Friday Business Links
To cut is (probably not) to cure: EMI laid off an undisclosed number of employees in Canada. (Billboard.biz)
The EU is looking at whether or not the Sony BMG merger has raised CD prices. A survey sent to record companies and trade group asks, "Have the majors shown a parallel behavior, in particular in terms of prices before the merger? Did the merger have an effect on such parallelism?" Honest answers please. (Bloomberg News)
The newly-created House Antitrust Task Force will hold a public hearing next week on the proposed merger between Sirius and XM. (The Wall Street Journal)
Internet radio listening jumped 26% in 2006. AOL's radio network, at 15.25 hours per week, is the most listened to online radio network. (Radio Ink)
The UK government responded to a petition to ban DRM. In short, it is not jumping on Norway's bandwagon. Excerpt: "DRM does not only act as a policeman through technical protection measures, it also enables content companies to offer the consumer unprecedented choice in terms of how they consume content, and the corresponding price they wish to pay." (Number-10.gov, via Tech Digest)
The state of music retail in Columbia, Ohio. (The Other Paper)
The state of music retail in Belfast, Ireland. "The demise of the independent sector has been rapid, brutal and in inverse proportion to the rise of downloading and the digital revolution." Actually, I think the demise has been in direct proportion to the rise of downloading and the digital revolution, but I get what they're saying. (Belfast Telegraph)
Music Groups
