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BusinessWeek on Opening Apple's iTunes DRM

hype7 writes "BusinessWeek is running a very interesting story on Apple's foray into music, with a different bent to everyone else's. BW suggests that, instead of opening the iPod up to the world, Apple should instead license its DRM - 'Fairplay' - to anyone who wants to start up a music store. The upside is obvious: it would mean that Apple's music format, AAC, would become ubiquitous; Apple could quite feasibly make money on licensing fees (say 1 cent per song sold); and, it would just happen to stick it to Microsoft and the Windows Media Format. As the iTunes Music Store isn't running at a profit (or forecast to make a big one), having the Music Store clones eat into Apple's existing market share wouldn't be a problem; all these stores would be doing is building a bigger potential market for the iPod."

39 of 489 comments (clear)

  1. AAC by daeley · · Score: 5, Informative

    For the nth time, AAC is not "Apple's DRM technology." It is part of the MPEG-4 specifications. More info here.. To quote:

    AAC was developed by the MPEG group that includes Dolby, Fraunhofer (FhG), AT&T, Sony, and Nokia--companies that have also been involved in the development of audio codecs such as MP3 and AC3 (also known as Dolby Digital). The AAC codec in QuickTime 6 builds upon new, state-of-the art signal processing technology from Dolby Laboratories and brings true variable bit rate (VBR) audio encoding to QuickTime.

    --
    I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
    1. Re:AAC by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Apple's DRM technology is FairPlay, and the files they offer for download on iTunes Music Store are AAC files wrapped in the FairPlay encoding.

    2. Re:AAC by the+argonaut · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And for the one billionth time, things change. Even Apple. The best point of the article is that the iPod is cool now, but how long will it stay that way? And how long will Apple be able to maintain the premium to buy in?

      I'm not generally a fan of Salkever, but I think he makes a pretty good point. The only thing that I would add is that Apple should re-negotiate their contracts with the labels and get themselves a better deal, so that iTMS could actually generate some profits for them. Right now, they're the Walmart (**shudder**) of the music download world, they should flex some muscle as the market leader to get a lower wholesale price. And if they really wanted to change the world and actually support the music creators, their contract would include a better cut for the performers and writers (I would think a 40% Apple, 25% label, 20% performer, 15% writer/composer cut would be about right).

      --
      fuck you.
  2. AAC is already gaining ground by Motherfucking+Shit · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The upside is obvious: it would mean that Apple's music format, AAC, would become ubiquitous
    I thought that AAC was already well on its way to becoming ubiquitous, without Apple having to license it to every up-and-coming online music retailer?
    --
    "BSD: Free as in speech. Linux: Free as in beer. Windows 10: Free as in herpes." --Man On Pink Corner in #52607549.
  3. Unfortunately, Apple is too bullheaded... by overbyj · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I agree with this article. Adding WMA to the iPod is ludicrous (as is Rob Glaser's plea to add other support....Real.....get real!). However, licensing the DRM to AAC that Apple uses would nothing but grow the iPod marketshare because no one could complain that the iTMS is the only place to buy music for the iPod.

    However,.......based on Steve's stubborness and protectiveness of Apple, I am not going to hold my breath on this one. Having clones to Apple hardware is one thing and I can understand Steve killing that idea but this is so totally different. Steve readily admits that iTMS is not a breadwinner. But Steve is a just a bit too protective still to license FairPlay.

    Here's to hoping.....

    --
    No trees were harmed in the composition of this; however, numerous electrons were inconvenienced.
    1. Re:Unfortunately, Apple is too bullheaded... by worm+eater · · Score: 4, Informative

      Having clones to Apple hardware is one thing and I can understand Steve killing that idea but this is so totally different. Steve readily admits that iTMS is not a breadwinner. But Steve is a just a bit too protective still to license FairPlay.

      ...but they already did license the hardware for the iPod to HP. Seems like it would be a lot easier to license out the DRM tech than the precious iPod.

      --
      Maybe partying will help...
    2. Re:Unfortunately, Apple is too bullheaded... by awtbfb · · Score: 4, Informative

      But Steve is a just a bit too protective still to license FairPlay.

      There is precedent for Apple successfully licensing something of this nature: Firewire.

