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Virgin Scraps Legal P2P Music Plans After Labels Get Jitters

This story was written by Robert Andrews.


Virgin Media (NSDQ: VMED) has scrapped groundbreaking plans to pay music labels for songs its customers download illegally - effectively legitimising P2P - after lack of support from some of the majors, The Register first reported and paidContent:UK has confirmed.

We learned last year Virgin Media was talking with Playlouder MSP - a veteran vendor working on the model - about creating the service, which was due for launch this Q1. But what The Reg now says was to be called "Virgin Music Unlimited" has been scuppered at the last minute by major-label demands the ISP block transfer of songs outside of computers owned by subscribers.

The service would have been revolutionary, helping to monetise some of the 95 percent of music downloads the music business acknowledges are illegal. Virgin would have effectively allowed paying subscribers to continue transferring songs over P2P networks, and would have paid royalty collectors for the privilege. Full details on paidContentUK...

For more on the digital music industry, join us in LA on Feb. 5 for our second EconMusic conference


By Robert Andrews

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