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MySpace Digital Music Service Is DRM-Free

Anti-Globalism sends word that MySpace flipped the switch on its online, ad-supported, DRM-free music service that will "... give its roughly 120 million users free access to hundreds of thousands of songs from the world's largest recording labels. Unlike much of the material at Apple's iTunes store, the music sold through MySpace's new service won't contain the protections that limit how many times a track can be copied. MySpace is hoping to set itself apart from iTunes even further by allowing its users to create an unlimited number of playlists containing up to 100 songs apiece, a sharing concept similar to music services already offered by Imeem and Last.fm."

2 of 93 comments (clear)

  1. neat by jacquesm · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Now for an easy way to get to a catalogue using XML so we can do machine-to-machine catalogue matching to download whatever we're still missing.

  2. Re:What a confusing article by moofrank · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Agreed. I still cannot tell if it is ad-supported, or paid subscription, or pay per song.

    But more importantly, why can this streaming business model work, and yet Pandora is bleeding from legal fees?