Skip to navigation
   
Mark Tennent's Blog
Another Ripping Rip off

By Mark Tennent in Reader

Posted in Gripes moans and whinges, Microsoft on April 25, 2008 at 11:52 am

Permalink | Author Profile

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 the 31 August Microsoft are going to turn off the license servers. This means that which you bought with your hard-earned 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 they 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 tracks become un-playable 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 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. Or 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 clicking 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?

12345
Rated: 100% (2 votes)
Loading ... Loading ...

Previous Post | Next Post

 
 
Comments

Comment by Jacques Daviault - April 27, 2008 on 3:17 pm

I did read them… and of course I’d never be so stupid as to subscribe to any anything remotely associated with MSN… other than Hotmail, and certainly never a Microsoft music store of any kind.

Not that I’ve ever bought anything at the iTunes store either, but their free podcasts are great!

Microsoft will beat Apple at the digital music game when Microsoft stops thinking like Microsoft. I’m not holding my breath.

Make a comment

* required

* required

We stop spam using reCaptcha.
Type the words below and click Submit Comment.

   
Tag cloud

ClamXav Service Scrubber OpenCL Macromedia Dr Who Leopard Extensis Mac OS X 10.6 Apple iMac French Resistance iPod Time Capsule Safari 4 Claris HomePage compression broadband speed Service menu spy satellite images gopher Tobias Meyerhoff Lawrence Dudley Windows XP Honfleur Audio Books for Free Jonathan Ives Hamlet CAPTCHA Mike Markkola 1802 Back to My Mac Lewis Hamilton Bacchus CoPilot entertainment industry Safari-tweaks EyeTV proxy server manager BBC iPlayer atvFlash Entanet Mighty Mouse Cheltenham and Gloucester vBulletin Apple TV SimplyRAR The 88 Anarchy phpBB Garmin MacBook Air Apple Newton Phototshop British Telecom Time zones Moondrop to Gascony Andrew Potts Gennaro Contaldo Quark Suitcase Fusion Mike Spindler EST Rick Stein MacWorld magazine Firewire SuperDuper iChat Apple France Telecom Kate Beckinsale Civinfo Government Coding Monkeys wifi softwear IBM Linotype FontExplorer Kira Knightley Hotpoint paperless bills 20CN Public Enemies pontum Mac OS X Services Call of Duty Transmit BST iPad Maggie Thatcher unilities Fatboy iPod Vidahost Adobe Flash 'Flash Cookies' Macromedia ADSL2+ 32- or 64- bit Kernel Startup Mode Selector WordService web browsers Linotype FontExplorer Pro Moho Books Jim Kidwell Napster Xendai Gestapo Aquiss PDF 'Library of Congress' 'digital images' 'Image Engineering' 'Matthew Brady' photography 'Samuel Morse' Parexcel FourTrack FontDoctor CalcService Apple Portable Zune Mac OS X TomTom App Store HSBC 18185.co.uk Simon Pinkerton Joan of Arc BT Connect Spamhaus Steve Linford Spam CAN-SPAM portforward Michael Mann 1Password Fetch encryption Apple iPhone CyTV Lucidcake 'Andreas Junghans' Western Digital MyBook Pro Mosaic Ron Wayne veronica anarchie Many Tricks software SETI Smart Guides Apple Macintosh Genuine Fractals CRB checks BT ADSL QuarkXPress Lotus SpeedMail Rogue Amoeba Elgato MacBook Linksys Phil Schiller Muscadet Windows 7 Honda Civic HP AppleTV Telefonica Carbonized SoundSource FontAgent Pro Port Map MacPro insurance cellphone MacWorld Expo TNT 21CN Insider Software Logmein Ignition pxl SmartScale Apple Mac Mini Q2ID Gil Amelio iPlayer Downloader Netgear Suitcase Fusion 2 Mac Pro iTunes BT Central Pipes LaserWriter Cisco Apple Cube Helen Mirren Media Player Logmein font manager Steve Jobs EDS TV and Video uplink iPlayer PC Tools iAntiVirus EyeTV3 Elgato CYTV Andreas Junghans Bonjour GMT Hat Full of Sky Jamie Oliver Adobe Broadband Max CoPilot Live Cocoa Motorola Dell Adobe PageMill broadband onOne Software CS Suite iPad Mini Panic Inc iPhone remote control Logmein for the iPhone Ofcom Gauloise Nano Andrew Tomazos Dell Studio Hybrid Markzware Snow Leopard Optiplex Bellhop Coffee break French O2 Orange Acrobat satnav FTP Freehand FileMaker WordPress Growl Lotus Notes MarkWahlberg Seagate Barracudas Siemens
Advertisement
Advertisement