Inks agreements with EMI, Sony and Warner...
Published: 26 April 2006 08:30 GMT
Skype, the free internet calling service owned by eBay, has struck deals with three major music publishers to distribute hundreds of thousands of songs as ringtones.
The agreements, announced on Tuesday, are with EMI Music Publishing, Sony/ATV Music Publishing and Warner/Chappell Music. Skype also signed a deal with the MCPS-PRS Alliance, a UK-based organisation which collects licence fees and distributes royalties generated from recorded music.
Skype's new licence agreements allow the company to distribute ringtones from Warner Music Group artists. Skype users can use the ringtones on their PCs or smart phones running Skype software for playback when they receive incoming calls.
In January, the company struck a deal with Warner Music Group, which distributes music from artists such as Green Day, Madonna and Red Hot Chili Peppers, to sell snippets of songs as ringtones. But in order to sell the ringtones, Skype also had to obtain separate agreements with music publishers that own the copyrights to those songs.
The agreement between Skype and the music publishers is important, because it is the first time music-publishing companies that own copyrights to songs have given licensing permission worldwide. Previously, licences were granted only for a particular region or country.
Initially, only Skype users in Belgium, France, Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland, the UK and the US will be able to download the Warner Music Group ringtones. But within a few weeks, the rest of Skype's more than 94.6 million registered users worldwide will able to download the ringtones, the company said.
Earlier on Tuesday, several publications, including the New York Post, wrongly stated that the agreements Skype had obtained would be used to launch an online music store that would rival Apple's iTunes.
But a Skype representative denied these claims.
A spokeswoman for Skype said: "We won't be selling full songs. There are no plans for selling music online other than in the form of a ringtone."
Marguerite Reardon writes for CNET News.com
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