MacMuser
Another Ripping Rip-off
Digital music is set to take another kick in the teeth. Have you got any tracks you downloaded from the MSN Music service? If so, think again, because on August 31 Microsoft is going to turn off the license servers. This means those tracks that you bought with your hard-earned cash will eventually become nothing more than digital detritus on your hard disk.
Microsoft’s attempt to topple iTunes from its number one position started in 2004 and lasted two years before it realised it was yet another failure and stopped the service. Instead, the Zune Marketplace took over, presumably destined to go the same way at some point unless Microsoft can persuade iPod users that the Zune is a better device. That will be on the same day as the porcine air show no doubt.
Closing the MSN Music servers will not mean that tracks become unplayable immediately, because the currently authorised computer will remain unaffected. But the tracks will not be usable on another computer or operating system because Microsoft’s digital rights management (DRM) stops the tracks being duplicated or transferred.
The only solution is to burn the tracks to audio CD, never 100% effective because they have already lost quality when the compressed versions were made, and more quality would be lost if you re-ripped them. Or you could find some nefarious means to crack the DRM.
Microsoft Inspires Piracy
It’s almost as if Microsoft was encouraging piracy. Music, unlike computer programs, doesn’t suddenly become obsolete, and “owners” of the tracks reasonably expect to be able to listen to their music for years to come. When they get a new computer they will also expect to transfer their digital music from one to the other. As many have pointed out, this is the weakness in protected music tracks where one relies on being able to transfer the tracks.
Of course, this is all pointed out in the friendly copyright notices that you scrolled to the bottom of, before you clicked on the Agree button. You don’t actually own the digital tracks, just the right to play them until such time as the content provider decides otherwise.
You did read them, didn’t you?
Also in This Series
- What Trick, What Device, What Starting-Hole… · May 2012
- Do Androids Dream? · April 2012
- Our Macs Are Under Attack · March 2012
- The Best and Worst Christmas Presents · February 2012
- The Best Use for a Kindle · January 2012
- It’s Got No Blinking Light · January 2012
- Box-Shifting Causes Migration · December 2011
- The Best Thing About the iPhone 4S and How to Cope in Clink · December 2011
- Death of a Salesman · November 2011
- Complete Archive
Reader Comments (1)
Speaking of which, btw, anyone interested in purchasing a glorified $50 FM radio receiver? (i.e., SanDisk sansa™ c200 MP3 player). :(
Add A Comment