Record Labels? Collusion? You Can't Be Serious
from the who-you-gonna-call-trustbusters dept
It’s no secret that some record labels advocated price-fixing for downloaded music, believing for some reason that they should be able to control the retail, as well as wholesale, price of the music they sell to Apple — something that’s attracted the attention of New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer. But perhaps he won’t stop there, as executives from digital-music allege anticompetitive behavior by the labels in subscription-based music services as well. They say the labels engage in a “passive form of collusion” based around so-called most favored nation status contracts. These contracts basically say that a particular label’s music will always command the best wholesale price. If they agree to supply music to a service at a particular price, then another label comes along and gets a better deal, the label with MFN status has to then get the better deal as well. The problem then comes about when all the major labels have these deals, as they do now, eliminating any sort of competition. Additionally, at least one label is trying to get the contracts it signs with subscription services to allow it to look at the deals its rivals have made with the company. These MFN deals do away with the need for any tacit collusion, ensuring it contractually instead. The labels may not be getting together in smoke-filled rooms to figure out what their prices will be, but that’s because it sounds like they don’t need to.
Comments on “Record Labels? Collusion? You Can't Be Serious”
Payola all over again...
Yogi Berra once said “It’s like deja vu all over again” and I have to agree in this case. The further this whole Digital vs. Retail (for lack of a better comparison) fiasco goes, the more and more it’s looking like our generation’s version of payola.
Price fixing, or “passive collusion” as it’s now being called, and even further revenue related issues are burdening everyone and someone really needs to get in there and stir things up before it becomes and even more “tangled ball of christmas lights” (where one bulb wont work, but you have to untangle the whole thing to find out which one).