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Rory Cellan-Jones

Digital music - you can't give it away...

  • Rory Cellan-Jones
  • 25 Jan 08, 16:01 GMT

鈥 just the kind of daft name you expect from a digital start-up 鈥 and eye-catching enough to be spread across the world鈥檚 media back in April 2006. It was a service offering free downloads supported by advertising. And it wasn鈥檛 just the name that caused all the excitement but the promise of a new business model for an industry desperate to find a way to make money in the digital age.

Then everything went quiet - but today SpiralFrog is making a noise again. It has unveiled the first figures for its service 鈥 launched to North American customers last September. There are no figures yet on advertising revenue or downloads 鈥 but they鈥檙e jumping up and down with excitement over their 400,000 registered users. To my untutored eye that seems pretty unimpressive for a service offering completely free, no strings (apart from the ads) all-you-can-eat music. Someone from a ratings firm confirmed that view: 鈥淭hey barely show up on the radar,鈥 he told me.

But the founder of the firm Joe Mohen was in very confident mood when he came on the phone, forecasting that SpiralFrog will be second only to iTunes in the United States by the end of the year. The company says that it is visitor numbers that really matter (they are getting a million or so a month) because even if they don鈥檛 download a thing, they get to see the adverts and earn SpiralFrog some cash every time they click on them.

But that won鈥檛 cheer anyone up in the music business. The record labels and the artists get paid (and presumably it鈥檚 a tiny amount) when someone plays a track 鈥 SpiralFrog can detect how many times you鈥檝e done that on your MP3 player (iPods not supported, by the way). I would be surprised if the money flowing back to the industry was even a fraction of that generated by iTunes 鈥 and the record labels aren鈥檛 that happy about Apple鈥檚 terms 鈥 so right now SpiralFrog doesn鈥檛 look like the answer to the industry鈥檚 prayers.

And new figures from the global music trade body, the IFPI, show just how much it needs a saviour. In its digital music report it trumpets a 40% growth in digital music sales to $2.8 billion in 2007 鈥 but that鈥檚 a real slowdown after previous years saw sales double. What鈥檚 more, the IFPI reckons the overall music market fell another 10% last year. So the $800 million extra digital sales are on one side of the scale 鈥 with a $2.9 billion fall in shop sales on the other.

What the IFPI also ruefully points out is that there are twenty illegal downloads for every one that鈥檚 paid for. This is where SpiralFrog claims it can make a difference. Joe Mohen says he isn鈥檛 taking on Apple: 鈥淥ur competition is piracy.鈥 He describes the 鈥渃an鈥檛 pay, won鈥檛 pay generation鈥 of 15 to 25-year-olds. 鈥淔or them, content has always been free.鈥 He believes they will be willing to trade some of their time looking at adverts if they can get free music in return.

So now there are so many ways of getting hold of digital music. You can pay per track to download, you can pay a subscription, you can sign up to one of the mobile music services, you can stream it for free (Last.fm launched its free service this week) or you can download it for nothing. Or of course you can grab it for nothing using file-sharing sites. Right now, it鈥檚 only the last option which is capturing the imagination of music fans.

Darren Waters

Tech section highlights

  • Darren Waters
  • 25 Jan 08, 09:48 GMT

Here's a round-up of some of the pieces posted to the Technology section this week, just in case you missed them:

From our regular columnists:

took a look at the growing debate around copyright protection and privacy implications.

celebrated wireless freedom thanks to his laptop and 3G card.

In the news:

UK online music service and social network a streaming service for users, with deals with most of the big labels. The downside? You can only ever listen to a track three times.

A British firm believes it has the solution to our . H2O will be rolling out fibre optic cable connections to people's homes via the sewers, offering speeds of 100Mbps. But unless you live in Bournemouth, Northampton or Dundee, you might have to wait a while.

Social networking sites have gone from fad to mainstream in a short space of time. But what happens when you want to leave? found leaving MySpace harder than he thought...

Features:

If you've just joined the HD revolution and spent thousands of a TV you might not want to hear about the post-HD age. This week Japanese broadcaster NHK visited the 大象传媒 to talk about . And no, your current TV is almost certainly not good enough for the new technology.

And in the US, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has unveiled which can be used to fly into disaster zones, such as hurricanes, to help gather data.

Blog:

Who are the most influential people in technology over the last 150 years? That question certainly provoked a debate.

Apple released its most recent financials and Rory ran over some of the detail.

And what were the forgotten concepts of technology. Many of you had some great suggestions.

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