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Sony Music CEO Confirms Launch of Apple's Music Streaming Service 86

An anonymous reader writes: Sony Music CEO Doug Morris said in an interview that Apple will announce a new music streaming service tomorrow at its World Wide Developers Conference (WWDC). The new Apple Music service will include subscription streaming music features as well as a revamped iTunes Radio service. "What does Apple bring to this?" Morris said. "Well, they've got $178 billion in the bank. And they have 800 million credit cards in iTunes. Spotify has never really advertised because it's never been profitable. My guess is that Apple will promote this like crazy and I think that will have a halo effect on the streaming business. A rising tide will lift all boats," he added. "It's the beginning of an amazing moment for our industry."
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Sony Music CEO Confirms Launch of Apple's Music Streaming Service

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  • Rising tide? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by flogger ( 524072 )
    I think he meant a tsunami which will wash everything else away.
    • Re:Rising tide? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Sunday June 07, 2015 @01:08PM (#49862403)

      Exactly.

      >"It's the beginning of an amazing moment for our industry"

      More like additional fuel to end the "owning" of anything. Streaming is great when you are connected, don't mind someone watching what you are doing, and don't care that you can be fed things you don't want.

      Look at the reaction to even the CONCEPT of Netflix having commercials...

  • Pandora (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Noah Haders ( 3621429 ) on Sunday June 07, 2015 @10:45AM (#49861685)

    I think apple is a little late to this. They tried apple radio a couple years ago and it didn't work. insider interviews confirmed that the point was not to get people to listen to the radio, but rather to convert people to buy the songs from itunes. this was patently transparent. At the time I started using pandora and paying $4 through the app store subscription. I have a dozen really cool stations that I have curated through dozens of thumbs up / thumbs down / song seeds. I would need to see something really compelling tomorrow if i'm to be convinced to try something else, let alone in addition.

    • Re:Pandora (Score:5, Insightful)

      by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Sunday June 07, 2015 @11:09AM (#49861793) Journal

      Those people who already use something like Spotify or Pandora won't immediately switch, but I guess that Apple expects that there will be a very large number of people who have never used an Internet radio service that will sign up for Apple's service.

      Reducing friction in the sign-up process will certainly make a difference and I expect that Apple will make it easy to sign up.

      • As I neither use Spotify or Pandora (music I consume comes in CDs), let me ask: Should we worry about market segmentation? I remember people getting upset becuase Taylor Swift exited Spotify in order to get into Tidal. Another player means (a) more pressure to lower prices due to competition or (b) publishers creating scarcity in order to avoid competition. Or do people just want some random noise in the background?
        • It depends on if you prefer to listen for the hottest artists are you prefer to listen for the back catalog. I do a lot of back catalogue genre and live music listening, so the ebbs and flows of hot artists to hot services don't really impact me.

          btdubs, TS didn't pull from Spotify to go to tidal, she pulled from Spotify in order to boost her CD sales and other paid channels. She had wanted to do a deal with Spotify where her music would be available on the paid service but not on the ad-supported service,

      • Apple will make it easy to sign up

        i.e.: automatic. Just fill out this form, mail it in with proof of identity, and we'll stop charging you a subscription in 60-90 days!

        • by Anonymous Coward
          Is this supposed to be funny? When has Apple ever made it difficult to unsubscribe from their services?
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Surprisingly, you and the US aren't the only people in the world.

    • by jo_ham ( 604554 )

      This is not going after Pandora users, it's going after people who don't currently have a streaming service.

      If it launches in the UK then it also might be for me since we can't get Pandora and while I like Spotify well enough, it didn't seem to work as well as Pandora did when I tried in in the US.

      Either way, more competition in the streaming space will be good, surely.

    • by gregmac ( 629064 )

      > I would need to see something really compelling tomorrow if i'm to be convinced to try something else, let alone in addition.

      Such as "all competing apps have been removed from the app store per Apple policy"?

  • Walled Garden (Score:4, Insightful)

    by GuldKalle ( 1065310 ) on Sunday June 07, 2015 @10:47AM (#49861689)

    So, seeing as they are becoming competitors, when will Spotify disappear from the Apple App Store?

    • If they do, spotify would have good chances in courts, because thats abuse of market power.

      • Nothing requires Apple to carry everything in their store. They can deny any app for whatever reason they want.
        • by Anonymous Coward

          Nothing requires Apple to carry everything in their store. They can deny any app for whatever reason they want.

          This is definitely not true, even if you only count the US. When you are in a position of market dominance you have to obey antitrust laws. If US law applies to this case or not is somewhat debatable as Apple has less than half the smartphone market, but I don't think it would be legal in Europe for example.

