iTunes Ping Is Last.fm Rip-Off?

Apple has done it again. The company heavily borrows ideas and technologies from others but packs it in a manner that it not only looks their own, but at times also claims to have 'invented' the concept. FaceTimes is a good example where instead of letting Skype into the walled garden, they created their own version (restricted) of Skype and called it Facetime.

On Sept 2, Steven P Jobs announced new iTunes with Ping. "“With Ping you can follow your favorite artists and friends and join a worldwide conversation with music’s most passionate fans," said Jobs.

Apple users might think 'hey, here you go now we have a soical network called Ping'. I wonder how many know that it's not a new concept. Ever heard of Last.fm, SongBird, Spotify?

Adrian Drury, Ovum’s lead media and broadcast analyst says, "Apple is borrowing from the greatest hits of the pioneers of social content recommendation and discovery for its Ping service. Songbird, Spotify, Last.fm, 7Digital will all recognise elements of their services in this new venture by Apple, but imitation can be a smart strategy."

He further says, "Social recommendation takes the Genius recommendation engine into a new dimension. Again this is nothing new from a service point of view, but iTunes is the 800 pound gorilla in the digital music market and if successful, will have a material impact on overall digital sales.

At this early stage in the development of the service, the challenge for Apple will be to persuade users to actually spend time in the Ping environment. Facebook, MySpace and other social discovery environments now have very rich feature sets that drive dwell time.

Ping has music track previews that you can already get in iTunes. The service is also set up to drive users to follow featured artists rather than individuals in their social graph, which may have hit the network effect potential of the service. While Apple has over 160 million iTunes retail customer accounts, it has no mandate yet to host them as a social community. It will be interesting to see how Apple learns from the first iteration of Ping."