Just to clear up any confusion, yesterday’s entry was a bit of an April Fools’ meta-joke, made at the expense of those not in the know. The real joke is that what I wrote… wasn’t. In other words, yes, I actually am permanently banned from accessing the internet via the school network. Not very funny when I put it that way, but oh well.
Apple and EMI have teamed up to release EMI Music’s entire catalog on the iTunes Store… without DRM. Not only that, but these tracks will be encoded at a bitrate of 256kbps, double that of the DRM-encumbered tracks currently available, and pretty damn close to CD quality.
Which means that for the first time ever, (some) songs purchased from the iTunes Store will not be limited in how many CDs they can be burned to, or how many iPods or computers they can be played on, or indeed, limited to CDs or iPods or computers at all. You can do with these digital downloads everything you’ve always been able to do with a regular CD purchased from a brick-and-mortar music store, and the sound quality isn’t too far off either.
To be clear, Apple isn’t the first online retailer to offer music sans DRM. Services like eMusic have long sold high-quality, DRM-free music, but the selection was limited to relatively obscure, independent artists. The fact that EMI, one of the Big Four record labels, is jumping on the DRM-free bandwagon—and reports indicate that it was EMI who approached Apple, and not vice versa—marks a giant leap of faith in an otherwise extremely conservative industry that has been stubbornly insisting on an inverse relationship between DRM and piracy for years.
That said, these higher-quality, DRM-free tracks will not be replacing the old DRM-laden ones (yet), but rather offered alongside them for 30 cents more, at $1.29. Full albums, however, will remain at $9.99 a pop. Not a bad deal.
As much as I try to avoid supporting the RIAA because of all the things they do wrong, it would defeat the purpose to not support them when they do something right. So I fully intend to purchase a few albums’ worth of DRM-free music from the iTunes Store when they become available in May, and I encourage anyone planning on buying music under an EMI label to take that route as well, if possible.
Because every DRM-free song purchased sends a message to EMI and the rest of the major labels: You don’t need DRM to make money. DRM has never stopped piracy and it never will, but it does make life harder for your paying customers as well as deter many potential ones. So stop combating piracy, and start competing with it.
Want to sell me some music? Want to sell me anything, for that matter? Make it high-quality, make it affordable, and make it convenient, but by all means, do not saddle it with some ridiculous rights management scheme that dictates what I can or cannot do with my purchases, and assumes I’m a criminal out to destroy your revenue stream. The rest will take care of itself.
5 Comments
How is it a joke if what you wrote was true? I don’t get it.
It’s not so much a joke as it is messing with people’s expectations… which is really what April Fools’ is all about, right? ;)
Well, I for one knew instantly that it was no joke… but I’d known of what was happening since after the day it happened. Still, in the back of my mind I was hoping against hope that it was a very elaborate hoax/prank by Alex. Sadly, not the case.
p.s.: meaning, since Alex’s post did make me pause, if only for a microsecond, it succeeded in fooling me—even though I was “in the know,”—with its meta-ness. Pssh. ::chuckle::
Interestingly, I was not in the know and also not fooled by your meta-joke — I took it seriously and never had a second thought that you were joking. But then I also have a history of being fooled by people’s April Fools jokes every year, mostly because I am a person who largely neglect dates to begin with (I never remember anyone’s birthdays — or rather, I remember them but I don’t realize it when the dates come around). I also fell for Kass’ weblog April Fools joke last year. In fact when I read your entry from 4/1 I didn’t even realize it was 4/1 and automatically took it for real.
And in addition to all that, I am a person who is easily convinced, believes in anything I see/hear easily, and just gullible in general. :P