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BusinessWeek September 10, 2007 Einhorn & Ji |
Deaf To Music Piracy Chinese search engines make it easy to steal Net tunes. |
InternetNews June 12, 2009 Michelle Megna |
Google China Launches Shopping Search Google rolls out a beta shopping search channel in its latest attempt to capitalize on the huge Chinese online market. |
The Motley Fool November 17, 2006 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Baidu Faces the Music Baidu gets a win in its battle against China's music industry. |
The Motley Fool July 6, 2007 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Baidu Learns to Rock China's top site strikes a chord with an important music label. Investors, take note. |
InternetNews February 5, 2008 |
Music Labels Square Off Against Chinese Search Engines Targeting file sharing, Universal, Sony BMG and Warner slap Baidu and Sohu.com with lawsuits. |
The Motley Fool October 8, 2004 Tim Beyers |
Europe Spanks File Swappers The effort to crack down on illegal music downloads moves across the pond. |
The Motley Fool October 21, 2009 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Will Google Rock? The search giant wants to be heard in the digital music realm, according to TechCrunch. Multiple sources are telling the tech blog that the launch of Google Audio is imminent. |
The Motley Fool April 1, 2009 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Sing Louder, Baidu Google launches free music downloads in China. |
InternetNews October 21, 2009 |
Google's Next Move: A Music Service? Google giant may make a move into the online music space and capitalize on its position in search market. |
BusinessWeek July 1, 2010 Grover & Satariano |
The Fall of Music Downloads Music streaming services are taking their toll as downloads to iPods, computers, and other devices plunge. |
The Motley Fool July 19, 2011 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Baidu Sings a New Tune China's Baidu rolls out its legal music service. |
PC Magazine November 11, 2003 Cade Metz |
Let the Music Play We review all the tools you need to satisfy your digital music urges. |
The Motley Fool January 16, 2007 Alyce Lomax |
Baidu, EMI Make Beautiful Music The two companies team to fight piracy and offer music online. A streaming music service should be far more palatable to Britain's EMI as it tries to reach out to Chinese consumers accustomed to free content. |
PC Magazine November 28, 2007 Eileen Travers |
Digital Music: Changing the Game Musicians are bypassing record labels, but the industry is fighting back. |
InternetNews February 29, 2008 |
Chinese Music Industry Files Suit Against Baidu In China, Baidu.com faces copyright charges as pirated songs dominate distribution. |
The Motley Fool November 8, 2005 Tim Beyers |
Hollywood Won't Grok Grokster As a federal court shuts down Grokster, Hollywood declares victory. Now all Apple needs is a fraction of those downloads to keep a stranglehold on the digital music market and sow fertile ground for an iMovie video store. |
InternetNews October 17, 2006 Roy Mark |
International Recording Industry Hits File Sharers Illegal peer-to-peer file sharers are facing more than 8,000 copyright infringement lawsuits in 17 countries, according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry. |
HBS Working Knowledge June 21, 2004 Sean Silverthorne |
Music Downloads: Pirates---or Customers? Internet music piracy not only doesn't hurt legitimate CD sales, it may even boost sales of some types of music. |
InternetNews January 26, 2009 Andy Patrizio |
Clock's Ticking on Windows 7 Public Beta Want to test Windows 7? Better act soon. |
InternetNews October 11, 2006 Nicholas Carlson |
Google's Counter-Punch For Cuban Mark Cuban told the world YouTube was going to get "crushed." Then Google bought YouTube. |
InternetNews September 5, 2006 Nicholas Carlson |
MySpace Helps Musicians Sell Out Now all those MySpace musicians can find out if anyone is actually willing to pay to listen. |
PC World May 2, 2001 Michael Gowan |
Napster Alternatives If you're an MP3 junkie looking for a fix, we'll tell you which of the Napster alternatives works best... |
The Motley Fool January 17, 2007 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Bobbing for Apple Is there room for Apple to charge more for tracks? Probably, but does Universal want to be the one to open up that Pandora's Box? |
Home Theater August 17, 2007 |
Sympathy for the Devil: 10 Questions for the RIAA Cary Sherman, President of the Recording Industry Association of America answers questions about peer-to-peer file sharing and more. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2007 Tekla S. Perry |
Imagine There's No DRM... I Wonder if You Can Even rock stars rejoice when a major record company takes the locks off digital music. |
The Motley Fool July 26, 2010 Jordan DiPietro |
Death by a Thousand Cuts The music industry is slowly dying. More and more people are using streaming sites like Pandora, which means there will be fewer digital downloads. |
Searcher May 2007 Stephanie C. Ardito |
Social Networking and Video Web Sites: MySpace and YouTube Meet the Copyright Cops The author thinks the media giants will eventually calm down and learn to work with social networking and video Web sites. Otherwise, these outlets risk losing their substantial customer base, not to mention access to revolutionary marketing strategies and technologies. |