    3. Re:Unfortunately, Apple is too bullheaded... by baur · · Score: 4, Interesting

      they pay Apple a license fee

      This is no longer true. There used to be a $0.50 per-port charge for using the name FireWire - which is why you see IEEE 1394 all the time instead. A couple years ago, Apple dropped the fee. Unfortunatly, I think the 1394 name is probably going to stick at this point. (Sony calls it iLink, I think, but its still the same thing.)

  4. Re: Apple DRM? by One+Louder · · Score: 5, Informative
    Consider yourself corrected - AAC is not proprietary and is part of the MPEG-4 specification. Apple's DRM wrapper for AAC, called "Fairplay", however, *is* proprietary.

    On the other hand, Microsoft's WMA is proprietary no matter how you slice it.

  5. It's all about control: BannedMusic.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The only reason iTunes has DRM in the first place is because the major labels insist on it: they like their paying customers to have more restrictions than the folks that are getting it for free, makes sense right?

    Every fumbling attempt the record companies make to control and restrict music blows up in their face. Case in point, the new, bannedmusic.org which is using a BitTorrent installer packaged with a specific torrent to spread music that's run afoul of the current copyright regime. They could have made money licensing this stuff, but now there ain't nothin they can do about it.

    1. Re:It's all about control: BannedMusic.org by Xenographic · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Heh, it could be worse. Almost all other DRM schemes I've heard of are worse than Apple's.

      Then again, I would much prefer no DRM at all, and, ironically, the more draconian the DRM, the more likely people will refuse to use such products, and the more likely it is that we won't have to put up with it at all...

      I may be a tad overly optimistic, but I think we all know that DRM is futile so long as we have full control over our own computers. The problem is in the corrollary of that is that the DRM folks have to control our computers to make their schemes work. I don't find that to be a pleasant thought at all... Effectively unenforceable laws tend to get applied in discriminatory manners, after all... :/

  6. While this wouldn't hurt by tiktokfx · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The obvious problem is that what incentive is there for someone to open a music store with encrypted songs that are only playable on the iPod?

    Musicians already have ways of submitting their music to the iTMS.

    Any large conglomerate opening a music store online is generally stupid or on the "music store" bandwagon, or both. Apple pretty clearly does it because it's a selling point for iPods, and with their early appearance on the scene, they have a good chance to dominate the market until such time as it does become profitable.

    So what earthly good does licensing FairPlay do for anyone?

  7. RTFA by Ogrez · · Score: 5, Informative

    It doesnt say that AAC is Apples DRM.. it says that Apples DRM is called 'Fairplay' and licensing that to others would increase usage of the AAC FORMAT.

    --


    Fire in the hands of the village idiot is no tool, but a weapon of mass destruction
    1. Re:RTFA by cOle2 · · Score: 5, Informative

      FairPlay is actually owned by Veridisc so it may not be up to Apple to choose who to licence it to (if at all).

      http://64.244.235.240/explained_contentprovider.as p

    2. Re:RTFA by farzadb82 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Umm... hate to burst your bubble but VeriDisc's Fairplay is not related in anyway to Apple's Fairplay (see)

  8. Re:If apple want's to win with AAC they have to .. by One+Louder · · Score: 5, Informative

    That's not Apple's decision to make, since they aren't the owners of AAC. And they're apparently smart enough at least to know that, unlike, say, you.

  9. Re:It would be nice, but by wankledot · · Score: 4, Informative
    The iPod doesn't "have DRM" any more than your Dell thing does. It's capable of playing DRM'd tracks from the Apple music store, but you don't have to buy those to use the iPod.

    You're a little defensive about your manliness there buddy, I don't have to choose a certain electronics device to reassure myself that people will think I'm straight.

    --
    My sig is blank, I typed this by hand.
  10. Re:So... by One+Louder · · Score: 4, Informative

    An online store that wants to sell to iPod users merely has to provide the music in MP3 or unprotected AAC, since the iPod will accept both of those as well as Fairplay-protected AAC. You'd probably have to provide your own client to buy the music, and then use the scripting interface for iTunes to load it onto the iPod.

  11. Apple's Dual Paths by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think that Jobs has his own plan in mind, though I hope he's included "flexibility".

