Ditto Music will launch Bluebox, a blockchain recording technology that could be a boon to musicians and distributors alike.
What it’s all about
The problem, says Ditto Music CEO Lee Parsons, is that misplaced metadata can end up eating away at the bottom line.
Recently Ditto made a royalty payment of 60,000 pounds sterling ($80,000) to the wrong artist. Parsons reportedly had to pay the correct artist out of his own pocket.
But Bluebox will allow artists to address legal concerns, such as copyright registration, publishing, and mechanical splits. The app records music around legally-binding smart contracts, which are written into code and instantly copyrights the content.
"There's billions of dollars of unclaimed royalties out there," Parson said. "The blockchain can help millions of artists claim what is rightfully theirs."
Larger vision
Ditto Music, which paid out $100 million in royalties last year, claims a roster of 250,000 artists including the likes of Ed Sheeran, Sam Smith and Royal Blood. Bluebox is designed to split royalty payments for a recording’s lifetime and accurately track plays on the system. Parsons told Cointelegraph:
“Users upload their song data, confirm with all of the parties and then bluebox will store in the blockchain, track and process the data and split payments between parties [...] Anyone who has music can access the app and register their copyrights between all parties, securely on the blockchain.”
Parsons argues that this creates more transparency and more detailed reporting, both of which should reap higher collection rates from digital services.
Ditto claimed to promote “higher collection rates [while] massively reducing the loss of earnings currently experienced by artists.”
Last year, Cointelegraph published a contributor piece on decentralization in the music industry.
UPDATE Jan. 28 12:15 UTC: This article has been updated with comments from Lee Parsons received after publication.