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Pandora radio revamps its $5 subscription option

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NEW YORK (AP) — Pandora said it has revamped its $5 a month Internet radio service, giving listeners the ability to skip and replay more songs.

The update, announced Thursday, comes two days after Pandora signed music licensing deals with major and independent labels. It also said this week it planned to offer a new $10 monthly on-demand streaming service by the end of the year that would better compete with rivals Spotify and Apple Music.

The new radio service is being called Pandora Plus and will replace Pandora One, which has 4 million subscribers. Those subscribers will be switched over to Pandora Plus and the service will continue to be ad-free.

Pandora said the free version, which plays ads, will also be updated. Listeners will be able to skip or replay more songs if they click to play a video ad, the company said. Most people listen to Pandora without paying. It had a total of 78.1 million listeners in the second quarter, down 2 percent from the same period a year before.

The new versions of the radio service will be launched Thursday in the U.S. and roll out on its apps in the coming months, the company said. Listeners in Australia and New Zealand will see the changes next year, it said.

Pandora is different than Spotify and Apple Music, because Pandora users currently can't choose which songs they want to listen to. Instead, listeners choose artists or songs they like and Pandora puts together a playlist. Listeners are limited by how many times they can skip or replay a song. But Pandora plans to change that with its on-demand option, which it plans to release before the end of the year.

The Oakland, California, company has been facing increasing competition. Spotify already has 40 million paying subscribers. And Apple Inc.'s music service, launched last year, has 17 million.

Shares of Oakland, California-based Pandora Media Inc. slipped 14 cents to $13.17 on morning trading Thursday.