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The Courts DRM Apple

Apple Wins iTunes DRM Case 191

An anonymous reader sends word that Apple's iTunes DRM case has already been decided. The 8-person jury took only a few hours to decide that the features introduced in iTunes 7.0 were good for consumers and did not violate antitrust laws. Following the decision, the plaintiff's head attorney Patrick Coughlin said an appeal is already planned. He also expressed frustrations over getting two of the security features — one that checks the iTunes database, and another that checks each song on the iPod itself — lumped together with the other user-facing features in the iTunes 7.0 update, like support for movies and games. "At least we got a chance to get it in front of the jury," he told reporters. ... All along, Apple's made the case that its music store, jukebox software, and hardware was simply an integrated system similar to video game consoles from Sony, Microsoft, and Nintendo. It built all those pieces to work together, and thus it would be unusual to expect any one piece from another company to work without issues, Apple's attorneys said. But more importantly, Apple offered, any the evolution of its DRM that ended up locking out competitors was absolutely necessary given deals it had with the major record companies to patch security holes.
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Apple Wins iTunes DRM Case

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  • I'm shocked. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 16, 2014 @02:35PM (#48611157)

    I can't believe the 700 billion dollar corporation won this.

    • Re:I'm shocked. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by alen ( 225700 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2014 @02:40PM (#48611195)

      i'd be surprised if apple didn't win the case. they blocked and non-apple DRM like every other company out there and Real had to hack it. but in the end itunes allowed you to use any hardware you wanted as long as the maker coded to a few of apple's API's. i use my Note 3 with itunes on my macbook. itunes itself has supported non-apple devices for many years as long as the files don't have any DRM.

      • Re:I'm shocked. (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Frobnicator ( 565869 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2014 @03:11PM (#48611429) Journal

        i'd be surprised if apple didn't win the case.

        At the jury level this is expected. The appeal was expected either way. And in the longer term this may turn out differently.

        Anti-trust concerns usually do benefit the consumer in the short term. And as the article points out, the jury specifically wrote that the features have an immediate benefit to the consumer.

        Usually anti-trust problems are not immediately bad for the consumer. In the short term the consumer sees a lower price, easier access, and other conveniences.

        In the long term the market ends up with monopolies and oligopolies, a loss of vibrancy, a slowdown in innovation, less desire to follow expensive advances, and worse customer experiences. Think of your local telco and cable companies as prime examples.

        I expect that like so many other technical cases the jury's verdict will be overturned on appeal because juries in the US rarely understand the actual law. While criminal law is usually pretty straightforward for a lay jury, things like IP law and business law are often miscommunicated or misunderstood when handed to a jury of random citizens.

        • I expect that like so many other technical cases the jury's verdict will be overturned on appeal because juries in the US rarely understand the actual law.

          Then it is good that the jury doesn't interpret the law - that is up to the judge and is (supposed to be) based on case law. The sole purpose of the jury during the trial phase is to determine facts, like given the judge's instructions about what the law is, did the defendant violate it, or based on the evidence, did the party do or not do the claimed action. Any appeal will not be based on the jury getting the wrong answer, it will be based on the judge giving the jury the wrong instructions about what t

          • Re:I'm shocked. (Score:5, Insightful)

            by amaurea ( 2900163 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2014 @04:03PM (#48611943) Homepage

            Doesn't the USA have a concept of jury nullification [wikipedia.org], where the jury does much more than just determine facts, and actually takes a position on what's right and wrong?

            • by nebaz ( 453974 )

              Jury nullification has a tarnished history here, as it was often used in the South to acquit white men of lynching crimes. While it may be possible for a juror to use it, even mentioning it may be considered grounds for dismissal, or so I've heard. (IANAL)

              • I was on a jury recently (for someone accused of misdemeanor possession of methamphetamines). Some of the questions that the judge asked every potential juror were exactly along this line:
                - Do you actively participate with any groups that advocate for or against the legalization of drugs?
                - Do you believe that possession of a small amount of drugs should be legal?
                - (If either of the above was true:) Will you follow my instructions regarding the law, even if it disagrees with your beliefs?

                Anybody that wasn't

            • Re:I'm shocked. (Score:5, Informative)

              by dunkindave ( 1801608 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2014 @04:45PM (#48612371)

              Doesn't the USA have a concept of jury nullification [wikipedia.org], where the jury does much more than just determine facts, and actually takes a position on what's right and wrong?

              Yes, but that is for criminal trials, not civil trials. Basically, for a criminal trial if the jury returns a verdict of innocent then the defendant walks, no matter how the jury reached that verdict, even if it blatantly goes against the evidence. Jury nullification isn't explicitly codified in law, rather it is a concept that people have applied that is based on how the legal process works, i.e. a jury that returns innocent ends the prosecution. It has been used for juries to deliver justice when people have been unfairly, but legally, charged with crimes.

              A civil trial doesn't really have the same protection since a judge is allowed to toss a jury's verdict if he feels it goes egregiously against the facts of the case, but if he does he must defend his decision and he doesn't get to replace the verdict with his own, but rather he in essence declares a mistrial and it has to be retried. Again, this is for the trial portion where the jury's purpose is as a determiner of facts. On the other hand, the jury award during the penalty phase can be reduced by the judge. And like always, any such action by a judge better be defensible otherwise he opens it up to being overturned on appeal.

              Just like in criminal trials, in civil trials juries are given wide discretion in order to allow justice to be served. For example, it is not uncommon for the plaintiff to be awarded more by the jury than the plaintiff asked for, or for the jury to decide with their hearts instead of what the evidence logically dictates. Since civil juries decide based on the preponderance of the evidence and that is subjective, the level that must be reached for the judge to be able to toss the jury's decision is pretty high, so overturning such jury results is not very common (though make big press when the few do happen in big cases).

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          Anti-trust concerns usually do benefit the consumer in the short term. And as the article points out, the jury specifically wrote that the features have an immediate benefit to the consumer.

          Usually anti-trust problems are not immediately bad for the consumer. In the short term the consumer sees a lower price, easier access, and other conveniences.

          In the long term the market ends up with monopolies and oligopolies, a loss of vibrancy, a slowdown in innovation, less desire to follow expensive advances, and wo

          • Re:I'm shocked. (Score:4, Insightful)

            by JohnFen ( 1641097 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2014 @04:51PM (#48612427)

            Whatever harm iTunes did, seems to have resulted in a far more vibrant marketplace now than it was years ago.

            Be careful about confusing causation with correlation.

          • by hondo77 ( 324058 )

            The iPods are on life-support - they don't make Apple much money anymore but Apple keeps them around because there's still a tiny demand for them.

            That's true but the funny thing is that that "tiny demand" was well over a billion $$ in revenue in the past year. Funny how that much money is considered tiny...for Apple, anyway.

    • by swschrad ( 312009 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2014 @02:43PM (#48611215) Homepage Journal

      every time you have to move data from one system to another, it has to be flushed through some software to work on the new stuff. every time. all the way back to ENIAC, nothing is truly portable. I never had issues with iThingies, but then I never tried to use Real or Creative, either. and if I did, hey, flush the data through something else. like always.

    • by gnupun ( 752725 )

      I can't believe the 700 billion dollar corporation won this.

      You want to buy music from multiple vendors on your mobile device? Well we need a standard and open platform like the PC, where any vendor can add their hardware, software or DRM. Apple hardware/software stack is proprietary and owned by one company, so this decision is correct.

      • You want to buy music from multiple vendors on your mobile device?

        Who wouldn't want that?

        Well we need a standard and open platform like the PC, where any vendor can add their hardware, software or DRM.

        We have such a thing, so that's good, but I would argue that DRM is not only unnecessary, it needs to die a fiery death.

        Apple hardware/software stack is proprietary and owned by one company, so this decision is correct.

        True enough, which is reason #2 that I will never own Apple anything. Reason #1 why I will never use Apple music devices is that would force me to use iTunes, which sucks beyond measure.

        • by gnupun ( 752725 )

          ... but I would argue that DRM is not only unnecessary, it needs to die a fiery death.

          You must have heard of things like Napster and BitTorrent. Plenty of people can't/won't pay for music. In fact, I've heard the PS4 DRM was too hard for pirates to crack. It may have been cracked since then. But until then, the only way to play PS4 games was to buy/rent them.

          My point is consumers pay to use all products and services, except digital ones, because they are easy to use without paying. DRM forces the consumer t

  • Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2014 @02:38PM (#48611181) Homepage

    Yet beyond monetary damages, the case has zero bearing on the modern technology industry, as both the MP3 music file format and the iPod itself have waned in popularity

    Wait, what? People no longer use MP3s? They don't buy iPods?

    This sounds like an odd claim ... I've got way more MP3s now that I did in 2005, and it's the primary way I listen to music. When I buy a CD (yes, I still do that) the first thing I do is rip it.

    Sure, there are streaming services. But I'm betting lots of people still play MP3s on portable players.

    It's not as glamorous, but saying MP3s have no bearing on the modern technology industry? I'm not buying that.

    • by Ixokai ( 443555 )

      The claim is very weird, yes, but the premise isn't -- the case has absolutely no bearing on the industry. Not because MP3s and iPods have been replaced by streaming and iPhones or whatever other device people use instead of a dedicated iPod, but because the DRM has long since been dropped in the music space.

      Worst case scenario, Apple pays the lawyers involved some number of millions of dollars and a pittance to consumers (as in all class action cases), and changes nothing because its all entirely moot at t

      • Not because MP3s and iPods have been replaced by streaming and iPhones or whatever other device people use instead of a dedicated iPod, but because the DRM has long since been dropped in the music space.

        It's still relevant, but an expected ruling. This is not about DRM on the songs, it is about DRM on the connection between iTunes and the devices. That is, you can't use a non-apple device with iTunes. And Apple can go out of their way to make that happen.

        That's really annoying, but this is the same as Keurig putting DRM on their kcups, or HP putting DRM on their printer cartridges. Lame, but legal.

        • Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)

          by Ixokai ( 443555 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2014 @03:11PM (#48611435)

          You can use non-apple devices with iTunes and the iTunes music store just fine. You have always been able to do so. I don't know why you'd want to because as far as mp3 managers go it kinda sucks, but you could plug a random mp3 player in and provided its not going out of its way to be weird, iTunes will detect it and list it on devices and it'll happily copy any non-DRM'd content to it.

          All you could not do was use non-Apple devices with DRM'd music-- but no music is DRM'd anymore, so that's not relevant.

          You also couldn't use DRM'd music from other services on Apple's devices, and you still can't, but that's not relevant either because there's no obligation for Apple to support anyone elses DRM.

          The case is not about supposed non-existent DRM between iTunes and iThings, its about Real hacking Apple's DRM on files and trying to copy such hacked DRM'd content -- instead of plain straight up mp3s that iTunes always supported fine -- into an iThing. Apple closed the hole in their DRM and such hacked content was no longer valid.

          But, that's not relevant anymore because Apple doesn't use that DRM on any music anymore. (They _do_ use it on non-music stores still, though)

        • Re:Huh? (Score:5, Interesting)

          by gnasher719 ( 869701 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2014 @06:27PM (#48613123)

          It's still relevant, but an expected ruling. This is not about DRM on the songs, it is about DRM on the connection between iTunes and the devices. That is, you can't use a non-apple device with iTunes. And Apple can go out of their way to make that happen.

          I think you are making the mistake of thinking that Apple was sued for something that remotely makes sense. They weren't.

          Apple sold music with DRM in 2006. That music was hard or impossible to copy, as music with DRM should be. But that's not what Apple was sued for. And making it impossible for music with DRM to be copied is actually what DRM is there for.