The Motley Fool June 25, 2009 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Is Google Too Blue for Red China? Google is showing too much skin for China's comfort. |
The Motley Fool September 29, 2005 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Dueling Fools: Baidu.com Bull The company went public this summer at $27 a stub. It skyrocketed into the triple digits on its first day of trading and now rests roughly three times higher than its $27 offering price. That has prompted many investors to bash the stock. |
The Motley Fool March 11, 2010 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Throw This Stock Away These aren't merry days for the prerecorded music industry. Is it time to get rid of your Warner Music Group stock and replace it with something else? |
BusinessWeek February 16, 2004 Heather Green |
Downloads: The Next Generation Music merchants are trying new ways to make an honest buck off the Internet. |
The Motley Fool July 6, 2006 Alyce Lomax |
Yahoo! China's Sour Notes Is Britain's International Federation of the Phonographic Industry's copyright lawsuit against Yahoo! China good business for the recording industry? |
The Motley Fool January 17, 2007 Alyce Lomax |
Digital Music's Double Trouble The major labels' resistance to innovation, penny-pinching ways, and frequent complaints about piracy and the flagging popularity of CDs leave them ripe for disruption. Digital distribution should be only too happy to oblige. |
Home Theater August 16, 2007 |
DRM Kills Google Video Downloads In what surely must be the worst-case scenario for digital rights management, Google has informed purchasers of its video downloads that they will no longer play. |
The Motley Fool March 16, 2007 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
SINA Tunes Up The Chinese Internet media company has teamed up with five of the world's largest music labels to launch a new digital platform. |
BusinessWeek March 29, 2004 Larry Armstrong |
E-Tune Shopping With downloading now legit, online music stores have similar catalogs. It's the extras that set them apart. |
T.H.E. Journal October 2004 |
Legal Downloading Services Offered to College Students Companies are responding to college students' demands for music and media downloads by providing services for legal downloads at a minimal charge. |
PC Magazine May 1, 2009 Albanesius & Rhey |
Are ISPs on Board with RIAA's New Strategy? Tech companies deny they will cut off pirating customers. |
Chemistry World September 6, 2012 Ned Stafford |
Scientists: workaholics but happy A new study has found what many already know -- that when the sun goes down researchers don't go to bed, but continue working on into the wee small hours of the night. And many of them also carry on working through the weekend too. |
The Motley Fool February 28, 2007 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Google's TestTube Developments The media giants don't know it. You probably don't know it. Maybe even YouTube doesn't know it. But great ideas are brewing in the search king's YouTube lab. |
Home Toys June 2006 Scott Bahneman |
Sea Change in the Music Industry Benefits Consumers The digital music revolution is upon us and it's changing the landscape of the music industry as we know it. Accounting for $1.1 billion in 2005 music revenues, online music services now represent six percent of global music sales. |
Home Theater August 6, 2007 |
Illegal P2P Rampant in U.K. Despite the fact that U.K. residents are among the world's steadiest CD buyers, apparently they're also among the world's most avid illegal downloaders. |
The Motley Fool June 15, 2004 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Delicious Downloads Fast food companies are offering free music downloads with a purchase. |
The Motley Fool July 10, 2006 Anders Bylund |
Downloads: Music to Labels' Ears The music industry's complaints about dire downloading doom are largely unfounded. |
InternetNews February 22, 2008 |
U.K. Laws Could Target ISPs Over File-Sharing Legislation in Britain may force Internet access providers to work with the music and film industries to curb illegal downloads. |
InternetNews February 6, 2008 |
Report: Google Eyes Online Music Move in China Google is planning to boost its presence in China by tying up with a Chinese online music company to provide free music downloads. |
PC Magazine October 29, 2003 |
Online Music Stores: Music to Your Ears? As Apple iTunes Music Store for the Mac showed, users wanted to download as much or as little as they liked and pay only for what they bought. Now that the winning formula has been hit upon, it's rapidly being improved. |
The Motley Fool January 6, 2010 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Baidu Wants to Show You Something The Chinese search engine giant makes a bigger play in online video. |
Home Theater August 8, 2008 |
Universal Tries Exotic Downloads Critics of the music industry often say we wish the major labels would quit bellyaching, forget the lawsuits, and just offer a better legal-download product. That's the best way to fight illegal downloads, and that's what the Universal Music Group is doing with its new Lost Tunes download service. |
AskMen.com Craig Mazin |
5 Things You Didn't Know About Record Deals The basic fact underlying recording contracts is that their terms tilt heavily towards the benefit of the labels, not the artists. Many of the terms border on swindling. |