The ad-supported music start-up once hailed as the next new thing, SpiralFrog, closed down this week.
The company arrived on the scene with great fanfare in 2007, touting itself as a
means for consumers to get completely free and legitimate music downloads. News of SpiralFrog's shutdown was first reported by Cnet.
"Our competitor is piracy," SpiralFrog chairman and founder Joe Mohen said when the company launched. As it turned out, however, the company proved to have other rivals. Last
September, MySpace debuted its own streaming music service -- which boasted of streaming 1 billion streams within weeks of its launch. Also, in January 2008, CBS-owned Last.fm began offering free
music-on-demand streaming from all of the major labels and many independents.
And those aren't the only free music services. Search engines like SeeqPod that enable people to find and
listen to tracks also sprung up. While the labels weren't happy -- and, in fact, Warner Music and EMI both sued SeeqPod -- the site is still online.
Google's YouTube also carries music videos from three of
the four major labels (Warner pulled its content late last year in a revenue dispute).
Yes, those
services offer streams, not downloads -- but if you're going to listen on a computer, there's arguably not much difference.
Musicians themselves are also increasingly giving away downloads.
Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails are among the most high-profile acts to make free tracks available, but they aren't the only ones.
Additionally, purchasing music became more attractive to
some after Amazon began offering tracks without digital rights management software -- which can make it hard for consumers to copy music and/or play it on a variety of devices -- in the fall of 2007.
By this January Apple, as well, said it would sell tracks without DRM on iTunes.