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Sony's Idea of DRM-Free Music

edmicman writes "Leave it to Sony to mess up DRM-free music downloads. What is the point of DRM-free tracks if you still have to go to a retail store to buy them? From the Infoworld article: 'The tracks will be offered in MP3 format, without DRM, from Jan. 15 in the U.S. and from late January in Canada... The move is far from the all-digital service offered by its rivals, though. To obtain the Sony-BMG tracks, would-be listeners will first have to go to a retail store to buy a Platinum MusicPass, a card containing a secret code, for a suggested retail price of $12.99. Once they have scratched off the card's covering to expose the code, they will be able to download one of just 37 albums available through the service, including Britney Spears' "Blackout" and Barry Manilow's "The Greatest Songs of the Seventies."'"

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  1. Re:thepiratebay by CRCulver · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Even in a number of Berne Convention signatory countries it is de facto legal because police do not prosecute piracy (and, in some cases, actually facilitate it). Sure, most nations on Earth might have been muscled into signing copyright laws, but add up the populations of countries where piracy flourishes, and it seems that the vast majority of the world doesn't recognize this odd concept of "intellectual property".