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Indian music service Dhingana shuts down 2 months after losing its biggest label

Feb14
by Sindy Cator on February 14, 2014 at 11:47 am
Posted In: Around the Web, Asia, India

shutterstock 25586329 520x245 Indian music service Dhingana shuts down 2 months after losing its biggest label

Indian music streaming service Dhingana has quietly closed the shutters on its service, ending months of speculation about its future after it lost a key partnership.

A brief farewell note on the Dhingana website – first spotted by Medianama — simply says that “all good things must come to an end” and thanks its users. No explanation for the closure is given:

dhinghana 730x189 Indian music service Dhingana shuts down 2 months after losing its biggest label

Dhingana had raised venture funding — its most recent $7 million round closed in 2012 — and hired its first external CEO less than one year ago, but ultimately it came unstuck after its biggest music label partner — T-Series — declined to renew its licensing agreement in December.

“We were not able to see much traction in the service and secondly we couldn’t agree on the commercials and both parties thus decided to part ways in an amicable manner,” T-Series president Neeraj Kalyan told TechCrunch at the time of the break-up.

Speaking at the time, CEO Rohit Bhatia told Medianama only that the service was in the process of ‘restructuring’. However, the service appears to have paid the ultimate price for its break-up with T-Series.

We’ve reached out to Dhingana for more details. For now Indian music lovers can turn to Saavn or Times India’s Gaana.com, but the fact that the most funded company is bowing out of the game illustrates the difficulties of running a legitimate streaming service in a country where labels are all powerful.

Related: India’s Flipkart shutters digital music store, says country’s download market ‘will not scale’

Headline image via ronfromyork / Shutterstock

└ Tags: media, news, syndicated
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Rakuten’s $900 million strategy is to transform Viber into Line. But it won’t be easy.

Feb14
by Sindy Cator on February 14, 2014 at 11:01 am
Posted In: Around the Web, Asia, rakuten, viber

viber 520x245 Rakuten’s $900 million strategy is to transform Viber into Line. But it won’t be easy.

Today’s big news is Rakuten’s acquisition of Viber for nearly $900 million. Taking a step back to look at the strategy behind it, Rakuten is focusing on the growth of mobile messaging platforms and aiming to ape one of Asia’s fastest growing and most important tech firms: Japanese chat app Line.

Let’s first establish why Rakuten, a company that makes 400 billion yen (nearly $4 billion) in annual revenue from a range of online retail businesses, feels compelled to enter the free calls and chat space at the cost of nearly $1 billion.

Why messaging?

Chat apps have become important platforms in Asia, where more than just allowing free calls and text chats, they are stacked with features that rival social networks for the attention of smartphone owners. The platformization trend hasn’t made it into Europe or the US yet, but there is plenty of evidence to suggest that users are open to more than basic messaging apps.

Line, the app from Japan that has 350 million users across the world, embodies the potential.

It grossed $318 million in revenue for 2013, with 60 percent of its income coming from in-app purchases within the 30-plus apps on its gaming platform. Its total income in the final quarter of 2013 grew 450 percent year-on-year. As if scaling at speed is not enough, it is testing new revenue streams such as e-commerce, flash sales and breaking news.

Aside from games, stickers and other sales, it runs a marketing platform that lets users opt-in to receive information and updates from a range of global business — including McDonald’s — each of which pays for the privilege.

Line Q4 Rakuten’s $900 million strategy is to transform Viber into Line. But it won’t be easy.

In short, messaging apps are just scratching the surface of what can be delivered on mobile. Any company involved in Internet content or services should be keeping an eye on the space, particularly if it is based in Asia.

Rakuten ticks all those boxes. In addition to buying up prominent retail sites like Buy.com and Play.com, it has focused on entertainment to push its brand into international markets. It bought into hardware (acquiring Kobo) and content (with deals for Viki and Wuaki) and now it is moving into distribution.

Why Viber?

Simply, Viber is the messaging app with the greatest scale that is most open to being bought.

  • WeChat: 270 million active users and owned by Internet giant Tencent — no sale
  • WhatsApp: only Facebook eclipses it for international social reach — no sale: too expensive / unwilling to sell to a company unfamiliar worldwide
  • Line: busy (reportedly) planning an IPO; has a solid business model and plenty of ambition — no sale
  • Kakao Talk: 150 million users, also linked with an IPO, and has global ambition — sale unlikely: price multiple billions
  • Kik: 100 million users is not the scale of Viber, is focusing its efforts on enabling the mobile Web and Web apps — sale unlikely
  • Viber: still in its early days of making money, claims 280 million registered users and has raised no external money (that’s a big potential pay day) — bingo

Viber may be the best fit, but there are questions.

