Major music association calls Grooveshark's death an 'important victory' for artists
(Grooveshark)
Grooveshark was one of the first online services that let you play almost any song you wanted, on demand, with no restrictions.
It closed down Thursday and it won't be coming back, according to a statement on the web site.
The site shut down as part of a legal settlement with copyright holders — the artist, publishers, and music labels who owned the rights to a lot of the music on the service.
"This is an important victory for artists and the entire music industry," the Recording Industry Association of America said in a statement. "For too long, Grooveshark built its business without properly compensating the artists, songwriters and everyone else who makes great music possible. This settlement ends a major source of infringing activity."
In its early days, a lot of the music on Grooveshark was not licensed. Users were uploading the songs, not the company itself, but that argument has been tested on other services, like Napster, and so far it's never held legal water.
Copyright owners sued, and while Grooveshark managed to settle with EMI and Sony back in 2013, it apparently wasn't enough.
Back when Grooveshark started, there weren't any easy ways to listen to any song on demand at a reasonable price. But as the company said in its goodbye post, with the rise of paid services like Spotify, Songza, and many others, there are many legal choices to do what Grooveshark was doing (mostly) illegally.
Grooveshark also apologized for how it started out: "We failed to secure licenses from rights holders for the vast amount of music on the service. That was wrong. We apologize. Without reservation."
You can read Grooveshark's full goodbye post here>>
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