arstechnica.com — Despite widespread declarations of the death of DRM in music, the Recording Industry Association of America insists that it's far from dead. At the Digital Hollywood conference taking place in Los Angeles this week, the organization argued that DRM is still used in the large majority of music distribution methods.
May 8, 2008 View in Crawl 4
blup3aceMay 9, 2008
nvm...digg me down
bdbrMay 9, 2008
Take a look at iTunes if you think DRM is dead. The vast majority is still DRMed, and usually all of the top 10.
mazzy12345May 9, 2008
...not just a river in Egypt.
lenoxusMay 11, 2008
GIVE THE RIAA ICE CREAMI MEAN F**K THEM
automatictlcMay 12, 2008
I really wanted to click the thumbs up sign for the extreme amount of "RANDOM" in your comment. However. I did not.
donb2008Jun 30, 2008
Wow. An actual intelligent comment. Most people seem to have the idiotic notion that there's no such thing as intellectual property. They want artists, game designers, software developers, and others to make their work available for nothing. The music industry has every right to protect their stuff so people don't just rip them off. However, consumers have every right to choose products with less onerous protection schemes.