676
The Ugly Truth About Spotify Is Finally Revealed
(www.honest-broker.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Likely antitrust.
That said if you've gone down the path of reasoning that says things that aren't illegal are okay, then I don't know what to tell you.
I suppose you could argue that Spotify can abuse its position in the same way that Walmart bullies its suppliers and Microsoft freezes out competition, but it doesn't sound like that's what's happening here. Like I said, it sounds like they're just preferring cheaper sources.
But they aren't just preferring cheaper sources, they're funding production houses that crank out music cheaper than it would cost to pay a single artist, and then putting that "mass" produced music on playlists that they themselves promote, allll to avoid promoting actual artists and paying them potentially more than they're paying the production house.
It's in terribly bad faith because I myself am an artist that distributes through Spotify, not only because I can reach the widest audience, but I'm hoping on some level Spotify is promoting my new music to people outside of my own purview. But they aren't. They're flooding the market with cheap music and only promoting it.
Okay, that's shitty for sure, but I'm not sure that it amounts to illegality, at least under US law.