Tuesday Business Links
Reuters reports that Warner Music Group is "likely" to offer an increased bid to top the $4.73 billion bid for rival EMI submitted by private equity firm Terra Firma. Could be worth it if Coldplay plans to release an album any time soon. (Reuters)
At the urging of a House Judiciary Subcommittee, SoundExchange has offered small webcasters break in royalties. (Billboard.biz)
In a lawsuit similar to Cheap Trick's complaint against Sony BMG, FBT Productions and Em2M have sued Aftermath Records and Interscope Records over digital royalties. The plaintiffs allege they have been underpaid and should have received half of net receipts from ringtones and downloads. (Billboard.biz)
Defend Distribution has teamed up with former Caroline Distribution GM Rick Williams, who will act as a consultant, to expand its label roster and increase its label services. Good thing Defend now goes through Ryko. (CMJ.com)
A profile of Sonos founder John MacFarlane. He's a big believer in the subscription model. "As broadband connectivity becomes ubiquitous, MacFarlane sees an inexorable shift to the music dial-tone model -- which is more conducive to a raft of innovations, such as social networking and recommendation engines, that are currently unfolding." (Business 2.0)
An IFPI investigation has resulted in a shut down of a voucher system for Russian download site allofmp3.com run by a London-based agent. (PC Pro UK)
Here's a video of the unboxing of a Halo 3 edition of a Zune portable media player. The player's design isn't much, but it shows the kinds of cross-promotions that Microsoft can utilize to help its Zune player get marketshare. (Zune Insider)
Music Groups