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Let this be a lesson to you, purveyors of online music. If you do DRM-lock digital music, be prepared to continue to support it well into the future, lest users rebel. Microsoft announced earlier this year that its MSN Music service, defunct now for some time and never terribly popular, would cease to function as of August 31, 2008. This would mean that people who bought tracks from MSN Music would no longer be able to authorize files to play on new PCs and devices. The only workaround: burn to CD and re-rip.

Even on a relatively unsuccessful service, though, that caused a major outcry. Result: Microsoft has backpedaled, extending the deadline to "at least the end of 2011" and possibly even beyond. (By then, you may have to appeal to our new robotic overlords anyway, after the Great Cyber Rebellion of August 4, 2011. Oops, sorry, the people of your time aren’t supposed to know about that yet.)

The lesson here seems clear to me: the cost of DRM is ultimately exacted on the vendor. It’s especially ironic as video sellers move toward more DRM rather than less, but DRM in music seems utterly dead. And whereas the DRM controversy began as a discussion of piracy issues, it’s now centered on sales. The simple fact of the matter is, online music has proven to have real profit potential, even if it’s been slow to catch up with the late 90s CD bubble. True, DRM does live on in subscription services, though I think the comparison there isn’t entirely valid — the point of subscription models is unlimited access to music, not necessarily building permanent collections. And even there, we’ve seen a migration away from DRM, as in the streaming/purchase model on Lala.com, which I examined earlier this month.

Tomorrow night, I’ll be attending the launch party for the Wax Poetics digital download store, and they’re a print magazine for vinyl buffs, for crying out loud. (Oh yeah — guess that bit about print and vinyl being dead was also wrong.)

Conventional wisdom: 0. Music lovers: score.

6 responses to “DRM Lessons: MSN Music Restores Authorizations Through 2011”

  1. irez says:

    That's freaking hilarious.

  2. Michael Coxen says:

    See you at the partay! Flyer here for all, don't forget to RSVP… http://waxpoetics.com/myspace/WebFlyer.jpg

  3. TechLo says:

    Suck it, suits!

  4. MK says:

    Maybe this will convince people (companies and individuals) to invest time and money in open standards when it comes to digital music formats and distribution. I personally feel that I need some sort of guarantees that tracks bought now will be playable forever before I'll properly invest in them.

    Remember – I'm not collecting these CDs for me, they're for my great-grandkids to listen to 🙂

  5. […] no toy for you. If MSN Music had given away action figures or something, I expect things would have gone differently. Next, I want to see a functioning synth bundled with an […]

  6. […] parece que a Microsoft ganhou juízo e voltou atrás com a sua decisão. Segundo Peter Kirn do Create Digital Music, a empresa enviou outro email para os antigos clientes da MSN Music onde infoma que irá continuar […]

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