RazorPop Announces P2P Subscription Music Offering - Comprehensive Plan Protects Consumers And Can Pay Billions To Record Labels
RazorPop, a peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing developer and distributor, announced plans today to create the RazorPop P2P Music Subscription service. The unlimited music subscription offering is similar to those from Yahoo and Napster. RazorPop is the developer of the multi-network TrustyFiles P2P file sharing software.
Dallas, TX (PRWEB) May 24, 2005 -- RazorPop, a peer-to-peer (P2P) file
sharing developer and distributor, announced plans today to create the RazorPop
P2P Music Subscription service. The unlimited music subscription offering is
similar to those from Yahoo and Napster. RazorPop is the developer of the
multi-network TrustyFiles P2P file sharing software.
RazorPop offers
music rights holders, including labels, composers, and publishers, a percentage
of the subscription revenue, similar to licensing deals that have been entered
into with iTunes and other centralized online music services. An independent
clearinghouse will hold and disburse licensing fees. An industry research firm
will sample network downloads and allocate payments among rights
holders.
“Five years ago there were no online subscriptions and P2P was
the primary conduit for unauthorized music downloads. Today the world is vastly
different,” said Marc Freedman, RazorPop CEO. "Digital music subscriptions are
now available over a wide range of channels. The number one way consumers obtain
unlicensed files today is through e-mail and instant messaging. Number three is
copying files from another person’s iPod or portable MP3 player. Yahoo typifies
the new world. It just announced its music subscription plan, while at the same
time offering Yahoo! Mail and Yahoo! Messenger, along with its new Yahoo! Music
Unlimited with portable player file transfer.”
“The RazorPop P2P Music
Subscription benefits both the music industry and consumers. For the industry,
P2P is the one channel the major labels haven’t licensed yet or monetized.
That’s ironic because P2P offers a ready-made customer base of 20 to 30 million
US users. At $100 per year per subscriber, P2P represents a virtually instant
multi-billion dollar market that can reverse the music industry’s sales
decline.”
“On the consumer side, people will finally have the freedom to
choose the music subscription channel and provider that’s right for their
lifestyle and consumption. The RazorPop music subscription service will be
highly competitive with those from Yahoo, Napster, and others. We will deliver
over thirty times more music tracks for less than ten dollars per
month."
"Equally important, the RazorPop service immunizes our
subscribers from music industry lawsuits. It’s time to trust consumers. P2P
users deserve protection for committing to support content creators. The record
labels can bypass lawful P2P network users and focus on true copyright
violators."
The music subscription service includes copyright
infringement insurance. The RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) may
continue to target non-subscribing P2P users with lawsuits, and inadvertently
sue RazorPop’s paying customers. The insurance will be capped at $5,000 per
subscriber, which is above typical RIAA settlement amounts to date.
The
introductory retail price is planned to be $9.95 per month or $99.95 per year
paid in advance and will include RazorPop’s award-winning TrustyFiles software.
Subscribers will have access to virtually all music tracks on the P2P networks.
Consensus industry estimates put the number of P2P music tracks at 32 million
today. P2P music growth is expected to continue at double digit annual rates as
increasing numbers of both established and emerging artists promote their works
to the most eager segment of the music listening public, the P2P file sharing
audience.
The music subscription launch is predicated upon execution of
licensing agreements with music industry rights holders. RazorPop is providing a
simple form agreement that can be executed electronically to expedite clearances
and to avoid the need for regulatory intervention that would not be in the best
interests of content owners or distributors. RazorPop will not comment on the
status of in-progress confidential negotiations, but music industry receptivity
has been encouraging.
RazorPop’s TrustyFiles 2.4 is the industry’s
leading multiple P2P network software. TrustyFiles features simultaneous
download of the same file over Kazaa, Gnutella, and Gnutella 2 P2P networks, and
the Internet. TrustyFiles searches and downloads hundreds of millions of files
over the Kazaa/Fast Track, Gnutella, Gnutella 2, and Bit Torrent P2P file
sharing networks. TrustyFiles is FREE with NO spyware and NO additional bundled
software and can be downloaded at http://www.TrustyFiles.com.
About Razorpop
RazorPop
(http://RazorPop.com) is an
Internet marketing, technology, and entertainment company. RazorPop develops
innovative software, services, and networks for digital entertainment consumers
and businesses that want to reach them. RazorPop's primary product is
TrustyFiles High Performance File Sharing software (http://TrustyFiles.com), the
leading multi-network client with Kazaa, Gnutella, Gnutella2, and Bit Torrent
search and download, as well as personal, private, and public file sharing.
RazorPop was founded in January 2001 by visionary Marc Freedman and is based in
Dallas, Texas.
RazorPop properties include TopP2P (http://TopP2P.com) for free and legal
downloads. CEO Marc Freedman writes the P2P Insider’s Blog at http://p2p-weblog.com/.
RazorPop is a member of the
Distributed Computing Industry Association (DCIA). The DCIA (http://www.dcia.info) advances the
adoption of distributed computing technologies and the commercial development of
business models based on them.
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Source : http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/5/prweb244000.htm