Music collectors within the US shall be ready to join Apple’s iTunes Match service q4, however it feels like our friends around the pond should wait a bit longer before lofting their libraries as much as the cloud. Consistent with sources in the British recording industry, licensing negotiations between Apple and the country’s major labels have only just begun and certain won’t be concluded until 2012. A spokesman for the Performing Right Society, a company that protects the rights of musicians and songwriters, likened the location to the launch of iTunes, which only spread to international markets some 14 months after launching inside the US. Chatting with the Telegraph, Forrester Research vp Mark Mulligan echoed these predictions, while offering some insight into the industry’s approach:
“Apple’s cloud music service won’t launch within the UK until not less than quarter certainly one of 2012. Most of these negotiations take a while… For something the united kingdom arms of the entire major record labels are biding their time and waiting to look how the service affects download sales within the US before they join to anything.”
Neither Apple nor any of the main labels have commented at the negotiations, but when things drag on we’d be willing to share our cloudy iTunes in exchange for a crack at Spotify.
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