Baidu Music Explained

Baidu Music
Developer:Baidu
Platform:Cross-platform
Availability:China

Baidu Music is a Chinese music streaming service by Baidu. By December 2015, it had 150 million monthly active users.[1]

History

In December 2015, Baidu announced that they merged Baidu Music with the record company Taihe Music Group, which owned the copyrights to 700,000 at the time and had licenses with overseas record labels; this merger allowed Baidu to include more songs within their streaming service.[1] [2] In May 2017, James Lu left Baidu Music.[3]

Copyright infringement

In 2008, record companies Universal Music, as well as the Hong Kong divisions of Sony BMG Music Entertainment, and Warner Bros. Records, brought Baidu to court in China for allegedly linking to unauthorized copies of music with their music search engine.

The record companies lost the case.[4] Later, in the year of 2011, Baidu signed contracts with record companies that allowed them to receive compensation when a user downloads or streams a song; advertisements on the service's website helped pay for the songs' licensing fees without making Baidu's music search engine a paid-to-use service.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Already bigger than Spotify, China's search engine giant doubles down on streaming music. Steven Millward. December 4, 2015. December 4, 2015. Techinasia.com.
  2. Chinese Music Entertainment Giants Taihe Music Group (TMG) and Baidu Music Merge. Prnewswire.com. 30 November 2021.
  3. Web site: Baidu Vice President James Lu Steps Down – China Money Network. Chinamoneynetwork.com. 26 May 2017 . en-US. 2017-10-17.
  4. Web site: Fletcher. Owen. China's Baidu Wins Copyright Case Over Music Search. PCWorld.com. 31 January 2016.
  5. News: Arthur. Charles. Agencies. Baidu signs music licensing deals. 31 January 2016. The Guardian. 19 July 2011.