DRM-Free Music Sells, Major Labels Keep Pretending The Jury Is Still Out

from the annoying-customers-isn't-good-business dept

The idea that DRM-free music might just make good business sense smolders along, as eMusic is announcing they’ve managed to sell 100 million unprotected songs without the world coming to an end. As part of the promotion, the customer who purchased the milestone track will have a song written about him by the Barenaked Ladies, who’ll include the song on as a bonus track for their upcoming album. The record labels have consistently claimed you can’t be successful selling music that isn’t copy-protected — but eMusic’s second place showing (behind iTunes) shows that’s clearly not the case. They continue to sell more music than Rhapsody, Napster and MSN Music combined, all while catering to indie music fans by avoiding major label content. 2006 saw a growth in smaller content providers arguing that DRM-free content can be part of a sustainable business model, but there’s still a shortage of major industry players acknowledging DRM’s limitations. Meanwhile the major labels continue to pretend either that the idea has no legs — or that they need to conduct further experiments to see if demand for DRM-free content actually exists. There simply can be no talk of a trend toward unprotected content en-masse as long as the music industry continues to pursue the idea in half-assed ways.


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Comments on “DRM-Free Music Sells, Major Labels Keep Pretending The Jury Is Still Out”

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21 Comments
ScytheNoire (profile) says:

we’ll see DRM free music just as soon as the RIAA and MPAA go away. they’ve spent way too much money to concede that people will pay for content, as long as they are allowed to use what they paid for any way they would like. nope, it won’t be happening any time soon. luckily, more and more are just avoiding association with the RIAA and MPAA and doing things for themselves, and reaping the rewards of more loyal fans, content they own and have direct control of, and reaching the audience they want to reach.

Danny says:

Re: RIAA MPAA

Here in new zealand we dont even have a fair use clause for transfering music to other media among our personal possessions. However, I have not heard of anyone being prosecuted unless they sell burnt music or server thousands of tracks. our version of the RIAA is called APRA and is the artistic and performance recording association who act as a single point of contact to assist with licensing music for commercial, and private use. I think this, and the information these organisations can provide is an invaluable service to ensure Artists and people who are paying for music are in touch. Whatever else they do is usually by collective or executive decision, and like all businesses they tend to go off the best information they have. If you suspected customers were walking out with 20% of your product without paying, you would install security cameras. Yet the estimates of piracy were spiralling higher for years based on a percentage of sales, which in itself is a bit flawed. However, how can you estimate the scale of an invisible crime. You cant. And how do you value something you didnt buy. Does that say that you dont value it, dont know what value it has yet, or that you are cheap? I prefer to think that for most people it is the ‘dont know yet’, and when we get given music from a friend to try, when we can we will buy an album by that artist. Nowadays I like the freedom of purchasing single tracks via the internet. But I also like being able to hear samples and radio internationally, peddling more than just recycled pop tunes. Most of all, I have enjoyed the so called “pirate radio” and undernet distribution networks simply because many showcase music such that I have never heard in a music store, street corner or concert here in New Zealand. However, most have not been worth keeping, nor finding the artist or an album. That said, I have spent alot of time and money on itunes and emusic because they are so ready to use and quick to download. Torrents might be good for the usual crap, but what if you want to find something old or slightly unusual quickly and then download quality info covers and at broadband speed?
Now what I would like is a revival site, like napster was before they killed it. Revival? Yes, songs and music that were killed by time. The ones you cannot find on Itunes, CD stores or emusic. Things like “Return to yogia” by Sha Abahn or the old 75 RPM recordings that didn’t make it to the CD age. How would you stop kiddies loading up new pop music on the site? Moderators. but really…Who cares, kiddies have ooddles of time and usually no credit cards, let them be and maybe their parents will buy them music for xmas instead of a sweater.

misanthropic humanist says:

Can't con an honset man

Snake oil salesmen. They can be very persuasive. A good salesman can sell snow to Eskimos and it’s all about psychology, charm and persistance. People buy into all sorts of things, not on their merits, but on the job the salesman did. So even Bill Gates, a presumably smart man, was hoodwinked into a position where he believed DRM could work. So were countless other presumably very smart people in big companies. How?