          • It would absolutely be legal in Europe. Stores in Europe are free to chose what they want to sell and not, they are not required to carry everyone that wants to. If Apple decides that they don't want to carry competing streaming applications then they are fully within their right to do so, just like Debian is in their right to refuse to ship any application in their archive for whatever reason they want. Are you suggesting that Debian could not legally refuse to ship the non-free Spotify client in Europe?
            • Debian's case is completely different because you can choose a different repository than their official one and install from it. No such luck with the iStore.

              Also this is not like other retail businesses. Apple does not consume any shelf space to 'stock' applications. At all.

            • by Kjella ( 173770 )

              It would absolutely be legal in Europe. Stores in Europe are free to chose what they want to sell and not, they are not required to carry everyone that wants to.

              Microsoft has already paid over a billion dollar in fines to the EU over anti-trust charges, they've had the browser selection screen, the forced unbundling of WMP... technically you're correct, they will never force Apple to ship Spotify. What they will do is to say that banning Spotify in favor of their own in-house app is an anti-competitive practice and fine them millions of dollars per day until it ends. The most relevant article in the EU treaty is 102 that explicitly mentions blocking off markets in

          • by Anonymous Coward
            Apple is not in a position of market dominance in any market except maybe Japan. They have less than 15% of the smart phone market in the US. Android on the other hand could probably get in trouble for this.
            • Which did not forbid people from wanting to break up IBM's mainframe business at one point.

            • Keep in mind that the FTC may define a "market" differently than you do.

              For example, Microsoft attempted to use market-share of Apple computers to claim that they did not have a monopoly in the personal computer market. However, they did have a monopoly in personal computers run by Intel CPUs (at the time, Apple computers used PowerPC CPUs). In other words, the FTC had a different market in mind.

          • I am sure Apple has consulted with lawyers much smarter and more knowledgeable than you to determine their legal risk. For one thing, a brief perusal of the Wikipedia article on US antitrust and the Sherman Act would show you how wrong you are.

          • by jo_ham ( 604554 )

            Nothing requires Apple to carry everything in their store. They can deny any app for whatever reason they want.

            This is definitely not true, even if you only count the US. When you are in a position of market dominance you have to obey antitrust laws. If US law applies to this case or not is somewhat debatable as Apple has less than half the smartphone market, but I don't think it would be legal in Europe for example.

            So what market are they dominant in? The sale of Apple-branded products?

            Or are we forgetting that Apple is only a "dominant monopolist" when it suits slashdot, and the "failing has been" when talk abut how Android has so much market share?

            It can't be both.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Why would they remove Spotify?

      They already carry Google Music in App Store, do we have more conspiracy theories while we're at it?

    • by ioErr ( 691174 )

      So, seeing as they are becoming competitors, when will Spotify disappear from the Apple App Store?

      Has Apple ever removed a major competitor's app from the store? After it was approved?

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by jo_ham ( 604554 )

        So, seeing as they are becoming competitors, when will Spotify disappear from the Apple App Store?

        Has Apple ever removed a major competitor's app from the store? After it was approved?

        No, but facts are a very pesky issue for Apple bashing so they're frequently ignored in favour of baseless speculation and fabrication.

    • They didn't remove Pandora when they launched iTunes Radio. They didn't remove the Kindle app when they launched iBooks. Netflix is still available, despite the existence of the Movie and TV sections of the iTunes store. Chrome is available as an alternative to Safari. And when Apple dumped Google maps from its default position, Google fairly quickly came up with a less embarrassingly out-of-date maps app that's in the app store right now.

      Why should it be any different with Spotify?

  • APPLE INNOVATION SURVIVAL KIT
    ONLY BREAK SEAL IN CASE OF EMERGENCY

    Contents of Packet A: Introduction of new streaming iTunes service.
    Contents of Packet B: Introduction of new streaming iTunes service.
    Contents of Packet C: Introduction of new streaming iTunes service.

  • OK this is admittedly a guess but it seems likely from their track record that this service will only work with Apple devices.

    Why in the hell would anyone want a single-vendor music steaming service? Music isn't specific to Apple (or Sony or Google). I can outright BUY unencumbered mp3 files for so dirt cheap that streaming doesn't make any sense. Why stream when I can just buy them and copy them to whatever device I want, whenever I want, and use them long after the streaming service goes bust?

    It makes

    • Good question. If there were an answer to it I think the industry would be in a different spot than it is.

      It turns out customers greatly prefer streaming music (essentially paying per-play) to buying it. Music downloading is down and streaming is up.

