Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement
TO READ THIS STORY - you must have a paid subscription to Technology Review OR you can purchase special archive reading credits here. Choose from these great offers below.
I'm a paid subscriber please
log me in
I want to purchase this article for
only $1.99
(requires login)
I want to purchase five articles for
only $7.99
(requires login)
I want to buy
1 Year TOTAL Access for
only $24.95
(requires login)

Please note: Click here if you are currently a Technology Review print or digital subscriber and do not have access to this article.

Click here if you are an MIT alum and do not have access to this article.

January/February 2008

The Tipping Jar

Does Radiohead's Internet release of its latest album tell us anything about the future of the music business?

By Larry Hardesty

Credit: Robin Sellick/Headpress/Retna

In October 2007, the English rock band Radiohead enhanced its already enviable avant-garde credibility by releasing its seventh album, In Rainbows, online. Fans willing to offer up their names and e-mail addresses--or at least, fake names and fake e-mail address--could pay what they chose for the album, even downloading it for free. The band, and the "tip jar" business model it had adopted, were the talk of the music press and the blogosphere for weeks.

  Select from the choices above
to read the entire article.


Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement

Videos

Malleable Maps, Artistic Robots and Bubble Interfaces
Technology Review January/February 2010

Current Issue

Security in the Ether
Information technology's next grand challenge will be to secure the cloud--and prove we can trust it.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Subscribe to Technology Review's daily e-mail update. Enter your e-mail address

TECHNOLOGY RESOURCES

More Technology News from Forbes

Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2010 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.