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Yahoo Offers Compensation For Unplayable Music

DrEnter writes "According to this article, Yahoo will offer some compensation after they turn off their DRM servers and Yahoo Music customers will no longer be able to access their music. The company said Wednesday it is offering coupons on request for people to buy songs again through Yahoo's new partner, RealNetworks Inc.'s Rhapsody. Those songs will be in the MP3 format, free of copy protection. Refunds are available for users who 'have serious problems with this arrangement,' Yahoo said. Nice to see them step up and do something, especially without trading one DRM scheme for another."

8 of 143 comments (clear)

  1. Surprising by EdIII · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I really am surprised that Yahoo stepped up like this. Really Surprised.

    The offer to receive a DRM-free MP3 seems pretty darn reasonable to me. I wonder why Microsoft did not stand up and offer anything remotely as reasonable as this considering their size when they were going to shut down their DRM servers.

    DRM has always been a less valuable product inherently, but Yahoo has backed up the customer and made sure they will be able to play the music they paid for.

    I almost feel.... hopeful.

    Good for Yahoo. They did the right thing.

    1. Re:Surprising by Optic7 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I wonder why Microsoft did not stand up and offer anything remotely as reasonable as this considering their size when they were going to shut down their DRM servers.

      Probably because that would have been akin to an admission by Microsoft that their product (WMA with DRM) sucks and should be avoided.

      Yahoo has nothing riding on WMA or on music file DRM so they could care less about the impression that this makes for WMA or for DRM in general. After all, they were (one of?) the first major music store trying to convince the major labels to offer non-DRM music files, and the first to offer a song from a major label artist on unprotected MP3 for sale, as an experiment a couple of years ago.

  2. Duh... they had to. by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Company complies with rules to avoid chargebacks" should be the headline.

    When you sell a perpetual license that needs to be reauthorized every so often, you have to either keep your license server up forever, or ofter to give customers all their money back.

    We saw this happen when Google Video shut down. At first Google thought they could get away with giving out Google Checkout credits, but the credit card industry upheld chargebacks so they had to refund all credit card charges too.

    1. Re:Duh... they had to. by compro01 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Just because a contract says something doesn't mean it is legally valid.

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  3. Re:Real player by socsoc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How is this offtopic? Experiences with Real Player were so unsatisfactory that many people I know won't use ever use a RealNetworks product. *buffering*

  4. Re:Real player by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How is this offtopic? Experiences with Real Player were so unsatisfactory that many people I know won't use ever use a RealNetworks product.

    Perhaps it's off-topic because, as even the summary points out, the alternative being offered is in unprotected MP3 format: hardly a proprietary RealNetworks product, nor likely to suffer from the same problems that plagued early versions of RealPlayer. One man's joke is another man's unconstructive and irrelevant cheap shot; YMMV.

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  5. Good for Yahoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One thing we can know for sure is that if MS had purchased Yahoo already Yahoo would NOT now be offering money back or replacement music.

    Why do I say that? Because of what ms ALREADY did when they shut down their drm music business.

    This crap about Yahoo doing it because they "have to" is a bunch of bull. Yahoo could have waited until lawsuits were filed and then played games in court, BUT THEY DIDN'T. They lived up to their responsibilities like a decent corporate citizen. Saying they did this under duress is saying like saying man who doesn't beat his wife only refrains from doing so because there is a law prohibiting it.

    Too bad MS can't act like Yahoo, but as we all know it's against their character to act in the public good.

  6. Re:Surprising anyone would think this is okay. by EdIII · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes they DID do the right thing.

    With all due respect, you are complaining about the past. I agree with you about DRM and pretty much everything in your post, but you are still missing a very important FACT.

    When Yahoo did have to shut down it's DRM servers, which is as you say the "inevitable", they have made arrangements that ALL of their customers get OPTIONS.

    Those options are 1) Get a refund. 2) Get a DRM-FREE MP3 from another provider.

    Now you are obviously upset that DRM existed in the first place. You question it's motivations and affect on the consumer's best interests. That's all fine and dandy. Let's just give credit where credit is due okay? Yahoo stepped up and made it right for their customers.

    Now if you want to argue something, then please try explaining to me how giving coupons for DRM-FREE MP3's is NOT doing the right thing. That would be a productive argument.