      • A lot of the streaming is ad based or subscription based. If you listen to recent music a lot it makes more sense to have this subscription service. If you listen occasionally to old music it often doesn't make sense to own it. Plus the streaming services are a good way to sample and find new music.

    • Listening at work.

    • by jo_ham ( 604554 )

      OK this is admittedly a guess but it seems likely from their track record that this service will only work with Apple devices.

      Why in the hell would anyone want a single-vendor music steaming service? Music isn't specific to Apple (or Sony or Google). I can outright BUY unencumbered mp3 files for so dirt cheap that streaming doesn't make any sense. Why stream when I can just buy them and copy them to whatever device I want, whenever I want, and use them long after the streaming service goes bust?

      It makes no sense.

      Sure you can buy music for dirt cheap - you'll still be able to after this launches.

      It's almost as if different people have different needs when it comes to products and services. I'm sure there's some sense in there somewhere. Could it be that people are different from each other? Help me out here. This isn't making sense.

  • by koan ( 80826 )

    Spotify has never really advertised because it's never been profitable.

    So you should only advertise when you're profitable?
    If Doug Morris thinks this is a good thing that means it isn't a good thing for the end users.

    • by jo_ham ( 604554 )

      Spotify has never really advertised because it's never been profitable.

      So you should only advertise when you're profitable?
      If Doug Morris thinks this is a good thing that means it isn't a good thing for the end users.

      The summary is oddly worked but it means that it has not been a net benefit financially to advertise. They would spend more in advertising costs than they would gain in income.

      • by koan ( 80826 )

        Perhaps, it is odd though, I don't stream or even go looking for streaming yet I hear and read about Spotifiy constantly.

        • by jo_ham ( 604554 )

          Perhaps, it is odd though, I don't stream or even go looking for streaming yet I hear and read about Spotifiy constantly.

          That's the point.

          It's like Pizza Express, whose first advert was "word of mouth since 1936" or something.

          Spotify haven't used traditional advertising because it's expensive and they are already getting a lot of exposure as it is.

          • by koan ( 80826 )

            That makes sense, I have to admit I am experiencing schadenfreude thinking of music execs raging because their markets have dried up.

  • A rising tide will lift all boats," he added. "It's the beginning of an amazing moment for our industry."

    Anyone remember Apple Pay with the already available credit card information? Well, according to some, it looks like a dud [bgr.com] already. This could well be the same because I for one, have no intention of ever being a subscriber. I am sure I am not alone.

    • by ColdWetDog ( 752185 ) on Sunday June 07, 2015 @11:42AM (#49861931) Homepage

      Actually, pretty much anything that Slashdot pans seems to make it big.

      The iPod, Windows, Bill Gates, the iPhone, the iPad, the iWatch.

      We like Nokia, Blackberry and god help us, Windows phone.

      There is a lesson here....

    • by jo_ham ( 604554 )

      It depends on the country. When Apple Pay inevitably launches in the UK it will be an enormous hit - contactless payment is all the rage here and has seen massive growth in the past 2 years.

      It doesn't surprise me that the US is lagging behind. You guys don't even have chip and pin.

  • by koan ( 80826 )

    The chief executive of Spotify, Daniel Ek, has predicted that the free online music service will help the industry grow to as much as 10 times its current size, in a future where old distinctions between providers break down.

    http://www.theguardian.com/tec... [theguardian.com]

  • "It's the beginning of an amazing moment for our industry."

    I'd appreciate if someone would pull the CEO of Sony out from under his rock and let him know it's the year 2015.

    You've got to be fucking kidding me with this. As if no one has ever heard of a streaming music service before.

    On a related note (ba dum tiss), must be fun to be a board member for Apple. Fuck it, why not has become the financial motto, especially when identifying cash-on-hand as the justification here.

    • by Carewolf ( 581105 ) on Sunday June 07, 2015 @11:56AM (#49862019) Homepage

      "It's the beginning of an amazing moment for our industry."

      I'd appreciate if someone would pull the CEO of Sony out from under his rock and let him know it's the year 2015.

      You've got to be fucking kidding me with this. As if no one has ever heard of a streaming music service before.

      On a related note (ba dum tiss), must be fun to be a board member for Apple. Fuck it, why not has become the financial motto, especially when identifying cash-on-hand as the justification here.

      Considering their cash on hand, they actually seem surprisingly reluctant with new ideas.

  • CEO's [wikipedia.org] are overvalued!!
  • "It's the beginning of an amazing moment for our industry." Let's see how many years since you bought CBS??? A decade? So money might be nice to have coming in. BUT you're no Apple. Maybe Apples' sauce...strained.

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