Showing posts with label music labels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music labels. Show all posts

Friday, March 16, 2007

DRM: Complication

Material:
Enter the Devosphere
higaara/dino: Reasons for DRM on Independent Content
Enter the Devosphere: DRM on Independent Content
Daring Fireball: Would Apple Mix DRM and Non-DRM Music at the iTunes Store?
Stairways Software: Why Apple Cannot Allow DRM-free Indie Music
The Poisoned Project - Poisoned
MP3 music download website, eMusic
USATODAY.com - EMusic's pitch: Download song and own it
higaara/dino: Thoughts On Thoughts On Steve Jobs Thoughts on Music Minus Macrovision's Response
Apple - Thoughts on Music
Rolling Stone :Steve Jobs: The Rolling Stone Interview

Artem over at Enter the Devosphere has a good rebuttal of my piece entitled DRM on Independent Content. Of course, I take issue with several of his points.

DRM Vs. Non-DRM
Yes, such a point is valid, however, the difference between DRM'ed and non-DRM'ed content is far more significant than the difference between Explicit and Clean content. Explicit and Clean content can pretty much be used in much the same way. That situation just isn't possible with DRM'ed and non-DRM'ed content being sold at the same location.

In reference to the the above quote from my post, Artem states:
DRM’ed and non-DRM’ed music can also be used in the same way… listened to. DRM or non-DRM does not change how a normal user (non-pirate) uses music. Either way, they get their song, put it on their iPod and enjoy listening to it. The only thing that is affected is the subtleties of sharing. Most users already deal with these differences due to the fact that they don’t buy all their music from iTunes but download some from limewire or indie sites like www.3hive.com .
The list of differences between Explicit and Clean content:
  • Explicit content can be 'turned off' using iTunes parental controls.

The list of differences between DRM'ed and non-DRM'ed content (in the context of iTunes):
  • DRM'ed content can only be played on (generally) Apple branded hardware and software while non-DRM'ed content can be played on any device that supports the particular format.
  • DRM'ed content from one particular account can only be played on up to 5 computers. Non-DRM'ed content can be played on any number of computers
  • Computers that can play DRM'ed content must be authorized to play that person's DRM'ed content. Authorization is not required for DRM content to be played on a person's music. Subsequently, deauthorization is required for when the user moves to a new computer.
  • DRM'ed content is effectively impossible to share
As can be seen, there are a significant number of differences between DRM'ed and Non-DRM'ed content compared to Explicit and Clean content.

Artem believes that most users won't notice the difference. I disagree. In the same blog post that both I and Artem link to, John Gruber himself states that even if a simple icon was used to distinguish both DRM and Non-DRM'ed content, it still probably wouldn't be effective:
I see no reason why Apple couldn’t devise a little icon to represent FairPlay-protected songs. But Peter Lewis is right that no matter what Apple does, it would only matter for iTunes users who are paying attention — and most users don’t pay attention.

Even with a single consistent set of rules, DRM is complicated. (How many people have forgotten to deauthorize an old or broken computer before getting rid of it?) Selling a mix of DRM-laden and DRM-free music wouldn’t pose any serious technical hurdles for Apple, but it would pose some design challenges.
Peter Lewis also gives some good points in a post that Gruber links to:
The answer is pure Apple through and through. The tyranny of choice. Think about the consequence of iTunes Music Store offering some music in FairPlay, some in unprotected MP3 format. Now every song needs to be clearly marked as which format it will be purchased in! No longer can I just click the Buy buttong and know what I am getting.

But how would this be communicated? A special “flag” icon to indicate format - that would not likely be noticed. A dialog box on purchase - people do not read them, and already ignore the current ones. The net result would be confused consumers wondering why some music they purchase works with their Zen and other purchased music will not play. Lots of angry customers. The result: a degrading of the iTunes Music Store experience and customer loyalty.

People do more with their music than just listen to it. Over the period of a year, someone might burn CD's of it, share it online, move it to multiple computers and put it on different pieces of hardware. These are just some of the potential uses of digital music.

The problem with DRM, as indicated by both Peter Lewis and John Gruber, is not that it explicitly stops customers from doing what they want with their music, but that it's an impediment to what they want to do with their music. That's the rub with DRM: it introduces complications that feel arbitrary. Why do they feel arbitrary? Well, because DRM doesn't work, mostly because true freedom with your iTunes-bought music is just a burn away.

