indie
Netflix goes Indie, adds 300 new on-demand streaming Indie films
Netflix is continuing to make forward progress in the streaming market, and this latest move will have Indie movie fans rejoicing. According to the latest announcement, Netfix has partnered with “a number of leading distributors of independent” films which will result in them adding about 300 Indie films to the on-demand lineup. The movies will more »
ReverbNation: You download music for free and we’ll pay the band
ReverbNation just announced their plan to have 1000 of their artists to start participating in a new Sponsored Songs program. This program will actually pay the bands $0.50 each time one of their songs is downloaded for free by a user. Yup, you get it free and the band gets paid.
Now, of course the question is where does the money to pay the band come from? You guessed it. Ads. A small branded ad will be placed within the album cover art of each download. The value to the advertiser is that it is passed along in the embedded work as the song is passed along by fans via P2P. They want you to share the song with as many people as you like.
Last.FM, are they really music for the masses?
No middleman. Claims of paying their artists more than twice the royalty rate offered on commercial radio. Sounds pretty darn good for independent artists, doesn’t it? Last.FM is a music-streaming service that says they offer all of that and more. The company actually launched in January of 2007, and has since been bought by CBS, so, they have some pretty strong backing holding them up. And they are starting to pass the longer running Sound Exchange even with the fact that royalty rates for music being streamed over the Internet has been raised; making it somewhat difficult for ad-supported start-ups to stay afloat. Some people though, say this is not wholly due to their really being all for the artist, but instead because they pay rock bottom royalty rates. From a commenter at DashGo regarding Last.Fm’s royalty tier – “Even bands that write just one great song deserve compensation for their copyright. Maybe not by a major label force bundling it into an album, but certainly at more than 30% of whatever pitifully low CPM Last.fm and CBS can dredge up – something they won’t even guarantee a floor on.”















