Probably because actual "sales" of singles, downloads, albums, etc are being replaced by streams and views. Where before, an album could make 10 million in sales, consumers aren't making actual purchases as before beyond streaming service subscriptions. I guess this new way of determining album status can answer the problem of loss of already poor royalty payments for artists for sales performance by better reflecting their music's presence more closely with the way consumers are actually obtaining the product now. It may not be a benefit right away, but with the more accurate reflection of "are people actually listening to this artist", said artist should be in a better position to negotiate future deals for themselves to supplement the loss of record sales due to industry changes. They'll have more leverage to ink higher paying deals based on their real market presence. Record labels will have a harder time justifying still paying artists based on sales performance now that RIAA has changed it's rules on what a performing album or song looks like. The record labels will likely benefit from this as well. Streaming and views are more frequent than physical buys ever were, so the the signed artist will also be an increased asset for them under the new rules.And how does "I went platinum" different fundamentally from "My album made 10 million dollars"?
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