PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Independent music squashed out of streaming playlists and revenue

2021-03-03
(Press-News.org) Bands and artists on independent record labels get less than their fair share of access to the most popular playlists on streaming platforms such as Spotify - argues a new paper from the University of East Anglia. The paper, published today, looks at whether streaming platforms offer a level playing field for artists and record labels. It finds that major labels have an unfair advantage when it comes to playlist access - and that they take the lion's share of subscription revenue as a result. As a possible remedy, the research team suggests changing the payment system, so that royalties generated by individual listener subscriptions go direct to the labels, bands and artists they are listening to. They also recommend more transparency in how playlists are created and how the algorithms behind music recommendations work. Finally, they recommend greater transparency about contracts and say that major labels with financial stakes in streaming platforms should be forced to divest. Not overhauling the system, they say, is likely stifle innovation and creativity in the long run - which will in turn impact both the industry and consumers. Prof Peter Ormosi, from UEA's Norwich Business School and Centre for Competition Policy, said: "Music streaming has become the most important route to market recorded music, and this position is likely to strengthen in future. "Music streaming platforms like Spotify pay the labels royalties that are calculated on a pro rata basis, as a proportion of the revenues associated with the streams of their content. "We wanted to see how streaming platforms support or distort fair competition between different types of recorded music and their creators - whether they offer a level playing field for artists and labels. "A level playing field is important not only for artists but also, over the longer term, for consumers. If competition is distorted it risks inhibiting innovation, variety and the prospects of upcoming and more niche artists. "Creativity and innovation are vital for the music industry - if streaming platforms stifle this, it will be bad for the whole industry and consumers in the long run." The team studied in detail how streaming platforms such as Spotify and Apple Music operate - including how streaming revenues are split between major and independent labels and artists, the role of playlists, and how some major labels also hold shares in streaming platforms. Co-author Prof Amelia Fletcher, also from UEA's Norwich Business School and Centre for Competition Policy, said: "Playlists on music streaming platforms play a central role in disseminating music to consumers. As such, it is important for ensuring fair competition that independent artists have fair access to playlists. "But our research suggests that independent label artists are getting less than their fair share of access to the most popular playlists. "While the vast majority of playlists are curated by Spotify, the shares of the major labels' own proprietary playlists may exacerbate the situation. "This disproportionately lesser access is likely to have a direct impact on revenues for independent labels and their artists as well as an indirect impact on the sustainability of this important segment of the market in the future. Co-author Daniel Antal, founder of Reprex, a big data startup focusing on the music industry,said: "The impact of playlists on royalty payments is likely to be accentuated under a pro-rata royalty allocation system. "We recommend that the payment system should be reformed by moving from the pro-rata payment system to a user-centric remuneration, where the royalties generated by an individual user's subscription is simply split between what they choose to listen to. "We would also encourage greater transparency of contracts, once they are agreed, to help ensure fair treatment, or alternatively that competition authorities should allow industry-wide negotiation by labels, as is already carried out for performance and mechanical royalties on the composition side of the split. "Finally, we note that some of the majors have residual equity stakes in Spotify. For example Universal holds a 3.5 per cent stake and Sony Music a 2.9 per cent stake, in Spotify. And Deezer is part-owned by Access Industries which in turn owns Warner Music Group. "Requiring divestment of such stakes could also be helpful in ensuring that streaming platforms have the right incentives to ensure a level playing field."

INFORMATION:

'Music streaming: is it a level playing field?' is published in the journal Competition Policy International.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Study contributes to evidence for potential association between blood group a and COVID-19

2021-03-03
As researchers around the world work to identify and address risk factors for severe COVID-19, there is additional evidence that certain blood types could be associated with greater risk of contracting the disease. A new Blood Advances study details one of the first laboratory studies to suggest that SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, is particularly attracted to the blood group A antigen found on respiratory cells. In the study, researchers assessed a protein on the surface of the SARS-CoV-2 virus called the receptor binding domain, or RBD. The RBD is the part of the virus that attaches to the host cells, so it is an important research target for ...

