The changes are meant to keep Pandora's mobile radio playing when you want it and turn it off when you don't, as the company keeps the bite of licensing costs limited to engaged listening. (Credit: Pandora) Pandora's latest iOS update includes improved buffering and an autopause feature that stops radio playback when the iPhone listener mutes their phone. It also includes "bug fixes and improvements to keep your music playing as it should." Related stories Pandora calls artist royalties flap an orchestrated 'lie' Apple said to be enticing indie labels for iTunes Radio Pandora hits 2.5M in-car activations, quadruple last year's mark Pink Floyd to Pandora: Shut up, you crazy cubic zirconium In other words, the Internet's top radio provider is doing everything it can to keep music playing when you want to listen and turn it off when you don't. Pandora pays out more than half its revenue in royalties and is doing everything it can to be sure that it's not paying fees on listening that's falling on deaf ears. A quick test by CNET failed to get the autopause feature to engage, however. Pandora's update may also be a response to iTunes Radio, the long-awaited, recently launched Apple answer to Internet radio. Yet one of the key features that distinguish iTunes Radio from Pandora are Apple's ability to offer greater control over what the listeners chooses to hear. That won't change unless Pandora decides to upend its model, abandoning a simple-but-constrained licensing system set up by Congress for direct deals with labels like Apple did.

Posted by : Unknown Tuesday, July 9, 2013

The changes are meant to keep Pandora's mobile radio playing when you want it and turn it off when you don't, as the company keeps the bite of licensing costs limited to engaged listening.



(Credit: Pandora)


Pandora's latest iOS update includes improved buffering and an autopause feature that stops radio playback when the iPhone listener mutes their phone. It also includes "bug fixes and improvements to keep your music playing as it should."



In other words, the Internet's top radio provider is doing everything it can to keep music playing when you want to listen and turn it off when you don't.


Pandora pays out more than half its revenue in royalties and is doing everything it can to be sure that it's not paying fees on listening that's falling on deaf ears.


A quick test by CNET failed to get the autopause feature to engage, however.


Pandora's update may also be a response to iTunes Radio, the long-awaited, recently launched Apple answer to Internet radio. Yet one of the key features that distinguish iTunes Radio from Pandora are Apple's ability to offer greater control over what the listeners chooses to hear.


That won't change unless Pandora decides to upend its model, abandoning a simple-but-constrained licensing system set up by Congress for direct deals with labels like Apple did.



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