Now this is interestink.
Steve Jobs posts an open letter to, well, everyone, on music and DRM. http://www.apple.com/hotnews/thoughtsonmusic/
And the general reaction on slashdot is... positive? What crazy bizarro world is this?!?
I love it.
And the general reaction on slashdot is... positive? What crazy bizarro world is this?!?
I love it.
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As for needing to stick with a player, it depends on the DRM. If you don't mind a transcode, FairPlay lets you burn the bugger to CD... which is then rippable back to MP3 or AAC, without any DRM. Kinda like copying a tape back in the day, with the copy being not quite as clear. :D
I think I was most surprised, as were you, by the fact that it wasn't a 'license FairPlay!' pitch. Given the reasons in the piece though, it makes sense why they've been holding off on that. If the labels really have the right to yank their entire catalog within a specified time period every time FairPlay gets hacked, then hells yes they're going to want to limit who has a copy of the keys. It actually explains nicely why they haven't yet, when everyone has been expecting them to.
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(It's also a big reason why the PC platform has historically been buggier than the Apple platform--and why the Apple platform is going to get buggier in the future--but that's another rant.)
So it doesn't surprise me that it wasn't a pitch to license FairPlay.
It also doesn't surprise me that slashdot is knee-jerking. Why does it surprise you? :)