Once again, it remains to be seen if Pandora and Spotify will survive. Neither company is making money, regardless of the number of users. The music industry has stacked the game against companies who make money using music. And based on my dealings with the music industry, as well as the recent announcement from the copyright office, it's clear that it will get MORE expensive to stream music. It's one thing to tack on a $5 a month streaming charge, with all of that money going to copyright holders. But Pandora is paying more than half of its revenues (not profits, because they have none) in music royalties. Imagine having a business with a line item cost that eats up over half of your revenue, before rent, employees, insurance, utilities, etc. It's a terrible business model. We already saw what the music industry did to Napster. They're doing the same thing now to Pandora and Spotify. Artists are removing their music from Spotify because they feel they're not making enough money. Same with YouTube. The law allows them to do that. Not with OTA radio. So the playing field will change with regards to streaming radio, REGARDLESS of what the current crop of teens do. At the same time, there is a movement to activate the FM chip in cell phones, something that's available in many other countries. Imagine having radio service on your phone that doesn't cost anything. Imagine how successful that would be.