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MINT

Music Industry Licensing Technology — a digital services licensing platform operated by several European CMOs that provides mechanical licenses for interactive streaming and download services. MINT allows multi-territory licensing for digital platforms operating across member territories.

Articles about MINT

UPC Codes for Music Releases: Why They Matter and How to Apply Them Correctly
Music Business

UPC Codes for Music Releases: Why They Matter and How to Apply Them Correctly

UPC codes for music releases are the release-level barcodes retailers, DSPs, and rights processors use to identify, group, and report your products—get them wrong and sales, charts, and royalties will be misallocated. This guide cuts through standards and vendor noise to explain GTIN/UPC basics, how UPCs differ from ISRCs , and the operational tradeoffs of GS1 versus distributor-supplied codes.

DistroKid Metadata Requirements: Preparing Your Catalog for Accurate Rights and Payments
Music Distribution

DistroKid Metadata Requirements: Preparing Your Catalog for Accurate Rights and Payments

Getting metadata right separates paid royalties from errors and lost revenue. This guide lays out DistroKid metadata requirements and the exact fields, identifiers, and formatting that determine how recordings and works are matched and paid across stores, PROs, SoundExchange, and The MLC .

Music Metadata Standards: Why ISRC, ISWC, and CAE Matter for Royalty Collection

Music Metadata Standards: Why ISRC, ISWC, and IPI Matter for Royalty Collection Strong music metadata standards are one of the biggest factors in whether a stream, broadcast, or usage event becomes a successful royalty payment. When identifiers are missing, inconsistent, or recorded in the wrong place, downstream systems struggle to match usage to the correct recording, composition, and payee.

Guide to Publishing Royalties and Split Sheets for Businesses

Guide to Publishing Royalties and Split Sheets for Businesses

Whether you’re a label, manager, publisher, or distributor, industry leaders should always encourage their artists to have honest and open conversations about split sheets. After all, not having them in place means not being able to confirm a creator’s ownership percentage or collect any related publishing royalties.