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If “video killed the radio star,” as British band The Buggles famously
sang in 1979, then online playlists might put the nail in the coffin
for FM disk jockeys.
“Many music fans are not content to simply listen passively to what
radio DJs play,” according to Derek A. Slater ’05-’06, co-author of a
report that will be released today by Harvard Law School’s Berkman
Center for Internet and Society and the Gartner Group, a research firm.
Slater wrote in an e-mail that listeners “want to be DJs too, sharing
their tastes online through playlists and creating their own
downloadable radio-style shows. In this way, they might take away the
power of radio and other traditional tastemakers in shaping tastes.”
Slater, a government concentrator in Winthrop House who will graduate
from the College Phi Beta Kappa in January, has worked at the Berkman
Center for the past three and a half years. He is the first
undergraduate ever to be named a student fellow at the Berkman Center.
Several people, including professors, have even called the law school
and asked to speak with “Professor Slater,” according to Berkman Center
spokeswoman Amanda R. Michel.
Slater co-authored the report with the Gartner Group’s research
director, Michael McGuire. The Gartner Group, based in Stamford, Conn.,
provides analysis about the information technology industry and counted
over $894 million in revenue last year, according to its website.
The report by Slater and McGuire found that playlists yield cultural
benefits by exposing listeners to a greater variety of music. Moreover,
the lists introduce music fans with similar tastes to one another,
reinforcing online communities.
Slater and McGuire recommend that record companies study the dynamics
of playlist sites so they can restructure their marketing strategies
accordingly. In addition, Slater and McGuire encourage online music
services to improve playlist-publishing capabilities and to solidify
links to other consumer-to-consumer music-sharing sites in order to
attract more traffic to their Web pages.
Slater, an avid music fan who spends much of his free time attending
concerts, began studying internet and copyright issues because he has a
genuine love for music.
“The struggle over music file sharing has unfortunately turned
‘sharing’ into a bad word,” Slater said in a Berkman Center press
release. “Whatever one thinks of illegal downloading, much can be
gained from giving music fans a chance to share their musical tastes in
a variety of ways.”
The use of consumer-to-consumer recommendation tools such as playlists
is becoming increasingly common, the report finds. According to the
report, 20 percent of online music listeners use these tools at least
five days a week, and more than 25 percent of online listeners use the
tools between one and four days a week.
Slater and McGuire predicted that by 2010, 25 percent of online music
transactions will be driven directly by consumer-to-consumer sharing
applications.
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