iTunes Rival Adopts New Strategy
An online music company is launching a new take on the MP3 business model: it's offering unlimited listening (from any Internet-enabled device) to a track for 10 cents. For LaLa, the group offering the deal, this is the third different method it's tried.
LaLa, which launched in 2006, began as a music business based on members trading physical CDs (originals, not copies), with LaLa charging a dollar to both parties as middleman.
Last year it changed the focus to online music, with streaming music available with permission of the publishers (though this feature didn't last long) and the ability to upload your own music collection and access it from any computer.
The new idea is to sell music through this system. Users can pay 10c to add a song to a personal 'locker' which they can then access online forever. However, there's no option to download tracks onto your own computer or MP3 player.
There are a couple of features which don't appear with most rivals. Users will be able to listen to any track in the system once without charge, unlike with iTunes which limits previews to 30 seconds. And LaLa has one of the widest potential ranges of music, with the support of all four major record labels plus a reported 70,000 independent labels. (Source: cnn.com)
Those benefits don't seem likely to overcome the system's weaknesses though. While LaLa insists we are close to the point where all music-playing devices have an Internet connection, that sounds an unlikely imminent prospect to me. In any case, there will always be situations where you simply can't get online, for example when riding the subway. (Source: cnet.com)
The economics seem questionable as well. LaLa will have to pay a royalty fee every time a website visitor plays a preview track, though the firm says that in a test run, the proportion of purchases-to-previews was easily high enough to cover these fees.
The other big problem is that 10c doesn't sound like enough to cover the fees record companies would presumably expect for unlimited streaming (the current royalty rate is 0.2c per play) and still let LaLa make a profit.
Most popular articles
- Which Processor is Better: Intel or AMD? - Explained
- How to Prevent Ransomware in 2018 - 10 Steps
- 5 Best Anti Ransomware Software Free
- How to Fix: Computer / Network Infected with Ransomware (10 Steps)
- How to Fix: Your Computer is Infected, Call This Number (Scam)
- Scammed by Informatico Experts? Here's What to Do
- Scammed by Smart PC Experts? Here's What to Do
- Scammed by Right PC Experts? Here's What to Do
- Scammed by PC / Web Network Experts? Here's What to Do
- How to Fix: Windows Update Won't Update
- Explained: Do I need a VPN? Are VPNs Safe for Online Banking?
- Explained: VPN vs Proxy; What's the Difference?
- Explained: Difference Between VPN Server and VPN (Service)
- Forgot Password? How to: Reset Any Password: Windows Vista, 7, 8, 10
- How to: Use a Firewall to Block Full Screen Ads on Android
- Explained: Absolute Best way to Limit Data on Android
- Explained: Difference Between Dark Web, Deep Net, Darknet and More
- Explained: If I Reset Windows 10 will it Remove Malware?
My name is Dennis Faas and I am a senior systems administrator and IT technical analyst specializing in cyber crimes (sextortion / blackmail / tech support scams) with over 30 years experience; I also run this website! If you need technical assistance , I can help. Click here to email me now; optionally, you can review my resume here. You can also read how I can fix your computer over the Internet (also includes user reviews).
We are BBB Accredited
We are BBB accredited (A+ rating), celebrating 21 years of excellence! Click to view our rating on the BBB.