Vaping marijuana associated with more symptoms of lung damage than vaping or smoking nicotine

2021-03-03
Adolescents who vape cannabis are at greater risk for respiratory symptoms indicative of lung injury than teens who smoke cigarettes or marijuana, or vape nicotine, a new University of Michigan study suggests. The result challenges conventional wisdom about vaping nicotine, says the study's principal investigator, Carol Boyd, the Deborah J. Oakley Collegiate Professor Emerita at the U-M School of Nursing. "I thought that e-cigarettes (vaping nicotine) would be the nicotine product most strongly associated with worrisome respiratory symptoms," she said. "Our data challenges the assumption that smoking cigarettes ...

Researchers explore relationship between maternal microbiota and neonatal antibody response

Researchers explore relationship between maternal microbiota and neonatal antibody response
2021-03-03
A healthy system of gut bacteria, or microbiota, is crucial to health: Gut bacteria not only aid with digestion, but also play an important role in the body's immune response. Infants, however, are not born with full-fledged gut microbiota, which makes it difficult for them to fight off intestinal infections. Although little is known about how the immune system develops during infancy, new research from the Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine's Department of Biomedical Sciences and Pathobiology sheds significant new light on the subject. A research team from principal investigator ...

UNH research: No second chance to make trusting first impression, or is there?

2021-03-03
DURHAM, N.H.-- In business, as in life, it is important to make a good first impression and according to research at the University of New Hampshire a positive initial trust interaction can be helpful in building a lasting trust relationship. Researchers found that trusting a person early on can have benefits over the life of the relationship, even after a violation of that trust. "It's not just an old adage, first impressions really do matter especially when it comes to trust," said Rachel Campagna, assistant professor of management. "During an initial interaction, one of the most important and immediate factors people consider about another person is trustworthiness. It can impact their willingness to accept risk and vulnerability ...

Ghosts of past pesticide use can haunt organic farms for decades

2021-03-03
Although the use of pesticides in agriculture is increasing, some farms have transitioned to organic practices and avoid applying them. But it's uncertain whether chemicals applied to land decades ago can continue to influence the soil's health after switching to organic management. Now, researchers reporting in ACS' Environmental Science & Technology have identified pesticide residues at 100 Swiss farms, including all the organic fields studied, with beneficial soil microbes' abundance negatively impacted by their occurrence. Fungicides, herbicides and insecticides protect crops by repelling or destroying organisms that harm the plants. In contrast, organic agriculture management strategies avoid adding ...

Sewage-handling robots help predict COVID-19 outbreaks in San Diego

Sewage-handling robots help predict COVID-19 outbreaks in San Diego
2021-03-03
In earlier days of the COVID-19 pandemic, before diagnostic testing was widely available, it was difficult for public health officials to keep track of the infection's spread, or predict where outbreaks were likely to occur. Attempts to get ahead of the virus are still complicated by the fact that people can be infected and spread the virus even without experiencing any symptoms themselves. When studies emerged showing that a person testing positive for COVID-19 -- whether or not they were symptomatic -- shed the virus in their stool, "the sewer seemed like the 'happening' place to look for it," said Smruthi Karthikeyan, PhD, an environmental engineer and postdoctoral researcher at University of California ...

How math can help us understand the human body

2021-03-03
Healthy human bodies are good at regulating: Our temperatures remain around 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit, no matter how hot or cold the temperature around us. The sugar levels in our blood remain fairly constant, even when we down a glass of juice. We keep the right amount of calcium in our bones and out of the rest of our bodies. We couldn't survive without that regulation, called homeostasis. And when the systems break down, the results can cause illness or, sometimes, death. In presentations at the American Association for the Advancement of Science's annual meeting, researchers argued that mathematics can help explain and predict those breakdowns, potentially offering new ways of treating the systems to prevent or fix them when things go wrong. The meeting ...

