Seemingly every couple of months, Twitter lights up with (very important) conversations about how little artists actually get paid every time their song gets streamed. It varies between streaming services, but according to the RIAA’s 2020 report, Spotify averages $.00437 per stream while Apple Music averages about $.00783. However, the company that pays artists the most per stream is pretty surprising, seeing how it’s oftentimes credited for nearly killing the music industry: Napster.
Thanks to a recent tweet by T-Pain, fans were shocked to learn that Napster still actually exists seeing as the company filed for bankruptcy in 2002 after losing a wave of copyright infringement lawsuits. T-Pain shared a screenshot of a dubious chart originally posted to Reddit which claims how many times a song has to be streamed on a given platform in order for the musician to make $1. T-Pain’s chart shows an artist’s song on Napster has to be streamed 53 times in order to make $1, which is actually accurate per the RIAA’s 2020 report, compared to 315 streams on Spotify (although RIAA’s numbers show it’s more like 229 times).
Just so you know…… pic.twitter.com/t8m3PerxT9
— T-Pain (@TPAIN) December 29, 2021
While it’s fairly well-known that Spotify is one of the biggest streaming platforms with one of the worst artist payouts, fans on Twitter were even more surprised that Napster is still around. T-Pain’s tweet instantly made Napster trend on Twitter, with many people reacting to the news that Napster essentially went from “villain” to the “hero” of streaming.
Surprised to see @napster go from villain to the hero of this story… https://t.co/nud9q0AVmX
— AZcomm (@AZcomm) December 29, 2021
Finding out Napster still exists is a damn plot twist https://t.co/HZoHQAI2Sr
— Naima Cochrane (Original Recipe) (@naima) December 29, 2021
Napster: from the music industry’s bad guys in the 2000’s to paying artists more than any other streaming service in 2021… pic.twitter.com/e2vD9aOyVC
— SportzStew Ⓥ (@sportzstewcom) December 29, 2021
Others were simply reminiscing on the times they stayed up all night downloading a few songs on Napster.
You’ve never heard of #Napster?
In 1999 I set up 3-5 .mp3 file transfers on Napster every night and hoped they’d be done by morning. #TrueStory
That’s right, kids. It took ALL NIGHT to download a few songs.
Napster is the #GenX equivalent of walking to school uphill both ways. pic.twitter.com/XDGh2Iaqt2
— Jennifer Korey (@JenniferKorey) December 29, 2021
If you didn’t use one of these devices to listen to all the music you stole from Napster, you can’t sit with us.#90sEphemera pic.twitter.com/nUmEbThD3h
— Ebony Edwards-Ellis (@Eedwardsellis) December 21, 2021
Being a “computer kid” during the early 2000s was freaking great.
Got cable internet, a CD burner, and downloaded Napster all within the same week.
Ran my own phpBB forum for my high school.
LAN parties with friends.
Could make decent $$$ fixing computers for people. pic.twitter.com/p5JxiHci0T
— Matt Karolian (@mkarolian) December 29, 2021
Napster is trending and I’m ready to party like it’s 1999.
— Emily (@emily_tweets) December 29, 2021