beaTunes News

Friday, July 10, 2015

The unfortunate Return of DRM

Back in April 2007, we thought it was the beginning of the end. The end of DRM-crippled songs sold through iTunes. Apple announced that songs released by EMI would soon be sold DRM-free in the iTunes store. In May of the same year, iTunes Plus was launched and by January 2009, Apple was finally able to announce that "all four major music labels—Universal Music Group, Sony BMG, Warner Music Group and EMI, along with thousands of independent labels, are now offering their music in iTunes Plus, Apple’s DRM-free format". Undoubtedly, a great achievement.

Fast forward to June 2015. Apple announces Apple Music, as "a revolutionary streaming service and app that puts the entire Apple Music catalog at your fingertips across your favorite devices". As we all know by now, the public reception after the launch has been not quite revolutionary, but rather luke warm. Users reported installation glitches, UX issues and plain old bugs.

One thing that took many users by surprise, was the fact that iTunes Match and Apple Music share some properties, like being able to import your private collection, but are still two different services. Kirk McElhearn, wrote a good explanation of how exactly they differ. And here's the most important part:

Songs downloaded via iTunes Match are DRM-free.
Songs downloaded via Apple Music are not.

Yes, I'm afraid, you've read that correctly:

DRM is back!

How could this happen? And why isn't this all over the news? When you think about the business model, this immediately makes sense. Without DRM, people could simply download the whole Apple catalogue and freely share their files. Given the three months trial period, they could even do this for free. So in a sense, this is very understandable—but unfortunately not obvious.

So what, you might say—I don't see the disadvantage of DRM-crippled music! Until of course, you want to listen to it on a non-Apple device for the first time (the Android version isn't out yet). Or want to use a tool like BeatGauge to determine the BPM. Or decide you want to DJ with Traktor and realize: Traktor can't play protected content. Suddenly DRM becomes a big nuisance and it feels like 2007 all over again.

Naturally, other streaming services aren't necessarily much better. To integrate Spotify into an app, you have to first get approval and then use their special SDK, that does the decoding for you. But at least they offer such an SDK. Plus a REST-API for metadata access. Apple does not even offer an API for iTunes Match, which was introduced almost four years ago.

No doubt, streaming is here to stay. And Apple is most certainly on the right track, trying to meddle in this market. But so far, it has acted amateurishly, delivering a half-baked service. And many users haven't realized, that by choosing streaming, they also chose DRM. Let's hope, Apple finds a way to allow at least third party apps to access the raw audio of Apple Music—just like Spotify did.

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Monday, March 24, 2014

How to kill DRM on old iTunes files

beaTunes3 logoWired has a really useful article on how to get rid of DRM on old iTunes songs—if you are using iTunes Match.

So if you still have DRM protected songs, check it out, it's worth your time: "Kill the DRM in Your Old iTunes Music Purchases"

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Wednesday, January 7, 2009

iTunes DRM free soon

iTunes logoIn case you haven't heard it yet: Apple will start selling only DRM-free songs in their iTunes Store by the end of March. This is great news for beaTunes users, as DRM protected songs are notoriously hard to analyze.

Finally! Thanks, Apple.

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Sunday, January 27, 2008

Amazon MP3 starts going global this year

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According to an official press release, Amazon MP3 will begin to offer its service globally this year. The company claims to be responding to thousands of emails from international customers, asking when the DRM-free MP3 store will open in their country.

While the press release states, that Amazon will start the international rollout this year, it does not give dates for individual countries, nor does it list the countries in which a store will actually open.

So even though the press release is somewhat preemptive - in the sense that it really only promises that at least one non-US store will open this year - this is very promising news for Amazon's international customers.

Since beaTunes can only analyze DRM-free music, this is also great news for beaTunes users.

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Friday, November 16, 2007

OS X 10.4.11 solves iTunes Plus-CoreAudio problems

beaTunes LogoIt looks like the recent OS X 10.4.11 update solved a couple of issues with opening iTunes Plus files with CoreAudio. Previously, CoreAudio APIs were often not able to even open an iTunes Plus file even though no DRM was employed. For beaTunes users this was pretty annoying, since they had to fall back to a not as fast QuickTime implementation of the same code, that had to be manually enabled.

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Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Apple to lower iTunes Plus prices

iTunes logoArs Technica is reporting that Apple will drop the price for DRM-free music to 99c per track. Apple had introduced DRM-free tracks under the label iTunes Plus earlier this year. The price drop seems to be a reaction to the newly opened Amazon MP3 store, which sells DRM-free music at a more competitive price.

beaTunes users benefit directly from DRM-free tracks, since they allow automatic analysis of their raw audio data.

Update: Apple officially announced today that it lowers prices to 99c.

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Tuesday, September 25, 2007

DRM-Free MP3s from Amazon

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Great news for iTunes users! Today Amazon went public with a beta version of their new MP3 shop dubbed Amazon MP3. The new service has over 2 million songs from more than 180,000 artists represented by over 20,000 major and independent labels. All files are 256kbps encoded DRM-free MP3s - which basically means they play in iTunes, on iPods, Zunes and pretty much any other player out there. According to the Amazon press release, most songs are priced between $0.89 and $0.99. Most albums are priced from $5.99 to $9.99.

For beaTunes users this means that they can now buy tracks at a decent price electronically without running into the DRM trap. This comes only a few months after Apple introduced a limited offering of DRM-free tracks to their music store for the premium price of $1.29 per track.

For both technical and legal reasons beaTunes cannot analyze the raw audio of DRM protected files.

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Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Non-DRM songs now on iTunes

iTunes logoWith the new iTunes 7.2 out today, Apple starts to sell non-DRM music provided by EMI. As mentioned earlier, the songs are sold for $1.29 a piece. Apple dubbed the new offering iTunes Plus.

By the way, as Erica Sadun has been quick to point out, just like the DRM-cousins, non-DRM files purchased from iTunes have the buyer's account name embedded...

In another press release Apple also announced iTunes U, offering lectures from leading US universities for free.

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Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Apple will sell non-DRM music soon

iTunes logoApple will start selling non-DRM music provided by EMI in May. That's the bottomline of a press release published yesterday by Apple Inc. The songs will be higher quality (256 kbps AAC, as opposed to 128 kbps AAC) and $0.30 more expensive.

This is great news for beaTunes users, since until now Apple's DRM system Fairplay prevented them from analyzing their own music.

Artists like The Rolling Stones, Beastie Boys, Janet Jackson, Mando Diao, etc. are all signed by EMI.

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