Social Majors

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Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Pandora Falls 10% as Apple ITunes Radio Draws 11 Million









Pandora Media Inc. (P), the biggest Web radio service, fell 10 percent after Apple Inc. (AAPL)said it attracted more than 11 million unique listeners to its new iTunes Radio service.

Pandora, with 72 million active listeners, slid to $24.26 at the close in New York. Shares of the Oakland, California-based company have more than doubled this year.

Apple is seeking to challenge Pandora and Clear Channel Communications Inc. (CCMO)’s iHeartRadio for listeners and advertisers after adding the radio feature in updated iOS operating software for its iPhones and iPads. Customers downloaded the iOS 7 software on more than 200 million devices since its Sept. 18 release and snapped up a record 9 million new iPhone models over the weekend, Apple said today in a statement.

“Whenever Apple decides to get into a business, it has proven to be a huge disrupter,” Paul Sweeney, an analyst with Bloomberg Industries, said in an interview.

Pandora is looking to vie with radio stations for a larger slice of $15 billion in local advertising and has opened sales offices in 29 U.S. cities. Earlier this month, it named digital advertising veteran Brian McAndrews as chairman and chief executive officer. Last week it priced an expanded stock offering and has raised an estimated $378.8 million to finance growth.

The company sold 15.7 million shares at $25 each in the offering led by JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Morgan Stanley. Crosslink Capital Inc., the largest shareholder, sold 5.2 million. The sale is expected to be completed on Sept. 24, Pandora said last week.

Apple, based in Cupertino, California, rose 5 percent to $490.64.


Reference: www.bloomberg.com

Monday, September 23, 2013

Navori inks digital signage distribution deal with Ingram Micro





Navori Inc. recently announced a U.S. distribution alliance with technology distributor Ingram Micro Inc. As part of the new relationship, Navori will work with Ingram Micro's ProAv and Digital Signage business unit to introduce its new digital signage products for the audiovisual marketplace.

"It seemed natural to team with Ingram Micro, who is a global leader in IT distribution," Navori President and CEO Jerome Moeri said in the announcement. "It was important to design an affordable solution that was able to meet the needs of businesses throughout the U.S."

Available now, Navori QL StiX-2400 is a digital signage player the size of a USB key that the company says is as easy to install as a DVD player.

"Navori's digital signage software plays a critical role within the digital signage marketplace, and we're pleased to add them to our growing portfolio of digital signage solutions,"Kevin Prewett, senior director of Ingram Micro's Pro AV & Digital Signage business unit, said in the announcement.

Program management is performed using a Web-based interface, and the server infrastructure is located in Atlanta, in partnership with Rackspace US Inc., and the product follows the software-as-a-service model, the announcement said.

Reference: www.digitalsignagetoday.com

Friday, September 20, 2013

Pac-12 Networks sign digital distribution deal



Larry Scott





You may remember that broad distribution of thePac-12 Network is being held up by DirecTV, which has balked at assigning bandwidth to the upstart sports network. Only the Big Ten Network has managed to make a profit running its own network, and other BCS conferences – most notably the SEC – have turned to big-time partners like ESPN to ensure distribution.




Going it alone, the Pac-12 may do battle with DirecTV for a while yet. But they have added a major piece of the distribution puzzle this week, signing on with AT&T U-verse today. There was no standing on ceremony, either. The network went live on AT&T U-verse immediately, so more homes were able to tune in today’s football games.


From the official press release:


With the deal, Pac-12 Networks now is available on four of the top six distributors in the U.S., and more than 50 television providers overall. Existing partners continue to launch Pac-12 Networks in more markets around the country including Comcast in Chicago, Time Warner Cable in the Midwest, and Cox in New England and the Washington DC area, among others.




As always, football is driving the bus on this deal, but a couple of months from now, college hoops fans on the left coast will have more opportunities to see their favorite teams lace ‘em up.




One of the most interesting aspects of the U-verse deal is the plan to make the Pac-12 Network available on mobile devices such as phones, tablets and PCs. Sneak-watching sports at work just gets easier every day.




Thursday, September 19, 2013

Nigeria’s growing digital music distribution market valued at N16.2bn

The growing online platform for digital music distribution in the country is now being valued at $100 million, about N16.2 billion, according to analysts with Spinlet, with iRoking and iTunes dominating the market.

Digital distribution outfits have sprung up in the last six years, making it possible for the spread of local music online and for investors to tap into an estimated $10 billion digital market globally

“Investors in digital music distribution are seeing huge potential for profits,” says an analyst.

The internet has become an important element of modern economic infrastructure recently, fundamentally changing how people interact, how consumers shop, and how products and services are designed, developed, marketed, and delivered. The internet has also changed how businesses operate and interact with one another.

The increase in digital trade, which has had significant impact on the United States and global economies, is offering Nigerian artistes and their music to be heard in different parts of the world. Thus, bringing about increase in revenue for artistes.

In 2012 alone, according to the United States International Trade Commission, digital music contributed $4.1 billion to the US economy.

