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February 07, 2007

In Web Manifesto, Apple's Jobs Calls for End to DRM

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There are times when Apple and its CEO Steve Jobs seem to be well ahead of the curve, releasing products and services that easily trump anything the company's competition is doing. And then there are times when Apple is a follower, although the company tries, in such cases, to pretend that it's leading the way. What follows is an example of the latter.

Yesterday, Jobs posted on Apple's Web site an open letter (which was clearly aimed at the world's largest record companies) calling for an end to Digital Rights Management (DRM), the technologies that protect legally purchased digital music and videos from piracy. Jobs's plea comes after years of complaints from analysts, music fans, and an increasing number of industry executives, which have all noted that DRM restrictions have stymied online music sales. Of course, when someone with Jobs's clout makes a stand, it's interesting, even if we've heard these arguments before.

"Imagine a world where every online store sells DRM-free music encoded in open licensable formats," Jobs wrote in the open letter. "In such a world, any [digital media] player can play music purchased from any store, and any store can sell music which is playable on all players. This is clearly the best alternative for consumers, and Apple would embrace it in a heartbeat. If the big four music companies would license Apple their music without the requirement that it be protected with a DRM [sic], we would switch to selling only DRM-free music on our iTunes store. Every iPod ever made will play this DRM-free music."

Jobs did address--but immediately discount--two other alternatives for the future. First, the industry could continue on its current course, where different companies offer "'top to bottom' proprietary systems for selling, playing, and protecting music." (Currently, Apple, Microsoft, and RealNetworks are the only major players doing so.) In such a scenario, incompatibilities between systems prevents interoperability, so, for example, songs purchased from Apple's iTunes Store won't work on a portable player designed to work with Microsoft's DRM.

The second option is for Apple to license its FairPlay DRM technologies to other companies. Because Apple is the dominant player in the MP3 player market, I've been calling on the company to do just that for years, as have countless others. But Jobs downplayed this possibility, alleging that the success of DRM relies on secrecy, and if Apple's technologies were widely disseminated, those secrets could be revealed. (This argument is completely trounced by reality: Microsoft's more sophisticated DRM system has never been completely compromised because it can easily be renewed electronically.)

Jobs also used numbers to his advantage. He noted that iPod customers have purchased only 22 songs per iPod on average. That's about 2 billion songs overall, a huge number that Apple has proudly trumpeted in press releases and keynote addresses. It also represents the majority of music sold online.

For the purposes of this argument, however, Jobs presented those numbers a different way: When you factor in the number of songs an average iPod can hold (1000), only 3 percent of songs per iPod are protected by DRM. The rest, Jobs said, were copied from CDs. And that's where his most interesting argument occurs: Because 97 percent of music contained on iPods today was sold on unprotected audio CDs, the music industry itself is doing nothing to protect most of the music it sells. (Jobs conveniently doesn't mention that digital music sales have completely destroyed the CD single market, therefore, the majority of singles sold worldwide actually are protected by DRM.)

Microsoft responded to Jobs's pronouncement in a fashion that I feel is long overdue. Jason Reindorp, Microsoft's marketing director for Zune, told "The New York Times" that Jobs's public plea for unprotected music sales was "irresponsible, or at the very least naive." "It's like he's on top of the mountain making pronouncements, while we're here on the ground working with the industry to make it happen," Reindorp said. "He's certainly a master of the obvious." RealNetworks' CEO Rob Glaser was equally nonplussed by Jobs's pronouncement, given that he made a similar public plea recently. "I gave a speech on this exact topic advocating this exact position two weeks ago," Glaser said.

Regardless of the timing, Apple will always claim that it led the way to unfettered music downloads, of course. And although the company knows that record companies will never bow to this kind of pressure, Apple can claim it's been looking out for the interests of consumers all along. If Apple were really looking out for consumer interests, I'd just reiterate a request I've been making for a long time now: Jobs, tear down this DRM wall. License FairPlay, seek a license to Microsoft's Windows Media technologies, and make all these products interoperate in the world as it is, even if it's not as perfect as the one you allegedly prefer.

Thoughts on Music

http://www.apple.com/hotnews/thoughtsonmusic/

End of Article



Reader Comments
I got all the music I need from p2p.

