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Apple Negotiating for More iPhone Music Features

Apparently Apple is negotiating with the major record labels to bring additional music-related content to the iPhone, and is hoping to finalize deals in time to make a June announcement. Sources close to the negotiations claim Apple is looking to bring more ringtones, ringback tones, and over-the-air music downloads to its combination iPod and smart phone, according to the New York Times.

Apple is targeting "a big launch in June," according to one music executive familiar with the talks.

The deals the Cupertino-based company is hoping for, however, may not come in time for an announcement at its World Wide Developer Conference in early June. The record labels have been pushing for variable song pricing, which could be a sticking point since Apple has been resistant to changing its flat US$0.99 per song policy.

The record labels are also pushing for higher song prices when users download from wireless cell data networks instead of Wi-Fi networks. According to the labels, music downloads from cell networks add some form of ethereal value that warrants paying more than a dollar per track.

Assuming Apple does reach an agreement with the music labels, cell network music downloads likely wouldn't be available until the company launches the second generation iPhone with its rumored support for 3G data networks. The iPhone currently relies on slower EDGE data networks when Wi-Fi isn't available, and doesn't offer the bandwidth needed to download songs as quickly as 3G.

Striking a deal for additional ringtones and 3G music downloads could prove to be a win-win situation for Apple and the record labels. Consumers could see additional value in the new music-related offerings, and record labels would have yet another avenue for pushing their products.

Apple has not commented on the alleged negotiations.

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mahuti said:

member since 09 Jan 2003 with 377 posts, TMO Staff, send him a message or view his profile

The only way I'd use the over-the-air downloads is if they were less, not more. I've never understood why ringtones, with less playtime, cost more than a song, and I don't see the logic in paying more for a song downloaded over the cell network. Music labels... get a clue. Make money in volume, not in strong-arming.

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A guest said: (hide)

I could care less about answer music. My niece has that and it sound really bad when I call. I'd much rather hear a standard "Ring Ring" than someone else's song. Anyway why in the heck is this a "iPhone" function. It's done at the carrier not the phone. I don't see why apple is even involved.

Way the heck would anyone ever want to pay extra to download music over the cell network rather than WiFi.

Are people in such an all fired hurry that they can't wait till they either at home or a hot spot to download a song?

Do the music companies really thing people will accept paying extra to load from the carrier?

I guess maybe the "it's all about me" generation might but anyone with half a brain wouldn't.

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