The music in the screenshot is Neil Young’s, which is distrubuted by Warner — a label not currently a part of iTunes Plus. And in the American version of iTunes, Neil Young’s music still is laced with DRM. So what gives?
[aditude-amp id="flyingcarpet" targeting='{"env":"staging","page_type":"article","post_id":101575,"post_type":"story","post_chan":"none","tags":null,"ai":false,"category":"none","all_categories":"social,","session":"A"}']Well, either the record labels have some kind of new deal with Apple based on what country they are in, or Apple is testing the waters for an upcoming DRM-free push. Speculation on various sites (including this one) wonders if Apple could unveil a completely DRM-free version of iTunes at Macworld Expo in a few weeks? Apple loves to make a big splash at that event, and that would be big news — especially considering Apple chief executive Steve Jobs long ago promised massive amounts of DRM-free music in iTunes, but has yet to come through on that promise while rivals like Amazon MP3 have.
But a recent report suggests that despite the advantage, the DRM-free Amazon MP3 is still no match for mostly-DRM’d iTunes, as MediaMemo notes. Still, I believe if Apple doesn’t match its rivals’ with DRM-free music at some point, the public could wake up and realize they’re buying an inferior product (and most of the time at a higher price).
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That of course hasn’t been Apple’s fault. The music labels are playing hardball with Apple because it is in such a dominant position for music distributiong — this past year it became the number one retailer in the U.S. for music. Yes, that includes traditional brick and mortar stores. DRM-free music is really the last bit of leverage the labels have over iTunes, and it seems like they are using it. A new report suggests the labels are demanding varying price points for music and things like digital watermarks (different from DRM) if they are to give DRM-free music to iTunes.
There’s a lot of smoke out there about this issue — I bet we find the fire soon.
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