          Realnetworks had developed their own DRM "solution". Which had the unfortunate disadvantage that it didn't play on iPods, and it didn't play on Microsoft "Playforsure" compatible players either. So it was quite dead in the water. So Realnetworks decided to create a hack where they removed their own DRM, then put fake "FairPlay" (that's Apple's DRM) around it, and copied that to the iPod.

          It turned out that they damaged directory structures on the iPod, and the iPod's "FairPlay" implementation noticed that there was something fishy about these files. Altogether so bad that Apple's software suggested that you reformat the iPod. And that is what these lawyers complain about: That Apple didn't allow their hacked DRM to play on an iPod.

          The obvious and 100% iPod compatible solution would have been to remove the DRM and _not_ to try to add Fairplay DRM to the music. Music without DRM, like mp3, AAC, WAV, ALAC has always played on all iPods.

          • by Karlt1 ( 231423 )

            Apple sold music with DRM in 2006. That music was hard or impossible to copy, as music with DRM should be. But that's not what Apple was sued for. And making it impossible for music with DRM to be copied is actually what DRM is there for.

            If by "hard to copy" you mean use iTunes to burn a regular audio CD containing the DRM'd songs and then use iTunes to rip the songs as an MP3.

      • because the DRM has long since been dropped in the music space.

        This is not true, even if Apple insists on saying it is. As near as I can tell, what they mean is that they aren't putting DRM on music that was added after the DRM-free date. However, the iTunes library is full of music that is as "protected" by DRM as it ever was. Or at least that was true three years ago, when I spent far too much time working out how to strip the DRM off of a song I downloaded from it.

        • So Apple can automagically remove all DRM from music you owned? What thinks Apple has the right to do so? As for existing DRM music they will continue to work; you could strip them manually if you want if you want to transcode from one lossy format to another. Or you could pay the music companies an additional fee to strip it and upgrade your music to a higher bit rate. I personally avoided DRM as much as possible so my upgrade price was a few dollars when the time came to remove it.
        • This is not true, even if Apple insists on saying it is. As near as I can tell, what they mean is that they aren't putting DRM on music that was added after the DRM-free date. However, the iTunes library is full of music that is as "protected" by DRM as it ever was. Or at least that was true three years ago, when I spent far too much time working out how to strip the DRM off of a song I downloaded from it.

          Just in case that you still have a reasonable amount of music with FairPlay DRM: You can buy Apple's "iTunes Match" for a year, which will among other things allow you to replace any music bought from Apple, and any music from anywhere that the software recognises, with DRM free 256 Kbit/sec copies. Costs about $25 or so. If you have lots of music with DRM or in lower quality, it's worth it.

        • by bledri ( 1283728 )

          because the DRM has long since been dropped in the music space.

          This is not true, even if Apple insists on saying it is. As near as I can tell, what they mean is that they aren't putting DRM on music that was added after the DRM-free date. However, the iTunes library is full of music that is as "protected" by DRM as it ever was. Or at least that was true three years ago, when I spent far too much time working out how to strip the DRM off of a song I downloaded from it.

          No, they removed the DRM from the vast majority of their catalog and automatically upgraded songs in the iTunes library back in 2009. The reason that not all music is DRM free is not all labels and artists agreed to sell non-DRM music. Apple has to abide by it's contracts, even if it pisses a few people off.

    • Yet beyond monetary damages, the case has zero bearing on the modern technology industry, as both the MP3 music file format and the iPod itself have waned in popularity

      Wait, what? People no longer use MP3s? They don't buy iPods?

      This sounds like an odd claim ... I've got way more MP3s now that I did in 2005, and it's the primary way I listen to music. When I buy a CD (yes, I still do that) the first thing I do is rip it.

      Sure, there are streaming services. But I'm betting lots of people still play MP3s on portable players.

      It's not as glamorous, but saying MP3s have no bearing on the modern technology industry? I'm not buying that.

      You hinted towards the very definition of "waning" in your description, especially identifying yourself as one of those rare individuals who still purchases their music, and in a 30-year old format.

      Do not simply dismiss those "streaming services". If they don't comprise the majority of music consumption these days they likely soon will, and reflect an impact similar to the one Netflix has had on video streaming.

      Sure consumers like MP3s, but consumers are also really fucking lazy. They don't even type the

    • Wait, what? People no longer use MP3s? They don't buy iPods?

      Waned in popularity != never use. Today music streaming is more normal for teens and young adults.

    • by RDW ( 41497 )

      "Yet beyond monetary damages, the case has zero bearing on the modern technology industry, as both the MP3 music file format and the iPod itself have waned in popularity"

      Wait, what? People no longer use MP3s? They don't buy iPods?

      They've also technically got it backwards. Neither Apple nor Real were distributing mp3s, but DRM'd music files in other formats - mp3s were never targeted by Apple's countermeasures to Real's hack. Today it's actually possible to get most music in plain mp3 format from Amazon and other online retailers so, if anything, mp3 is now vastly more popular than before (at least as a legitimate distribution format).

    • Wait, what? People no longer use MP3s? They don't buy iPods?

      iTunes, the iPod, and the iPhone (which are either the default software player or the default hardware for most people, especially inside of the US) have been using MP4/AAC for years.

      Google still seems to be using MP3 strangely (AAC compresses much better with higher audio quality, and you'd think they would like to save on bandwidth costs), but they could be doing that because they have to support a wider range of devices. Amazon falls into the same category.

      So yeah, while MP3 is still around, but with 63

    • They stopped making iPods and while many people still use MP3s, the digital market itself has moved more toward streaming and subscription based services, where people buy access rather than files that they need to migrate.

  • Good for consumers? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by mrspoonsi ( 2955715 )
    How can DRM and locking out competitors ever be defined as good for consumers?
    • When bypassing the DRM involved breaking the security of a device, that's bad for consumers.
    • It wasn't... Even Apple didn't want to do DRM, but the record companies were shellshocked from Napster (and other P2P) at the time. They would have never sold their music on iTMS without it.

    • How can DRM and locking out competitors ever be defined as good for consumers?

      "Ever" is a strong word. Think back to 1983 and 1984 when the North American video game market crashed due to too much choice. Because the Atari 2600 had no lockout, anybody could develop a poorly balanced game and sell it. In an era before Internet reviews, when games cost $20 or more (roughly $60 in today's money), people grew leery of spending on something they think might not be fun, and many retailers and end users gave up video gaming altogether. It took Nintendo and its lockout regime to convince ret

      • by Smauler ( 915644 )

        In addition, DRM is good for consumers because it ensures that studios will be willing to publish more than zero desirable works in a format.

        You seem to forget that studios _have_ to be willing to publish in a format that people will use. The studios being "willing" to publish is irrelevant. If they try to publish works in a format no one uses, they lose their revenue stream. Their entire business model is having as many people as possible buy the content.

        • You seem to forget that studios _have_ to be willing to publish in a format that people will use.

          And if there are many people whom the DRM doesn't inconvenience, then there are many people willing to buy copies of works in a DRM format. The popularity of video game consoles, DVD, and iTunes Music Store prior to 2009 has shown that there do exist enough customers willing to tolerate DRM to keep a market going.

          • And if there are many people whom the DRM doesn't inconvenience, then there are many people willing to buy copies of works in a DRM format. The popularity of video game consoles, DVD, and iTunes Music Store prior to 2009 has shown that there do exist enough customers willing to tolerate DRM to keep a market going.

            True, but that isn't an argument for how DRM can be good for consumers.

            • by tepples ( 727027 )

              DRM is good for consumers because it ensures that studios will be willing to publish more than zero desirable works in a format.

              studios _have_ to be willing to publish in a format that people will use.

              there are many people willing to buy copies of works in a DRM format

              True, but that isn't an argument for how DRM can be good for consumers.

              Which brings me back to the original assertion: DRM allows studios to make works available to those members of the public who accept DRM that the studios would be unwilling to make available to anyone without DRM. If the choice were between DRM home video and requiring the public to wait seven years for a repeat theatrical screening, how would the latter "be good for consumers"?

      • Think back to 1983 and 1984 when the North American video game market crashed due to too much choice.

        Nothing that you've said here is an accurate reflection of why that crash happened. Lockout wasn't even remotely a factor.

        DRM is good for consumers because it ensures that studios will be willing to publish more than zero desirable works in a format.

        This also doesn't resemble the truth at all. If there were no such thing as DRM, there would be just as much content being produced. Or, at least, there isn't any indication that wouldn't be true.

        So end users were faced with a choice between VCD/SVCD, which has no DRM and no major titles, and DVD, which has DRM and major titles.

        And that was good for consumers how?

        • by tepples ( 727027 )

          Nothing that you've said here is an accurate reflection of why that crash happened. Lockout wasn't even remotely a factor.

          Then please help me understand why the abundance of low-quality shovelware was either A. unrelated to lack of lockout or B. not a factor in the crash.

          So end users were faced with a choice between VCD/SVCD, which has no DRM and no major titles, and DVD, which has DRM and major titles.

          And that was good for consumers how?

          Because DRM gives consumers access to view the movie at home, as opposed to having to wait years to see it again in theaters if it ever comes back to theaters.

    • by KeithJM ( 1024071 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2014 @03:25PM (#48611579) Homepage
      When DRM is a prerequisite to get the rights to offer the item to consumers at all. I'm not saying it necessarily WAS worth it, but the people who owned the rights to the music wouldn't allow downloads without DRM. So the options to bring it to market were download music with DRM, or don't download music legally. The consumer gets to decide whether they want that deal or not.
    • Hard to say, but I'm sure the jurors--each sporting the latest iPhone as they walked out of the court house--knew what they were doing.
    • How can DRM and locking out competitors ever be defined as good for consumers?

      I suggest you read what the case was actually about. Apple is claimed to have prevented Realnetworks from adding Apple's DRM to Realnetworks' DRM music and copying it onto Apple's iPods. The reality is that Realnetworks created an awful hack and damaged the data on an iPod in the process to an extent that Apple's software thought the iPod was broken and reformatted it.

      To your question "How can DRM ever be defined as good for customers": Without DRM, it would be impossible to rent videos online for cheap

  • Deals? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by robmv ( 855035 )

    "Your Honor, I ended up killing him, It was absolutely necessary given deals I had with his wife to patch her problems"

    A secret deal is not an excuse to screw illegaly your customers, if that was the case.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by nwf ( 25607 )

      That's silly. Making products work with only your products is legal and has been going on for at least 100 years. If you get razors from company X you can't get blades from company Y. Like video games (that Apple mentioned in their argument) that work only in their console, if you get a DVD it won't play in your VCR, your AT&T phone won't work on Verizon, if you get HBO you can't record it without DRM in HD, only certain garbage cans fit into my cabinets trash drawer, etc. It's stupid to expect a compan

      • by robmv ( 855035 )

        Say that to Google, they don't have the right to make their search products to only work with their browser or OSs, monopoly regulations will start to hit them. What did Apple wrong?, I can't say for sure, IANAL and apparently they will try an appeal, but was Apple music service big enough at the time they started screwing with other companies trying to enter the market? maybe, maybe not.

        • by Karlt1 ( 231423 )

          Say that to Google, they don't have the right to make their search products to only work with their browser or OSs

          Google Maps with navigation only worked with Android for 3 years.

          Google NaCL only works with Chrome.

          Do you want other examples of Google technologies that only work with Chrome and/or Android?

          • by robmv ( 855035 )

            You are taking examples that are not a market monopoly, Search is an example that they can't do whatever they want, any example you find that say they can do watherver they want with that technology, doesn't make true: the parent comment "Making products work with only your products is legal" there are situations where that isn't true. The situation here is, was iTunes to big so they can't do whatever they wanted?