We all know as computer scientists and IT savvy people that copy protection and DRM are logically flawed at the most fundamentally basic mathematical and physical levels right? There will never be a copy protection system that works, ever. But smart people buy into things they *want* to believe in just as quickly as J Random Fool in the street.

And just like those 419 scam victims, once you’ve bought the magic snake oil nobody is going to convince you you were wrong, it’s a matter of pride that can cause deep denial and bizzarre behaviour to justify your mistake.

Thats where the major lables are now. They still want to give Mr Umbugoola one more call to Nigeria to see if that cheque is in the mail yet like he promised.

Basically, they were had, hoisted by their own greedy make-believe world of magic copy “protection”. Somewhere there are some very wealthy software engineers laughing it up right now.

Don says:

Yeah, and the only reason eMusic numbers aren’t higher is because they have a “cap” on there downloads. there top plan only allowed for 90 tracks (now 75 for “newbies”) a month (for $19.95, or $191.50 if you got the yearly plan), although they do allow up to $75 worth of “bonus packs” a month (you could get packs of up to 50 tunes – now 30 – for $14.95. Hell I’ve been a member for maybe six months now and I’ve already loaded up on close to 60 albums, most of them from very well known bands (sevendust, powerman 5000, black label society). Frankly, even if the major labels did suddenly start selling their music DRM free I’d likely still continue to buy from independent labels and sites like eMusic whenever possible. Well except maybe for Roadrunner Records. If Roadrunner ever signed a deal with eMusic I might go broke. lol

LJSeinfeld (profile) says:

Rhapsody and Napster are subscription service

Umm yeah… I don’t want to *subscribe* to my music that I’m paying for. I want to own it and be able to do whatever I damn-well please with it.

Subscription service music is DRM laden, and IMHO worse than buying (even) DRM’d files from services like iTunes. Little ticking time-bombs just waiting to expire. If you buy that crap, you’re not part of the solution — you’re part of the problem. At least there are various workarounds for ITMS downloads..

I also applaud the BNL for being involved with this promotion. They’re awesome.
——————-
by Anonymous Coward on Dec 14th, 2006 @ 5:13pm
Rhapsody and Napster are subscription services…

so what if eMusic is out selling them…

they dont sell that many songs.
——————-

Jasper Kohl says:

It's cheap too

I think the low price of emusic tunes is as big a factor in its success as the DRM-free format. Depending on your subscription type, each track ends up costing between 25 and 40 cents. Major-label song prices are simply far too high! You end up paying about the same price for music as a discount/used CD, but you get no physical media or packaging, reduced audio quality, and (usually) inconvenient DRM restrictions. Unbelievable.

But emusic proves that people are willing to pay for music they can get free elsewhere, if the terms are reasonable.

Eric the Grey says:

My only problem with emusic.com

is that they don’t allow me to actually see what they have available without my signing up first.

Sorry, but I don’t care to give my personal information to a company unless I plan to actually buy something, and then it is seldom that I’ll do it.

Perhaps if they allowed us to browse their titles before filling in their forms, I’d change my mind, but not before hand.

EtG

Elizabeth Brooks says:

The fact of the matter

is that while eMusic has sold a creditable number of files, and iTunes has sold a VERY creditable number of files, there are still more songs traded on filesharing services in five or six days than eMusic and Apple’s total added together.

eMusic doesn’t have that much that the mainstream wants to buy. More and more every day, as the majors continue to lose their touch and alienate artists with followings. But the big crowd will still go where the big stars are…and I can’t imagine the majors giving up on DRM…..they just keep cooking up more and more bizarre versions of it.

Eric (user link) says:

eMusic sucks

What’s amazing about eMusic is that is succeeds in spite of having a stupid model. A monthly cap on the amount of music you can purchase just doesn’t make any sense and doesn’t conform to any music buying behaviors that I’m aware of. (Some months I want more than 40 tracks, meanwhile any month that I don’t I feel like I’m wasting money)

If they or someone else were to adopt a similar pricing model of AllofMp3, then I think it would fair even better against iTunes. I’d love to see a no-DRM service dominate the digital music business, but I think that eMusic’s model puts off a lot of consumers that would otherwise buy music from them.

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