Well folks there you have it.  DRM was finally killed by Apple and the music giants yesterday.  No more need for copy protection (was there ever a need?) on your downloaded music.  From today almost all the music on the iTunes music store will be free of DRM.

However, as cleverly pointed out by Tech Crunch they’ve not finished with your DRM protected cash just yet – if you want your existing music collection to be DRM free you can have it…for only 30c per track for all the music you already paid for!

Posted by Simon May, follow me on Twitter or if you like email me
Simon's Blog @ thedigitallifestyle.com

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4 thoughts on “Music DRM dies – finally”
  1. Complete ripoff. Considering you could get the same music DRM free from Amazon for awhile now I can’t figure out how the studios are getting away with charging iTunes users with this “tax” to free up the music they already paid for.

  2. When in a lot of cases I can get cd’s of the music I want for less than downloads, and therefore can create perfect lossless rips, this is such a con.

  3. Yeah I don’t see this as such a big deal either.. Like Athursby mentioned you could already get this elsewhere, and I personally prefer subscription based services like the Zune pass that costs me around $15 US a month and I can consume all the music I want.

  4. I don’t use iTunes either, but they do have 75,000,000 user accounts with credit card details so there are lots of people that do.

    I too still buy most of my music on CD because its generally a bit cheaper and if (hopefully when) Zune and Zune pass come to the UK I’ll be on that one. This is probably also a big step in the right direction for the Zune market place too. It’s also significant ‘cos this is gonna affect how movies and TV adopt DRM (or not).

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