The Guardian
topics
Close Box

News From Us:

Our latest report; our new video section; and jobs with paidContent.org and paidContent:UK


Musictoob Launches Linking Tool For Bloggers; Brings On First Outside Investor

imagePop music news and gossip site Musictoob thinks it has found a way for some aggregators to get around accusations of stealing content. The site has launched a new tool that lets any blogger link to outside stories, which then show up under the blogger’s URL but are still hosted on the site of the original publisher. Musictoob says that both the blogger and the site he or she links to register page views (A small frame also shows up on the top of the page. Click on the thumbnail to the right for an example). “Everybody who comes to the party gets rewarded,” says Michael Rovner, the general manager of Musictoob. “It’s actually loading—it’s not us stealing page views.” Musictoob is using the service, which it calls the Tuna Platform, on its own site—and it’s also now giving it away for free.

If it catches on, plans are in the works for a paid option for “power users and corporations.” The benefits are obvious for bloggers (who can keep visitors on their sites for longer) but less obvious to those being linked to who might not want to share their page views, although Rovner insists they’ll be okay with it because they’re still getting hits. (He contrasts that with a service like Google (NSDQ: GOOG) Reader, which uses a site’s content but doesn’t necessarily bring it page views—or traditional frames—like the ones that generated controversy for Digg earlier this year—which he admits basically “hijack” a site’s traffic).

It’s far from Musictoob’s core business—producing music-related content—but Rovner said the company developed the Tuna Platform internally while “we were playing around with different ideas” and decided it might as well distribute it. He added that six-month-old Musictoob.com is “thriving” despite the recession. The company generated its first profit in April—and just brought on its first outside investor, former AOL U.K. marketing chief Tobin Ireland. The site brings in revenue via ad sales and also an events series. It’s also syndicating some content to Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO) Music and is beginning to make some video content it hopes to sell to big media outlets. The company is also adding some big names to its board including former HMV (LSE: HMV) CEO Robin Miller.

Related Stories
Jun 16, 2009 11:29 AM ET
Share

Posted In: Entertainment, Music, Social Media

  • Makaleler

    It seems they are so good about social media.It looks like an innovative tool.

  • Jonathan Ruff

    I think they are compete others social media. its a good defense to link like others. I appreciate very much and looking to keep up it. <a href="http://www.r4cards.co.uk/">Nintendo r4 uk</a>

  • Edmund Ng

    It looks like an innovative tool. I think they have the potential to pha<a href="http://www.internet-empire.com">seo</a>ut many competitors.

  • henry

    maybe i am confused, but doesn't facebook and a few other sites do something similar when you click on links from their sites?

The Economics of Content | paidContent Newsletter

Know something we don’t?

Send Us a News Tip

All tips are anonymous and untraced.

Sponsors

Contributors