Color blindness-correcting contact lenses

Color blindness-correcting contact lenses
2021-03-03
Imagine seeing the world in muted shades -- gray sky, gray grass. Some people with color blindness see everything this way, though most can't see specific colors. Tinted glasses can help, but they can't be used to correct blurry vision. And dyed contact lenses currently in development for the condition are potentially harmful and unstable. Now, in ACS Nano, researchers report infusing contact lenses with gold nanoparticles to create a safer way to see colors. Some daily activities, such as determining if a banana is ripe, selecting matching clothes or stopping at a red light, can be difficult for those ...

Ecosystems across the globe 'breathe' differently in response to rising temperatures

2021-03-03
Land stores vast amounts of carbon, but a new study led by Cranfield University's Dr Alice Johnston suggests that how much of this carbon enters the atmosphere as temperatures rise depends on how far that land sits from the equator. Ecosystems on land are made up of plants, soils, animals, and microbes - all growing, reproducing, dying, and breathing in a common currency; carbon. And how much of that carbon is breathed out (also known as ecosystem respiration) compared to how much is stored (through primary production) has impacts for climate change. ...

New, highly precise 'clock' can measure biological age

2021-03-03
Using the model organism Caenorhabditis elegans, researchers at the University of Cologne have developed an 'aging clock' that reads the biological age of an organism directly from its gene expression, the transcriptome. Bioinformatician David Meyer and geneticist Professor Dr Björn Schumacher, director of the Institute for Genome Stability in Aging and Disease at the CECAD Cluster of Excellence in Aging Research and the Center for Molecular Medicine Cologne (CMMC), describe their so-called BiT age (binarized transcriptomic aging clock) in the article 'BiT age: A transcriptome based aging clock near the theoretical limit of accuracy' in Aging Cell. We are all familiar ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Switching immune cells to “night mode” could limit damage after a heart attack, study suggests

URI-based Global RIghts Project report spotlights continued troubling trends in worldwide inhumane treatment

Neutrophils are less aggressive at night, explaining why nighttime heart attacks cause less damage than daytime events

Menopausal hormone therapy may not pose breast cancer risk for women with BRCA mutations

Mobile health tool may improve quality of life for adolescent and young adult breast cancer survivors

Acupuncture may help improve perceived breast cancer-related cognitive difficulties over usual care

Nerve block may reduce opioid use in infants undergoing cleft palate surgery

CRISPR primes goldenberry for fruit bowl fame

Mass General Brigham announces new AI company to accelerate clinical trial screening and patient recruitment

Fat tissue around the heart may contribute to greater heart injury after a heart attack

Jeonbuk National University researcher proposes a proposing a two-stage decision-making framework of lithium governance in Latin America

Chromatin accessibility maps reveal how stem cells drive myelodysplastic progression

Cartilaginous cells regulate growth and blood vessel formation in bones

Plant hormone allows lifelong control of proteins in living animal for first time

Swedish freshwater bacteria give new insights into bacterial evolution

Global measures consistently underestimate food insecurity; one in five who suffer from hunger may go uncounted

Hidden patterns of isolation and segregation found in all American cities

FDA drug trials exclude a widening slice of Americans

Sea reptile’s tooth shows that mosasaurs could live in freshwater

Pure bred: New stem cell medium only has canine components

Largest study of its kind highlights benefits – and risks – of plant-based diets in children

Synergistic effects of single-crystal HfB2 nanorods: Simultaneous enhancement of mechanical properties and ablation resistance

Mysterious X-ray variability of the strongly magnetized neutron star NGC 7793 P13

The key to increasing patients’ advance care medical planning may be automatic patient outreach

Palaeontology: Ancient tooth suggests ocean predator could hunt in rivers

Polar bears may be adapting to survive warmer climates, says study

Canadian wildfire smoke worsened pediatric asthma in US Northeast: UVM study

New UBCO research challenges traditional teen suicide prevention models

Diversity language in US medical research agency grants declined 25% since 2024

Concern over growing use of AI chatbots to stave off loneliness

[Press-News.org] Independent music squashed out of streaming playlists and revenue