            • by Karlt1 ( 231423 )

              You mean like promoting internal products in their search results?

              http://www.zdnet.com/article/y... [zdnet.com]

              Or forcing a company to use their location services over a competitor (Android has 80% of the worldwide market)?

              http://www.androidpolice.com/2... [androidpolice.com]

              Or not allowing a company to manufacturer non Google approved Android devices if they manufacturer Android approved devices?

              http://marketingland.com/googl... [marketingland.com]

            • You are taking examples that are not a market monopoly, Search is an example that they can't do whatever they want

              I think you need to first lean what a market monopoly is, and then secondly learn what anti-trust laws are. If you did you'd find that Google does not have a monopoly on search, and not cross-licensing to allow others interoperability (as in this case being discussed) would not fall afoul of anti-trust laws even if a monopoly position was in play.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re:Deals? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Ixokai ( 443555 ) on Tuesday December 16, 2014 @03:43PM (#48611735)

      Your analogy is dumb.

      The customers would never have had access to the music catalogs of the major music labels were it not for deals to implement DRM and patch holes when that DRM is exploited.

      Real exploited a hole to create fakely-DRM'd content, and Apple had to close it or they'd be in breach of contract and suddenly the ITMS has no content.

      (At least, in theory. In reality Apple got big enough by this point that they were able to muscle the labels into letting them un-DRM the entire catalog, which seems quite the opposite of illegally screwing customers.)

      • by robmv ( 855035 )

        It ia a joke analogy, I know but the main idea is that your deals doesn't give you a blank cheque to do anything above the law, as I said, "if that was the case"

        Continuing with the joke analogy, If the killer don't agree to kill the husband, the customer, the wife, will not get access to enjoy the money from the inheritance either

      • The customers would never have had access to the music catalogs of the major music labels were it not for deals to implement DRM and patch holes when that DRM is exploited.

        Absolutely not true. Customers had access to those music catalogs before iTunes existed, both in legal and illegal ways. I think what you meant was that Apple would never have had access.

        • by Ixokai ( 443555 )

          No, I mean the customers who are party to the suit -- Apple's customers. Yes, there was other channels they could have gotten music, but the catalogs were not exhaustive and were just as locked down as anything Apple ever did.

          ITMS wasn't the first to try to do legal online music, I'm not arguing that. They did get all the paranoid labels on board and made it easy, and at the time that was a big deal. I remember I *could* buy music online at the time, but it was mostly a pain in the butt from most sources --

          • For the most part Apple does what they always do: they work to make things easy for the consumer. Before Apple, you could buy music online. The sites were terrible to navigate and sometimes it wasn't even easy to pay. Pricing was ludicrous. Then you had to get your music software to authorize and then sync it to your device. PlaysForSure was almost an ironic name back then.

            So here comes Apple: Consumers use iTunes for everything. payment, navigation, downloading are all integrated. All songs are the same pr

  • The decision was good. Apple did not have a monopoly. People could choose not to use Apple products and still listen to music. Not a big deal.

    This was just a bunch of lawyers desperately looking to hit the jackpot. They were so creepy they had to find a new client to justify the case because none of their original clients qualified.

    Even then they case was open and shut absurd and dumped.

    "Following the decision, the plaintiff's head attorney said an appeal is already planned."

    Aye, spoke like a true ambulance

    • The decision was good. Apple did not have a monopoly. People could choose not to use Apple products and still listen to music.

      What's more, people could choose not to use Apple's iTunes music store and still listen to music on their iPod. Reports of this case always seem to airbrush over the fact that the "lock out" only ever affected competing DRM formats: there was no problem with playing unprotected MP3 or AAC files from any source.

    • Great idea. Should one ever try to sue a big company and lose, they would be in debt for the rest of their lives, with no chance to ever pay back what they owe. Sounds like a great protection for the corporations from the little guy.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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