Apple
is still in negotiations with Sony and Warner over its iRadio streaming music
service, reports the FinancialTimes. Apple had offered roughly 6 cents per 100 tracks
streamed, but later reportedly raised this to 12.5 cents per 100 tracks --
similar to the rate paid by Pandora.
Although
the company has reached an agreement with Universal Music, the largest record
label, the FT claims other labels are still looking for better terms.
Apple is reportedly working hard at reaching a deal and wishes to launch the
'iRadio' service at some point this summer, perhaps at WWDC in June.
Some music industry executives argue that cash-rich Apple should pay a
higher rate than Pandora, which had 70m "active listeners" in April,
because of its broader ambitions for iRadio. These include using data it
already has from hundreds of millions of iTunes users to predict the selection
of tracks they will enjoy, and a plan to allow listeners to purchase songs
seamlessly via the iTunes store.
The people familiar with the terms said that Apple was offering labels
three tranches of revenue: a royalty per track streamed, a share of iRadio’s
advertising revenue and a guaranteed minimum sum over the course of the
contract that would provide a safety net in case the number of plays or amount
of advertising sold disappoints.
The FT
notes that Apple is
intentionally not launching an on-demand service like Spotify in order to avoid
cannibalizing purchases from its iTunes Music Store. Instead, the iRadio
service will allow customers to discover new music and likely direct listeners
to the iTunes Store to buy music they enjoy.
[Source]
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