21 July 2006

DRM is Bad for Business: The Message is Slowly Sinking in

Fred von Lohmann of the EFF notes that Sony-BMG is offering a new Jessica Simpson track for download through Yahoo Music...as an MP3. No DRM at all.

Dig Yahoo's crazy rap:

As you know, we've been publicly trying to convince record labels that they should be selling MP3s for a while now. Our position is simple: DRM doesn't add any value for the artist, label (who are selling DRM-free music every day — the Compact Disc), or consumer, the only people it adds value to are the technology companies who are interested in locking consumers to a particular technology platform.

We've also been saying that DRM has a cost. It's very expensive for companies like Yahoo! to implement. We'd much rather have our engineers building better personalization, recommendations, playlisting applications, community apps, etc, instead of complex provisioning systems which at the end of the day allow you to burn a CD and take the DRM back off, anyway! And on the consumer end there is certainly some discount built into that $0.99 download for the fact that you can burn a limited number of times, can't play it on your Squeezebox, can't DJ it with your DJ software, and can't make a movie out of it with iMovie? I certainly hope so. Un-DRM'd content is implicitly more valuable to a consumer.

Via EFF's DeepLinks and Boing Boing.

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