It has never released a figure for its active user base. It claims to have users located in 193 countries but, as a European startup, you would expect a minority of them to be in the US (a market Rakuten aspires to succeed in) and Asia, its primary focus.

Now what?

Rakuten has some work to do to ape Line though. The Viber service focused on voice calls and has been kept simple, it doesn’t include the robust mechanics of its Asian rivals that include payments, e-commerce, games, marketing and more.

Viber makes money by selling stickers and Skype-like international calling credit, both of which are recently introductions.

Information disclosed by Rakuten shows that Viber made just over $1.5 million in revenue last year, that’s small change compared to Line and WeChat, and even WhatsApp and its $1-per-user-per-year strategy. Overall, Viber recorded a $29.5 million net loss for 2013, and a $14.7 million net loss in 2012.

viber Rakuten’s $900 million strategy is to transform Viber into Line. But it won’t be easy.

Yet, CEO Hiroshi Mikitani believes Viber has “tremendous potential as a gaming platform,” and he outlined his plan to use the service to deliver content:

Viber understands how people actually want to engage and have built the only service that truly delivers on all fronts. This makes Viber the ideal total consumer engagement platform for Rakuten as we seek to bring our deep understanding of the consumer to vast new audiences through our dynamic ecosystem of Internet Services.

This strategy is neither easy nor cheap to execute. Line’s parent company is spending heavily — with reports of $200 million annual investments — as it seeks to gain visibility among users worldwide, and to appeal to game developers and companies that it needs to attract to its platform.

Line began 2013 with 100 million registered users, and ended it with over 300 million. This year it is targeting 500 million and, while it still doesn’t reveal active user numbers, it is an important service because it changing how companies interact with consumers.

That’s why Rakuten is getting into the messaging game with Viber, albeit at a hefty price.

└ Tags: line, syndicated
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YouTube now promotes top tracks and playlists when you search for music

Feb14
by Sindy Cator on February 14, 2014 at 10:45 am
Posted In: Around the Web, Google

157547287 520x245 YouTube now promotes top tracks and playlists when you search for music

While Google is rumored to be working on a YouTube music and video subscription service, it’s already developing its existing site to combat Spotify, Rdio and numerous other music streaming firms.

If you head over to the YouTube site and search for a recognized artist, you’ll notice a new section on the right-hand side of the page. By default, it shows a list of their most popular tracks with links to corresponding videos on YouTube. At the top is a thumbnail image, which provides a shortcut to a custom playlist where you can listen to all of the songs back-to-back.

Screen Shot 2014 02 14 at 10.26.35 730x728 YouTube now promotes top tracks and playlists when you search for music

Notably, Google is tapping into all of the videos available on YouTube, including unofficial versions that have been uploaded by fans. For instance, the ‘top tracks’ playlist for De La Soul – who made its discography free to download today – only features fan-made videos at present.

The new music section also has a section for related artists, adding some light discovery features to YouTube, as well as a tab that switches top tracks for a list of their latest albums. Again, if you select one of these links you’ll be given a custom playlist populated with all of the relevant tracks on YouTube.

Earlier this month, Google started showing prominent links to music videos at the top of its search results. Although clips from other video-sharing services such as Vimeo and Dailymotion are being handled in a similar fashion, it’s further evidence of Google’s ambition to make YouTube the preferred service for audio and video streaming.

Given that Google already has Google Play Music All Access, it’ll be interesting to see how it positions a YouTube-based music and video subscription service, if and when it comes to fruition.

Image Credit: ERIC PIERMONT/AFP/Getty Images

└ Tags: news, syndicated
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De La Soul makes its entire back catalog of music free to download for one day only

Feb14
by Sindy Cator on February 14, 2014 at 9:34 am
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

Rising 220x220 De La Soul makes its entire back catalog of music free to download for one day onlySeminal hip hop outfit De La Soul is making its entire back catalog available to download for free, marking the 25 year anniversary of its classic debut album, 3 Feet High and Rising.

You can garner the trio’s full arsenal of recorded music from 11am EST today (Friday, February 14) until noon EST tomorrow, directly from the official De La Soul website.

This move is notable for a number of reasons, but perhaps chiefly because the band has yet to make its full catalog of tunes available online, specifically its earlier efforts, due to the abundance of samples the band uses. But for a 25-hour period kicking off today, you can get it all.

➤ De La Soul to Make Entire Catalog Available for Free | Rolling Stone

└ Tags: media, news, syndicated
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Daily Dose for Fri, Feb 14: The Paris Wife

Feb14
by Sindy Cator on February 14, 2014 at 8:00 am
Posted In: Around the Web


The Paris Wife by Paula McLain
Reviewed by Sheryl from Clinton, Washington.

└ Tags: syndicated
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