
A major purpose in describing these music business models is to illustrate how innovations do not have to be tied to the success of a new good or service. Rather, an organization can innovate by introducing a new method of doing business, and such innovation has the potential to “turn the world upside down” (a la Google or Facebook).
| Model | Currently implemented? | Feasible? | Currently legal or illegal? | Consumer satisfaction | Record label satisfaction | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional | No | Not anymore | Legal | No | Yes | 
| Digital music stores | Yes | Yes | Legal | Yes | Yes | 
| Peer-to-peer stores | Yes | Yes | Legal | Yes | Yes | 
| Open Source | Yes | Yes | Illegal | Yes | No | 
| Artist centered website hub | No | Yes | Legal | Yes | No | 
| Artist’s personal website | Yes | Yes | Legal | Yes | No | 
| Non-traditional “record labels” | Yes | Yes | Legal | Yes If used with other models | No To traditional record labels | 
| Tax-the-device | No | Not really | Legal | ? | No | 
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