eric2006
iMovie Professional
Steve Jobs, and his lawyers, have released a paper titled "Thoughts on Music".
Basically, it addresses the DRM issue. We can assume that Apple has released this paper in response to the numerous lawsuits, hacks, and dissent that have arisen recently.
In the first section, he explains what DRM is and why Apple has it. The "big four" music companies: Universal, Sony BMG, Warner and EMI, demanded a mechanism for which their music would be protected from piracy, and would not sell music through Apple if it wasn't. Steve explains that DRM uses "secrets" to stay secure, but smart people can find ways around the "secrets", so they must be updated constantly.
Next, he explores one solution: licensing music with Apple's DRM to other music companies. However, he explains that this will create less privacy for the DRM "secrets", and once the secrets are out, it is harder to create a fix when multiple companies have to be coordinated.
Finally, he states the only "real" solution: DRM free music. Obviously, Apple is held by contract to keep the music un-pirated, but Steve argues that DRM can never be completely secure. He states that music companies already sell music without DRM 90% of the time - on CD. He wraps it up by saying that Apple would love to have DRM-free music, if only the music companies would let them - and tells readers to fight the music companies, not Apple.
What do you think?
Basically, it addresses the DRM issue. We can assume that Apple has released this paper in response to the numerous lawsuits, hacks, and dissent that have arisen recently.
In the first section, he explains what DRM is and why Apple has it. The "big four" music companies: Universal, Sony BMG, Warner and EMI, demanded a mechanism for which their music would be protected from piracy, and would not sell music through Apple if it wasn't. Steve explains that DRM uses "secrets" to stay secure, but smart people can find ways around the "secrets", so they must be updated constantly.
Next, he explores one solution: licensing music with Apple's DRM to other music companies. However, he explains that this will create less privacy for the DRM "secrets", and once the secrets are out, it is harder to create a fix when multiple companies have to be coordinated.
Finally, he states the only "real" solution: DRM free music. Obviously, Apple is held by contract to keep the music un-pirated, but Steve argues that DRM can never be completely secure. He states that music companies already sell music without DRM 90% of the time - on CD. He wraps it up by saying that Apple would love to have DRM-free music, if only the music companies would let them - and tells readers to fight the music companies, not Apple.
What do you think?