In the promotion, Pepsi will hand out 100 million promotional iTunes downloads -- each Pepsi cap sold in States after February 1st, will have a 1:3 chance of winning a free iTunes download. Unfortunately, says the team behind the idea of TuneRecycler.com, this means ultimately a $65 million to major record labels unless something is done about it.
The Tune Recycler campaign is aimed at people who don't have any intention whatsoever to install iTunes even should they win a free download (or a hundred free songs, if you need bit more caffeine :-) by purchasing a bottle of Pepsi. Tune Recycler urges these people to send their winning code to Tune Recycler, which will then use the code to purchase music from independent record labels that are well-known for treating their artists and fans well (unlike most of the major record labels do).
A short quote from their site: "Every week or so, we'll be choosing independent artists and an album of theirs which we will repeatedly purchase using the donated codes (if we buy enough copies of a single album, we might be able to move it up the charts-- it's not too hard these days). All the artists will be from independent labels with reputations for treating artists fairly. Once we get started on February 1st, we'll list the artists [on our site]."
More information: TuneRecycler.com
Written by: Petteri Pyyny @ 29 Jan 2004 14:04