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Topic: EMI's music catalog to go ONLINE (SSC) Return to archive
10-25-03 12:27 AM
Jaxx Deal Puts EMI Music's Catalog Online

By MICHAEL McDONOUGH
LONDON - A file-sharing network on Friday said it has signed a deal with EMI Music to put a "majority" of the music publisher's catalog online for users in Europe.

British company Wippit Ltd. said the deal with EMI will boost the number of tracks it offers online by about 100,000.

Wippit's chief executive and founder, Paul Myers, told The Associated Press that his company signed a deal last month with EMI, whose artists range from the Rolling Stones to Coldplay.

Myers said the Beatles, who are part of the EMI family, were not included in the deal, but refused to specify which acts were included or say how much the deal was worth.

No one at EMI was immediately available for comment Friday.

Wippit distributes authorized copies of songs on its file-sharing network, allowing subscribers to download an unlimited number of tracks for an annual fee of $49, or $6.50 a month.

Consumers can burn the songs onto CDs, transfer them to portable music players supporting Windows Media Audio or store them on a computer. Customers keep the music even after their subscription ends, Myers added.

A Wippit user gets a license for each track downloaded. Myers said the user can download the same track onto different computers by entering the license details each time, but cannot share the track with other users or convert the music file into MP3 format.

Kazaa, through a partnership with Altnet, also distributes authorized copies of songs, though major recording companies have shunned offering their catalogs.

The companies have been fearful of legitimizing Kazaa, which they blame for declining CD sales, and worry that people would download large amounts of music and then stop paying the monthly fees.

Myers would not say whether EMI had imposed any restrictions as part of its file-sharing deal, other than limiting its availability to users in Europe. The subscriber's credit card indicates where the user is based, and Wippit plans to restrict the EMI catalog to European users.

Wippit has about 165,000 registered users but only 5,000 subscribers who pay to access the service's 60,000 tracks from nearly 200 independent labels, Myers said. He added that EMI was the first major label to sign with the service, 77 percent of whose users are in Britain.

The deal will be officially announced next month and Wippit will offer EMI Music products "before the end of the year," Myers added.

Tracks are downloaded from Wippit in Windows Media Audio format and encrypted using Microsoft's Digital Rights Management, meaning they cannot be shared on other file-sharing networks.

On the Net:

http://www.wippit.com