iTunes going DRM-free
DJ_Enki
6,473 Posts
Announced at Macworld today.
Discuss, batches.iTunes Plus is Apple's DRM-free encoding for the iTunes Store; music is encoded using the AAC format at 256Kbps. Beginning today, 8 million of the iTunes Store's 10 million songs will be offered without DRM; the entire catalog is expected to go DRM-free by the end of the first calendar quarter of 2009.
Comments
I've always held onto the bottled water theory. The goal of the music vendors should be to make the process as convenient and inexpensive as possible. They are never going to win the battle against digital bootlegging.
It looks like everything is switching over. They're redoing the pricing structure, too:
Bet that everybody's gonna price their shit at 69 cents.
This makes me laugh
Amazon has been doing this for longer and for cheaper.
My business will be staying with Amazon and indie mp3 sellers like Other Music, Labcabin or straight from the label or band.
I thought Amazon used some kind of DRM too, as the two albums I bought from them won't play on my ipod.
"Atmospheric" is what I call 'em.
I believe this is due to the hardware configuration on the iPod more than anything else. I read that iPods are ready to ship from the factory able to play .mp3/.wma file formats but then Apple tinkers with 'em so they are only able to play .aac (Apple's proprietary format) instead.
Not sure how accurate this really is but some women in CA filed a suit against Apple a year or two ago alleging this, that and the 1/3.
Not sure in what file format Amazon "ships" its .mp3s and I don't feel like checking right now.
J
I am happy to use them and never had problems uploading to the ipod...
edit - the tracks have also almost always been 256kbps on Amazon too
I've Dj'd with em and they sound fine
That's my main gripe. Seems like all of the music I have ever bought from iTunes is 128 kps. I don't pretend to notice a huge difference in sound quality on my computer set-up or still-factory iPod earbuds. But, if I am making a music purchase, I want it to be relatively permanent and don't feel confident going forward into the future with 128 kps -- maybe as a discount "play" copy. But for filing purposes? Never that.