    Option 1: Stay Alone

    This basically has the iPod and the iTunes Music Store (iTMS) working only together. So far, this situation has proven to be the case, and it's working pretty well: the iPod is the #1 selling MP3 player out there, it's making Apple a butt load of cash (and when you try to carry money in your butt you'll know what I mean), and iTMS is the #1 online music sales system by far - 50 million songs sold compared to Roxio's 5 million. Even comaring apples to , er, apples, just within the 6 months since Napster has been out Apple has made 5 to 1 sales.

    If this continues, then eventually Jobs can force out all of the "for profit" music shops out there, and boil it down to just the "for advertising" places, like Wal-Mart, Coke, and Microsoft (which would really be looking to make Windows Media Audio the default standard).

    From this, Apple makes AAC the next MP3, and their DRM becomes the "de facto standard" - even though nobody else can use it. Apple makes all the money, and they like it.

    This will only come true, however, if Apple keeps a huge lead. What happens when Microsoft (MS) unveals their own online music store (didn't originally they tell folks like Napster that they wouldn't? Well, nevermind that....), sells songs for $0.50 each, takes a hit on profits, and basically acts like they did with Internet Explorer. (Ignoring any antitrust issues - not that Microsoft ever has had to in the past.)

    So that goes to Option 2: License the DRM

    I have the feeling that Jobs will release this if and only if iTMS and iPod sales start taking a dive. It's his "ace in the hole" to keep iPod sales alive. All it will take is him going to the other stores, making an offer, and then everybody can use the iPod with any service. Sure, it could hurt iTMS removing the one thing that makes it different from everybody else - but Apple is about the hardware.

    But what happens if someone like Dell or Gateway come out with their own MP3 player that starts to make the iPod look like yesterday's bulky cell phone? That's when option 3 kicks in:

    Option 3: License WMV for the iPod

    This one only happens when things are dire and Apple feels they finally have to put in their chips.

    The question is, how likely is either option to be? I can see Option 2 and 3 as "someday, maybe" futures. But as of right now, iTMS and the iPod rules the roost, and as long as Apple keeps that up for another 12-24 months, everybody else just in it to "make money selling music" will be so marginalized it won't matter. We're more likely to see Pepsi style promotions than anything else - though Apple had already keep an eye on possible cracks in their popularity: McDonald's may have dumped a iTMS deal in favor of a Sony Online Music one already, though of course nothing is official yet.

    2 years I think the dust will be settled. Until then, I'll keep saving up to buy my wife an iPod mini. Hey, if nothing else, they're cute. And she still buys lots of CD's.

  12. Re:While... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Apple likes the 'go it alone' route, regardless of any benefits to other routes.

    Which is why Apple has licensed the iPod to HP.
    Which is why iTunes is also Windows software.
    Which is why the iPod OS is designed and maintained by somebody other than Apple. Which is why USB, Firewire and other technologies are shared across the broad spectrum of platforms. yeah Apple goes it alone with such things as ATA, PCI

    Apple goes it alone on these things:
    Design (beautiful things work better see Donald Norman)
    Usability (because if it's not brain dead simple I'll have to think about how to do stuff instead of just doing it.
    Focus (whether in Digital lifestyle stuff like iTunes and iMovie or whether in bio-informatics, Apples hardware and software are tailored to getting things DONE)
    Lifestyle (like the wearable computing fashion indicates, computers and devices are becoming embedded in our lives to such an extent that choosing these tools is a real factor in fashioning out lives)

    And why Dell, Roxio, M$, and the others only sit and snipe.

  13. Re:Apple's DRM by jcain · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you send an email to iTunes Support, and ask them nicely, they will de-authorize all the computers on your account automatically. Just tell them you no longer have the computers you authorized and cannot de-authorize them the normal way.

    Worked for me.

  14. Or... You Could Just Get The Non-DRM MP3s by meehawl · · Score: 4, Informative

    All hail FatWallet:

    Here are some legal (in Russia!) MP3 download sites - most flat fee:

    allofmp3.com
    This site is locally legit and songs can be downloaded for as little as $0.01 per MB. That's around 3 cents per song.

    DELit
    Unusual emphasis on hard rock and metal acts (east European and Russian youth apparently worship metal acts)

    3MP3.ru
    $4.55 per month for unlimited downloads.

    And you are not stuck with the typical iTMS low-quality 128Kbit file. Most of the Russian sites let you choose your quality and give you the option to do "online encoding" where you can select the settings you want. When the pop up screen shows up you can hit switch to advanced mode toward the bottm and you get the following options:

    You can choose between the LAME or BLADE codec and 128, 160, 192, 256, and 320 kbps for each (constant bitrate). Or you can choose LAME variable bitrate at 128, 160, 192, or 256.

