2021年3月22日 星期一

On Tech: Streaming saved music. Artists hate it.

Plus, where Big Tech is challenged.

Streaming saved music. Artists hate it.

Alexis Jamet

Streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music rescued the music industry. They're also tearing it apart.

My colleague Ben Sisario says that musicians complain about streaming economics that can translate millions of clicks on their songs into pennies for them. Last week, a group of musicians protested outside Spotify offices for changes in how they are paid from streaming.

Ben spoke with me about why streaming music has been a letdown for many musicians. The challenges reflect a larger question: What happens when the promise of making a living online from music, writing or building apps doesn't match the reality?

Shira: How has streaming changed the music industry?

Ben: It's been the industry's salvation. Largely because of Spotify and other subscriptions, streaming provided the industry something it never had before: regular monthly revenue.

To oversimplify, the big winners are the streaming services and the large record companies. The losers are the 99 percent of artists who aren't at Beyoncé's level of fame. And they're angry about not sharing in the music industry's success.

If more people are paying for music, why isn't that money trickling down?

There's a complicated and opaque formula that determines how the $10 monthly subscription for Spotify or Apple Music makes its way to artists. After those services take their cut, about $7 goes into a pot of money that gets split a bunch of ways — for the record labels, songwriters, music publishers, artists and others.

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The more people listen to music, the less each song is worth because it cuts the pie into smaller and smaller slices. I've seen financial statements from some fairly popular independent musicians that suggest they're making a pretty good living from streaming. But often, unless musicians have blockbuster numbers, they aren't making a great deal.

Who is to blame for this?

The streaming services and the record labels both bear responsibility.

Spotify pays a big chunk of its sales to the record labels, and then it's up to those labels to distribute the money to musicians. The music industry doesn't have a great track record of paying artists fairly.

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But Spotify is also nowhere close to its stated mission of "giving a million creative artists the opportunity to live off their art." It likely has around seven million artists on its platform, and Spotify's figures show that only about 13,000 of them generated $50,000 or more in payments last year. How can that number possibly get to a million?

Haven't many musicians always felt exploited and underpaid?

Yes, but the streaming model has exacerbated the divide between superstars and everybody else. It's also a fallacy to dismiss musicians' complaints. Economic inequality has been around a long time, but it still should be addressed.

What's the solution? Can streaming ever work for everyone?

There is talk of changing the payments systems to a "user-centric model" that would allocate payments based on what people listen to. If I listen only to Herbie Hancock on Spotify, my subscription fee goes only to him, after the service takes its cut. Proponents say this system would be more fair, especially to artists in niche genres. But there have been studies that say it's not that simple. And I wonder if it's too late to change.

Are any companies doing it differently?

There's a smaller music service, Bandcamp, that musicians tend to like. It lets artists limit how often their music is streamed and takes a relatively small commission on sales of song downloads, T-shirts and things like that. It's proof that Spotify isn't the only way it can be done.

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I'm also interested to see what Square might do with Tidal, the streaming service it bought last month. It's not going to change the economics of what a streaming song is worth, but Square is deeply integrated with things like merchandise sales. It could come up with new ways to help artists make more money or connect and market to fans.

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Where Big Tech is challenged

In China, upstart technology companies are doing something that can feel impossible. They're challenging the tech kings.

The Wall Street Journal reported recently that a five-year-old Chinese e-commerce site, Pinduoduo, became the country's most widely used shopping website. More people made purchases last year on Pinduoduo — which is a combination of Costco, a video game, QVC and Amazon — than shopped on Alibaba, China's version of Amazon.

By the way, do you want to feel small and insignificant? Chinese shoppers spend more than $2 trillion each year on online purchases — and it's nearing half of all retail sales in the country. Americans spent about $800 million on e-commerce in 2020, or about 14 percent of retail sales.

One of the big questions about technology is whether America's current tech giants like Google, Facebook and Amazon will stay powerful forever. In China, the answer is maybe not. (But we'll see.)

In the last few years ByteDance, the company that makes the Douyin app and its international version TikTok, has also challenged China's all-powerful Tencent.

