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Roxio hopes to revive music download site.  Appeared in CNN.
SAN JOSE, California (AP) -- Software maker Roxio said Monday it has
acquired the online music service pressplay for about $40 million, setting
up the return of the Napster name.
Roxio, best known for its CD-burning software, owns the Napster brand and
expects to use pressplay as the foundation for a new online music service
under the name that set Internet music file-swapping in motion.
Pressplay is jointly owned by Universal Music Group and Sony Music
Entertainment.
"This is Napster's second coming," said Phil Leigh, analyst with Raymond
James & Associates. "The record labels crucified him, and now he's going
to come back and be their savior."
The new service will "retain the overall feel and vibe of Napster," said
Chris Gorog, Roxio's chairman and chief executive. He would not elaborate
on details, including whether the new Napster would include the famous
file-swapping technology that upset the record industry and doomed the
company in a sea of copyright infringement litigation.
Competition for Apple?
The deal lays the groundwork for a competitive Windows-based offering
against Apple Computer's online music store. The online pay-per-download
service for Macintosh users, which boasts virtually no restrictions on how
and where the songs can be played, sold more than 2 million tracks within
16 days of its April 28 launch.
"That success reinforces our belief of the future profitability of selling
music online," said Larry Kenswil, president of UMG eLabs, Universal's new
media division.
Born in 1999 in a college dorm room, Napster once boasted some 60 million
users and symbolized both the excitement of the digital revolution and the
worst nightmares of the established recording industry. But the company
went bankrupt and dissolved last year amid a series of legal battles with
the record labels, and in November, Roxio bought the company's name.
"With our acquisition of Napster we obtained the most powerful brand in
the online music space. Now, with our acquisition of pressplay, we have
the most complete and scalable legal technology infrastructure to use as a
platform to relaunch Napster," Gorog said.
Roadblocks to success
Pressplay was Universal and Sony's attempt to offer a legitimate online
music alternative, but its subscription-based model and copy restrictions
apparently hampered its success. Analysts estimate the money-losing
venture had at most 100,000 users.
Pressplay wouldn't give specific customer figures, but it "didn't have
enough subscribers to satisfy us," Kenswil said. "For sure, we see the
brand name of Napster as increasing that tremendously."
Under the deal, Universal and Sony will become minority owners of the new
Napster company.
Santa Clara-based Roxio purchased pressplay for $12.5 million in cash and
approximately 3.9 million shares of Roxio common stock, the companies
said.

May 20, 2003.
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