Microsoft To People Who Bought Tunes From MSN Music: “Suckers!”

Microsoft is pulling support for MSN Music’s digital-rights management come August 30, which means that any songs purchased through the now-defunct music store–which went dark in November 2006, just as the parent company was going Zune-crazy–will be locked into the computers and operating systems that they’re working on at that time, with no further authorizations possible. Microsoft is recommending that affected users burn their unshareable tracks to CD and then re-rip them to whatever new computers they’d like to hear them on, but given that the recommended process results in the fidelity being even worse, what’s more likely to happen is that people will be driven to LimeWire, BitTorrent, and leak blogs in search of replenishing their collection. Ah, digital-rights management–it really is good at making unintended consequences turn into reality, isn’t it? [Listening Post]

 
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  1. Anonymous  |   Posted on Apr 23rd, 2008

    Mmmm… Zunies, I hope Steve Ballmer treats you better than that when the current service goes dark.
    [blog.newsok.com]

  2. DeeW  |   Posted on Apr 23rd, 2008

    @GeorgeLang: Um… do you know that Zune offers more DRM-free tracks for sale than iTunes?

    Anyhow, I’m always trying to illustrate to people that DRM only lets you RENT your music/movies, etc. Yet they still buy shackled stuff from DRMed iTunes, Zune, Rhapsody, etc.

    This “service going dark thing that MSN is doing is the same thing Google Video and other service did with their DRM.

    Amazon MP3 and eMusic all the way, baby!
    (*Not a plug. Promise.)

  3. Anonymous  |   Posted on Apr 27th, 2008

    “Microsoft is recommending that affected users burn their unshareable tracks to CD and then re-rip them to whatever new computers they’d like to hear them on”

    Microsoft itself has just violated the DMCA with this recommendation. Where do I file the complaint?

  4. DMCA is just a way to try and screw the very customers that they want to keep.

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