MOG adds free music gas tank to subscription plan

Advertisement
By Associated Press | Updated: 5 June 2012 01:52 IST
Highlights
  • MOG, a subscription music service is introducing a free music service that will supplement its $5-a-month unlimited streaming plan and $10-a-month unlimited mobile music offering.
All that tweeting and sharing of photos on Facebook could finally have a tangible reward: free music.

MOG, a subscription music service based in Berkeley, Calif., says it is introducing a free music service that will supplement its $5-a-month unlimited streaming plan and $10-a-month unlimited mobile music offering.

Starting immediately, MOG is giving new users a kind of digital gas tank they can use to listen to tracks from its library of 11 million songs.

Sharing songs, making playlists and other actions get users more gas while listening uses it up. Having more friends or followers multiplies the gas-earning effects of a user's activity.

MOG's free system revamps what had been a 14-day free trial and puts it in competition with Spotify, a Swedish subscription music plan that is popular in Europe. Spotify launched in the U.S. in July and has a free service that is limited by listening time caps in some countries. Rdio, another subscription music service, also said Thursday it would expand its free trial service soon.

The moves come ahead of an event on Sept. 22 at which Facebook is expected to announce a new set of tools for music services that the social network hopes will bolster it as a platform for sharing musical tastes with friends.

MOG and services such as Spotify, Rhapsody, Rdio and Muve Music allow paying customers to download an unlimited number of songs to mobile devices - most of them for $10 a month. Users can listen to the tracks outside of cellphone coverage areas, but access disappears if the subscription is dropped. Music companies are licensing songs to these services in order to promote the fledgling business since purchases of tracks and albums over services like iTunes and Amazon.com have not made up for a decade-long decline in CD sales.

So far, the services haven't attracted enough subscribers to turn the music industry around. Rhapsody, the market leader, has some 800,000 paying subscribers while Muve Music, which bundles its plan with Cricket cellphone service, has doubled its subscriber base in the last two months to 200,000.

David Hyman, chief executive and founder of MOG, said the key for users who want to obtain free music is to prove they are engaged and finding others who may eventually sign up for a subscription.

"Conceptually, if you're a taste-maker, an influencer, you will never have to pay. It'll be free forever," Hyman said. He added that if one of a user's followers or friends is converted into a paying subscriber, the user would be entitled to about three to five months of free music.

MOG's free service will be supported by advertising revenue. For the first 60 days, however, it will come without ads to give users a chance to test it without interruption.

Hyman wouldn't say how many subscribers MOG has or if the company is profitable. MOG, founded in 2005 originally as a network of music bloggers, launched its subscription music plan in late 2009. Its backers include Menlo Ventures, Balderton Capital, Universal Music Group and Sony Music.

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: MOG, subscription music service
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. These Four Xiaomi Phones Are Now Eligible to Get Android 17 Beta Updates
  2. Moto G87 Launched With 200-Megapixel Main Camera, 5,200mAh Battery
  3. Miss Vine? Jack Dorsey-Backed Divine Brings It Back Using Open Protocols
  4. Sony Issues Statement on New DRM Check for PS5, PS4 Games After Backlash
  1. ULA Atlas V Launches 29 Amazon Kuiper Satellites in Return Mission
  2. Moto Buds 2 Plus Launched in India With Hi-Res Audio, Up to 40 Hours of Total Playback Time: Price, Features
  3. iQOO Z11 Global Variant Spotted on Geekbench Database With Snapdragon Chipset, Unlike Chinese Model
  4. Samsung Reportedly Plans to Launch Galaxy Book Models With Android-Based One UI 9 Soon
  5. PS5 Linux Loader Gets Public Release, Allowing Users to Run Steam and PC Games on Console
  6. Nine Crypto Scam Centres Targeting US Users Shut Down in Joint Operation Involving UAE, US and China
  7. Google Photos Unveils New AI-Powered Wardrobe Feature to Help You Decide What to Wear
  8. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Teases GPT-5.5 Cyber AI Model Rollout, Could Take On Anthropic’s Claude Mythos
  9. Vivo X Fold 6 Leaks Hint at 200-Megapixel Camera, MediaTek Dimensity 9500 Chip and 7,000mAh Battery
  10. Raakaasa OTT Release Date Confirmed: Know When and Where to Watch it Online
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.