July 13, 2007

Friday Business Links

• Private equity firm Terra Firma has extended its deadline for its offer for EMI again, this time for one week. (BBC News)

• Universal Music Group has extended to July 26th its offer to buy the Sanctuary Group. UMG has offered $87.7 million. Last month news broke that investment bank Crosby Capital Partners was preparing a bid for Sanctuary, but the firm has not yet made an official bid. (Billboard.biz)

• Microsoft has applied for a patent titled "Off-line Economies for Digital Media" that is system for paying a commission to Zune owners for sharing music. Owners would be paid only if the other user who received the song purchased it at the Zune Marketplace. (ZuneScene, via Engadet)

• Music retail legend Music Millennium in Portland, OR is going to close down one of its two stores after 30 years. The combination of declining music sales and increasing rents was too much for owner Terry Currier. Since last August, the store has lost $93,000. (The Oregonian)

• Michael Geist, professor Law and columnist, helped create a video that aims to show how the media's reporting of piracy has helped lead to movie piracy legislation and two government committees that seek tougher action on piracy. The movie addresses claims of music piracy made by the CRIA with statistics and info on Canada's music market. Not all of Geist's rebuttals actually rebut the often-made claims. Rather, they try to present a more balanced view. The video is almost nine minutes long, spend some time with it if you can. (Michael Geist)

• Inside Digital Media has an podcast interview with Jim Burger, an attorney who discusses the recent WIPO meeting and the issue of fair use of acquired media in home networks. (Inside Digital Media)

January 2, 2007

Next Up: Majors License For Podcasts

The new year is just a few days old and already there are interesting developments (which is nice in a time that's usually painfully slow). The Wall Street Journal's Ethan Smith reported yesterday that some major record labels and publishers have deals to license their songs for podcasts. Not surprisingly, the first are for corporate-sponsored podcasts.

"San Francisco-based Rock River Communications Inc. has struck some of the first deals to license major-label content for podcasts. Rock River, which specializes in making the mix CDs sold at the check-out counters of retailers like Gap Inc. and Williams-Sonoma Inc.'s Pottery Barn, is creating a series of promotional podcasts on behalf of corporate clients including DaimlerChrysler AG and Ford Motor Co.

Chrysler and Ford pay Sony BMG Music Entertainment -- the joint venture of Sony Corp. and Germany's Bertelsmann AG -- a flat fee, which the companies decline to disclose, for the right to distribute the podcasts for a year, regardless of how many or how few copies are downloaded. Users can keep the programs on their personal computers or MP3 players indefinitely."

Chrysler's podcast is/has been available at its corporate website as well as iTunes. The Ford podcast series will launch later this month.

Right now this is nothing to get overly excited about. While far short of the kind of solution so many labels hold out hope for, it's an important change and possibly a precursor to larger shifts. And it just plain makes sense. Labels and publishers should recognize the need for additional revenue, and hopefully they realize that a podcast -- a professionally-produced broadcast contained in a single, large file -- is not a replacement for commercially available digital tracks or albums.