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Your Local Cafe Is Probably Streaming Music Illegally

Artists, record companies lose $2.7 billion revenue annually because small business stream music from personal accounts at cafes.

Your Local Cafe Is Probably Streaming Music Illegally
People sit inside a cafe in Buenos Aires, Argentina. (Photographer: Erica Canepa/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Artists and record companies lose $2.7 billion in revenue annually because small business owners typically stream music from personal accounts at cafes or barber shops rather than a commercial-use license.

Music makers earn a lot more when their tunes are aired in restaurants, stores and other business venues to help drum up extra trade. Consumer streaming services, such as from Spotify Technology SA and Apple Inc., don’t include those rights, according to a Nielsen study.

“Personal music services are not designed for business use, which means music makers get less money than they should,” Nielsen said in the report, which was commissioned by Swedish Muzak streamer Soundtrack Your Brand AB.

The market for business background music is worth as much as $5 billion globally, less than a third of the size of the consumer market, but it has much better margins. Consumer streaming has become the music industry’s largest source of growth in the past few years, but small and medium-sized business have by and large used consumer services illegally.

Andreas Liffgarden and Ola Sars, co-founders of Soundtrack, are hoping the Stockholm-based startup can replicate the success Spotify had in weening consumers off pirated music or illegal streaming, but in commercial settings. Spotify owns a minority stake in Soundtrack.

Nielsen Music interviewed about 5,000 small-business owners in the U.S. U.K., Sweden, Spain, Italy, Germany and France and found that 83 percent of those that play background music incorrectly use personal accounts. Nielsen estimates 21.3 million businesses use consumer services globally, costing artist billions in lower payouts.

A cafe or a shop pays about $35 a month for a commercial license, compared with about $10 for a consumer service.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Thomas Pfeiffer at tpfeiffer3@bloomberg.net

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