(These are just rough ideas...take it with a grain of salt)
Side Note: Any idea for making money from a social network probably requires
a lawyer these days. (Especially a P2P Music-sharing network)
Going Open-source may provide some legal protection, since the author of the
software that enables users to listen to music was written by the "Community"
-- Not the individual. However, I think that there is enough protection in the
statement: "I just write the software--I have no control over what is done with
it."
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I have an idea based upon the business model of Ventrilo ® software:
* There is a usable (but limited) Free version.
* The pro version is costly, but allows you to make money as a host of a
service.
* An end-user may pay a small monthly fee to the server host (who purchased
the Pro version)
In a sense this is like a franchise. Server operators pay a franchise fee to
make money.
StreamerP2P already provides a free version. It is a great client, but also
allows small-time broadcasters to enter the field without having to purchase
much bandwidth (but alas the user's IP is traceable).
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My Example
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I am interested in sharing Classical music with friends. In the US this is
legal. At the same time, I don't want to put myself at risk by having an
internet "radio station".
I would be willing to pay a small monthly fee to be guaranteed anonymity. I
would also like to shop around for the best provider of this service for the
money. (An example of this is a NNTP service that lets me download any news
article I want from their server, and guarantees that nothing is "logged")
I would think that a monthly fee of $10 to $20 would be acceptable for this
service. You would have to take a survey to see what the market would pay.
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Step 1) Create software for a "Server Operator" that is an anonymous
"Streamer Gateway". The basic concept is that the Gateway broadcasts 10
or more stations at a time on different ports. Although a legal
authority may request information about customers, there would be no
way to tell which customer transmitted what. (It would also be good
if each Server Operator guaranteed that 10% of its broadcasts
offered "original content" -- to protect the other 90%)
* Take care that each copy of the Gateway software is
A) Licensed (Phones home)
B) Gets updates (to thwart hacking)
C) Has Strict Franchise "agreements"
Note:
The only customers that need technical support would the server-
operators. Violation of Franchise agreement would require server
shutdown and end-user refunds.
Unlicensed (hacked) servers should be somehow blocked from legitimate
network-swarm
Here is what I would envision this "Streamer Gateway" to provide the
end-user:
* Complete anonymity of my broadcast content.
* Low bandwidth guarantee (only one upload stream)
* Ability to switch source from Home to Work, etc.
* Keep station "alive" if source dies with "Technical Difficulties"
message or some other customizable message.
* Agree to partial refund of end-user fee if server is shut down for
extended time.
* The ability to have my stream prompt for a simple password would
be nice to have for special occasions (or if I think I need to
keep a low-profile)
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Step 2) Next version supports the ability to connect to various "genuine"
anonymous servers...
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You need to get a lawyer to protect yourself. Ideas:
Disclaimer:
StreamerP2P has no control of content. This is a social
network protected by free speech. Any broadcasts of a private
individual is considered the sole responsibility of the
private broadcaster.
Any sharing of music is only protected under the
"Fair Use Act" of 1992 provided the following:
* The private individual purchased the music played.
* The music played is only intended for friends--not the
general public.
* No Revenue is generated from the playing of music nor
from ads.
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Another Idea for making money:
(I always like a Win-Win scenario).
Let's just say that this thing gets big. Somehow you avoid any legal issues and people are
sharing music freely, and anonymously. There are no centralized servers. Users can choose to broadcast directly or through an anonymous Gateway--whatever.
Let's just say that I heard something that I really liked and wanted to purchase it. (Note: this is how most internet Radio Stations make money). If I know the name of it and the Album title, etc., I can always go to Amazon.com and purchase it. However, I don't always know this and I am a bit lazy at looking it up.
If I can make the lookup easier by knowing: Approximate time it played, the genre, Perhaps the name of the station that played it, perhaps the composer but not the Album name... I could go to a web database and look it up.
This could be a massive database and would only need to keep about 36 hours of what-played-when.
Let's just say for example, that I could link to Amazon.com directly from this database to make a purchase. The owner of the database could make a large amount of commission revenue. The owner of the database would not have to worry about paying royalties for a radio station since it is just a database of "recently heard" music.
The database would be maintained by listeners--users of the software. Incentive would have to be provided to end users for accurately providing the correct link-for-purchase to the music that they heard. (a user-rating for first most-accurate posting, or a small financial incentive if a purchase is made from correct posting. -- Whatever)
This would be like a "name that tune" kind of thing. People who secretly have "inside" information on what was broadcast would easily get higher ratings.
The latest release would need to have the "name that tune" function built-in, and users would have to provide the link to purchase at Amazon.
Since purchases are made from a user-submitted database (from listeners) you would avoid all the hassles of paying royalties that broadcasters have to pay. (like Pandora, for example)