Just another content-less speech.

pavigeant February 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Again, I fail to see Jobs' "Call for the abolishment of DRM" that bdk so bonchily pointed out yesterday, and lotsa continues to try to prove. Its just a repeat of everything that many people have been saying for a long time..."DRM is bad...If they allowed us to sell music DRM free, we would." Nothing more...And I like Paul's use of the term Manifesto...it makes me think of the uni-bomber, who much like Jobs' had a god complex. (the g is in lower case on purpose here)

--tayme

tayme February 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


What you are argueing for is that every device on the market can play every form of DRM that someone dreams up for music. It just doesn't make anys sense. The cost of testing and compatibility would be huge. This kind of environment would be the worst possible for consumers, just look at PlaysForSure, the stuff just doesn't work all the time, no one wants that, they just want to buy music and have it work.

The only sensible position to advocate as a consumer is DRM free. Real pirates will always break DRM. And Jobs is totally right about number of devices increasing complexity, look at DVDs, completely compromised, no way to fix it, to many devices and not all updatable in any way.

Even if Option 2, license DRM would happen, there is no way Apple licenses Windows DRM (which one btw, Zune or PlaysForSure?), they don't need to. Apple might be forced to licencse FairPlay, and MS would be forced to license it. Napster and everyone else will take a license and sell AAC-Fairplay tracks either exclusively or side by side with WMA. Apple has by far the dominant position in this market, and no one needs WMA on iPods.

murdocdv February 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Apple wouldn't play WMA w/ DRM on iPod's. they told PortalPlayer to disable that option, even though the firmware is completely capable of it. the Sandisk e200 series PlaysForSure players use a very similar PortalPlayer firmware (albeit with a different UI) and they are allowing DRM'd WMA's.

XP

Waethorn February 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"What you are argueing for is that every device on the market can play every form of DRM that someone dreams up for music."

Exactly. Actually, Paul would like a Microsoft-centric world, but that's beside the point.

"License FairPlay, seek a license to Microsoft's Windows Media technologies, and make all of these products interoperate in the world as it is, even if it's not as perfect as the one you allegedly prefer."

You are a smarmy little bugger, aren't you?

DRM is a mess. And it will always be compromised in one fashion or another. "Plays for Sure" was abandoned by Microsoft for the Zune BECAUSE IT DIDN'T WORK. PERIOD. That's why they went the proprietary route.

The Jobs manifesto is absolutely correct. Whether it's DRM from Apple, Microsoft, Sony, or whomever--it's anti-consumer and it's time to put an end to this experiment.

lotsamystuff February 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"the [sic] Sandisk e200 series PlaysForSure players use a very similar PortalPlayer firmware (albeit with a different UI) and they are allowing DRM'd WMA's."

Yeah, that's worked out real well for them and the dozen or so people that bought the device.

lotsamystuff February 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


The fact that Paul posts stuff like this here and on his Nexus blog *way* after bdk first brought it up and we have argued about it makes me question his integrity.

You just know that in a few months something is going to happen regarding this whole DRM tomfoolery and Paul is going to say something like: "I BROKE THE ORIGINAL NEWS OF THIS EXCLUSIVELY ON WININFO/ITPRO BACK IN FEBRUARY!!!!"

C'mon Paul: For once give credit where credit is due. At least add something along the lines of "... as was discovered by a WinIT Pro regular."

sticknick February 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"RealNetworks CEO Rob Glaser is equally nonplussed by Jobs' pronouncement, given that he made a similar public plea recently. "I gave a speech on this exact topic advocating this exact position two weeks ago," he says."

So why doesn't he welcome Jobs' voice to the choir? Oh, that's right...because Glaser is a whiny little baby who can't stand to see anyone else in the spotlight. Here's a clue for you, Mr. Glaser: If your products weren't such pieces of crap, maybe someone would pay attention to you.

lotsamystuff February 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


"I got all the music I need from p2p."

Congratulations, thief. Your momma must be so proud. Do you steal food from the grocery store, too?

lotsamystuff February 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


losta, you're such a putz!

""Plays for Sure" was abandoned"

in absolutely no way was it abandoned. that's like saying Apple abandoned the Mac by opening the iPod up to Windows users. Microsoft has, and will continue to invest money in their widely used DRM scheme for Windows Media technologies. to think otherwise is being as naive as Jobs.

re: Sandisk Sansa: "Yeah, that's worked out real well for them"

2nd place in the flash-memory market is hardly a bad launch. even now, Sandisk has 2 out of the top 10 slots of top-selling flash-based MP3 players from the e series, and 2 from the m series, ALSO in the top 10. so, just like you say, "Yeah, that's worked out real well for them" - it did!

just another hypocritical Mac user with nothing to do....

get a job, Mac user!

XP

Waethorn February 07, 2007 (Article Rating: )


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