There's no fat lady singing around here... Music download site MP3.com has been bought by CNET Networks, the parent company of silicon.com. The deal was revealed in an announcement on the MP3.com ...
WASHINGTON, May 21 -- French multimedia giant Vivendi Universal announced plans Sunday to acquire San-Diego-based MP3.com, an online music service, for $372 million in stock and cash. In a statement ...
Another former favourite of online-music fans looks set for the scrapheap -- MP3.com appears to be on the brink of closure. News broke late last night that the company is to close its European arm in ...
Once a rock star in the online music world, MP3.com is leaving the building. The San Diego-based company helped launch the digital-music revolution five years ago by enabling independent artists to ...
Tangled Web: A weekly column featuring intriguing online music-related issues & destinations. This Week: MP3.com's Game Soundtracks, Airtalents.com and Recess Records. By Billboard Staff IT’S IN THE ...
Online music isn't dead. It just smells bad. At least that's what I keep telling myself. Yet, the world's most prominent site for music by unsigned artists stumbles on toward its dot-com coda. Last ...
MP3.com said Tuesday it has launched a new subscription service in a move to raise money and reach profitability. MP3.com's Premium Listener Service, or PluS Express, combines the My.MP3.com online ...
Vivendi Universal's acquisition of MP3.com is further evidence that online music's era of raucous, market-shaking experimentation is fading. Although its star was eclipsed by Napster in the last two ...
Digital vet starts unprotected-download store. By Antony Bruno Michael Robertson, founder and former CEO of the original MP3.com, has announced plans to launch a new online music store next week. The ...
Like a carnival barker executing the dot-com era's last will and testament, auction house Cowan Alexander announced the unloading of former online music star MP3.com's remaining earthly possessions: ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. Four out of five is a great average for a ballplayer; for a dot-com, it ...
MP3.com Inc. founder Michael Robertson once touted his company as the leader of an online revolution that could one day wrest control of music distribution from the major record labels. Now, analysts ...