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Streaming Surpasses CD Sales At Warner Music (ft.com) 63

An anonymous reader writes: The times are a changin'. "Warner Music Group has become the first major record company to report that streaming has become its largest source of revenue, surpassing sales of physical formats such as CDs and vinyl," reports Financial Times. Last year, Warner's streaming revenue surpassed its sales for downloads. It goes to show just how much of an impact streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music are having on the music industry. Warner is the third-largest record company and has embraced streaming more quickly than the rest of the industry. "This rapid transformation is evidence of our ability to sign, develop and market artists that thrive in the streaming world," said Stephen Cooper, Warner's chief executive. The company reports that total recorded music revenue grew 10 percent to $610 million in the first three months of the year. Overall digital revenue increased 20 percent to $328 million, offsetting declines in physical formats like CDs.
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Streaming Surpasses CD Sales At Warner Music

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 07, 2016 @05:47AM (#52066165)

    Rent your dwelling place.

    Rent your computer time in the cloud.

    Rent your media

    Rent your communications device.

    Rent your transportation unit..

    Rent everything.

    You own nothing.

    Slave.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Rent your dwelling place.

      Rent your computer time in the cloud.

      Rent your media

      Rent your communications device.

      Rent your transportation unit..

      Rent everything.

      You own nothing.

      Slave.

      Right, I used to buy stuff like Office of Photoshop and use it forever I'd skip several new released and upgrade when I was forced to. Now they want to charge you a subscription for them and that ends up costing me more than just buying a license did. I know you can drop the subscription when you don't need the software and then re-subscribe when you need it again but when I need these programs I generally need them **NOW** and not in quarter of an hour when I'm done with the activation process. I like havi

    • by radish ( 98371 )

      Explain to me why renting makes me a "slave". Why is ownership the be all and end all?

      Renting gives me flexibility. Renting prevents me from being burdened with possessions I no longer want (which may or may not be worth anything on the secondary market). Renting ensures I can easily switch to a different model or version of something at little or no cost. Renting lets other people take care of maintenance and depreciation.

      There are plenty of things I choose to own, either because it makes financial sense,

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        First, renting allows a landlord to evict you for reasons other than failure to pay rent. Second, renting doesn't allow you to become the landlord.

        • by radish ( 98371 )

          Firstly, who was talking about real estate? Not me, and not (exclusively) the OP. As it happens I own my house, but renting makes more sense for some people. And I wouldn't classify them as slaves - which was the point of my post.

          But to your points:

          renting allows a landlord to evict you for reasons other than failure to pay rent

          I own my house. There are still ways in which I may lose the right to live in it. The developed world is full of social contracts and obligations. If you're not cool with that, leave

          • by tepples ( 727027 )

            First, renting allows a landlord to evict you for reasons other than failure to pay rent.

            Firstly, who was talking about real estate? Not me

            Nor I. I was making a more general analogy for termination of a service even though your subscription is paid up. For example, several PlaysForSure music stores closed their doors and shut down their DRM authorization servers.

  • by popo ( 107611 ) on Saturday May 07, 2016 @06:05AM (#52066205) Homepage

    "Warner Music Group becomes the first major music company to see physical media sales plunge to levels beneath streaming"

    • I was just pondering that. Ok, albeit from a different angle.

      I mean, who's still buying CDs? Last I bought must have been a decade or two ago. Closer to two, actually. Do kids these days even own a CD player anymore? I was under the impression that music sales today are in online music store downloads, not CD sales.

      In other words, I'd like to see this compared to online music sales. I have a hunch that CD sales and streaming combined is dwarfed by them, i.e. that they BOTH are insignificant.

  • What's a CD?

    Am I going to have to change my sig?

    • What's a CD?

      Its a thing that looks like a BluRay disc, you can put it in your BluRay player and after a long wait, hear some music. But for some reason there is no picture.

    • Had to google it myself. According to this [cd-koerperpflege.de] (warning, only click with a good adblocker if you don't want to get eye cancer) it has something to do with soaps and beauty products.

      News for nerds, my ass!

    • What's a CD?

      Am I going to have to change my sig?

      It's a way to legally get music at full quality without the lossy compression you get in streams or MP3s. You also get a booklet with the words to the songs and neat artwork free as part of the bundle. It doesn't need an internet connection to work, can't be remotely deleted and it's easy to make your own if you're in a band.

    • My vinyl is worth a buttload 'o bucks now, and my CDs will be someday.
  • Paying For Radio (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 07, 2016 @08:28AM (#52066537)

    You morons have been played by the record companies. They have shifted you from buying and owning physical product to paying for radio and owning nothing at all.

    They are pissing themselves with laughter as you throw money at them and proclaim "old" people to be luddites for not being streaming hipsters.

    • The value is an illusion, I could download 1000 MP3s that'd cost 99 cents but I couldn't sell it for ten bucks. Okay maybe you'd get a bit of cash for original CDs/DVDs/BluRays, but only a small fraction of what you paid. Practically I just consider the entertainment value to me and consider the asset value ~$0. Which means I'm only interested in owning it if it's a good deal, if I'd never see the movie again I don't care if it's just a stream. And most things are only worth watching once. Many songs are a

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