In one of the highest-profile moves so far, Universal Music Group and Samsung Electronics announced in August the creation of The Kleek, a pan-African digital music service, which features music from Universal’s international catalogue and from local artistes like the Power Boyz in Angola, DJ Vetkuk in South Africa, and W4 in Nigeria.

Mark Redgaurd, marketing manager, Spinlet, says digital music is a major paradigm shift happening globally. Music is moving from physical purchases to digital downloads and streaming, and Nigeria is definitely part of this. According to him, market for online music has been very positive.

“We see tremendous amounts of potential in Nigeria and across Africa. The market is very nascent. As such, the market value can vary with little degree of accuracy. I don’t think anyone knows its true potential. Digital distribution has certainly made an impact and will continue to do so for the long term,” he says.

Digital music distribution has continued to spread its tentacles across the continent. In December last year, South Africans were given access to the iTunes digital music store from Apple. Around the same time, one of the leading internet streaming music services, Deezer, a French company, expanded across much of Africa.

And in several countries, including Nigeria, local digital music operations like iRoking have started to attract large numbers of listeners and investors. Recently, it attracted $8 millon from Tiger Global Management.

Ayeni Adekunle, CEO, Blackhouse Media, agrees there are huge opportunities in this emerging market for music distribution.

“It is possible to make the best we can of it,” says Adekunle, if stakeholders put their best foot forward. Whether it’s Spinlet or iTunes or Iroking or Notjustok, what’s certain is that digital is the future of distribution. Look at the feat Jay Z has scored, with his MCHG deal with Samsung.”

Digital music must have affected the performance of other channels of music distribution like CDs. Michael Odiong, special project manager, Premier Records, says in the last four months CD sales have dropped by 8 percent, saying that “in the last three to four months CD sales have dropped. More people are switching to digital sales. We have more music applications coming in now, giving consumer diverse offerings online.”

To him, this new trend is forcing old record label companies like Premier Records to diversifying their platform for music sales.

“We are diversifying and working with the likes of iRoking and Spinlet for digital distribution and with Konga.com for physical sales. We are trying to make sure we maximise every available online platforms for the sale of our music. We are also working with rhapsody and iTunes,” he discloses.

Digital form of music distribution has been argued to be a good alternative to physical form as most stakeholders believe it will help curb piracy.

“If you look at what Spotify is doing, and the fact that the telcos are using RBTs and CRBTs as ways of pushing music, and with iTunes opening up to the Nigerian market, you’ll see clearly that we’re quickly moving past the Alaba era. I think the system is opening up to digital distribution. We are very optimistic and all key players are adapting to follow the trend.”

Some industry analysts say digital music platform has fuelled piracy instead of decreasing it. To them, the rapid evolution of internet technologies and the ways they are used make it easy for consumers to share music through their mobile phones or laptops.

They argue that widespread access to and use of the internet has been made easier by mobile devices such as smartphones, tablets, gaming consoles, televisions, and TV set top boxes (digital video recording devices), which makes it increasingly difficult to track how music is shared and protect intellectual property.

Adekunle argues further that piracy cannot be totally eradicated, saying “no one can eradicate piracy, really. But if we make music products available to consumers at the right time, and in the right places, piracy can be reduced to the barest minimum.”

In addition, Odiong says digital online is the biggest pirates itself and record labels may go into extinction in the near future, as “the pirates are everywhere and downloading music for N100,” adding that it is killing the market.

“Yet artistes see it as the biggest means to promote themselves. They believe they can just make a song, upload it online. The money they will make from it is not so important to them. They just want to be heard. They don’t see it, but for records label it is a big problem. Record labels are going into extinction. There is no formal structure to protect them in the country. It is a major problem. More record labels are folding up. It is only the old ones that are surviving. It is the frustration that is forcing the artistes to go online.”

Monday, March 18, 2013

European Union Pledges $5.6M to its Digital Distribution Market








France’s UniversCiné, Germany’s Europe’s Finest and Austria’s flimmit.com are among 13 European VoD platforms and DCD initiatives to benefit from the EU’s MEDIA Programme.

According to the European Commission, the main objective “is to support the creation and exploitation of catalogues of European works to be distributed digitally across borders to a wider audience and/or to cinema exhibitors through advanced distribution services, integrating where necessary digital security systems in order to protect online content.”

The largest sum - $981,000 (€ 750,000) – was awarded to the French VOD platform UniversCiné, which this year plans to extend its EuroVOD network of platforms to new territories such as the UK and Italy and focus on strengthening the strategic position of the project platforms in their respective markets as well as developing ‘multi-channel’ and ‘multi-device’ distribution.

Germany’s Europe’s Finest, which received $392,000 (€300,000) funding from MEDIA, currently has the largest collection of European film classics and current arthouse films for digital cinema.

There are plans to extend its catalogue and add a second pillar of activity by making the Reelport-owned service available as a platform for other distributors so that they can offer the films in digital form to the network of cinemas.

