It's no secret that negotiations between Google  and the recording industry haven't been going very well. Perhaps even  less surprising are the reasons behind the stalemate. According to the Hollywood Reporter,  discussions between the two parties have sputtered thanks to three  usual suspects: money, file-sharing and concerns over competition.  During licensing talks, Google agreed to pay upfront advances to all  participating labels, but the major players wanted bigger guarantees.  That prompted the indie contingent to ask for similar money, unleashing a  snowball of stakes-raising. The two sides also failed to agree on how  to handle pirated music, with the industry demanding that Google not  only ban illegally downloaded files from users' lockers, but that it  erase P2P sites from its search results, as well.
Hovering above all this bargaining was a thick cloud of destabilizing uncertainty. Some execs welcomed the idea of a new iTunes competitor, while others were less enthusiastic, amid concerns that Google Music wouldn't deliver new revenue streams. The ultimate question, of course, is how negotiations will proceed now that Google's already launched the service. The labels were warned that Tuesday's I/O announcement was coming, but the search giant didn't do much to mend fences when it effectively blamed the record execs for holding up negotiations. It's hard to say whether Google's bravado will help or hurt matters, but according to a source from a major label, "People are pissed."
 The Hollywood Reporter
The Hollywood Reporter
Hovering above all this bargaining was a thick cloud of destabilizing uncertainty. Some execs welcomed the idea of a new iTunes competitor, while others were less enthusiastic, amid concerns that Google Music wouldn't deliver new revenue streams. The ultimate question, of course, is how negotiations will proceed now that Google's already launched the service. The labels were warned that Tuesday's I/O announcement was coming, but the search giant didn't do much to mend fences when it effectively blamed the record execs for holding up negotiations. It's hard to say whether Google's bravado will help or hurt matters, but according to a source from a major label, "People are pissed."
 
 
 
        
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