Spotify Will Boost Music In Exchange For Cut of Royalties (gizmodo.com) 36
On Monday, Spotify announced a new initiative that offers artists the chance to pay their way into automated recommendations. Gizmodo reports: In a carefully worded blog post, Spotify is framing its latest move as a test that will give artists more "input" into the recommendation algorithms that populate personalized playlists with fresh tracks. The company writes that its algorithms take "into account thousands of types of signals: what you're listening to and when, which songs you're adding to your playlists, the listening habits of people who have similar tastes, and much more." Today, Spotify is adding a new signal to the mix: $$$.
Artists uploading new tracks to Spotify will be able to choose "music that's a priority for them" and in exchange for accepting a "promotional recording royalty rate," Spotify's algorithms might just bless them with exposure. The company isn't making promises, it's only offering an opportunity. There's no guarantee of placement in playlists and the reduced royalty rate is only applied to songs that end up being served through the new recommendation system. What is a "promotional recording royalty rate," exactly? [A] spokesperson for the service told the Verge that they aren't making the rate public while it's in testing and Spotify will "calibrate to make sure that the widest group of artists and labels can find success."
Artists uploading new tracks to Spotify will be able to choose "music that's a priority for them" and in exchange for accepting a "promotional recording royalty rate," Spotify's algorithms might just bless them with exposure. The company isn't making promises, it's only offering an opportunity. There's no guarantee of placement in playlists and the reduced royalty rate is only applied to songs that end up being served through the new recommendation system. What is a "promotional recording royalty rate," exactly? [A] spokesperson for the service told the Verge that they aren't making the rate public while it's in testing and Spotify will "calibrate to make sure that the widest group of artists and labels can find success."
Business... (Score:1)
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Are those old laws from the early radio / rock and roll days not applicable to this?
Perhaps just a little massaging of those laws to update them today might be something to look into?
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Re: pray all you like (Score:1)
Prove on exists.
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user choice (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:user choice (Score:5, Interesting)
The only choice is to leave Spotify.
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You can bet what they want to push as number one on the hit parade, advertising jingles, they will claim are music ;/. Corporations will pay to have their products mentioned in music and then push that advertising as music.
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You're probably right.
It was already done with radio back in the 70s. Simon and Garfunkel had an accidental hit that way:
Kodachrooo-oooo-ome. Gives us the nice bright colors; gives us the dree-ee-eeams of summer; makes you think all the world's a sunny day.
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Their payment to Spotify is the algorithm.
Radio is dead (Score:5, Insightful)
Congrats, Spotify, you just found out how to become like that radio thing that nobody listens to anymore! More mass-market cookie-cutter garbage incoming!
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Came here for this, was not disappoint.
Welcome to the future (Score:4, Informative)
Next will be the movie/TV studios, who will have to compete with all-you-can-eat. Except, unlike with music, they won't get royalties but instead ever cheaper fixed sums of money, as their greed backs them into a corner. With COVID killing cinema, Netflix only needs to woo enough desperate studios into signing cheap deals that they will reach a critical mass, at which point, they will be able to begin dictating prices. Of course, once that has happened there will be no going back as folks will inevitably pirate what does not show on the only services they are willing to pay for.
When will this happen for books? I would love it for almost all e-books to be available under one subscription. Amazon has something but it is nowhere near close to full coverage.
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Yes. People are lazy parasites who expect other people to entertain them for free.
Meet the new boss (Score:3)
so... (Score:2)
Where the money is going to (Score:2)
But the obvious difference is that these labels will be able to pocket more profits which were realized by shaving the razor-thin margins because they'll get stock dividends from Spotify, whereas if they had been collecting royalties from number of plays they're contractuall
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rent seekers, it's just like "hollywood accounting" where all the powerful people get rich but somehow when it comes time to pay the artists and working crew and taxes, the blockbuster that broke all sales records somehow lost money on paper.
It was only a matter of time (Score:3)
Someone should cal the RIAA (Score:2)
/s
Good luck... (Score:2)
But the artists are all gone (Score:2)
The ones that mattered: Cobain, Cornell, Staley, RIP, and say hello to heaven
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It's kind of creepy when the music you listened to as a teenager becomes "Classic Rock".
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Added bonus - there's new music coming out in the next month or so and our lead singer isn't dead yet...
Hey Mr. DJ, I thought you said we had a deal. (Score:2)
Should do the opposite (Score:1)
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There are 130 million paid subscriptions (at at least $10 per month) and 3m artists. $2 per subscription would be almost....
almost $87 per month per artist?
Doesn't seem like much.
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Well, you're not wrong about the amount. Although I suspect that if it was distributed by play and not divided evenly it may be more, and that would weed out some of the bot accounts. But then again that is going to be tough on new bands with less audience. But I suspect that a struggling artist wouldn't turn down $1k a year even if that won't help much towards a living wage.
Maybe a tipping system? You direct the $2 to artists you pick every month. If no artist picked it could go to the distribution pot.