Tag Archives: Facebook

Former Facebook executive Owen Van Natta is now assuming CEO stripes at Playlist Inc., the controversial playlist creation and playback service. The company officially announced the development on Tuesday. Playlist (playlist.com), also referred to as Project Playlist, pulls content hosted across the web, and deftly assembles on-demand playlists for users. Just like Seeqpod, the clever idea has gone en fuego, though it also attracted a major label lawsuit in April of this year.

The lawsuit complicates the equation for investors, though the company is still attracting fresh funding. Playlist indicated that Pilot Group had now invested in the company, and that Pilot founder Bob Pittman would be joining the board immediately. The Wall Street Journal estimated a round within the range of $18-20 million, kindling for endless lawyer fees and litigation.

Van Natta reportedly turned down an offer to head MySpace Music, partly because of a desire to command a standalone company. “Project Playlist’s unprecedented growth proves that consumers are looking for new ways to discover, share, and buy music on the web,” Van Natta said.

(Reuters) – Social networking site Facebook’s founder and Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg plans to enter the digital-music business in the wake of the launch of News Corp’s MySpace Music last month, the New York Post said.

Zuckerberg is talking to a number of song-streaming services and music community sites, including Rhapsody.com, iMeem.com, iLike.com and Lala.com about an outsourcing deal, the Post reported, citing sources familiar with the situation.

Facebook executives have been busy meeting major record companies about the strategy, the paper said on its website.

The Post quoted sources saying that unlike MySpace, which traded equity in its music venture in exchange for licenses to stream ad- supported songs, Facebook doesn’t want to secure licenses to distribute music, or build a proprietary service from scratch.

Sources further cautioned that nothing was imminent, and Facebook may ultimately walk away from the plan altogether, the paper reported.

Facebook did not immediately return calls seeking comment.

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