YouTube readying paid music service
Google's
video-sharing arm YouTube is preparing to launch a subscription music
service to allow consumers to watch videos and listen to music ad-free,
industry sources said.
Sources familiar with the plans told AFP the service is likely to launch sometime next year.
The
new plan would still allow users free access for the vast amount of
music and music videos available on YouTube but would allow an option
for a paid service without ads, with some extras such as the ability to
store and listen to songs offline.
A source
familiar with the plan said YouTube is not setting up a "pay gate" for
music and would continue to allow people to stream music on any device
for free if they choose.
The move, however, is
the latest effort to monetize YouTube, which Google bought in 2006 for
$1.65 billion and which is believed to generate a modest amount of
advertising revenues. YouTube recently launched a number of paid
channels for television programs.
Earlier,
Billboard magazine and The New York Times reported that the premium
subscription designed for mobile devices would cost around $10 a month
and would compete with services such as Spotify, Rdio and Rhapsody.
The reports said the deal would allow record companies to get bigger royalty payments than they currently getfree services.
Billboard
said a paid service would give YouTube more flexibility in packaging
and selling music with fewer restrictions. It also said a premium
service could be paired with other Google products in the future,
including Google Glass.
Creating a paid service
would help YouTube move awaythe sharing of free music videos, which
often face copyright violations. YouTube currently allows verified music
publishers and other copyright holders the ability to block infringing
videos or to place an ad over the video to generate revenue.
A
YouTube spokesman, contacted by AFP, declined to comment on the
specific reports of the new paid service but said: "We're always working
on new and better ways for people to enjoy YouTube content
acrossscreens, and on giving partners more opportunities to reach their
fans."
Billboard said the new paid service
could allow YouTube the ability to stream full albums, which are not
usually available because artists generally one or two tracksany single
album to feature in a music video.
The music
publication said YouTube is in the process of a larger redesign of the
YouTube mobile app that would offer a cleaner interface for music and
playlists.
Google in May introduced a paid
music service for smartphones and tablets powered by its free Android
software, called Google PlayAccess, with a monthly subscription fee of
$10.
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