How Can the Music Labels Save Themselves?
In the afternoon I used Live search to find more information on ‘financial business’ so I could post it into ‘Sign up bonus’. And this is one of the first results I found:
Fred Wilson recently pointed me to David Hymans manifesto on how the music labels can save themselves. Its well worth a read, but Davids point is basically that they should: Drop their penny-per-play streaming-on-demand rates by 90 percent, to one-tenth of a penny Link streamed songs to a commerce opportunity, such as buying the MP3 from a store such as Amazon Upsell a premium subscription Im not sure that this will fully replace the foregone revenues from a decline in physical CD sales,
Because I didn’t want to write a short journal entry and post it in Sign up bonus, I checked some search engines on risky business and found this:
Risky Business — Episode #59
Tenable Network Security recently began sponsoring the Risky Business podcast with Patrick Gray. Episode 59 is now online. This latest installment includes: A review and commentary of the weeks security news. Jeremiah Grossman of Whitehat Security talks about some of the very latest web vulnerabilities including Cross Site Request Forgery attacks. Patrick Gray interviews me about Tenable, our work in the logging and correlation space and the Nessus vulnerability scanner. If interested in th
Because I didn’t want to write a too short journal entry, I checked some search engines on airline advertising and found this:
Worrying Lack of Ecomic Growth di Elisabetta Povoledo sull’International Herald Tribune del 9 Aprile 2008
ROME: An advertising campaign promoted by the Venice industrialists’ association comparing the cost of labor in four European countries has been giving local commuters p ause. … Its fate has been inextricably linked to the beleaguered national airline, now poised between bankruptcy and a laborious takeover by Air France-KLM that is unpopular w ith the unions….
What do you think? Please post a comment, thanks!