Facebook is taking a swing at YouTube by bringing officially licensed music videos to its platform.
This weekend, the social media giant will begin rolling out official music videos in the US. The content will appear on a new music section in Facebook Watch, organized by genre, artist and mood, and will also be available on Facebook artist pages.
Facebook is partnering with Sony Music, Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group and others, and will launch with artists including Blake Shelton, Bob Marley, Diplo, Elton John, the Jonas Brothers and Nicki Minaj. YouTube also has similar licensing deals. Facebook plans to offer exclusive music video content and premieres from artists and popular personalities including Lele Pons and J. Balvin.
The move is a direct challenge to YouTube’s dominance over music videos. The Google-owned platform has long been a popular service for listening to songs and finding upcoming artists. Pop megastars including Justin Bieber and Dua Lipa trace their origins to the platform. Many of YouTube’s most watched videos are music videos, racking up billions of views.
In recent years, Facebook has tried to become a bigger player in digital video, which can be a lucrative source of ad revenue and also keep users engaged on its platform for longer. In 2017, the company introduced Facebook Watch, featuring original shows and popular videos from creators and media organizations, including CNN.
“Facebook clearly needs content that advertisers are comfortable with and will purchase advertising against, and some way to keep users on the platform other than provoking outrage,” said Jim Nail, principal analyst at research firm Forrester. Music videos could offer a way to address both those issues.
Facebook is known to borrow features and concepts from rivals, including disappearing posts, a dating tool, and a marketplace to buy and sell items.
The social network’s announcement comes days after CEO Mark Zuckerberg appeared before Congress along with the CEOs of Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), and Google parent company Alphabet, where they faced tough questions about their competitive tactics.
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