By Chris Maxcer E-Commerce Times
12/28/07 11:33 AM PT
Warner Music Group has become the third major label to let Amazon sell its music without digital rights management technology. The label does not currently have such a deal with market leader iTunes. Generally, major labels have loudly defended their DRM schemes in the past, but now Sony BMG is the only major player not to ink a no-DRM deal.
Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN) has picked up the third major record label to let the online music retailer sell MP3 songs without digital rights management (DRM) schemes attached. Warner Music Group announced Thursday that Amazon customers can now buy and download songs from its artists, which include Matchbox Twenty, Rob Thomas, Jewel, Kid Rock, The Red Hot Chili Peppers, Big & Rich and Faith Hill.
Amazon.com's DRM-free music store, Amazon MP3, launched in September and now boasts 2.9 million songs from more than 33,000 record labels. The company hasn't reported sales figures, but Bill Carr, Amazon.com's vice president of Digital Music, said its customers are delighted with Amazon MP3 and that the company has received thousands of e-mails thanking the company for offering DRM-free MP3 tracks.
Play Anywhere
Perhaps the biggest consumer benefit of DRM-free MP3s lies in the files' versatility. DRM-free MP3s will play on virtually any device -- PCs, Macs, iPods, iPhones, Zunes, Zens and hundreds of lesser-known MP3 players.
"Consumers want flexibility with respect to what they can do with music once they purchase it, and we want them to have that flexibility, which is why we're pleased to offer our artists' music on Amazon MP3," noted Michael Nash, senior vice president of digital strategy and business development for Warner Music Group.
"We believe that giving consumers the assurance that the music they purchase can be played on any device they own will only encourage more sales of music," he added.
Bending the Rules
Just because the songs are flexible, however, doesn't mean that consumers may copy them for their friends. Technically they can, but legally they cannot.
The major challenge facing the music industry in general and the big four record labels in particular (Warner Music Group, EMI Group, Universal Music Group, and Sony BMG Music Entertainment) is the ongoing rapid decline of CD sales. The labels have typically pointed to piracy as a major cause, but the shift to a DRM-free music solution is a leap of faith for many old-school music executives. The hope is that the vast majority of consumers would rather buy songs at a reasonable price than steal them from buddies or online file-sharing networks.
"Ironically, it seems that DRM-free music actually decreases piracy somewhat," Peter Eckersley, a staff technologist for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, told the E-Commerce Times.
"There are two reasons for that. One is that despite burning billions of dollars on DRM, nobody has ever implemented a DRM system that prevents any media from being available to pirates -- once media is available to pirates, it can be copied without limit. The second reason is that DRM sucks for the users ... people often choose to pirate stuff not because of the price, or not just because of the price, but because the DRM ruins the product they would have bought," he explained.
The Last Holdout
Sony BMG Music Entertainment is the last holdout of the big four record labels when it comes to offering DRM-free tracks.
"Sony, being an unholy amalgam of entertainment and consumer electronics businesses, have tied themselves up with a deep organizational culture of DRM," Eckersley explained.
"I wouldn't want to predict what such a confused company will do, but it is clear that DRM has inflicted tremendous harm on their electronics products and their reputation with consumers, and it's likely that it's hurt their entertainment businesses, too," he added.
In the Shadow of iTunes
Apple's (Nasdaq: AAPL) iTunes Store is the third largest music retailer, behind big-box stores Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT) and Best Buy (NYSE: BBY). It boasts a catalog of 6 million songs, but only one major record label -- EMI Group -- is letting Apple sell DRM-free tracks, even though the online powerhouse would like to sell more. Universal Music Group is likely interested in fracturing Apple's dominance, and letting other outlets sell DRM-free MP3s could be a tactic for doing so.
It remains unclear whether Warner will spread its DRM-free privileges to Apple -- the label declined to comment on future DRM-free sales efforts.
Tech Pathfinders to Watch in 2008 December 28, 2007
From a distance, it often seems that Google has all but cornered the market on Internet advertising, but plenty of entrepreneurs believe opportunities remain. Michael Leo, the CEO of New York-based Operative, is one of those businesspeople, and his background gives him an insider's view.
Related Stories
Amazon Hits Sales Jackpot in Lucky 13th Holiday Season December 27, 2007
When it came to raking in the dollars on Dec. 10, Amazon wasn't alone. The day, dubbed "Green Monday," will reign as the heaviest online spending day of the season, said comScore. The company issued a report saying online buyers spent about $881 million on Dec. 10. Last year, the figure was about $660 million, said comScore.
Amazon Offers Small Devs Ladder to Database Cloud December 14, 2007
Amazon Web Services has opened the doors to SimpleDB, a Web-based database service intended for smaller companies and developers with tighter budgets. Users can scale their applications, creating new domains as their data grows or request throughput increases. Virtualizing the infrastructure developers build apps on is an interesting concept," Forrester analyst Jeffrey Hammond explained.
AOL Unloads Video Download Service to Amazon December 03, 2007
AOL has put to rest its AOL Video pay-to-download service. Users will now be sent to Amazon's Unbox service if they wish to download and view movies on TV shows over the Web. Most operators in the pay-to-download space have had a tough time making a mark. Apple's iTunes store, which is used more as an iPod sales driver than as a profit center, is perhaps the only player to gain significant traction.
Related News Alerts
More by Chris Maxcer
The iPad's Cruel Teaser March 09, 2010
The iPad ad that debuted on Sunday was remarkable in how many functions it managed to cram into just 30 seconds. Document creation, email, e-books, media viewing -- all that and more was demoed using just two hands and a hip soundtrack. However, the ad left quite a few important questions about the iPad unanswered.
The iPad Catalyst Will Light a Lot of Fires March 02, 2010
I think we're going to get a lot of fantastic content options for mobile devices in 2010, even if you don't pony up for an iPad. While the iPad will likely be a raging success, it'll also help generate a market for alternatives. The question is, can we credit -- or blame -- the iPad for generating all this mobile action? Maybe not the iPad alone, but it's certainly the latest catalyst.
With Smut Ban, App Store Exposes a Jiggly Set of Rules February 23, 2010
Apple's stance on risque iPhone and iPod touch apps is understandable, but the whole incident does underscore the App Store's frustratingly fickle nature. Apple should either draw up a precise, crystal-clear set of guidelines for app developers or just admit it's completely subjective -- "If we like it, it's in; if we don't, it's rejected." Right now, its policy seems to be somewhere in between.