I thought the whole point of the internet was to transcend borders and bring us closer. I thought the point was that it didn’t matter if I was sitting in Denmark, the US or Japan. This email from a clearly dissapointed Tim Westergren leads me to believe otherwise;
Dear Pandora listener,
Today we have some extremely disappointing news to share with you. Due to international licensing constraints, we are deeply, deeply sorry to say that we must begin proactively preventing access to Pandora’s streaming service for most countries outside of the U.S.
It is difficult to convey just how disappointing this is for us. Our vision remains to eventually make Pandora a truly global service, but for the time being, we can no longer continue as we have been. As a small company, the best chance we have of realizing our dream of Pandora all around the world is to grow as the licensing landscape allows.
We show your IP address is ‘xxx.xxx.xx.xx’, which indicates you are listening from Denmark. If you believe you are seeing this by mistake, we offer our sincere apologies and ask that you please reply to this email.
Delivery of Pandora is based on proper licensing from the people who created the music – we have always believed in honoring the guidelines as determined by legislators and regulators, artists and songwriters, and the labels and publishers they work with. In the U.S. there is a federal statute that provides this license for all the music streamed on Pandora. Unfortunately, there is no equivalent license outside the U.S. and there is no global licensing organization to enable us to legitimately offer Pandora around the world. Other than in the U.K., we have not yet been able to make significant progress in our efforts to obtain a sufficient number of international licenses at terms that would enable us to run a viable business. The volume of listening on Pandora makes it a very expensive service to run. Streaming costs are very high, and since our inception, we have been making publishing and performance royalty payments for every song we play.
Until now, we have not been able to tell where a listener is based, relying only on zip code information provided upon registration. We are now able to recognize a listener’s country of origin based on the IP address from which they are accessing the service. Consequently, on May 3rd, we will begin blocking access to Pandora to listeners from your country. We are very sad to have to do this, but there is no other alternative.
We will be posting updates on our blog regarding our ongoing effort to launch in other countries, so please stay in touch. We will keep a record of your existing stations and bookmarked artists and songs, so that when we are able to launch in your country, they will be waiting for you. We deeply share your sense of disappointment and greatly appreciate your understanding.
-Tim Westergren
(Pandora founder)
Why oh why does the music business insist on making things harder for consumers – and thereby for themselves (NOT talking about Pandora here, I know they want to be as global and accessible as possible). And is this going to affect my lastfm as well? Is this the day music dies? Sorry for the drama – I know it’s over the top, but this really pisses me off.
2 Comments
An I had just spent like an hour last nite making a new station, damn the laws and boundaries and the stupidity of all this buracracy which cripples our world to the brink of turning us all into bloody binary robots, no freedom once-o-ever, are things really all that different from comunism for anyone ? No, the difference is the comunists were honest about what they were doing, the new liberal governments just do they same crap, but lie about it in our faces.
Sorry for taking this a little offtopic, but these are the kinds of issues that affected pandora I believe.
Hey – off-topic’s fine by me… it’s good to know that I’m not the only one who’s passionate about these issues