As an example of other aspects of digital music that Artem believes people have a harder time with, he states:
This slight sharing difference is much simpler than some more significant music differences users’ deal with. Some of their music is in mp3, some in wav, some in Apple’s aac, some in other formats (ogg anyone?).

Really? Well, let's take a look. The following screenshots are pics I've taken of a P2P filesharing program called Poisoned. Using Poisoned, I've searched for a particular popular track:



How about a lesser known title:



From these screenshots, it's clear that most of the tracks on filesharing networks such as Gnutella and Ares are provided in the widely used MP3 format, which both iTunes and the iPod (as well as all Apple software and hardware) natively support. AAC and WAV are also natively supported in iTunes and Apple hardware. Even WMA will automatically be converted to a format of the user's choice when they try to import it into iTunes. As for OGG, tracks in that format are actually hard to find and are very unlikely to show up in a user's music search. And there already exists free utilities that will convert any OGG track into an MP3. This is something that alot of iPod users are already familiar with, as there are already plenty of people who use similar utilities to convert videos into an iPod ready format.

Plus, once the music has been imported into the person's library, they don't have to worry about it anymore. The same can't be said of DRM'ed music. It's entirely conceivable that one would want to send tracks to multiple people over a period of time, or that one would want to burn a playlist with a specific DRM'ed song for the 7th time a couple of months after they purchased the track, or, as Gruber states, that one might run into their 5 computer limit just from forgetting to deauthorize a computer, or any combination of these things. DRM presents a multitude of variables that can easily cause customer confusion and frustration. In contrast, the importing of different types of tracks is largely transparent due to most of the internet standardizing on unrestricted MP3's.

Some music is 8bit, some 16bit, and myriad other differences. I think it is naïve to think that iPod users will be confused or frustrated by the presence of non-DRM music in the iTunes Store.

But that involves expecting people to know what the difference is between between 8bit and 16bit music, or at least knowing the differences it causes. Users don't care about the bitrate or how the track measures in a 'quality scale'. Ultimately, their idea of quality is subjective: if it sounds ok, then they'll get it1.
Also, by introducing a distinction between DRM and non-DRM music Apple can collect data and what music users prefer. Then they can turn to the big companies and start talking in their language of money but simply bringing up stats and saying: “look small label X made twice the money as equivalent small label Y by selling non-DRM music”. Maybe then Big Music would listen.

Except the Big 4 already have evidence of this working: eMusic. eMusic currently holds the number 2 spot for online music sales with an 11% marketshare. That's nearly double the marketshare of their closest competitor, Real Rhapsody. And every single song they sell is in an unprotected MP3 format, therefore, all the music on eMusic comes from Indie artists and labels. The same Indie labels that sell their music on iTunes.

Now, my bet is that the music industry will eventually go for unprotected music, but not because they'll think that it makes them more money, but so that they can remain in a position of power. From a previous post of mine:
...there's also the fact that the music labels don't have a lot of control when it comes to the sales of music online. That's because they've put all of their eggs in one basket: iTunes. Apple wields so much power with legal online music sales that the music labels actually find it hard to negotiate with them. Take the labels' push for variable pricing for individual tracks as an example. They were out there publicly boo-hooing about how they should be the ones to decide the pricing of their songs. Except, well, it never happened. Every song on iTunes in every country that it's available (except for Japan) has a flat-rate pricing structure and the prices never changed.

If the music labels didn't enforce DRM, then the situation I've outlined would have been far less likely. That's because Apple's DRM scheme only works with iTunes and the extremely popular iPod and vice versa, greatly discouraging users to not buy their music from other online services. The only way the music labels can defuse this situation is to stop enforcing DRM and instead let all the music stores sell unprotected content that can work on any music player, thereby increasing other music stores' share of the market and creating a more level marketplace in terms of marketshare. In this situation, the Big 4 have far more leverage in discussions they have with music distribution services.

Apple's Close-To-The-Chest DRM
Artem also states what he thinks is the reason why Apple won't release Indie content as unprotected tracks:
I think the reason Apple is really continuing to sell all their music as DRM is to hold on to their proprietary rights. Regardless of what Steve Jobs publishes as “his opinions” on DRM music, Apple is still a heartless capitalist corporation. By sticking to DRM, they make sure people can only easily listen to the music on their iPods and not competitors. This way iTunes Store and iPod become a bundle and exclusive “cool” society that other more open MP3 users can’t join2.

