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NEW
YORK (MP3 Tunes) - Michael Robertson, the founder and former CEO of
MP3.com, will announce next week that he is starting a new digital
music company called MP3tunes. The company will focus on music products
and services with an emphasis on the MP3 format to maximize
interoperability and consumer choice. Over the coming months, MP3tunes
will make several new products available online including a hardware
device, software products and an online music store. Robertson will
officially announce the new company at the Desktop Summit, February
9-11 at the Del Mar Fairgrounds in San
Diego (www.desktopsummit.com).
"When
I started MP3.com, the term 'MP3' was an obscure acronym recognizable
only by geeks," Robertson said. "Back then, we had to battle for the
legality of MP3 players. But because of those early efforts, consumers
now have a spectacular array of portable players to choose from.
"Today,
certain market forces are trying to drive consumers away from MP3
towards proprietary systems, which lock out some consumers and force
everyone to buy a particular company's player or software program. I
wanted consumers to have more options, so I felt compelled to reenter
the music space to bring the limelight back to MP3."
Robertson
will unveil MP3tune's first service - an online music store focusing on
high-quality music downloads � at the Desktop Summit. Unlike other
popular music stores, MP3tunes will offer all tracks without digital
rights management (DRM). This ensures that paying customers can use the
music they purchase on any player or computer, as well as make
unlimited copies of their songs and burn their music onto CDs.
The
founding of MP3tunes comes three years after Robertson stepped down as
the CEO of MP3.com. San Diego-based MP3.com was founded in 1997 and
grew to nearly 300 employees, becoming the largest digital music site
on the Web with more than 1,000,000 songs from 250,000 artists and
hundreds of thousands of unique daily visitors. Vivendi Universal
purchased the profitable company in 2001 for $372 million in stock and
cash.
MP3tunes is the third venture for Robertson since he sold
MP3.com. In 2001, Robertson founded Linspire, Inc. (www.linspire.com),
a company that produces the Linspire desktop Linux operating system,
which has been gaining market share from the popular Microsoft Windows.
In 2003, he founded SIPphone, Inc. (www.sipphone.com), a VoIP
technology company that competes with traditional phone systems.