iTunes Store goes DRM-free
#5
Posted 06 January 2009 - 10:52 AM
Given the continued market dominance of iTunes, I'm surprised that Jobs has chosen to bow to the demands of the record labels for multi-tiered pricing. Granted the labels were holding the DRM card over Jobs, but then when you look at the raw numbers, the iTunes Store didn't seem to suffer much vis-a-vis DRM-free offerings from Amazon et. al.
I wonder if this will further embolden the record labels now that Apple will not seem so invincible in the music arena.
In any event, maybe this particular decision will be win-win for all parties concerned -- consumers included.
Jeff Mincey
I wonder if this will further embolden the record labels now that Apple will not seem so invincible in the music arena.
In any event, maybe this particular decision will be win-win for all parties concerned -- consumers included.
Jeff Mincey
#7
Posted 06 January 2009 - 10:55 AM
Was hoping for TV show rentals, but DRM-free music will do, I guess. ;) Would like to know whether upgrading costs anything, though. Also, would like to know if Apple will provide a legitimate way to de-DRM files that I've bought from the store that it no longer sells (iTunes exclusives from a few years ago, etc.) Sure I can get around the DRM myself, but it seems silly at this point.
#10
Posted 06 January 2009 - 10:59 AM
DRM-free music means that you can use it with any player on any computer. So, no more having to worry about only 5 accounts being able to use a file at the same time (a concern for families with multiple computers) or about the day that Apple decides it's tired of being in the music business. Or even just the day that you buy a non-iPod music player and you can no longer sync it through iTunes. Seriously, there's no reason to think the iPod will still have a near monopoly in 2019, but I will probably still want to listen to a lot of the music I've bought over the past few years.



Sign In
Register
Help

MultiQuote