Tag: Apple Music

  • Voluntary web-blocks in Japan lead to litigation

    Voluntary web-blocks in Japan lead to litigation

    A Japanese internet service provider last week announced that it would voluntarily block its customers from accessing a number of piracy websites. This came after the country’s government urged such action while it considers how to formally instigate web-blocking as an anti-piracy measure. However, now said ISP is being sued over allegations that those very web-blocks breach Japanese privacy laws.

    Web-blocking, of course, has become an anti-piracy tactic of choice for the entertainment industry in many countries, with ISPs being ordered to block access to sites deemed to undertake or facilitate copyright infringement. In some countries specific web-blocking systems have been put in place, whereas in other jurisdictions – like the UK – the courts just started issuing web-block injunctions under existing copyright rules.

    Earlier this month the Japanese government said it also favoured web-blocking as an anti-piracy measure. While ministers work out what legal framework might enable such a thing, internet firms were encouraged to act voluntarily against certain piracy sites, in particular platforms that facilitate the illegal sharing of manga and anime.

    Responding to that, ISP NTT last week announced “short-term emergency measures until legal systems on site-blocking are implemented”. Those measures have seen sites highlighted by the government blocked.

    When the Japanese government announced its web-blocking plans earlier in the month, some questioned whether blockades of that kind might breach privacy and free speech rights contained in the country’s constitution.

    Now lawyer Yuichi Nakazawa, also an NTT customer, has gone legal accusing the net firm’s measures of being in breach of privacy law. In legal papers filed with the Tokyo District Court, Nakazawa says that the blockades in essence require the net firm to spy on their customers’ internet activity, which is not allowed under privacy rules.

    The lawyer is quoted by Torrentfreak as saying: “NTT’s decision was made arbitrarily… without any legal basis. No matter how legitimate the objective of [stopping] copyright infringement is, it is very dangerous”. He adds that the “freedom” being threatened is “an important value of the internet”, and therefore legal action was appropriate to protect it.

    In addition to potentially breaching constitutional rights and the country’s telecommunication laws, Nakazawa reckons the web-blocks may also put the ISP in breach of his contract with the company.

    The lawyer goes on: “There is an internet connection agreement between me and NTT. There is no provision in the contract between me and NTT to allow arbitrary interruption of communications”.

    It remains to be seen how NTT responds to the litigation, but it will surely put other ISPs off the idea of acting voluntarily on this, while piling pressure onto lawmakers to provide a clear legal framework regarding web-blocking in the country. Though they too will have to find a way of making such measures compliant with the constitution.

     

    Source: Complete Music Update

  • Radiohead’s Philip Selway Discusses Future of Streaming Music

     Latest News – Pitchfork by Jazz Monroe
    Radiohead's Philip Selway Discusses Future of Streaming Music in Part 2 of Talkhouse Podcast

    Photo by Kevin Westenberg

    Yesterday, the Talkhouse aired the first part of an in-depth conversation between Radiohead’s Philip Selway and Ghostpoet (aka Obaro Ejimiwe), in which Selway discussed, among other things, the schedule for recording Radiohead’s forthcoming album, as well as the band’s early years. Now, the second part of their conversation is available as a 50-minute podcast (listen above).

    During the conversation, recorded before Apple’s decision to pay labels during its 90-day free trial, Selway says of streaming:

    As a user, I love it. I’m listening to so much more music than I ever used to. That whole thing, the fact you can go and look at recommendations, look at other people’s playlists… Whether, in the long run, it can make a sustainable living for musicians, that’s another thing. Apple claim that they’re going to go there, which would be great. It’ll be interesting to see what happens in the three months of free subscription, but there you go.

    Asked whether he thinks streaming is the future of music consumption, Selway responds:

    I do worry about how new artists can afford to tour. It is an expensive process. And that’s one of the areas where you really learn your craft. I suppose music’s muddled through for many decades, and it’s had its very greedy phases when it’s been able to change formats every decade and get everybody to pay double. This might just be wishful thinking, but people with talent and a good independent frame of mind will find ways of making it work for them. But also, it’s finding a fair deal within that. Because you can do all of that stuff as an artist, and think, okay, I have to look for ways I can make this work for me, as a living, and continue making music. There’s something slightly galling though, when you see someone creaming off a lot of money at some point in the equation. You hope the streaming model will redress that balance at some point.

    Elsewhere in the conversation, Selway reveals that he’s been listening to the “very clever”Holly Herndon, singer-songwriter Nadine Shah, and, on Thom Yorke’s recommendation,Jeremiah Jae.

