iTunes walks with the Dead

The long, strange trip of acid rock icons the Grateful Dead has made a pit stop in cyberspace, with the band now selling digital downloads of key live recordings. Jerry Garcia, former Grateful Dead front man The band announced Tuesday that digital versions of the recordings are now available through Apple Computer’s iTunes service and …

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Net beckons radio broadcaster Infinity

Infinity Broadcasting is the latest radio operator to jump on the Internet bandwagon. The radio company, which tested the waters by launching a Web edition of its all-news station WCBS in December 2004, said Wednesday that 11 news radio stations would follow suit soon. Beginning March 14, Infinity news radio stations, including those in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, San …

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Comcast offers free digital music players

Comcast is tapping into the frenzy over MP3 players in a push to sign up new high-speed Internet service customers. The company is giving away Nomad MuVo digital music players from Creative Technology to new residential high-speed Internet subscribers who activate the service by March 31. The music player, which costs about $50 at online retail shops, can hold up …

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Is surround sound the future, or another Betamax?

SAUSALITO, Calif.–In a tiny private recording studio on the shore of San Francisco Bay, Talking Heads keyboardist Jerry Harrison is systematically giving his old band’s work new sonic life. Newly digitized versions of the band’s recordings glow on a pair of computer monitors–a guitar track here; vocals, bass drum and keyboard there. He and a pair of engineers are recreating …

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MP3s for pennies? Russian cops say no

A Russian digital-music site offering high-quality song downloads for just pennies apiece is the target of a criminal copyright investigation by the local police, recording industry groups said Tuesday. AllofMP3.com has been operating for several years, asking consumers to pay just 2 cents per megabyte of downloads–usually between 4 cents and 10 cents per song. Alongside the catalogue available at …

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AOL blocks music

America Online is disabling a feature of its popular music software that had been used to evade copy-prevention features of digital music services, the company said Friday. The company’s Winamp software was identified by bloggers this week as part of a process that transformed copy-protected music downloads into songs that could be burned by the thousand to CD. The tool …

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iMesh almost ready to become paid file

For more than six months, Israel’s iMesh has been the strangest of beasts in the file-swapping world: a fully functioning peer-to-peer network operating with the blessing, albeit temporary, of the recording industry. That status is coming slowly to an end. The company is working to build a record-label-approved peer-to-peer service, using song-filtering company Audible Magic’s technology to help turn unauthorized …

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Napster hack leads to free downloads

It’s like the old Napster all over again: all the music you want for free, as long as you’re willing to get a little geeky. Blogs were buzzing Tuesday about the resurgence of an old technique for recording music on a computer, reapplied to Napster’s all-you-can-eat subscription music plan. Using software freely available from America Online’s Winamp division, it’s possible …

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iTunes discounts Grammy

Apple Computer’s iTunes Music Store is having a sale on albums with Grammy-winning songs, the company said Monday. All albums sold through iTunes that include an award-winning track can be downloaded for $2 less than their original price. This brings most of the albums down to $7.99, according to the company, which rarely discounts music. iTunes rival MSN Music had …

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Yahoo Music

Yahoo has renamed its online music service Yahoo Music. The service had been operating under the brand name Launch, which was acquired by Yahoo in 2001. But now, Yahoo wants to showcase all its music products and services under a single brand, the company said. The service already has begun operating with a new logo. Yahoo Music offers streaming audio, …

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Study: Fee

Fee-based digital music is gaining popularity among downloaders in the United States, according to market research company Ipsos-Insight. Related story The company is putting$30 million in marketingbehind a new Microsoft-backed “portable”subscription service. About 47 percent of people who downloaded music in December and who were age 12 or older paid a fee to do so, the market researcher said. That’s …

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MP3tunes.com shuns digital rights management

MP3tunes.com introduced its digital music service on Wednesday, offering 300,000 songs at 88 cents each from mostly independent and unsigned artists. As earlier reported, the new download service is the brainchild of Michael Robertson, current chief executive of Linux software company Linspire and Net-calling service SIPphone. His creation of MP3.com in 1997 helped establish the online digital music business. MP3tunes.com …

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Xdrive adds music streamed to phones

Online storage company Xdrive is setting its sights on the multimedia market, offering streaming music capabilities to its subscribers for the first time. The company, which allows subscribers to store gigabytes of data online, said its customers can now upload MP3 files, create playlists, and stream that music to PCs or smart phones that support Web surfing and music playback. …

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Napster’s ad: Forget fashion, music’s a value play

The difference between Napster and Apple Computer music offerings was made clear during Sunday’s Super Bowl: Apple is a high-end fashion statement, while Napster is about value shopping. That may be an extreme take, but it isn’t far from the advertising messages the two companies are now sending as they square off at different poles of the digital-music markets. Napster’s …

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Price tag added to online music videos

After years of reluctantly treating music videos as free promotional tools, record label Universal Music Group is planning to charge Internet and satellite companies whenever they play. The change, which is likely to be followed by other record labels, marks a potentially substantial shift in the economics of the online-entertainment world. Some of the most popular entertainment services, such as …

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