YouTube will stop sharing music streams with Billboard starting midway through January 2026, it's going to have major ripples ...
In a surprising turn (or is it?) that has lit up music charts worldwide, BTS’ B-side track “Anpanman”, originally released in ...
YouTube is pulling its data from Billboard for use in the publisher’s industry-leading U.S. music charts. The decision is in ...
Linkin Park's "Somewhere I Belong" reaches the top 10 on a Billboard chart for the first time, more than 20 years after its ...
Official Charts, with chart icons like Taylor Swift, Robbie Williams, Oasis and Kylie Minogue grabbing the headlines. Throw in a Geordie Springsteen, Mother Monster and a trio of Kpop Demon Hunters – ...
More than two decades after its release, Eminem's "Lose Yourself" finally becomes the bestselling rap song in America — as ...
“Uncharted Territory” provides an entertaining and empirical look at how the Billboard chart has changed over the decades.
YouTube will stop submitting its data to the U.S. Billboard charts next month due to a dispute over how streams are counted.
Lyor Cohen, the company's global head of music, argued that Billboard's formula for the charts doesn't put enough weight on ...
No sooner had the changes been announced than one of the biggest streaming platforms out there – YouTube – announced that it ...
Kato's song 'Turn the Lights Off' made it to the top of a Spotify chart thanks to a meme on TikTok featuring a Jon Hamm scene.
YouTube said it will no longer submit its data to 'Billboard,' claiming the publication's chart formula is 'outdated.' ...