Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Warner Music goes DRM-free in Europe


Universal and Sony BMG soon to follow suit


Online music store 7digital today claimed to be the first major European download store to offer tracks from Warner in a DRM-free MP3 format, compatible with virtually any digital music device.

The online music store will make selected albums from Warner Music's repertoire available for a limited promotional period at the price of £5/€6.99. It also plans to offer 'value-added album bundles that contain additional content' in order to offer online consumers better value for money and a viable reason to NOT try to obtain their music freely via P2P file sharing.

7digital has been selling EMI's back catalogue in MP3 since April of last year and the company's marketing director, Peter Davis informed TechRadar earlier today that he expects the other two of 'the big four' major music labels, Sony BMG and Universal to follow suit by this summer.

"The only other store that carries DRM-free Warner tunes is Amazon in the US," said Davis, referring to the fact that Amazon's US store already sells DRM-free music from all the above-mentioned major music labels and it is expected that its UK and European stores will also follow suit sometime later this year.

Play.com announced its PlayDigital service last month in the UK, but EMI is the only big label involved, alongside independents.

Universal and Sony to follow

"We are also talking to Universal and Sony BMG about distributing their catalogues in a DRM-free format - we're talking to them quite a lot about switching over and there are lots of tests going on throughout the world with MP3," 7digital's Davis told us.

"We believe they will come on board around summertime this year," he added. "They are following the trend that the market is taking in the last 18 months... firstly EMI, then Warner, then the Amazon MP3 store in the US."

"Of course, they are cautious about the rampant P2P sharing that's going on," Davis informed us, but at the same time they are also coming to realise that, "stripping the DRM off the content allows users to experience music and also allows far greater interoperability - so you can use the MP3s on iPods , mobiles, PCs, Macs... it's an open format."

Universal Music Group International's VP of Communications, Adam White, remained fairly tight-lipped on the matter, when TechRadar spoke to him today, merely telling us: "We're still evaluating the tests we're doing in the US and internationally."

What of Apple?

"Digital consumers are very savvy and many take the stance that the AAC format is a better quality than the MP3 format," Davis claims.

"However, where Apple's standard encoding rate is 192 kbps, with 256 kpbs on iTunes Plus (currently limited to just EMI), we ensure that our MP3s are better than Apple's AACs and encoded at a higher bitrate," he added.

DRM-free movies

With all the major music labels finally shifting towards DRM-free online distribution, will the movie industry follow suit? The Electronic Frontier Foundation's Senior Intellectual Property Attorney, Fred von Lohmann is not so sure, telling us earlier today:

"I would be very surprised if a major movie studio were to give up DRM on any video format. They have managed to use DRM to control the next-generation video playback platforms, and I see no indication they are interested in giving that up."


Source: http://www.tech.co.uk/gadgets/portable-audio/news/warner-music-goes-drm-free-in-europe?articleid=144261548

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Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Warner Music goes DRM-free in Europe


Universal and Sony BMG soon to follow suit


Online music store 7digital today claimed to be the first major European download store to offer tracks from Warner in a DRM-free MP3 format, compatible with virtually any digital music device.

The online music store will make selected albums from Warner Music's repertoire available for a limited promotional period at the price of £5/€6.99. It also plans to offer 'value-added album bundles that contain additional content' in order to offer online consumers better value for money and a viable reason to NOT try to obtain their music freely via P2P file sharing.

7digital has been selling EMI's back catalogue in MP3 since April of last year and the company's marketing director, Peter Davis informed TechRadar earlier today that he expects the other two of 'the big four' major music labels, Sony BMG and Universal to follow suit by this summer.

"The only other store that carries DRM-free Warner tunes is Amazon in the US," said Davis, referring to the fact that Amazon's US store already sells DRM-free music from all the above-mentioned major music labels and it is expected that its UK and European stores will also follow suit sometime later this year.

Play.com announced its PlayDigital service last month in the UK, but EMI is the only big label involved, alongside independents.

Universal and Sony to follow

"We are also talking to Universal and Sony BMG about distributing their catalogues in a DRM-free format - we're talking to them quite a lot about switching over and there are lots of tests going on throughout the world with MP3," 7digital's Davis told us.

"We believe they will come on board around summertime this year," he added. "They are following the trend that the market is taking in the last 18 months... firstly EMI, then Warner, then the Amazon MP3 store in the US."

"Of course, they are cautious about the rampant P2P sharing that's going on," Davis informed us, but at the same time they are also coming to realise that, "stripping the DRM off the content allows users to experience music and also allows far greater interoperability - so you can use the MP3s on iPods , mobiles, PCs, Macs... it's an open format."

Universal Music Group International's VP of Communications, Adam White, remained fairly tight-lipped on the matter, when TechRadar spoke to him today, merely telling us: "We're still evaluating the tests we're doing in the US and internationally."

What of Apple?

"Digital consumers are very savvy and many take the stance that the AAC format is a better quality than the MP3 format," Davis claims.

"However, where Apple's standard encoding rate is 192 kbps, with 256 kpbs on iTunes Plus (currently limited to just EMI), we ensure that our MP3s are better than Apple's AACs and encoded at a higher bitrate," he added.

DRM-free movies

With all the major music labels finally shifting towards DRM-free online distribution, will the movie industry follow suit? The Electronic Frontier Foundation's Senior Intellectual Property Attorney, Fred von Lohmann is not so sure, telling us earlier today:

"I would be very surprised if a major movie studio were to give up DRM on any video format. They have managed to use DRM to control the next-generation video playback platforms, and I see no indication they are interested in giving that up."


Source: http://www.tech.co.uk/gadgets/portable-audio/news/warner-music-goes-drm-free-in-europe?articleid=144261548

No comments: