Posts Tagged ‘drm’

Apple’s iTunes to drop copyright protection

2009/01/06/1643

RTFA: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM…

Apple Inc. is now selling the vast majority of its digital songs without copy-protection software.

The maker of the iPod also announced Tuesday a deal to roll out variable pricing on songs from the iTunes Music Store, with prices between $0.76 and $1.29 U.S. .

Apple announced the changes at the Macworld Expo trade show in San Francisco Tuesday.

Copy-protection software, also known as digital-rights management or DRM, has proved a controversial topic with music fans and record labels alike. Eight million of iTunes s 10 million songs will be available without DRM.

The software was designed to prevent fans from illegally sharing digital downloads on file-sharing services. But it also prevented many fans from moving their own songs between devices and became increasingly unpopular.

Apple’s founder, Steve Jobs, publicly called on major record labels to drop DRM in February, 2007.

In exchange, labels have been asking that iTunes agree to sell songs at variable prices. Currently, iTunes sells all individual songs at 99 cents regardless of their popularity or date of release, unlike most other retail outlets.

Adobe Pushes DRM for Flash | Electronic Frontier Foundation

2008/02/23/1415

RTFA: http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2008/02/adobe-pushes-…

The immense popularity of sites like YouTube has unexpectedly turned Flash Video (FLV) into one of the de facto standards for Internet video. The proliferation of sites using FLV has been a boon for remix culture, as creators made their own versions of posted videos. And thus far there has been no widespread DRM standard for Flash or Flash Video formats; indeed, most sites that use these formats simply serve standalone, unencrypted files via ordinary web servers.

I can’t say I’m surprised… but that’s just because I have no faith in the DRM world.