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Charity music site fairsharemusic touts feel-good downloads

by Parm Mann on 22 June 2010, 14:15

Tags: fairsharemusic

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The number of web-based music stores has increased rapidly in recent years, but the latest addition - fairsharemusic.com - hopes to stand out from the crowd with the promise of "feelgood downloads".

Like most rival alternatives, fairsharemusic offers a vast library of tracks - 8.5 million and counting - with new singles priced at a standard 79p and albums starting at a competitive £5.

The difference here, however, is that for every track sold, fairsharemusic vows to donate half of its net profit to charity.

Created by Lee Cannon and Jonny Woolf, formerly of Warner Music and contributors to high-profile charity events including Live Aid and the Children’s Party at the Palace, fairsharemusic partners with eleven founding charities; including The British Red Cross, Great Ormond Street Hospital and The NSPCC.

Users of the site will see their donation amount at checkout, and will be given the choice of donating to a single charity or spreading their contribution across all eleven fairsharemusic partners.

Sounds like a good idea, but will it convince the hordes of illegal file sharers to start paying for music? Probably not.

Link: fairsharemusic.com



HEXUS Forums :: 3 Comments

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I still think if they reduced the cost of media by a substantial amount they would get a load more sales, enough to counteract the loss of profit per track.

If there are as many file shares as they say, im sure people would rather pay an insignificant amount of cash rather than getting caught.

I for one would be more likely to buy a DVD for a fiver rather than download it, burn it/convert it etc.
It is true that lower prises would help.

I know when they let you pay what you want for the game world of goo a lot of money came in, a lot to be believed was from pirates who wouldn't have paid the original price but where happy to pay something for it.
If it's the same price as Amazon/Play/7digital's store, I'll quite happily buy stuff from there.

Edit: As for whether it's going to convince freeloaders to start stumping up money - i doubt it would have much of an effect.

Edit2: I've noticed that on albums with less than 10 tracks, it's actually more expensive to download the album than each track individually. However, I've tried quite a few less well known bands as well as ones on the major labels, and It's got pretty much all bases covered!