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After repeated complaints from the The Recording Industry Association of America (
RIAA),
Facebook has
announced it will take down all
playlists provided by Project
Playlist.
Project
Playlist is an online community where 40,000,000+ music fans create and share music
playlists. For the past few years Project
Playlist has enjoyed huge growth from their embedded
playlist's with users from major social networks such as
Myspace and
Facebook.
Myspace took similar action against Project
Playlist recently, blocking all
playlist from their member profiles.
Facebook released the following statement this morning, "Our hope and expectation is that the parties can resolve their disagreements in a manner that satisfies the developer and copyright holder, that continues to offer a great experience to music fans, and that doesn't discourage other developers from using Platform to share their creativity and test new ideas."
Project
Playlist CEO Jeremy
Riney released this statement on his blog, "We are working hard to get our widgets back up on user profiles across these social networking sites as quickly as possible so our users can continue to share music with their friends. Until then, your
playlists are not lost and you can still share them - they remain available here on
Playlist.com, where you can continue to search for music, create and play new
playlists."
On Monday, Sony
BMG and Project
Playlist agreed to a licensing agreement which will make available Sony's entire catalog of artists which include the likes of Britney Spears,
Beyonce and many more.