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DRM is good, give us FairPlay, Macrovision CEO tells Jobs | DRM is good, give us FairPlay, Macrovision CEO tells Jobs |
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| by Stan Beer | |
| Sunday, 18 February 2007 | |
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Page 1 of 2
In an open letter that has raised eyebrows sky high, Fred Amoroso the CEO of digital rights management solutions provider Macrovision has not only defended DRM but also asked Apple CEO Steve Jobs to hand over management of Apple's FairPlay DRM to Macrovision. So how does Mr Amoroso believe Apple and the public would benefit?
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"I believe that most piracy occurs because the technology available today has not yet been widely deployed to make DRM-protected legitimate content as easily accessible and convenient as unprotected illegitimate content is to consumers. The solution is to accelerate the deployment of convenient DRM-protected distribution channels—not to abandon them," says Mr Amoroso. By that logic, DRM protected music downloads should be more valuable to consumers than DRM-free CDs. Might one be so bold to suggest to Mr Amoroso that one of the reasons that CDs still sell well, despite their relative high cost, is that people can play and copy them to any device. Most of the music on iPods today has been ripped from CDs.
Mr Amoroso claims that DRM enables tiered use of digital content. |
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