Digital Music Will Cost You
Hmmmmm....one of the better articles I've read as of late. Not only does some of the material bode well for edig but also makes an interesting (& brief) analysis of the costs for online distribution.
wired.com
Digital Music Will Cost You by John Gartner
3:00 a.m. 8.Dec.1999 PST Even after 15 years, Jeremy Silver is still jazzed about the music business, and he's looking forward to his next challenges: digital music and the Internet economy.
Some say record labels have been slow to embrace the Internet. But nobody can say that about Silver.
The vice president of new media at EMI Recorded Music has been a Web addict since 1994, when the command line was king, and gopher and fetch were a surfer's favorite tools.
"The Web used to be my hobby -- now it's my job," he said. "Now I surf the Web looking for my next hobby."
Silver, who started as a researcher in 1984 at National Sound Archive in London, has been around long enough to know that the retail channel is here to stay. Although EMI, the world's third largest music company, is adopting digital music, Silver projects that even by 2005, 80 percent of the company's revenues will come over the retail counter.
Silver is also a realist when it comes to technology and its ability to make music secure. Like music on compact discs, Net music can never be fully pirate-proof.
"What we need to do is keep honest people honest, which is a guiding principle of the SDMI (Secure Digital Music Initiative)."
Music publishers can't let the threat of illegal activities dissuade them from entering the Net age, he said. "If you want Fort Knox, then don't release any music."
Silver has faith that the SDMI will be robust enough so that if one aspect, such as encryption, is cracked, then other components will remain intact. "We don't want [online music] to be equivalent to the physical world, where one in three CDs worldwide is pirated."
The fear of piracy is just one reason that record companies have held back on releasing their libraries in downloadable, digital form. Silver said.
"The reality is, consumer demand for major artists' material hasn't been there," he said. Current methods of obtaining music are too cumbersome for most consumers.
Many digital music collectors enjoy the outlaw aspect of finding and downloading their favorite tunes -- they aren't as interested in obtaining music legally. Silver said scanning newsgroups, using search engines, and jumping in and out of chat sessions are part of the thrill of the hunt.
Silver, whose company is an active participant in the SDMI effort to protect content, said the oft-maligned initiative has gotten a bad rap. SDMI is not trying to limit consumer choice, as many pro-MP3 sites have opined. It is, however, unabashedly trying to eliminate opportunities for illegally music distribution.
The SDMI group's famously contentious meetings are healthy, according to Silver. "You wouldn't expect that group of people [who represent technology, consumer electronics, and content providers] to get together without having fiery arguments. If they don't have heated arguments, they are not doing their jobs."
Companies that have not been involved in SDMI may produce alternative security solutions. Silver said it's unlikely, but if a complete system for securing music came out before SDMI has finished its work, EMI would have to consider using it. "One should not necessarily wait for the other," he said.
Silver shares one widespread criticism of SDMI -- that products meeting the group's requirements may not be compatible.
"If I were a consumer, and I didn't have interoperability promised at some time, then I'd be severely disappointed," he said. People can expect to travel the world and cope with distinct languages and currencies, but "when you're in your home, listening to music, incompatibility is less acceptable."
Silver said while the digital music market is being winnowed to a handful of technologies, music publishers and consumers should plan on authoring and using content in multiple formats.
"We're not going to choose one codec [audio compression technology]," he said. "And I would be a very wary of someone who chose only one. Nobody has all the answers."
Over the past few months, EMI has signed agreements to deliver videos and music in Liquid Audio and Microsoft's Windows Media, and has signed a video distribution deal with Launch.com. Silver said EMI has no plans to directly capitalize on the e-commerce boom. The company will not sell to consumers themselves but instead will let the existing retail channel and emerging online channel interact with consumers. "Why would [consumers] want to deal with a single record company?"
EMI also has no interest in developing its own security technology and will continue to focus on partnerships. "We don't want to become a technology company," Silver said.
Consumers who think that moving to Net-based distribution might lower the price of music may be sadly disappointed, he said. "People have been talking about 'disintermediation' (where record labels will be replaced by more efficient virtual labels) for a while, but that's not going to happen."
The Net actually causes "reintermediation" -- as even more people are put between the artist and the consumer, according to Silver. Web hosting, music directory, streaming technology, security, watermarking, and transaction companies all have a role in digital music, and "the more hands, the higher the cost."
At least in the short run, it will cost EMI more money to distribute music digitally than through its regular retail channels. The economics for new labels that don't have established channels may be different, however.
The digital music landscape will likely shift over the next 12 to 18 months, he said.
"Next year will be by far the biggest year for experimentation [in music distribution]," Silver said. While in-store CD burning, secure portable players, or set-top boxes may not be the "killer apps" for digital music on their own, each technology has a place, and could be used in conjunction with things yet to come.
He said industry observers who get caught up in the numbers (of downloads and digital sales) in the next few months will miss the point. Once music is made highly accessible, and highly usable, then labels will have the incentive to distribute content over the Net.
Silver, who once played flute and sang in a band -- called Desmond's Leg -- believes recent controversies over acts being forced to forfeit their domain names when they sign with a label should not be an issue. Bands should be able to continue their personal relationships with fans, and labels should host sites of similar sounding names.
"We'll have the one with the hyphen in the middle of the name," said Silver, tongue firmly planted in his cheek. |