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Cloud-based music service unveiled by Google


2011-05-13

Google Incorporated . Displayed its long-planned music service Tues. , however it will probably need deals with the recording industry to reach its actual potential.

Called "Music Beta by Google," the service lets users store their tunes remotely and access them from any compatible gadget including mobile telephones, pills and PCs. So far, it doesn't offer music downloads or song sales and it does not let folk hear music they haven't physically uploaded. The service should be available by invite only beginning on Tues. , free although it is being tested. Google announced the new service at its annual meeting for software developers in San Francisco. It didn't say whether, or how much, it plans to charge at some point.

Google's music service comes just 6 weeks after Amazon.com Incorporated .

Presented a similar offering. The net retailer's service also lets users play songs they have uploaded to the cloud on their PC or on a smartphone that runs Google's Android. Apple Incorporated . Is also said to be working on a corresponding service. A gigantic hurdle has been getting deals with major record labels. Google didn't mention any agreements on Tues. , though the Firm has been in dialogues with record labels over licensing deals. The Recording Industry organisation of America, EMI and Sony Music remained silent. Warner Music and Universal Music didn't instantly return messages for comment. Google said users will be well placed to upload up to twenty thousand songs to "the cloud" - tech talk for storing info on remote servers and then accessing them thru a Web connection. Users can create playlists by hand or based totally on a specific song.

Among the services that Music Beta doesn't offer is "de-duplication," letting users skip uploading their own copies to the cloud if there's a matching file already available. Multiple users could stream music from a single file, and users with huge music collections could save some considerable time waiting for perhaps thousands of songs to upload. "But that's where Google and Amazon are hesitant," announced Julie Samuels, staff lawyer for the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "Google appears to accept that it needs to have a license...to de-duplicate." This, she claimed, is a "perfect example" showing that copyright law is superannuated. Google's music service, as it stands, is "not as leading edge as it may be because Google feels its hands are tied," Samuels declared. Google, based in Mountain View, Calififornia also displayed a production rental service that is available now on the Android market, its answer to Apple's app store. Pictures are available to lease for $1.99, $2.99 or $3.99. And in a future-is-now moment, the company previewed a service it is calling Android ( at ) Home, which can let Android applications engage with appliances and electronic gizmos in the home. It allows Android-based devices to govern lights, dishwashers, music players and a slew of other gizmos.

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