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January 4, 2008 12:31 PM PST

Report: Sony BMG to do away with DRM

by Greg Sandoval
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To everyone who has ever griped about music locked up in copy-protection software, it appears that the technology is on its way out.

Sony BMG Music Entertainment, one of the top four music labels, is preparing to offer part of its catalogue without Digital Rights Management software, according to a story in BusinessWeek.com, the online publication of BusinessWeek magazine.

According to BusinessWeek, Sony BMG plans to reveal its plans sometime in the first quarter. Citing an unnamed source, the magazine reported that Sony BMG, a joint venture between Sony and Bertelsmann, will participate in a song giveaway as part of a promotion for the Super Bowl on Feb. 3. The DRM-free music will be distributed via Amazon's download service.

Representatives from Sony BMG and Amazon declined to comment.

The move by Sony BMG is significant because it means that all four of the largest record companies are at moving towards digital music unencumbered by copy-protection schemes.

DRM was supposed to safeguard music but has done little to prevent widespread file sharing. But too often only the people who purchased songs legally were affected by DRM.

People who bought music at legitimate online music stores, such as Apple's iTunes, couldn't listen to their music on just any device. There was often confusion about which songs played on which devices.

Last year, Apple CEO Steve Jobs called on the music industry to do away with DRM.

Many of the top music-subscription services, such as Yahoo Music and RealNetworks' Rhapsody service continue to use copy-protection software.

Originally posted at News Blog
Greg Sandoval covers media and digital entertainment for CNET News. He is a former reporter for The Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times. E-mail Greg, or follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/sandoCNET.
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Amazon.com: Best Legal Source of Music
by john55440 January 4, 2008 4:23 PM PST
Amazon.com is clearly the best legal source of music, offering customers the choice of either CDs or DRM-free MP3s.
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About Time
by perfectblue97 January 6, 2008 4:54 AM PST
All that I can say is that it is about time.

DRM is too restrictive for law abiding consumers and too easy to break for pirates. It's time has well and truly come.

Now, maybe companies will get around to addressing the real causes of piracy, namely that people don't value content because so much of it is expensive and derivative.

Let's go back to the good old days when bands wrote their own songs, and where a music video had more shots of the band playing their instruments in it than shots of women in tight shorts waiving their booty at the camera.
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