I Want Sarah to Visit:

The captivating story of the mavericks who emerged from the dotcom rubble to found the multi-billion-dollar companies taking the Web into the 21st century.


Everyone has heard the story of the Internet Bubble. Beginning with Netscape's blockbuster IPO in 1996, billions of dollars flowed into Internet startups, and companies with no revenues and shaky business plans earned sky-high valuations on Wall Street. It was the era of paper millionaires, $800 office chairs, and Super Bowl ads for dotcoms that no one had ever heard of. Then in 2000 the Bubble burst, with the Nasdaq losing 75% of its value and hundreds of companies closing up shop. It was all written off to "irrational exuberance," and everyone moved on. Once You're Lucky, Twice You're Good is the story of the entrepreneurs who never gave up on the Internet dream.


"Sarah Lacy's very readable book pulls back the veil from the new princes of Web 2.0, and that it is as much about attitude as it is about business."

ANDY KESSLER AUTHOR OF RUNNING MONEY, WALL STREET MEAT, THE END OF MEDICINE

SARAH'S ARCHIVES

August 18th, 2008

Muxtape RIP? Noooooooooooooooooooo

Another post by Geoffrey Ellis:

Looks like the RIAA has shut down the user generated audio streaming mixtape site Muxtape.com for the time being. A note on the front page of the site says:

"Muxtape will be unavailable for a brief period while we sort out a problem with the RIAA."

And the August 18th Muxtape blogpost says: "No artists or labels have complained. The site is not closed indefinitely. Stay tuned. Beta users of Muxtape For Bands: you are unaffected by this outage."

I can’t find much other info on the muxtape situation other than my assumption that the RIAA can’t find a way to play nicely with the new realities of music dissemination. I imagine it has to do with the fees
associated with streaming audio (the streaming cost of one song currently runs $0.0008). Anyone else have any info? Sad to see it go. Hopefully it will be back in it’s same awesome state and not some sucky watered-down version.

Leave a Reply


SARAH LACY has reported on startups and venture capital in Silicon Valley for nearly a decade. She writes Valley Girl, a biweekly column for BusinessWeek and co-hosts Tech Ticker on Yahoo! Finance. She lives in San Francisco.
Learn more