Posted on 06/22/2015 6:02:55 AM PDT by dennisw
Well, that was a Swift response.
Less than 24 hours after chart-topping singer Taylor Swift criticized Apple for not paying royalties to artists during the three-month free-trial period for its new Apple Music service, the companys chief content czar signaled the policy has been reversed via Twitter.
Apple will always make sure that artist are paid, tweeted Apples Eddy Cue on Sunday night in a series of three tweets that called out Swift.
Cues response may have headed off what could have been a bruising battle for Apple during a crucial period in which Apple Music is attempting to compete with streaming services like Spotify, which knows all too well what its like to be on the receiving end of Swifts ire.
Swift signaled earlier in the day that Apples refusal to pay royalties during the initial period meant she would hold back her latest album, 1989, from availability on Apple Music.
I find it to be shocking, disappointing, and completely unlike this historically progressive and generous company, she wrote on her Tumblr page.
(Excerpt) Read more at msn.com ...
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I love Taylor.
She did this for all the people APPLE wouldn’t listen to. I love Apple products too, but this was the right move and she is brave to have done so.
Ha ha!
They better act right. Her entire songbook is about people who do her wrong. One song about her mean ex apple and theyd be toast.
You’re right!!! What about her song Mean, for someone in her past who abused her professionally?! She would have stayed Apple and made millions doing it.
Because I remember the time Karl Rove got some nobody to create a controversial ad criticizing a candidate Rove opposed, and run it one time on a podunk cable station in the middle of the night (after 'tipping off' the local Dems). The ad got hundreds of plays on local and national news (for free) as outraged liberals bleated about it, before disappearing down the rabbit hole.
The point is that these are sophisticated marketing plays, designed to generate conversation and brand awareness (Swift: cocky and confident, David v. Goliath; Apple: innovative, reasonable, flexible, artist-friendly).
It's not mistake in any way, shape or form.
It is equally funny to see the haters take the bait on this...
I suspect you may have the right take on this. Apple is very innovative in their advertising and can cook up ways to create buzz about new services. This has certainly done that in the social media. Apple has always found ways to pay the artists, programers, developers, etc. iTunes was always about producing content that made it easier for musicians to get their music to end users without being filtered through producers who strangle them, taking the lion's share of the loot. Apple has always shared revenues 70/30, with the 30 covering Apple's expenses, distribution, overhead, and profit, and the 70% going to the developers, artists, authors, suppliers.
This kerfuffle just did not ring true with Apple's way of doing business. . . but did ring true with what I know of accounting principles.
Why wouldn’t the new artists be in on the same deal? Getting payed I mean. Instead of having to suck it up and go the quarter without any royalties. The big artists, whether under the old deal, or the new one, would still have gotten preferential billing. Makes sense to promote “the stars” if you want to draw people to your service.
She had little to either lose or gain by this move, and she did the right thing, which is to her credit.
Apple didn't "cave", so much as they re-thought their position, and saw that they would benefit from doing the right thing more than by doing the wrong thing.
All good.
But the real battle -- which is not just between TS and Apple, but involves the entire music industry, the indies, the small artists, and the streaming services -- has only just begun.
Undoubtedly a nefarious false flag operation too!!!! I can smell them a thousand miles a way!!!! lulz
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