Dipset Capo Jim Jones spoke recently with CNBC sports business reporter Jabari Young about equity and opportunity for his new metaverse music recording platform. Jones says that he’s sitting on a billion-dollar idea with Quarantine Studios which he describes as a “Two-part thing.” Jones says: “One side is the tech side and the other is the service side. On the tech side I built my own technology, I figured out how to record virtually in real time with the least amount of latency. Shout out to AWS who saw the genius in what I was doing, and decided to help me build out this cloud technology. You can record from anywhere – the comfort of your own home, the airport. As long as you have WIFI, a computer and a mic I have an engineer who can come on virtually.”
Jones told Young that he developed this technology in the early 2000’s and that he has recorded his last six albums using Quarantine studios. He envisions Quarantine as not only a recording platform, but a one stop shop where musicians can obtain legal assistance and other services related to the business of music such as radio and video promotion.
Jones says that he recently met with Amazon executives who were instantly impressed when he shared the technology with them. Jim’s business partner Jarmon Hauser says that Quarantine could become like Google Docs for music. “There is a limitless number of applications for streaming high fidelity audio” says Hauser. Jim's message to potential investors is "You know where music has been, but you dont know where it's going. The same way that people are leaning toward cryptocurrency, the metaverse and NFT's, this is the same thing. This hasn't been done yet."