Julian Sanchez | March 21, 2006
Erstwhile roomie and all-purpose tech braniac Tim Lee has a sharp new paper critiquing the Digital Millennium Copyright Act as an attempt by the entertainment industry to outsource the costs of their business model to the legal system.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
We will spend millions of dollars pursueing Bill Gates to the death for bundling explorer with Windows 95 but I can't buy music from any other site but I-tunes that will work with my I-tunes software or load directly onto my I-pod or get my I-tunes software or music purchased from I-tunes to work with any other MP3 player. Nope nothing uncompetetive or monopolistic to see here. Just move along.
That's funny, I've bought several hundred MB of music from eMusic.com that I, yes, loaded directly into iTunes when downloaded and, yes, put directly onto my iPod. Perhaps the problem is operator error.
Stand corrected Phil, you can download and let Itunes take over
your music if you are willing to let I-tunes dicate how many times
you burn the music onto a CD (limit 10). Try using any other brand
of Mp3 player after you let Itunes take over your computer
harddrive. It won't work.
Perhaps the problem is you are an obnoxious jerk.
"critiquing the Digital Millennium Copyright Act"
..talk about late to the game..he's just now getting around to
critiquing it?
MP3 files don't have any provisions that I'm aware of for DRM so
you should have no problem with them. Or are you saying that iTunes
transcodes them to AAC or that it encrypts your entire MP3
collection?
I never have used nor ever will use iTunes. I'll buy the CD's and
rip them to FLAC or buy the music from, say emusic.com where there
is no DRM. Many bands that control their own music even offer their
stuff in lossless FLAC format (TMBG for example). If the music
publishers wish to make life difficult and control my files with
electronic nannies or push technology to where I no longer can
control what I do with MY files then I will not buy any more music,
period. Hell, I'll even stop using a computer altogether. Perhaps
some people would like that anyway. ;)
One irony is that right next to the link to the PDF article is one for Adobe Acrobat reader. Their business model is to give the reader away so they can make money selling the writer. The DMCA stops the development of models like that for content. Plus, as someone pointed out years ago while the bill was under consideration, it outlaws the sale of the general purpose computer! It doesn't exactly mandate a certain file structure, but it does so in effect for anyone who wants compatibility with customary file structures.
Wow, John, you sure react harshly to being corrected about a
misstatement of fact. I think that's actually the definition of
"obnoxious."
PS If you convert your iTunes-purchased music to mp3, you can in
fact use it on another player.
Phil: Really? That's news to me! If you download music from
iTunes, it comes wrapped in a DRM format, and iTunes doesn't
provide any option to convert directly to MP3 format. You can burn
it to CD and then re-rip the CD to MP3 format, but that's a pain in
the ass for a large music library, and it's liable to cause some
loss of quality.
On the other hand, if you buy from a non-DRMed store like eMusic,
then you won't have any such problems. However, you can't get
access to a lot of popular music on those sites.
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245