    Watch Philip Selway’s video for “Around Again”:

     

  • Dr. Dre, Elton John Plan Beats 1 Radio Shows for Apple Music

    Pharrell Williams, Drake, St. Vincent and others will also host their own programs
    Dr. Dre and Elton John
    Dr. Dre and Elton John are set to host shows for Apple Music’s new Beats 1. Gabe Ginsberg/WireImage/Getty; Samir Hussein/WireImage/Getty

    When Beats 1 Radio launches next week as part of Apple Music, it will feature programs by artists including Dr. Dre and Elton John. The former artist’s show will be called “The Pharmacy,” while the latter will host “Elton John’s Rocket Hour,” according to The New York Times.

    Other artists and celebrities who will have their own one- and two-hour radio shows include Pharrell Williams, Drake, St. Vincent, Queens of the Stone Age frontman Josh Homme, Disclosure and Jaden Smith.

    BBC DJ Zane Lowe will lead the charge alongside Ebro Darden, of New York’s Hot 97, and London-based Julie Adenuga.

    “Zane is a genuine enthusiast; this is not a fake thing,” John told the paper. “He’s a fan, and he’s a fan who’s got the opportunity to make his position in the world work for other people. He genuinely loves music, and that’s my kind of guy.”

    The paper reports that the idea for Beats 1 Radio came from Nine Inch Nails frontman Trent Reznor, who was previously Beats’ chief creative officer and continues to serve as a designer at Apple Music. After growing disillusioned with the way that digital music had made it so “everything gets so nichey” when it comes to playlists, hearing the way Lowe conducted himself on the BBC inspired the singer to question radio’s role in music discovery. “I wondered if in today’s world there is still a place for monoculture,” Reznor told the Times. “Can that still exist?”

    New York reports that the singer had been flying to Apple HQ in Cupertino to work with Beats 1’s designers and developers since the tech giant had acquired Beats Music. Beats 1 will launch as a component of Apple Music in the program’s app along with the social-media platform Connect next Tuesday.

    One of the first big interviews that the radio station will broadcast will be Lowe’s recent encounter with Eminem, in which they discussed the rapper’s music for the new film Southpaw and his experiences as a boxer. The air time for the interview has yet to be announced.

    Apple Music arrives amid several controversies surrounding streaming music. Aside from fierce competition from rivals like Spotify and Tidal, who have each expanded in original programming, the service already drew criticism from outspoken artists’ rights advocate Taylor Swift.

    The pop star said she would not allow the service to feature her music during its planned three-month free trial period – before it transitions into either an ad-supported or premium service – since it would not be compensating artists for streamed music during that period. Apple made a quick about-face and said it would pay artists, and the company’s exec Eddy Cue told Rolling Stone that the note “solidified quickly that we needed a change.” Swift has subsequently agreed to allow her recent 1989 album to be streamed on the service

    Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/dr-dre-elton-john-plan-beats-1-radio-shows-for-apple-music-20150625#ixzz3eBRy2iFn
  • iTunes Match storage limit increased to 100,000 songs

    Music Ally by Music Ally Blog

    Apple makes it jump into subscription streaming with Apple Music, but iTunes downloads remain a significant part of its business and, more importantly, the record industry’s business. In our Music Ally Report last week, we estimated that iTunes generated $2.5bn for labels last year – equal to 15% of the total recorded music business globally. Downloads might be declining in major territories, but this is still a huge market. There is going to be a (possibly very bumpy) period of transition, but Apple is extending the storage capacity for its iTunes Match service from 25,000 songs to 100,000 as part of the iOS 9 upgrade. This is also going to be baked into an Apple Music subscription, meaning Apple is going full “belt and braces” here as it guides its users from an ownership-led idea of music to a cloud-based one (i.e. let users upload and access their existing digital files from the cloud and eventually – possibly – switch completely to gain access to 30m+ tracks via a subscription).

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  • Ian Rogers on Beats 1 and Apple Music launch times; Sonos integration coming

    Music Ally by Music Ally Blog

    Eddy Cue and Jimmy Iovine have dominated all the interviews and public discussions around Apple Music and Beats 1. Ian Rogers is a key part of that team but has been silent – until now. He has written a short blog ahead of the service going live tomorrow and revealed the exact launch times for Apple Music and Beats 1. The former apparently goes live at 8am PST (i.e. LA time) and the latter follows at 9am PST. He then revised the blog to take out the exact launch times, but a number of tech websites had already copied & pasted/screengrabbed it. (When Rogers was at Topspin, he was a prolific blogger and video podcaster and always had an interesting take on music industry issues. We sense the hand of the Apple PR machine on his shoulder here.) Beyond saying/letting slip what time each part of the service goes live, he does not reveal any big secrets, but instead presents it as the culmination of his career in technology and music to date. He says his “first non dish washing job” was hosting a radio show at 16, then rode the MP3 wave, moving into streaming radio and D2F retailing. […]

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