

The service, which CEO and founder Adam Kidron says is set to launch globally later this year, will be the “largest legal music library” for sharing and listening to digital tunes. And while a whole plethora of startups have already tried to claim hold of that title, Beyond Oblivion might actually live up to it; that is, if the company actually follows through with promises on its About Me page:
- No more corrupt files.
- No more inequitable download charges and subscription fees.
- No more intrusive advertising.
- No more Big Music intimidation.
- The right to download from the biggest music library on Earth.
- The right to play as much of it as you want and share it among
- licenced friends.
Each one of those bullet points takes a jab at another big player in the music industry: non-paying Pandora listeners have to sit through “intrusive advertising,” MOG and Rdio customers must pay $5 or $10 monthly “subscription fees,” and even pirates have to deal with the occasional “corrupt” download.
How exactly the company plans to collect those licensing fees is still ambiguous at this stage.
Along with the music servicee, Beyond Oblivion will also include (of course) broad social networking features for sharing music and listening experiences.
Kidron says the listening and social features will be released to the world sometime in April, followed by launch of the commercial service somewhere between June and September.