Google which is developing a digital music service, is
winning over record companies that are hoping the technology
company can loosen Apple's grip on the digital music market.
The talks centre on securing a sweeping set of licenses that
would give Google the latitude to offer an array of products
and services through its Android operating system for mobile
phones as well as through computer browsers, said executives
familiar with the discussions.
Music companies have all but rolled out the red carpet for
Google, believing that the Mountain View, California,
technology giant can serve as a counterweight against Apple,
which controls 75 percent to 80 percent of digital music
sales via its iTunes store.
Though record companies collect 70 percent of the revenue
generated by iTunes, they have bristled under Apple's terms,
which had limited the prices music companies could charge,
among other things.
With Google on the scene, the hope is that music companies
can lessen their dependence on Apple.
"Google has smart people, and they recognise record companies
need to be more than just suppliers," said Jac Holzman,
senior advisor to Warner Music Group Chief Executive Edgar
Bronfman. "The attitude that you bring to the table is
clearly the first step."
Google sees the ability to offer a music service as a key to
the success of Android, a free operating system that runs
millions of smart phones worldwide.
Its entry into music is one of several efforts by Google in
recent months to play a greater role in delivering digital
content, including books, movies and television shows.
A move into music would put the company in more direct
competition against Apple, a one-time Silicon Valley ally on
whose board Google CEO Eric Schmidt sat until just a year
ago.
The search company is said to be looking to wrap up talks
with the music companies in time to launch a service for the
next release of its Android operating system, code-named
Gingerbread, due in the fourth quarter of this year, said
executives familiar with the talks.
Google declined to comment about its music plans, as did
music firms involved in the negotiations, citing
confidentiality agreements.
Another impetus for labels: new revenue streams. While
digital music sales have steadily grown, overall industry
revenue continues to fall. In the US, music sales were $US7.7
billion in 2009, down 12 percent from $US8.8 billion a year
earlier, according to the Recording Industry Association of
America.
Worldwide, recorded music revenue fell 7 percent in 2009 to
$US17 billion, according to the International Federation of
the Phonographic Industry.
With sales of Android phones outpacing iPhone sales in the
first half of the year, Google is in a position to bring
millions of potential customers to the table.
There were about 7.6 million Android phones in use in the US
at the end of June, compared with 12.4 million iPhones,
according to ComScore, a market research firm.
Moreover, cell phone users are willing to pay for access to
content, especially if the fees are embedded in the phone
bill. Four in 10 Android owners listen to music on their
phones (the figure is 6 in 10 for iPhone users), according to
Brian Jurutka, a mobile analyst at ComScore.
Most listen to music that they load into the device from
their computers, but about 13 percent downloaded the music to
their phones via subscription or outright purchase from the
phone, Jurutka said.
Among the scenarios raised in Google's discussions with music
labels are streaming music and paid downloads, according to
music executives who say the talks are led by Andy Rubin, who
heads up Google's Android business.
But there are many variations within those two models that
have not been nailed down. Those include whether there would
be a free streaming service and whether the cost would be
supported by audio advertising or built into the price of the
phone.
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