Premium
This is an archive article published on November 3, 2007

File-sharing portal Mosh strikes jarring note between Warner Music, Nokia

Nokia Corp.’s new Britain-based online music service launched this week with more than two million songs, including tracks from major record label except one...

.

Nokia Corp.’s new Britain-based online music service launched this week with more than two million songs, including tracks from major record label except one: Warner Music Group Corp., home to artists such as Green Day, Linkin Park and Red Hot Chilli Peppers.

New York-based Warner refused to license its music for the service, taking issue with Nokia’s operation of a file-sharing Website called Mosh, an executive familiar with the negotiations between the two companies said on Friday.

Warner insisted that Nokia promise not to promote Mosh alongside its paid music offerings, the executive said.Bill Plummer, Nokia’s vice-president of multimedia for North America, declined to comment on Friday on the details of the company’s negotiations with Warner, but said talks with the company were ongoing in “good faith and good spirit”.

A Warner spokeswoman declined to comment.

Story continues below this ad

Warner’s decision to remain outside the Nokia Music Store highlights the increasingly uneasy relationships among record labels and other entertainment companies and online hubs for user-generated content. YouTube and similar sites thrive from traffic created by computer users uploading all kinds of media files—including many copyrighted songs and videos.

Typically, media companies insist that files uploaded without permission by copyright holders be removed, and YouTube recently reached a formal agreement with major industry players on the issue.

The wrinkle this time is Mosh, which is entirely separate from Nokia’s music portal. Now, a major label that does have content for sale on the Nokia Music Store is prepared to pull out unless Nokia shows it can beef up its measures to keep unauthorised content off Mosh, said another executive.

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement