Google Launches Music Search With Lala, Pandora, Rhapsody, imeem & MySpace
This just in from the Technology department at the Los Angeles Times:
Google this afternoon began rolling out its widely rumored music feature, which lets users search for and listen to entire songs for free.
The search engine banded together with several music service sites that are responsible for streaming the songs on Google’s search results pages. Searching for Coldplay, for example, will yield the band’s album cover art, alongside four popular songs that users can play once for free. Once a song has been played by a user, they will only be able to hear a 30-second sample of tune. (The feature is being gradually rolled out over the next 24 hours, so some folks may not see the feature until tomorrow.)
Google itself isn’t paying record companies for the rights to play millions of songs on its search page; its partners are. Those include Lala, Pandora, imeem, MySpace Music and Rhapsody, a subscription service from Real Networks. All have licensing agreements with record labels to stream or sample millions of songs online.
The Mountain View, Calif., search company said it’s not interested in competing with digital music retailers such as Amazon and Apple’s iTunes.
“We’re not in the music business per se,” said R.J. Pittman, Google’s director of product for the music search project. “We don’t license the music nor sell the music directly on Google. We are merely a music search feature.”
Read the rest of the article at The Los Angeles Times…
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