The Audio-On-Demand Genie - Page 5
January 29, 2001
Internet radio, or TCP/IP radio, or Webcasting, or whatever you
want to call it, is exciting stuff, just in terms of the way it
greatly expands available programming. However, it also sets free
an even more powerful media genie. In theory, it enables fully
user-defined programming. In other words, rather than relying on
a DJ to choose musical selections, a listener can create their
own personal playlist, drawing on any media available on the Net,
including not only existing recordings, but news feeds and other
live material. In terms of the technology required, there's no
reason something like this couldn't exist today. But does it?
Well, it's easy enough to set up a custom playlist on a single
system, or even a LAN. Products such as
MusicMatch Jukebox and
RealJukebox
let you define playlists of audio content. But they
fall short of our Perfect Radio Station for three reasons:
- They are limited to audio files stored on the local system.
There's no provision for playing files over the Internet, or for
incorporating live Webcasts. The PRS allows any and all content,
prerecorded or live, to be included in a user-defined
program.
- The software itself runs on a local system. The PRS is a
hosted application, running 100% on an Internet server, and is
thus available from any computer device anywhere in the
world.
- They allow unauthorized (that is, in violation of copyright)
media use. While their makers surely don't condone unauthorized
copying, a media player of this kind has no way to distinguish
between an authorized sound file and an unauthorized one. The PRS
tracks all media playback, and submits data to the relevant
authorities, so that copyright holders are compensated properly.
Like it or not, this probably means that the PRS will have some
form of advertising (okay, so it's less than perfect).
So, today's so-called media jukebox is not a contender for the
title of PRS, although with a few improvements it could be. If
such a device were offered as a hosted application, and support
for live Webcasts were added, it would come pretty darn close to
our Holy Radio Grail. So it's plain that the technical challenges
of building the PRS are not that great. Legal issues are what's
keeping it in the bottle for the moment.
Webcasting Versus Audio on Demand
To the copyright authorities, our PRS would come too close to
audio on demand for comfort. The powers that be, that is, the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)
and the performing rights organizations ASCAP,
BMI and SESAC,
have embraced Webcasting, and they now make it easy enough for
anyone to set up as an Internet radio station, paying a
reasonable fee for the use of the copyrighted material that they
administer. Audio on demand, however, is a different kettle of
fish. It may seem that there is little practical difference
between the two, but to the copyright authorities, there is a big
difference.
Webcasts featuring both signed and unsigned talent are very
common, as is audio on demand by unsigned artists. At the moment,
you'll find very few sites where work by signed artists is
legally available on demand. Why is this so? First, a few
definitions.
Webcasting (or Internet radio) is the process of streaming a
sequential program directly to a user's sound card. It does not
leave the user with any permanent copy of the music, and it does
not give the user direct control over what selections are played.
Although the huge amount of programming available would seem to
satisfy all but the most picky, and although as we shall see in
next month's column, some Webcasting sites do allow a certain
amount of customization, Webcasting by definition includes the
concept of a DJ, who determines what selections will be played in
what order.
Audio on demand, on the other hand, allows the user to play any
available selection at any time, via either streaming or
downloading. The user can listen to the same song ten times in a
row if desired, and there are doubtless people who do just that.
A signed artist is one who is represented by a major, or at least
respectable-size, record company. They release recordings with
the intention of making a profit from them, and generally regard
their works as salable merchandise, not to be given away.
Unsigned artists, generally speaking, have little hope of earning
much from record sales, but rather tend to regard their
recordings more as publicity tools than cash cows. Thus, many
unsigned artists are happy to offer their works on demand. Take
your pick of a million or so at MP3.com
and IUMA.
The recording industry has no problem with Webcasting, any more
than they have with traditional radio. Through the RIAA,
copyright holders collect fees from broadcasters, and as everyone
knows, radio play does tend to induce people to go out and buy
records. Audio on demand, however, they view with suspicion,
seeing it as an invitation to unauthorized copying and loss of
potential sales. It's easy to see why they take this view. Even
if you can collect money for the initial download, you just can't
stop people from making endless copies.
This writer believes that in the future, all data will be stored
on central servers, the concept of "owning" a recording will
become obsolete, and record companies will have more control over
distribution, not less. But be that as it may, for now the
recording industry generally subscribes to this view: Webcasting
good, audio on demand bad.
Next Wave of the Web: Building the Perfect Radio Station - Page 4
Next Wave of the Web
Perfect Radio Station, Imperfect World - Page 6
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