    If you enjoy these services, 3MP3 should be your first stop to see if you can find what you are looking for at the lowest price. Then I'd move to allofmp3, followed by clubmp3.ru, and then DELit.

    Cue the "In SOVIET RUSSIA" trolls now...

    --

    Da Blog
    1. Re:Or... You Could Just Get The Non-DRM MP3s by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 4, Informative

      Of course there is a problem in that legal in Russia doesn't necessarily mean that it's legal for Americans in America to use those. In fact, it pretty likely isn't legal here, because all claims to the contrary, 17 USC 602 probably doesn't apply at all.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
  15. Favortie quote from the article... by microcars · · Score: 4, Informative
    It seems obvious that Glaser has never actually used an iPod.
    Otherwise he never would have said this:

    "The only way to presently put songs on an iPod is to (buy) them from iTunes," Glaser said, ...."
    --
    I like microcars
  16. Re:it doesn't matter by nsayer · · Score: 4, Informative
    AAC is suuposedly not a lossy format



    Um, no. AAC is a lossy format. If you burn it to CD, then rip it and re-AAC it, you get something not quite as good as the original.

  17. Re:It would be nice, but by Powercntrl · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...but what would the fees be? Out of the reach of the small indie shops, or reasonable?

    Poor talentless underdogs, my heart bleeds. If they can't afford DRM, they either shouldn't use it or they should start sucking less so they actually turn a profit. The iPod plays DRM-FREE MP3 files just fine.

    Then again, why bother with DRM at all? My Dell Jukebox cost me less per GB, has a longer battery life, doesn't have any DRM, at least none that I'm aware of,

    So it can play WMA but has no DRM support? That's like Satanism without the evil, it's totally pointless.

    I don't get my sexuality questioned every time someone sees me use it.

    Haven't had that problem... Considering the iPod has the majority of the portable audio marketshare, I highly doubt it comes into play as a factor in determining someone's sexuality. Now buying a pink mini and loading it with Ricky Martin's complete discography probably wouldn't help your case, but I digress.

    --

    ---
    DRM is like antifreeze, to the MPAA/RIAA it's sweet, to the consumers it's poison.
  18. Re:If apple want's to win with AAC they have to .. by LionMage · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Whatever, AAC is doomed to be less popular than WMA and Mp3 until it becomes 100% free for me to write a player that supports that format. WMA is a distant second to Mp3 and is only catching up because MS allows companies to make their devices WMA compatable for zero dollars and ZERO cents thuas making it compatable with portable players. It still can not touch MP3 in popularity though. AAC is a horribly distand almost last place near FLAC and OGG and is only growing because Apple themselves is offering content in that file format. if they were not offering content in AAC then it would be completely dead...

    I guess this is why AAC was just recently chosen by the DVD consortium to be the standard for audio in the ROM portion of DVD-Audio disks. (That's been one of my major gripes with DVD-Audio -- you can't rip the songs to your computer currently, because there's no software out there designed to do this.)

    Yeah, right, AAC is dead. Never mind that the latest iTunes rips into AAC by default. (You have to go into preferences to switch audio import to use MP3 instead.) Never mind that the iTunes Music Store outperforms all other legitimate digital music distribution methods, and their format of choice is AAC with FairPlay.

    apple as [sic] the opportunity to create a standard in a way that they tried with quicktime (which is still a distand third and being displaced with xvid/divx into fourth with Real Media)

    I guess that's why Quicktime is doing just fine? Seriously, talk about a reality distortion field -- yours seems to be worse than Steve Jobs'. Xvid and DiVX are still the purview of the 133t, although there are more DVD players on the market now that will play videos encoded in these formats. So they are gaining traction and mainstream acceptance; but most players that support these formats are cheapies from China, where video piracy is rampant, and the build quality leaves something to be desired.

    Incidentally, AAC and Quicktime are linked inextricably with MPEG4, which is a current and future video standard. DiVX/Xvid leverage the MPEG4 standard.

    Quicktime is not just a niche format. It's everywhere. Most sites that serve up movie trailers do so in Quicktime format. Quicktime is almost always offered as an option for sites that support multiple video formats. And AAC wasn't "created" by Apple -- it's an open standard that they adopted.

