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Record Companies Open Pandora's Box

by Tom Andry last modified August 19, 2008
R.I.P.

R.I.P.

Pandora has been one of the best sources for new music on the net. The way the service works is that you enter in some parameters (band name, music type, etc.) and the website starts playing music it thinks you'll like. You then vote up or down songs which helps the service better predict your musical tastes. With a minimal investment of time and energy on your part, you'll find new music that you may never have encountered before. There is even an option to go directly to Amazon or iTunes to purchase the music.

Say goodbye to all that.

Pandora may be going the way of the dodo according to Ars Technica. It seems that the recent Internet radio royalty hike will be too crushing for the upstart website. Currently they have a stable of ways to make money (ads on the site, subscription services, etc.) but apparently it isn't enough. While they will take in a reported $25 million in 2008, 70% will go to pay for the royalties.

So, maybe they can make their bills this year but what about in 2010 when the rates DOUBLE?

The problem, as I see it, is that Pandora is really against the wall. Can they make more money? Sure. Don't give anything away. But their user base has become accustomed to the free service. How hard can they push before the fickle Internet crowd goes to greener (or less green out of their pockets) pastures? It is a delicate line.

Don't think this will be the only victim to the greed of the record companies. While places like NPR won't go out of business because of it, you can bet you're going to see a lot less content online. If you think this is a good thing, try listening to your local radio stations and compare them to the offerings online. One of these things is not like the other.

The fact is that many bands have sold albums because of Pandora that might not have otherwise. While my local station thinks Alice in Chains is still "fresh," online I can find more and more music to buy because of services like Pandora.

The "winners" here are NOT the record companies. It will take them a few years after they crush the last of the online radio stations before they figure out how much revenue they lost and then try to recreate Pandora - probably poorly. The winners are the pirates and the P2P filesharers. Those of us that don't want to "steal" music won't, but the many out there who want new music and prefer to get it legally but don't mind a little filesharing will go right back to those services. And now, they have a bad guy to blame. Talk about shooting yourself in the foot.

I'm not giving up on Pandora yet - perhaps they will find a way to stay alive. Or maybe Google will buy them and I'll end up with the service anyhow. This is just the first step on a very rocky road for online radio.

by Tom Andry last modified August 19, 2008

Recent Forum Posts:

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kay posts on August 19, 2008 07:57
One other point they are missing entirely is that the world is now a global marketplace. In the country where I currently reside - South Africa - there is no legal way of purchasing music online. iTunes and Amazon MP3 for instance refuse to sell locally, citing licensing restrictions.

I am increasingly turning to Last.fm to discover new music, sample it there or via P2P, and buy the (DRM-free) CD online if I like it. I get cool interactivity, maximum quality, and a physical object in the end. Mostly clean conscience too although the file sharing step is obviously illegal
Clint DeBoer posts on August 19, 2008 06:09
This kind of stuff makes me want to start stealing music to be honest...lol. Whatever it takes to get them to understand the relationships between choice, selection and increased profits.

They need some kind of message, cause apparently they aren't getting it.
fmw posts on August 19, 2008 05:51
The record companies have been their own worst enemy for as long as I can remember. Apparently nothing has changed.

Our marketplace is now down to a single independent store that sells records and CD's. We used to have 4 of them. I wonder how long before there are none.
skers_54 posts on August 19, 2008 01:14
This is stupid. Quite a few of my friends stopped or drastically reduced illegal downloading once they discovered Pandora as a replacement (predicated by the rate at which people were getting caught at my college). You would think that record companies would support legal avenues of music distribution. But I guess if they were rational they wouldn't sue their consumer base.
rplotkin posts on August 19, 2008 01:02
Over the past year (our first with a Pandora subscription), my wife and I have purchased 15 albums (most on CD) because of what we've heard on it. Prior to that, our purchasing was one or two albums a year (at most). Recording industry really needs to screw their collective head on straight; I can't be the only one who's buying more now.
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