The Sound of Cash

Published: 7 March 2001 y., Wednesday
On Thursday, Amazon.com inaugurated a “tip jar” by which listeners can volunteer to give cash to artists they like. Amazon’s effort joins MP3.com’s year-old “Payback for Playback” system, where musicians can upload their music to the Net to get a chunk of $1 million a month. For 39 of MP3.com’s roughly 150,000 artists, that’s translated into more than $20,000 they each made off of free downloads last year. And even artists making less dough say they’re satisfied with the rewards they’re reaping from this new phase of the music business. In MP3.com’s payback scheme, $1 million a month is doled out proportionately to the site’s artists based on the number of unique users who’ve listened to their music. Payments can range from zero — if you’ve had fewer than 15 listeners — to last year’s top earner, electronic band 303infinity, which made $165,392.92. MP3.com has financial problems, mostly caused by a slew of lawsuits connected with its My.Mp3.com personal music-storage service: first a set of five copyright suits from major record labels, four of which were settled out of court and one of which, with Universal Music, cost the company $118 million. Rival Emusic.com has also sued the site for copyright infringement. That case is pending. MP3.com gives artists $3 million of its roughly $20 million in quarterly revenues. The site has permission to use all of its Payback artists’ music. Michael Robertson, MP3.com’s CEO, said the site considers its payments to artists to be marketing expenses. Rather than advertising itself, the site gets thirsty artists to advertise their pages on MP3.com in a quest for hits, he said. MP3.com makes its money primarily from on-site advertising.
Šaltinis: abcnews.go.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Hackers Limit Disruption To Small Internet Sites

A battle among hackers erupted on the Internet yesterday as some factions disrupted a loosely coordinated effort among other groups trying to vandalize Web sites around the world more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Denmark stops import of IT specialists outside normal rules

It will no longer be possible for Danish companies to automatically employ foreign IT specialists as an exception to the ordinary strict rules on residence permits more »

Over 200m European internet users by 2004, survey

Europe's online population reached 184m by the end of 2002 and will surge beyond 200m by the end of 2004 more »

IDC: OVER ONE MILLION INTERNET USERS IN CROATIA BY END OF 2003

It is possible to expect that by the end of this year there will be over one million Internet users in Croatia more »

Microsoft Enters Identity Management Fray

Microsoft rivals have been staking out a claim to the identity management space -- a critical component of Web services more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

ICANN comes to terms with country domains

Internet overseeing organisation ICANN has backed down in its battle with the rest of the world more »

The new banking software

Deutsche Bank S.p.A Italy Augments Service and Profitability via ACI's BASE24-es Software more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »