The Sound of Copy Restrictions Crashing
THE SOUND OF COPY RESTRICTIONS CRASHING
[SOURCE: Washington Post, AUTHOR: Rob Pegoraro]
The idea of ditching "digital rights management" for music downloads is rapidly changing from dream to business reality -- and faster than anybody might have hoped. Amazon said yesterday that it would open an online store that stocks only MP3 music files without copying restrictions. That would be huge news, except that Amazon is only catching up with Apple, which announced in early April that it would offer DRM-free downloads by the end of this month. Both stores have the public backing of EMI, one of the four big record labels, which yesterday also said it would sell unrestricted music downloads at some European sites. This should delight customers, who will no longer have to worry about being able to listen to their song files on their next music player or their computer. But it must unsettle many music industry executives.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/05/16/AR200705...
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* Amazon.com takes digital music sales to the next, unprotected level
http://www.usatoday.com/printedition/money/20070517/amazon17.art.htm
* Will labels sing along with DRM-free music?
http://news.com.com/Apple%2C+Amazon+may+hold+future+of+DRM-free+music/21...
The Sound of Copy Restrictions Crashing