Apple’s upcoming Beats-based streaming music service will likely be named “Apple Music” and will have deep social networking integration for artists, according to industry sources briefed on the plans for the new service.

Taking a page out of the discontinued iTunes Ping feature from earlier this decade, the service will allow artists to have their own pages within the streaming music service that they can use to post track samples, photos, videos, and concert updates.

Artists will also be able to share the content of other artists in an effort of cross-promotion. For example, all-gold Apple Watch wearer Kanye West could promote a new album from Taylor Swift on his “Apple Music” artist page, if he so chooses…

Using iTunes accounts, all users of the streaming music service will be able to comment on and like these posts from big name artists, but users won’t have their own social network profiles like with Ping.

Artists Activity will be a core feature of the “Apple Music” streaming service, but users will actually be able to disable it in the Restrictions Settings panel in iOS 8.4. Accidentally leaked in the latest iOS 8.4 beta for developers, the Restrictions menu has an “Artist Activity” switch, which sources say corresponds directly to the aforementioned Ping-like functionality. The network will be available across the iOS, Android, and Mac versions of “Apple Music.”

Sources have said that the service will be integrated deeply into the redesigned iOS 8.4 Music application, and that users will be able to port over existing Beats Music cloud libraries. Even with overlapping functionality, iTunes Match and iTunes Radio will be retained, with Radio receiving an overhaul for improved mixes and an international rollout to mirror the streaming service.

In February, we reported extensively on the feature set of the new streaming music service, noting that it will feature many of the playlist, curation, and organization features of the existing Beats Music app, but with a new Apple design. The current Beats Music app has basic functionality for artists, such as a biography and playlist pages, as shown in the screenshots above.

Alongside iOS 8.4, iOS 9, OS X 10.11, and the new Apple TV features, Apple Music will be introduced at Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference Kickoff keynote on Monday, June 8th. While Apple had originally planned to release the service on that date, we recently reported that the company now currently plans to release the paid service, which sources confirm will have a free trial option, toward the end of June.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

Check out 9to5Mac on YouTube for more Apple news: