Sonic Boom

£4.99

Sonic Boom

Napster, P2P and the Battle for the Future of Music

Internet and digital media: arts and performance Digital or internet economics Disruptive innovation Music industry Information technology industries Intellectual property law History of Computing, digital and information technologies Digital and information technologies: social and ethical aspects Digital music: professional

Author: John Alderman

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Language: English

Published by: Fourth Estate

Published on: 30th January 2014

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 228 Kb

ISBN: 9780007404803


Introduction

The first book to tell the inside story of the battle for control over the future of music and how technology is ripping up the traditional rules of business. As the internet grew throughout the 1990s, software was developed, such as Liquid Audio and MP3, that could deliver music anywhere and most importantly for free. Bands were reaching fans without record company support; entrepreneurs made money distributing digital music files without licensing agreements; the music industry executives complained of piracy and refused to embrace the Information Age.

The Changing Music Industry

The story of the struggle to define the future of the music industry is a parable of how technology is completely changing the way we think and do business. Internet companies such as Napster, invented in 1999 by the nineteen-year-old Shawn Fanning, were rewriting the rules. Within two years, the music industry was on the attack, Napster was shut down by the courts and then bought by Bertelsmann.

Key Questions

The ongoing battle highlights some of the most crucial questions facing all forms of commerce in the face of the internet: how does the internet change the way we pay for things? How far will traditional businesses go to protect their future?

About the Book

‘Sonic Boom’ is immaculately researched and peopled by the musicians, executives, entrepreneurs and programmers behind one of the most vital questions concerning the Information Age: who owns intellectual content on the web?

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