Posted on 04/02/2007 8:32:03 AM PDT by Mr. Blonde
EMI Group PLC on Monday announced a deal that will allow computer company Apple Inc. to sell the record company's songs online without copy protection software.
The agreement means that customers of Apple's iTunes store will soon be able to play downloaded songs by the Rolling Stones, Norah Jones, Coldplay and other top-selling artists without the copying restrictions once imposed by their label.
EMI said almost all of its catalog, excluding music by The Beatles, is included in the deal.
Singles and albums free from copy-protection software and with a higher sound quality will be offered as a premium product, the companies announced at a London news conference.
Consumers will pay a higher price for the premium singles, but the same price for albums either with or without the copy protection software.
The announcement follows calls by Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs earlier this year for the world's four major record companies, including EMI, to start selling songs online without copy-protection software.
The software, known as DRM, is designed to combat piracy by preventing unauthorized copying, but can make downloading music difficult for consumers.
(Excerpt) Read more at cnn.com ...
Still no Beatles?(Whatever)
Does anybody know if Zeppelin tunes are available?
Last I heard they aren't?(If I'm wrong,feel free to let me know)
Zeppelin tunes aren't available. They don't want to sell the songs individually they think Zeppelin should be digested in whole albums.
There's unlimited supply
And there is no reason why
Without the Beatles, this is a non-story.
It is a really big story regardless. The first major label to agree to see their music without restrictions online. Afterall you still have the Rolling Stones music on there.
iPod - iTunes PING!
DRM free songs fron EMI
yep, that's what it means.
Thanks, that is what I thought. But the only thing they talk about is the Fairplay system and not how this is so much better than that. The way I read it the first time through was that it was still linking the music exlusively to iTunes and iPod.
I misread the headline at first go...thought Apple was coming out with a pen. iPen. Ookay.
iPod |
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Send FReepmail if you want on/off iPing list WARNING: This is a high-volume Ping list. Turn your headphones down |
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The List of Ping Lists |
Do old, dead people pay for and download enough to make this big news? |
I guess Coldplay would be the bigger draw, but I couldn't bring myself to respond with their music being a positive thing.
Why no Beatles, still? Anyone know?
The Beatles and Steve Jobs have had a 16 year ongoing feud over the “Apple” trademark.
The bad blood between these people can not be understated.
So I guess Jobs’ anti-DRM speech wasn’t just a bunch of hot air.
When EMI puts their DRM-free tracks online next month on iTunes, it is going to revolutionize the music industry. iTunes sales (and iPods) are going to go through the roof.
Mark my words, within five years, you will not be able to buy a CD anywhere in a retail store. Be it Wal-Mart, Circuit City or wherever. Amazon.com might still sell them but that will be about it. Everybody will be downloading the music online.
DRM has been a major impediment in online sales and EMI is leading the way to a DRM-free marketplace. Very quickly (you will see), other labels will follow with their own DRM-free, higher bit-rate options.
And about The Beatles...don't worry, they will be online by the summer and they too will be DRM-free. You heard it here first.
Wrong. This is a big deal.
1... Jobs said in January that he would like to sell music without DRM, but the labels wouldn't let him. Now one label will.
2... The folks who said that Jobs was blowing smoke were wrong.
3... If non-DRM'ed music sells (and the premium is $1.29 vs. $0.99), then the other labels will wake up and smell the dinero.
4... Microsoft's lame attempts at DRM are dead (Plays for Maybe).
5... Nobody will encode for WMA, and exclude themselves from 80% of the players out there.
6... I get to do what I want with the music that I buy. If I want to run that ABB song thru SndSampler just so I can learn that Dickey Betts lick, I can do it without some Hijack tool.
Besides, the Beatles will be there before the end of the year.
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