    Steve Jobs historically makes bone-headed decisions.. Apple would be king right now if they made the decisions to open up their goodies years ago...

    So what you're saying is that your entire post is really just an excuse to slam Jobs and Apple, and has nothing to do with anything else. Obviously. Since real facts don't bear your arguments out.

    So stick that in your pipe and smoke it mister troll.

    Funny, you sound like the Troll in this case. Pity I used up my moderator points a couple days ago.
  19. Re:While... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Apple make way too expensive computers that usually are more hype than anything else..

    Do you own a powerbook? No? THEN SHUT UP

  20. AAC, FairPlay, and Apple by maggard · · Score: 4, Informative
    OK, cutting through the assumptions already posted, and folks who couldn't be bothered to actually read the article before posting...
    • Yes, Apple's music files are encoded in AAC.
    • Yes, AAC is an open standard, in that it is publically documented (for a reproduction fee to ISO), just not a free one, patent-wise or royalty-wise.
    • Apple's AAC files are then protected with DRM using Apple's FairPlay (if this FairPlay is related to VeriDisc's FairPlay is unknown, Apple lists FairPlay under their Apple's copyright).
    • If folks had bothered to read the article the DRM opportunity is pretty much what it was about, not the AAC format. FWIW FairPlay could be applied to mp3's too.
    • As DRM goes FairPlay is pretty liberal and there have been few problems (Cory Doctorow's consistantly forgetting to un-license machines aside)
    • Can FairPlay be broken? Probably, there are ways at getting to the AAC files via Apple's freely distributed QuickTime architecture (this is what iTunes uses).
    • There's also the trivial exercise of using iTunes to burn a CD then re-ripping the music. Of course the music has then been lossily encoded twice, with different encoders, so it's sorta like listening to a copy of a tape of a FM broadcast.
    • Ultimately though at US$1 a song & US$10/album most folks appear willing to own the music legitimately. Furthermore Apple has made it absurdly simple to share music locally via their iTunes software so most dorm & office style needs are handled that way.
    • Of course, the article pretty much ignores if Apple wants to be in the Music or IP licensing business at all. They only gave MS their previous Apple-IP license when their mutual lawsuits seemed deadlocked for eternity. The Mac licensing program cannibalized their own sales before it was killed off, their FireWire licensing plan shot itself in the foot, there doesn't even seem to be much co-branding like used to happen with special speakers and such for Macs. These days Apple seems pretty intent on only doing things that directly support selling, or at least evangelizing, Mac hardware.
    --
    I don't read ACs: If a post isn't worth so much as a nom de plume to its author then I wont bother either.
  21. The album myth lives! by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 4, Interesting
    And really, 99c for a song isn't even that great of a deal. That makes a 15 song cd = $15.... Which essencially is the same price it was before.

    And as everyone has discovered who uses the service, iTMS isn't for buying albums. It's for buying singles. This way you get the one song you wanted on the album for $0.99 instead of $15, and that *is* a hell of a discount. Even if you find CD singles, they're much more than $0.99.

    So for the majority of the world that (by definition) buys pop, iTMS makes sense. My wife just got 12 songs for $12 that would have cost over $100 in a store. I don't use it because I like older rock where 90% of an album didn't suck, but the service helps a large segment of the population.

  22. Re:So... by One+Louder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They've left a tantalizing hint - if you look inside the iTunes application bundle, you'll see an icon for ogg files. It looks like they were at least considering supporting it enough to provide artwork. It's possible it supported it internally, but the feature might have been removed before shipping for some reason.

  23. Re:Enjoy your more expensive same-thing by The+Infamous+Grimace · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yay, you paid a substantially more money for a different, metro-looking USB HDD that plays music than he did. Congrats, you're an idiot.


    Really? So you can boot your Windows machine off of your Dell DJ, and troubleshoot your computer? Can you also transfer music and charge it at the same time off of one cord?

    But you know what the real beauty of the iPod design is? It anin't much bigger than a cassette. How much longer before someone comes out with a car stereo that accepts your iPod like a tape? They're gonna get my money.

    (tig)
    --
    Ignorance and prejudice and fear
    Walk hand in hand
  24. Re: Apple DRM? by frankie · · Score: 4, Informative
    Apple FairPlay -- can't licence from anyone.

