EMI leaning towards unprotected MP3 downloads?

EMI leaning towards unprotected MP3 downloads?
It was reported late last week that EMI, one of the world's "big four" major record companies, is considering releasing a very large portion of its music for download in the MP3 format. Additionally, there would be no "technical restrictions", better known as Digital Rights Management (DRM) on the downloads. The vast majority of all music downloads sold through services like iTunes, contain DRM.

A source familiar with the situation said that EMI is preparing to offer a large amount of its music catalog in the MP3 format through various online retailers, while another source says the company is looking for large advance payments from retailers to offer unprotected downloads. Shawn Fanning's SnoCap is reportedly in talks with EMI over the matter.



An EMI spokesperson did not admit to any deals or confirm that any talks were in progress, but did say that EMI has been experimenting with the MP3 format already. "The results have been positive," the EMI spokeswoman said, adding, "lack of operability between a proliferating range of devices and hardware and the digital platforms for delivering music is more and more becoming an issue for music consumers and EMI has been engaging with our various partners to find a solution."

Source:
Reuters


Written by: James Delahunty @ 12 Feb 2007 8:52
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  • 9 comments
  • DVDdoug

    That's great News!!!

    Hopefully they will try it, it will be successful, and the other companies will follow.

    I would even pay more! If it's $1 for a DRM song and $2 for a non-DRM version, I'd get the non-DRM version. That's one of the reasions I spend way more on CDs as I do on downloads... I've got a couple-hundred CDs and about 10 downloaded songs.

    12.2.2007 09:47 #1

  • solarf

    I dont know, sounds too good to be true.But if it was DRM free, I would buy some MP3s

    12.2.2007 10:48 #2

  • georgeluv

    why dont they just start their own website where you can download all the songs for free directly from EMI wile they make money from other companies advertising on their site and selling marketing data as well as placed advertisment in new songs?

    you know this is the way of the future, i think EMI would gain a lot of respect if they did that before everyone else, instead of dragging everything out in court for decades like the rest of the RIAA.

    12.2.2007 13:24 #3

  • sorrow93

    that would please alot of consumers.
    I just wish EMI would drop the copy-protection on their australian released cds it's pretty easy to beat but it's also a pest
    perhaps follow Sony I believe they stopped it years ago.

    12.2.2007 16:45 #4

  • borhan9

    I think that after a certain number of years songs online should become free to use. Like a limit to how long the copyright on the song lasts.

    12.2.2007 18:27 #5

  • ZippyDSM

    DO they finally got it that copy protection is pointless and just wastes them profit...

    13.2.2007 03:14 #6

  • moviegram

    Oh what a dream! Would we finally be free of license's and license back ups and all the joyless parts of buying music? Would music finally be more fun than trouble again? I would buy the mp3 any day over a protected file; burn it to disc and then put it back on the computer as the mp3 I wanted in the first place. Over 500 cds here but sometimes... you just want the one song.

    "Hang on, help is on its way"... What music label has the Little River Band, lol?

    18.2.2007 18:51 #7

  • blitzman

    Why MP3?
    What a cack format.
    I want FLAC!!!

    19.2.2007 06:04 #8

  • moviegram

    That sort of made me curious...
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FLAC
    It looks good.

    19.2.2007 09:46 #9

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