mole.

From Grooveshark:

For the past year, Grooveshark has been in
talks with EMI Records and other copyright holders to negotiate
licensing agreements for the use of their content. We are pleased to
announce that over the past few months Grooveshark successfully
concluded mutually beneficial agreements with many artists, labels, and
publishers that we hope to be a template for other such agreements with
additional copyright holders.

Recently, EMI Records chose to abandon the template we’ve built with
the help of other major copyright holders and opted for their
traditional intimidation tactic of filing a lawsuit as a negotiating
tool. We find the use of this negotiating strategy counterproductive, as
Grooveshark has been willing to conclude an agreement with EMI Records
that is economically sustainable for both EMI Records and a start-up
company the size of Grooveshark.

Grooveshark is run by a group of young and passionate musicians. We
love music, we make music, and we believe that the use of all music
should be paid for. We adopted this core philosophy at our inception
and to date have concluded agreements with hundreds of record labels,
major US performance rights organizations, and thousands of independent
artists who support Grooveshark’s business model. (See: Grooveshark
Artists)

As musicians, we support the rights of copyright holders and strive
to sign sustainable agreements with all content owners, ensuring that
all artists get paid– or we agree to remove content from our system in
accordance with our DMCA Takedown Policy. We hope that EMI Records
eventually follows the lead of the many forward-thinking labels we are
already working with, who would rather get their artists exposure and a
fair share of our revenue than block content access and force customers
to illegal networks.

We understand that the economy of the digital music business is in a
state of flux, and we hope to help ease this transition by providing the
required new tools and services that lead to the next generation of the
music industry. We respect the ownership rights of the major labels and
publishers, and our core mission has always been to compete with piracy
by offering a service that is genuinely better than what illegal
networks offer, while also ensuring fair payment to copyright holders.
Our next important step on our road to success is to conclude a
mutually beneficial agreement with EMI Records that is sustainable for
both EMI and Grooveshark.

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5 Comments

  1. ANy song that streams are your PC is capable of being ‘downloaded’ regardless of info given. TO stream it has to first D/L to your cache and then it’s a pretty simple matter to find/rename to .mp3 and you have the song.
    This is why ‘streaming’ is just as bad as pirate music in many cases and SHOULD be subject to royalities as if it were downloadable.

  2. Why should the music industry be forced to do deals with a company? If I started a blog that ripped your design and all your content, and I made it really popular off of just stealing your content, word for word.. your code – line for line and used your blogs name to build my blog up, that would for sure piss you off.
    Just because a company starts a site, doesn’t mean the music industry HAS to do a deal with them.

  3. I should note that Grooveshark are also very difficult people. I have met with them multiple times and their understanding of music, technology and willingness to develop their company alongside the music industry was minimal. It very much is not the ad-supported streaming site that you want to be in business with. There are a lot of competitors out there who are starting the correct way, why be in business with someone you don’t belive in. EMI is doing the right thing.

  4. imo the music (and wider, entertainment) industry didn’t see or care when the times changed, when people started to exchange files, when formats like mp3 appeared (wich inventors were neglicted by majors). the industry wanted to keep intact their format and network : CD and stores. they thought their models/prices and way of exploiting artists could be conserved for ever.
    so the users, the communities, the new websites/softwares made fair job in their place. now it’s too late for most of them, and the only thing they can do is cooperate or bite like EMI just did. There is no reason why. Unlimited supply ? See, that was so predictable …

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