Universal Music will Sell Songs without Copy Protection

From the New York Times
Signaling another departure from the music industry’s longtime antipiracy strategy, the Universal Music Group will sell a significant portion of its catalog without the customary copy protection software for at least the next few months, the company announced.

Universal, the world’s biggest music conglomerate, said it would offer albums and songs without the software, known as digital rights management, through existing digital music retail services like RealNetworks and Wal-Mart, nascent services from Amazon.com and Google, and some artists’ Web sites.

But the music will not be offered D.R.M.-free through Apple’s iTunes, the leading music service. The use of copy protection software has become a major bone of contention in the digital music business, where iTunes accounts for the vast majority of download sales.

(Shawn's Comment: Does that make *any* sense at all? This is simply a matter of Universal trying to poke Steve Jobs in the eye)

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I think the reason they are

I think the reason they are doing it is so sales of the DRM-free material will tank, only because they aren't easily available on iTunes to the millions of iPod users, and then they can say.... "see, no one wants DRM free music. It's DRM forever!"

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