The continued destruction of mp3.com


As of December the 3rd, the recently sold independent music portal mp3.com will destroy their complete archive of songs by independent artists.

From kuro5hin

For background on the sale (and ethical failure) of mp3.com, go here.

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One response to “The continued destruction of mp3.com”

  1. […] Then along came a couple of smaller competitors, like amp3.com, which announced that they would offer per-download ‘royalties’ to artists in exchange for the insertion of short audio advertisments at the beginning of each track. In the case of amp3.com, this never really got off the ground because they apparently couldn’t settle on a workable system for this, and got embroiled in agonistic debates with the artist community that eventually stalled, and the site merged with iuma.com a few months later. MP3.com eventually integrated a pay-per-download system, but then also introduced payola schemes that effectively delivered a competitive advantage to the fat end of the long tail (e.g. ‘platinum’ membership which resulted in your tracks being prioritised in search and browse pages). It was a strangely schizophrenic and yet, in hindsight, entirely predictable pattern. More on the demise of mp3.com here and here. This model hasn’t died – for one, garageband.com is still going strong, but I haven’t looked closely at its business model for a while. […]