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Internet Radio Failing to Find Support?

K Fox asks: "WOXY, one of the Internet's larger radio stations, has announced that it will soon implement a monthly subscription fee, to support operations. When the Cincinnati based station went from terrestrial broadcast 97.7 to Internet only, they vowed to keep their streams free to listers. Now, they are saying that increased broadcast taxes, falling advertising revenue, and the overall uncertainty in the market (local or global?) has pushed them to change their business model. Is this a sign of things to come for the other radio stations, that broadcast over the Internet? Will digital music distribution fall solely to giants like XM and iTunes?"

3 of 354 comments (clear)

  1. I'm not convinced about internet radio... by dougjm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Radio over the internet is great untill the conection goes "a bit funny" and it stops streaming or drops to a lower sample rate.
    Also how do you listen to it on the move - I can't listen to it in the car or on my portable device.
    Then there's the problem whereby you can't go to your local comet (or other electronics store) and buy a radio for the office that has an ethernet port on the back - and no i'm not going to connect my computer up to the stereo becase evry time someone IM's me or I get an email or windows breaks you get horible alert noises that would drive everyone insane!

    Surley these problems are why these broadcasters are having problems.

    --
    Reinventing the wheel since 1979
  2. Crystal Ball by overshoot · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Will digital music distribution fall solely to giants like XM and iTunes?

    It will if the RIAA has any say in the matter. The last thing they want is Internet radio. Consider that they pay broadcast radio to play songs but demand to be paid for the same songs going over the Internet.

    We can speculate on why (greed doesn't explain it, since they don't stand to gain any revenue from strangling the baby.) My own guess is that Internet radio is cheap enough to run that independent artists might build listeners and escape from the RIAA plantation.

    --
    Lacking <sarcasm> tags, /. substitutes moderation as "Troll."
  3. I only listen to radio when driving by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I suspect it's the same for most people. That would explain the difficulty of being a 100% internet-only radio station.