A start was made last year by launching Operation Kino films on Europe’s Finest and - together with new partner Hollywood Classics - the plan is to launch a joint venture “finest-classics” to provide a world-wide dimension to the offer.

Meanwhile, with $262,000 (€200,000) MEDIA backing, Austria’s flimmit.com now plans to evolve from a technical start-up to a full-service film distribution and marketing company to ensure that European films also benefit from economies of scale.

Other platforms supported in this funding round included the UK’s Curzon On Demand and Distrify’s transactional VoD platform MUVIES.COM, the first European SVOD service FILMOTV, and VoD platforms specifically dedicated to documentaries such as France’s medici.tv, the Netherlands’ DocsOnline, the Doc Alliance Films portal as a partnership between Visions du Réel Nyon, DOK Leipzig, Planete Doc Review Warsaw, CPH:DOX Copenhagen, IDFF Jihlava and FIDMarseille.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Rumors of Apple New Radio Shakes the Internet Radio Market...Starting with Pandora Radio


http://topnews.net.nz/data/Apple-Logo_0.jpg     http://www.ppcgeeks.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/pandora.jpg



Shares of Pandora Media plummeted as much as 21% on Friday after word leaked out that Apple has been in discussions with record labels to launch a competing streaming radio service.


Apple's proposed online service, first reported by the Wall Street Journal, would have the potential to disrupt both Internet and traditional radio providers.

Cupertino, Calif.-based Apple is seeking a more flexible type of music license from the record labels than the one Pandora has. It would allow Apple to select whatever song it wants to play next and tailor selections based on albums in listeners' iTunes music libraries, according two industry executives with knowledge of Apple's plans for the service.

Such features would give Apple the ability to customize its music to individuals, which traditional radio can't do, without having to ask them what they like or restrict how often a single song can be played, as Pandora must.

Pandora's stock plunged as much as 21% in trading Friday, dipping below $10 in the morning before recovering slightly. It closed at $10.47, down 16.7%.

Apple's stock, meanwhile, marched up $4.17 Friday to close at $680.44 -- a new all-time high for the company.

A Pandora spokeswoman declined to comment, and Apple did not return calls seeking comment.

Why did Wall Street have such a dramatic reaction?

"This is Apple," said Michael Pachter, an analyst with Wedbush Securities. "If Apple wants to compete with you, then you got a problem."

For years, Apple and Pandora had a symbiotic relationship. After launching its Internet radio service on Apple's iPhone in 2008, Pandora's application skyrocketed in popularity, becoming one of the most-downloaded applications for the device.

Pandora, which had struggled to reach listeners on personal computer Web browsers, saw its audience explode, enabling the company to stem its losses by selling more advertising on its service.

Apple benefited from having one of the most well-liked entertainment services on its phones and tablets without having to spend a cent to develop the product. Now, however, Apple is negotiating deals with music labels for its planned radio streaming service.

"The big open question is: Why is Apple doing this now?" Pachter said. "The answer is that they fully intend to make a lot of money from this, and the way to do it is to sell more songs. The record labels embrace this because they see Apple can integrate iTunes downloads into the radio offerings in a much more compelling way than Pandora can."

Still, Pachter said, if Apple proceeds with launching a radio service, Pandora isn't necessarily toast.

"They have a big install base, and they’re on Android," he noted. "They’re not going to just lose all their customers overnight. I’m sure they’ll keep at least three-quarters of their customers or more, if Apple follows through. It'd be more of a setback as opposed to total devastation, but they’ll recover."

Pandora, which had a rocky time since going public last year, looked as if it may be turning the corner last quarter. Its shares jumped as much as 12% immediately after it reported that second-quarter revenue. That was up 51% from a year earlier to $101.3 million in the quarter that ended July 31.

Executives of the Oakland, Calif., company also said that third-quarter revenue probably would come in as high as $118 million -- higher than the $114 million that financial analysts had expected -- and that it would probably break even in the third quarter or even make a penny a share.


Reference: www.latimes.com

Monday, August 27, 2012

Sound Exchange Pays 204.4 Million Royalties since 2012



http://www.hypebot.com/.a/6a00d83451b36c69e201774423b498970d-800wi





SoundExchange announced it has distributed $204.4 million in digital royalty payments to recording artists and record labels in the first two quarters of 2012. In its second quarter, SoundExchange distributed $95.8 million, the second highest quarterly distribution in the organization's history.

SoundExchange is the non-profit performance rights organization that helps the music and creative community thrive in the digital world. The organization collects and distributes performance royalties from non-interactive digital music services on behalf of recording artists and labels for the use of their sound recordings. To date, SoundExchange has paid more than $1 billion in royalties to the creators of music.

"This quarter's distribution adds to what is shaping up to be a record breaking year for SoundExchange and reflects the continued growth of digital radio listenership and services," said Michael Huppe, president, SoundExchange. "SoundExchange is proud to be part of this growing revenue stream for the creators of music. We will continue to pursue all efforts to ensure that artist and labels are properly compensated for their critical contributions to these services."