Uncategorized

More Music Industry News: Pirate Bay, iTunes vs. Palm. Downloader Study, Licensing, LiveWire & More

  • image from suse.groenbaek.net Swedish judge to Pirate Bay admins: shut down or face fines. – The founders of The Pirate Bay could face fines in Sweden if the popular torrent tracker remains online. A court has banned them from continuing to operate the site at the risk of hefty daily fines. The admins, however, are no longer in Sweden and claim that they are not involved with the website anymore. (ars)
  • Apple's iTunes Update Again Blocks Palm Pre Syncing. (Newsfactor)
  • New study: Illegal downloaders spend more on music than those who obey the law. (UK Mail)
  • Film and TV licensing of music has been hit by the recession. (LA Times) Singer/songwriter Pi Jaocobs offers "10 Tips On Licensing Your Music As Economy Turns Further Downward". (urb)
  • A Street Musician With a Corporate Sponsor. (NY Times)
  • image from clear.colorado.edu Google seeks to turn a profit from YouTube copyright clashes. – Group is working to persuade music and video companies to cash in rather than clamp down when their content is uploaded. (Guardian)
  • Google Music and the New Payola – Some things never change. (Dave Kusek)
  • Hit streaming service Spotify eyes U.S. music fans. (Reuters)
  • LiveWire mobile makes cuts including 20 jobs. 
  • Record Label Earache Markets New Album via Free RapidShare Downloads – Band and Label to Give Away Entire Album to Fans for Free. (press release)
  • Digital Stores, a UK based direct-to-consumer entertainment retail services company, has appointed digital music veteran Rudy Tambala to their board as a non-executive director. Tambala was Head of Digital for Virgin Retail and most recently Head of Internet and Innovation for Ministry of Sound. (press release)

Share on:

1 Comment

  1. The Kusek piece was a real standout.
    The Earache Records bit is amateur noise, though. Having pop-ups ads from someone else all over your badly written press release is embarrassing enough, but hyping up the fact you’re using RapidShare links? Ouch.
    It’s a vanishingly small expense to have your own damn hosting for files like that. Chump change. These guys are clowning themselves.

Comments are closed.