iTunes Plus: Minus DRM, But Plus Price And Tracking Info
from the we-don't-really-trust-you-that-much dept
As was announced last month, Apple finally has started selling some EMI tunes through iTunes without DRM, but with an additional $0.30 in the price. Apparently there are some glitches, but perhaps that's not too surprising. A more interesting point, however, was submitted by John, who notes that while the DRM is gone, in its place is metadata about who bought the song. In other words, should you take a non-DRM'd file bought at iTunes and pass it on to someone else or put it on a file sharing network, it would be possible for someone to track you down (though, there would be no evidence that you purposely distributed the file). It's basically a poor-man's DRM, like watermarking technology, that is designed to scare you off from sharing the music. Not too surprising, really, but continues to show how the industry is confused about the promotional value of its own music.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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So what?
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This is what DRM should have been.
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Re: This is what DRM should have been.
Of course, that makes way too much sense for them to try.
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what happens when you loose your ipod
What apple should have done is encrypted the personal information, and kept the keys. This way apple (or its partners) could track whose files end up on P2P, but peoples personal information is not exposed if they loose their iPod
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Sometimes this site really stretches for controver
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Re: It isn't?
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Doesn't a way exist...
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not a big deal
I don't think there was anything nefarious behind the decision. Besides, it's trivial to modify.
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Strip it
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Good thing
It also can work to the advantage of file-sharers, because they can show how many times the song was uploaded by them, and how far it was spread. The RIAA wouldn't be able to say that there was millions of dollars of damage caused if there was only 5 people who downloaded it. Also, they couldn't go after random people anymore for uploading, because they could see who it was that shared it.
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So?
It might be enough to alter the file hash so my copy of Justin Timberlake's latest craptastrophe and your copy don't appear to be the same file on a P2P network, but then if I already bought it, why do I care about it's P2P compatibility?
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Nit Picking
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Re: Nit Picking
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Baby food
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Re: Baby food
CDs are easier to destroy than older types of media? cassettes and 8-tracks jammed, could be eaten by the player or even the tape could be scratched. Vinyl LPs could be scratched or cracked. I'm sure the same went for wax and aluminum cylinders before that although i would not know from personal experience. And before cylinders, there was no recordable media so there was only a few innovations before cds: cylinders, vinyl records and magnetic tape.
Either way makes someone money.
someone has always made money off the sale of recorded music (its why they make the albums to begin with) and for most of the history of recorded music, there was no way for you to make a perfect copy of the music you bought, not until the cd and the pc.
Where is the flash ram in music stores? Mini-disc? Or even a music downloader machine you can plug your ipod into?
Flash ram is too expensive. They tried selling mini-discs in stores with music on them and nobody bought them. And your music downloader machine for your ipod is your pc with ituneson it. Why would you go to a store to do something you can already do at home.
The whole point of havin a DRM-free file is so you can use it on any device you own easily and without restrictions. Your name being in the metadata does nothing to hamper that. All it would hamper is you sharing it online anonymously, and then only if you are too lazy to edit your info out of the metadata.
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Re: Re: Baby food
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MPfree
It's kind of funny that the RIAA has succeeded in its black propaganda to where people actually need to be told that DRM-free != Supporting Piracy.
I think the fact that this tag is so easily removed/altered says that Apple didn't keep it there to thwart anything-- unless they're worried that my grandma is file-sharing.
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remember the real pirates
Either way the real pirates, selling the cd's for $ on the streets will not be bothered. Everyone is always referring to the file sharing crowd as pirates, and while strictly speaking that is true. They are not gaining and money from the sharing. If there is any loss to the record label's income it is a drop in the bucket compared to the illegal sale of CD's.
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Easily removed?
Really sure? I'd take another peek if I were you....
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But are the files watermarked?
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It's a first step...
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Sorry, look at it anyway you want - putting rootkits on CD's that people have BOUGHT, is quite an offensive gesture, IMO.
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Use it wherever!
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Joke's on you!
While cumbersome, the "buy-burn-rip-to-MP3" workaround has been the primary way to start with a 99 cent iTunes download and end up with an unrestricted MP3 that will play on your Squeezebox, your non-iPod portables, or your MP3-enabled DVD player (it's not about "piracy" -- if that was your bag, you'd have started by downloading the song as an MP3 from the myriad P2P options).
The point is, DRM is only hurting the people who buy the music, the "honest" customers. Those that download illegally don't get affected at all.
Haha, the joke is on you, "honest" customers! Next time, maybe you'll skip all the nonsense and just download illegally. :P
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