Found 5 bookmarks
Custom sorting
Noah Yoo: How Artist Imposters and Fake Songs Sneak Onto Streaming Services (Pitchfork)
Noah Yoo: How Artist Imposters and Fake Songs Sneak Onto Streaming Services (Pitchfork)
Ultimately, the problem at hand is greater than the risk of lost royalties. The prevalence of leaks on established streaming services has a significant impact on an artist’s sense of ownership over their life’s work. The lines become blurred as to whether something actually “exists” in an artist’s canon if they never gave permission for it to be released. So while diehards might feel a thrill, circumventing the system and listening to unreleased songs by their favorite musicians, the leaks ultimately hurt those same artists.
·pitchfork.com·
Noah Yoo: How Artist Imposters and Fake Songs Sneak Onto Streaming Services (Pitchfork)
Eric Harvey: How Smart Speakers Are Changing the Way We Listen to Music (Pitchfork)
Eric Harvey: How Smart Speakers Are Changing the Way We Listen to Music (Pitchfork)
Indeed, many of the most pressing issues of the streaming music economy—artist compensation, statistical transparency, sexism—remain untouched, if not deepened, by the rise of the smart speaker. Moreover, as Amazon, Apple, and Google continue to carve out their spaces in the voice marketplace, music consumers and musicians alike will continue to fight against the companies’ preferred walled-garden approach to exclusivity. And though there’s no real reason to sympathize with Tidal or Spotify, the idea that the smart speaker industry might become the exclusive province of massive firms with enough capital to experiment (and huge captive audiences to use as guinea pigs) is significant reason for pause, no matter how little one is interested in owning the devices. A world in which three of tech’s “frightful five” become the equivalent of the major labels, with exclusive holdings in hardware and software, and plenty of incentive to lock competitors’ products and content out of their systems, is a chilling idea, and not as far-fetched as it might seem.
·pitchfork.com·
Eric Harvey: How Smart Speakers Are Changing the Way We Listen to Music (Pitchfork)
Liz Pelly: The Problem with Muzak (The Baffler)
Liz Pelly: The Problem with Muzak (The Baffler)
Brand playlists are advertisements, even if Spotify strives to imbue them with so-called editorial integrity. Such uncompensated advertorial playlists are harmful in that they offer artists no option to opt-out, but also because they undercut what can sometimes be a valuable source of revenue for artists. If brands can align themselves with artists without having to pay specifically for individual tracks or artist appearances, what do we think they’ll do? Can we at least give people the option to sell out if they want?
·thebaffler.com·
Liz Pelly: The Problem with Muzak (The Baffler)