A Short History of Online Music: From MP3 to Streaming
A Short History of Online Music: From MP3 to Streaming
Online music didn’t arrive all at once. It evolved in waves: compression, file sharing, legal stores, and finally subscription streaming.

1) MP3: the technical turning point
MP3 made music files small enough to move over slow connections. That single change shifted music from “physical distribution” toward “network distribution.”
2) File sharing and the early internet era
The late 1990s and early 2000s introduced mass peer‑to‑peer sharing. It was messy and controversial, but it proved the demand: people wanted instant, searchable access to huge catalogs.
3) Legal downloads and the store model
Digital music stores made buying online normal. Downloads were convenient and (usually) higher quality than random files. This was also when metadata, cover art, and library management became mainstream concerns.
4) Streaming subscriptions: music as a service
Streaming changed the core unit from “owning a track” to “accessing a catalog.” Recommendation systems, curated playlists, and cross‑device listening became standard.
5) Where radio fits in
Even in the streaming era, radio remains unique:
- Live: it’s happening now.
- Context: hosts, local culture, and real-time programming.
- Discovery: you can fall into music you wouldn’t search for.
That’s why internet radio directories still matter. If you want the “lean back” experience, try radio or browse by tag.