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Microsoft’s MSN Music service is
dead and buried as of August 31, when the company will stop issuing DRM keys, a
company statement unveiled on Tuesday. What that will do is allow music to play
only authorized computers, but transfers on other computers or upgrades from
Windows XP to Vista will mean losing the music library.
The company announced the
decision in a customer e-mail: “As of August 31, 2008, we will no longer be
able to support the retrieval of license keys for the songs you purchased from
MSN Music or the authorization of additional computers. You will need to obtain
a license key for each of your songs downloaded from MSN Music on any new
computer, and you must do so before August 31, 2008. If you attempt to transfer
your songs to additional computers after August 31, 2008, those songs will not
successfully play.”
The MSN Music Store was officially
launched in September 2004, but it never managed to become as big as Apple’s
iTunes Store, which meant an inevitable announcement two years later: the service stopped selling downloads,
redirecting customers to Zune or Real Rhapsody.
Rob Bennett, who also made the
2006 announcement, explained in a CNET News interview
the reasons for stop issuing DRM keys: “every
time there is an OS upgrade, the DRM equation gets complex very quickly,” he
said. “Every time, you saw support issues. People would call in because they
couldn’t download licenses. We had to write new code, new configuration each
time…”
In other words, it’s not a
lucrative deal anymore (after closing the service in November 2006, Microsoft
has offered support for customers who wished to move their music libraries to
other computers). And Bennett also offered a response to critics that have accused
Microsoft of trying to control legally purchased music at the customers’
expense:
“Had we had the ability to
deliver DRM-free tracks at the time, we absolutely would have done that,” said
Bennett. “We talked to the labels at the time about that […] Now, the industry
is making progress. The labels are understanding the downside of DRM when it’s
used the way they wanted to use it, they end up punishing the users who bought
music legally more than those who want to circumvent the system.”
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