According to the Wall Street Journal, the music industry is not at all pleased with the declining royalty rates YouTube pays musicians per stream it offers. There is also the fact that it is growing more and more difficult for any streaming video property that allows users to upload content to properly filter and remove copyrighted material.
For its part, YouTube claims it offers musicians and other entertainers a system that automatically blocks, monetizes or mutes music with a 99.7 percent accuracy rate. The company also said it has paid around $3 billion to music companies over the past 10 years.
However, the Journal stated that many music right holders claim YouTube's filtering system isn't foolproof and requires a manual search to track content and collect royalties. The royalties the music companies do collect is, however, a fraction of what other streaming services, such as Spotify, offers.
YouTube pays an average of $0.0008 per play to music companies and less than $0.0006 for user-generated content. On the other hand, the free tiers from Spotify pay six times what YouTube does, while music played by paying subscribers offers a higher royalty payment.
YouTube may have reason to be concerned, and it might be in its best interest to work with the music industry to find a win-win scenario. After all, the music industry believes the future of music lies with streaming services, such as Spotify and Apple Inc. AAPL streaming service Apple Music, rather than YouTube.
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
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