    Nope. How about you let me handle this:

    • AAC: codec for mp4 audio (m4a) -- license from MPEG-LA
    • WMA: audio wrapper format -- license from Microsoft
    • WMRM: DRM used by WMA et al -- license from Microsoft
    • FairPlay: DRM used by ITMS (m4p) -- license from Veridisc

    Note1: as you can see, Alex Salkelver at Business Week clearly didn't do his homework before writing that article.

    Note2: the folks at Veridisc are astonishingly incompetent at e-business: they own neither veridisc.com (unrenewed, squatted, not work-safe) nor fairplay.com (unowned, parked)

  25. Re:So... by jaoswald · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's see...Apple puts only what you call an ineffective lock on the music you download, yet this is the reason you haven't signed up for iTunes?

    What, are you waiting for a store to come out with *effective* protection which gives you even less of what you want? "Federal take-it-up-the-@$$" protection?

    Apple has to put some kind of protection on their downloads to reassure the labels. You claim that it is only a token effort. Isn't that the best you can hope for? Sounds like Apple is slying doing you a favor, as opposed to the draconian measures they could be taking.

  26. Re:DRM Online Music by Senjutsu · · Score: 4, Funny

    Is it just me or has companies like Apple managed to sneak DRM in under our noses while at the same time tricking us into thinking they're cool?

    And really, 99c for a song isn't even that great of a deal. That makes a 15 song cd = $15.... Which essencially is the same price it was before. Not only that but you end up with an inflexible lossy-encoded file.

    If by "sneak" you mean "implement because without it the major labels would never have agreed to let Apple distribute any of their songs" and "trick" you mean "tell you up front that their files are 'protected' by the weakest/most flexible DRM available from any online store that carries works from the major labels", and if by "$15 per cd" you mean "$9.99 for the majority of the albums", then yes, you're absolutely correct.

  27. And the MPEG-4 file format by benwaggoner · · Score: 4, Interesting

    And Apple also licenses the MPEG-4 file format, which is based on their own QuickTime file format.

  28. Re:So... by nehril · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Like Apple's DRM is worth a shit. It's as effective at protecting songs as my goldfish is at protecting my house. When anyone can defeat it by burning & reripping, what's the point? Really, why even bother?

    this is actually a point Steve Jobs made to the music industry execs (according to an interview with Jobs online somewhere, I forget where). He told them that any DRM is basically useless, anything that can be encoded can be cracked. they told him to piss off, a year or so later he came back when all their drm schemes were cracked and he said "See?!" Then they listened.

    so apple put in a bare minimum protection scheme, but more importantly made the terms so loose that nobody really wants to or needs to crack it. the restrictions are pretty insignificant (can't burn the same playlist more than 10x.... but change it slightly and keep going. But who's going to burn the same playlist that many times anyway?). the whole setup basically a fig leaf so that the industry can *feel* protected while raking in the bucks.

    the real protection here is the easy terms that don't stop you from doing what you want to. iTMS is excellent competition to Kazaa & crew: faster, better, more reliable, decently tagged, good catalog, cheap. Apple got tired of waiting for the industry to figure out how to do it right, and did it for them.

    so what exactly is your problem with iTunes?

  29. There's one thing everyone's forgetting by webslacker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Even if licensing out the iTMS format to other online music stores would theoretically drive more people to buy iPods, there's one factor that everyone's forgetting: user experience.

    Apple doesn't want just any joe schmoe with a smelly t-shirt selling songs for the iPod because Apple wants to maintain a level of quality with the entire user experience, from the purchase of songs on iTMS to the browsing of their songs on iTunes to the uploading and management to the seamless integration between the store and iTunes.

  30. Re:So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the whole setup basically a fig leaf so that the industry can *feel* protected while raking in the bucks.

    No.

    A deadbolt protects your house by making it physically difficult for the bad guys to break in. That's true.

    But a "beware of dog" sign also protects your house. How? By deterring those who would otherwise walk right in and take your stuff. It doesn't do anything to stop a determined thief... but how many determined thieves are there out there, compared to the number of "thieves of opportunity?"

    Fairplay protects music because it deters "thieves of opportunity." Because it's inconvenient to pirate Fairplay-protected music, paired with the fact that it's so darned easy to get it legally, Fairplay effectively protects music.

    It's not a fig leaf. It's real.