Statutes Shape Streaming Services

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In the Listening Post blog at Wired, Eliot Van Buskirk tries out Boomshuffle, a new service from Snocap, New Direction For SnoCap: Free, 15-Song Embeddable Mixes: "The service only plays 30-second clips of the songs unless you include 15 tracks by 15 different artists, because that helps Boomshuffle qualify for a lower internet radio royalty rate -- fine by me, I'd rather include more music anyway. Other royalty-related requirements: the songs shuffle, and users can't skip to a specific song, rewind, or skip more than 4 tracks"

Here is a case of how the statutory licensing has directly shaped the way that this service operates.

Take a look at 17 USC ยง114(d)(2) and compare the limits of interactivity allowed for webcasters using the statutory license with the terms of the Boomshuffle service.

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This page contains a single entry by Andrew Raff published on November 14, 2007 5:33 PM.

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