ARIA and PPCA welcomes NSW Labor’s $103 million pre-election commitment

ARIA - Annabelle Herd

“This strong focus on the contemporary music industry in NSW is a very welcome commitment from a major party”

Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) and Phonographic Performance Company of Australia (PPCA) have welcomed NSW Labor party’s preelection commitment of $103 million for contemporary music in NSW.
 
Annabelle Herd, ARIA and PPCA CEO, said: “This strong focus on the contemporary music industry in NSW is a very welcome commitment from a major party.
 
“Ahead of the election, it is vital that all parties recognise the huge cultural and economic potential that music can offer the state, provided it is given considered support. We urge all parties to follow suit so music in NSW can flourish.”
 
On Monday, ARIA and PPCA joined industry colleagues to unveil a list of key requests ahead of the election and call for preelection commitments to contemporary music.

This comes after Herd recently addressed ByteDance Ltd.’s decision to limit and remove access to music for select Australian creators and users on TikTok over the coming weeks, in a move described as a “test”.

Herd said: “It is frustrating to see TikTok deliberately disrupt Australians’ user and creator experience in an attempt to downplay the significance of music on its platform. After exploiting artists’ content and relationships with fans to build the platform, TikTok now seeks to rationalise cutting artists’ compensation by staging a ‘test’ of music’s role in content discovery.

“This is despite the fact that in 2021 TikTok’s Global Head of Music, Ole Obermann, said: ‘Music is at the heart of the TikTok experience.’

“This ‘test’ is presented as an effort to analyse, improve and enhance the platform’s wider sound library, but as little as five months ago, TikTok’s chief operating officer Vanessa Pappas said that 80% of content consumed on TikTok is programmed by algorithms.

“If this is the case, then it’s difficult to trust that this is a true test. TikTok can set its Australian algorithm upfront to – within parameters they define – deliver the results they want.

“Australians deserve better. TikTok should end this ‘test’ immediately and restore music access to all users and creators.”

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