Shouldn't Sandisk Be Eager To See The End Of DRM?
from the sansa dept
You'd think the company running second, behind Apple, in the market for digital music players, would have the most to gain from the abandonment of DRM. After all, despite what Steve Jobs says, the iTunes DRM does serve to lock consumers in to buying iPods. So it's a little disappointing to read Sandisk's own open letter on DRM (via Engadget), in which CEO Eli Harari seems mainly interested in sucking up to the music industry. In it he calls out Jobs for being confrontational, and says that while consumers deserve fair use, there also needs to be mechanisms to ensure the rights of musicians and content owners. This stance might be understandable if DRM actually worked, but it doesn't. It deprives music listeners of their choices without bringing any benefit to music labels or the musicians on their roster. At the end of the letter, he does suggest that walled gardens are a bad idea, but it doesn't sound particularly convincing, after what came before it.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Come back to your RIO roots!
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Well someones got to do it...
Or at least, I bet that is what Eli is banking on by pandering to the mafiaa...
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thanks Sandisk
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Apple's competitors want licensing
SanDisk and others are hoping for licensing that will allow them to produce players that work with iTunes. Thus forcing Apple's expenditures in this area to become a subsidy to their competitors. There is NO FairPlay without iTunes. These companies have failed to build decent software and websites to support their players, so now they want to demand that Apple give them theirs.
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Apple's competitors want licensing by UniBoy
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Or buy Creative and play anything
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The paradox...
Seems to me the best thing that SanDisk can do is bank on the continued proliferation of people who decide to illegally circumvent DRM. That erodes the market share and name recognition of iPod and Zune. So, we are actually supporting companis that take SanDisks position of "kissing up" by distributing unlicensed content of software. They are banking on more and more people turning away from DRM and making their products more appealing and in that sense SanDisk will do everything in its power to reinforce DRM. weird!
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