But then why would Apple even allow such an essay to be penned and prominently placed on the front page of their main website? It's not even so much that Steve Jobs made an essay about the subject, but that he explicitly states in clear terms why DRM doesn't work at all. If what Artem says is true, this essay seems more counter-intuitive than anything else.

And how can Apple use their system to lock users in if only 3% of an iPod owner's music is from iTunes:
under 3% of the music on the average iPod, is purchased from the iTunes store and protected with a DRM.
And even if that particular estimate isn't true (there is some debate over the math Steve Jobs employs), it is still widely agreed upon that most iPod owners music collections either don't contain music from iTunes or contain very little.

Plus there's this statement from Steve Jobs in a Rolling Stones interview back in 2003:
We have Ph.D.'s here, that know the stuff cold, and we don't believe it's possible to protect digital content.

...And it only takes one stolen copy to be on the Internet. And the way we expressed it to them is: Pick one lock -- open every door.

I don't think that Apple actually cares about, or likes, DRM. Along with complications for the user, DRM involves a complicated platform of locks, keys and checks to support it that's costly to maintain. The only reason that iTunes exists is to have a source of digital content for the Mac, iPod and any other products Apple might release.

One of the main reasons why I think Apple made this essay is because they're worried. Worried that the music labels' increasingly arrogant attitude and their continued antagonizing of customers are going to push people away from legally purchasing music and instead towards other means of legal and illegal means of getting unprotected content. This would be a bad thing for Apple, as the iTunes Store is becoming an increasingly bigger selling point for Apple products. If people stop caring about it, then that business advantage of having an end to end (purchase to listen) system becomes irrelevant.

1: Why else would people be willing to pay $10 on iTunes for a 128kbps encoded album when they can pay the same amount or a little more for a CD that's lossless?

2: I don't quite understand this last sentence. The iPod is an open platform when it comes to the type of formats it accepts. The only thing that's really closed about it is that it's DRM isn't licensed to other music distributors and/or hardware manufacturers. But that's significantly different from 'more open MP3'.

Friday, February 16, 2007

Thoughts On Thoughts On Steve Jobs Thoughts on Music Minus Macrovision's Response

Yeah, sure. So what? It's always been widely acknowledged that the big 4 major music labels want DRM on their music (although, apparently EMI might be reconsidering). So, since there's no such thing as interoperable DRM and the music labels are pushing for this 'un-interoperability', then why is Apple being reprimanded for it?

There's also the fact that making an essay about how you would make all your content unprotected is going a bit too far if all you wanted to do was to continue selling music in a particular region. Norway is very likely a drop in the bucket for iTunes Store sales. They wouldn't be doing something like this because of losing Norwegian customers. If Norway won't let them sell music without licensing FairPlay, Apple would just pull the store. Simple as that.1

Apple is just taking advantage of the fact that music labels will never sell unprotected content and are instead just riding on the coattails of the concept.
First off, all of this content will become available as unprotected content, and downloading music off the net will become the norm. It's up to the music labels to decide whether they want to be apart of that. If consumers decide that paying for protected content sucks, then the music labels are going to get left behind. Their scare tactics (suing everyone) doesn't scale very well.

My second point is that I believe that the music labels will definitely go for unprotected content very soon. We're already seeing signs of it happening (see the EMI link above for another example). Of course, there is the fact that growth is beginning to slow, but there's also the fact that the music labels don't have a lot of control when it comes to the sales of music online. That's because they've put all of their eggs in one basket: iTunes. Apple wields so much power with legal online music sales that the music labels actually find it hard to negotiate with them. Take the labels' push for variable pricing for individual tracks as an example. They were out there publicly boo-hooing about how they should be the ones to decide the pricing of their songs. Except, well, it never happened. Every song on iTunes in every country that it's available (except for Japan) has a flat-rate pricing structure and the prices never changed. This wouldn't have happened if DRM wasn't their in the first place. It was because of the music labels' push for DRM and the fact that Apple's DRM scheme works only with the most popular mp3 player on the planet that put them in the position that they are now.

Third. Regardless of whether the music labels are going to sell unprotected content or not, Steve Jobs never had to say anything in the first place. More specifically, he didn't have to say that Apple would switch to selling unprotected content in the iTunes Store:
If the big four music companies would license Apple their music without the requirement that it be protected with a DRM, we would switch to selling only DRM-free music on our iTunes store. Every iPod ever made will play this DRM-free music.
Now Jobs and Apple are expected to keep that promise. If Apple doesn't want to sell unprotected content, then making an essay about how you would switch to it when you're being forced not to is pretty contradictory.

What about video?
Obviously, if music can be sold unprotected, then video can be too. However, the sales of video online isn't ready for this. It's still in it's infancy, and not enough people actually care enough yet. Gruber also makes an interesting point:
Jobs makes the point in his essay that 90 percent of all music is sold DRM-free on CDs; DVDs, on the other hand, are copy-protected.

Steve Jobs Reasons for Not Licensing FairPlay Are Bogus.
I agree. What does Jobs have to say about this?
However, a key provision of our agreements with the music companies is that if our DRM system is compromised and their music becomes playable on unauthorized devices, we have only a small number of weeks to fix the problem or they can withdraw their entire music catalog from our iTunes store.
So why don't you just get more time from the labels. They've been pushing for Apple to embrace this whole 'interoperable drm' idea for some time. I'm sure they would be willing to give Apple more time.
The most serious problem is that licensing a DRM involves disclosing some of its secrets to many people in many companies, and history tells us that inevitably these secrets will leak. The Internet has made such leaks far more damaging, since a single leak can be spread worldwide in less than a minute. Such leaks can rapidly result in software programs available as free downloads on the Internet which will disable the DRM protection so that formerly protected songs can be played on unauthorized players.

An equally serious problem is how to quickly repair the damage caused by such a leak. A successful repair will likely involve enhancing the music store software, the music jukebox software, and the software in the players with new secrets, then transferring this updated software into the tens (or hundreds) of millions of Macs, Windows PCs and players already in use. This must all be done quickly and in a very coordinated way. Such an undertaking is very difficult when just one company controls all of the pieces. It is near impossible if multiple companies control separate pieces of the puzzle, and all of them must quickly act in concert to repair the damage from a leak.
Except that Microsoft already does this with PlaysForSure and there haven't been any more breaches to PlaysForSure then there have been for Fairplay.

Jobs does make an interesting point about the Zune though.
Apple has concluded that if it licenses FairPlay to others, it can no longer guarantee to protect the music it licenses from the big four music companies. Perhaps this same conclusion contributed to Microsoft’s recent decision to switch their emphasis from an “open” model of licensing their DRM to others to a “closed” model of offering a proprietary music store, proprietary jukebox software and proprietary players.
Sure, that might have been a likely factor in the decision to make the Zune. But I really doubt that if PlaysForSure had been successful that Microsoft would have decided to go through with the stupid decision of making another DRM format. In other words, it was the failure of PlaysForSure that caused the creation of the Zune, not the complications involved with licensing out a DRM scheme.2

Steve Jobs is being hypocritical because Apple sells independent music on iTunes that is not necessarily sold with DRM protection (like at eMusic).
It certainly seems that way, doesn't it? I actually think that something is stopping Apple from selling this music in an unprotected format. I think it's a very real possibility that the music labels force Apple to sell all of their music in a protected format. The Macalope gives a good explanation.
Apple’s agreement with the big four may say they can’t offer DRM-free music as the recording industry executives might fear that the great communist scourge of uncontrolled music files would eat their lunch and make love to their women better than they can.
No one has been able to confirm this, but I still think it's the case.

- - - -

Overall, I think that there's some fallacy in Jobs' letter. However, there is still a lot of truth to it. He brings up good points and makes a promise to sell DRM-free content if the Big 4 labels stand down on DRM. If Steve Jobs and Apple really wanted to continue this iTunes/iPod lock-in, this letter never would have come out in the first place.

1. Although I do believe that the Norway issue did factor into the decision to make this essay.

2. One may ask: Why the hell does Apple do this? Well, there's a very complicated answer. In short, Apple just works that way. Sometimes there's a real benefit to doing so, and sometimes there isn't. It's just the nature of the company to lock these things down. In there mind, somewhere down the road they might suddenly find that it gives them an advantage.