I don't want to go overboard. Alibaba and Tencent remain supremely powerful, and it's hard to imagine that changing. ByteDance and Pinduoduo could have trouble staying popular and making money. It's also difficult to know if China is a glimpse at what could happen to tech powers elsewhere in the world. China is unusual.

But it is intriguing to see technology superpowers confronted with newcomers bringing fresh ideas.

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Before we go …

  • Online hate as a precursor of real-world violence: Anti-Asian hate speech has spiked in fringe corners of the internet, my colleague Davey Alba reported. Researchers told Davey that a surge in online vitriol toward ethnic groups showed an increased risk of violence against them.
  • A novel but potentially abusive way to get more people online: Rest of World wrote about loans for people who couldn't otherwise afford smartphones, but they come with a catch. Pop-up messages take over the phone screen to nudge people to make payments, and the phone might lock if people miss too many.
  • TikTok is the opposite of reading books but … TikTok videos are selling a lot of books. My colleague Elizabeth A. Harris wrote about "BookTok," or short videos of people recommending titles, recording time lapse videos of themselves reading or weeping after an emotionally crushing ending. "I wish I could send them all chocolates!" one author told Elizabeth.

Hugs to this

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2021年3月20日 星期六

Talking to Kids About Anti-Asian Racism

Finding ways to celebrate unique identities amid rising bias.
A roundup of new guidance and stories from NYT Parenting.
Golden Cosmos

When Heidi Shin's daughter was born in 2012, she didn't plan on teaching her Korean, despite the fact that Heidi had grown up speaking the language with her immigrant parents. When she turned 5, her daughter lobbied to learn: She wanted to communicate better with her halmoni, or grandmother.

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In a beautiful, painful essay this week, Heidi writes about how celebrating her daughter's Korean identity has helped her process the racism she has encountered since the pandemic began, which included a girl in their neighborhood pointing to Heidi's daughter and saying they could not play together because of the "China virus." She also asked mental health experts for guidance on talking to children about their identities amid the rising tide of anti-Asian hate crimes in the United States, including the fatal shooting of six Asian women in Atlanta.

Also this week, Keith Gessen has a sweet long read about how much he loves sports, and how it vexes him that his older son does not seem particularly interested in them. Lindsay Patterson, who gave us a big list of podcasts for little kids last year, is back with another list, this time for bigger kids. Here are seven highly entertaining episodes to start with for kids ages 6-10.

Denise Grady reports that Moderna will begin testing its Covid vaccine in children under 12. The vaccine trial includes babies as young as 6 months. The company has a trial already underway for 12- to 17-year-olds, and it might have results by this summer in that age group.

Finally, Tara Parker-Pope explores a phenomenon called "disenfranchised grief." That's a kind of grief that "isn't acknowledged or supported by social ritual," and may be the result of anything from lost time with grandchildren to missed professional opportunities to a miscarriage. So many people are feeling disenfranchised grief during this pandemic year, when our losses are big and small, and we may be reminded of them constantly. Tara gives advice from experts about how to cope.

Thanks for reading.

— Jessica Grose, columnist, NYT Parenting

P.S. I'm working on a newsletter about another under-acknowledged pandemic emotion: boredom. The unending routine of parenting can feel monotonous in the best of circumstances, so if you're finding yourself incredibly bored during this never-ending quarantine life, drop me a line here.

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Tiny Victories

Parenting can be a grind. Let's celebrate the tiny victories.

My older children (7 and 8) are well past the cleanup song, or even being timed to accomplish tasks. Instead, I have recently discovered that they enjoy being recorded in time-lapse. They love watching themselves cleaning up a big mess in super speed. — Carrie Miller, Washington, D.C.

If you want a chance to get your Tiny Victory published, find us on Instagram @NYTparenting and use the hashtag #tinyvictories; email us; or enter your Tiny Victory at the bottom of this page. Include your full name and location. Tiny Victories may be edited for clarity and style. Your name, location and comments may be published, but your contact information will not. By submitting to us, you agree that you have read, understand and accept the Reader Submission Terms in relation to all of the content and other information you send to us.

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