PeopleSound

http://dbpedia.org/resource/PeopleSound an entity of type: Thing

PeopleSound was a British audio streaming platform founded on 22 June 1999 by Ernesto Schmitt. Going live in October 1999, it was the first European music streaming platform and the most visited. At peak, it was amongst the top ten most visited entertainment websites in Europe, with millions of registered users, and one of the highest profile new-age internet startups. rdf:langString
rdf:langString PeopleSound
rdf:langString PeopleSound
rdf:langString PeopleSound
xsd:integer 71754836
xsd:integer 1124727004
rdf:langString Autumn 1999
rdf:langString PeopleSound running in 2000
rdf:langString Great Britain
rdf:langString Audio streaming
xsd:integer 6
rdf:langString The PeopleSound logo
xsd:integer 85
rdf:langString Vitaminic
rdf:langString File:PeopleSound_platform.jpg
xsd:integer 250
rdf:langString Public
rdf:langString PeopleSound was a British audio streaming platform founded on 22 June 1999 by Ernesto Schmitt. Going live in October 1999, it was the first European music streaming platform and the most visited. At peak, it was amongst the top ten most visited entertainment websites in Europe, with millions of registered users, and one of the highest profile new-age internet startups. PeopleSound combined new media reach with old media music publishing to create a platform where users could search for music by artist or category and discover new recommended music. Unlike music distribution before, which had been managed exclusively by record labels, PeopleSound signed unsigned artists, notably offering £100 to artists per song they sent in. These artists earned 50 per cent royalties on physical copies sold, but music on the site was available free. With offices in London, Paris and Munich, PeopleSound raised at a valuation of $200 million (£70m in 1999) and reached a valuation of $280 million (£100m in 1999). Post dot-com bubble, PeopleSound sold to Vitaminic, and the combined entity was listed on the Italian Stock Exchange. The New York Times called PeopleSound "the leader for European-based downloadable music sites", and it set the basis for later companies like Spotify and Apple Music.
rdf:langString Screenshot of the PeopleSound website running in 2000.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 35535
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 85

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