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Anger over DRM-free iTunes tracks


#3 - 0--emndb--Anger over DRM-free iTunes tracks--2007-06-01 20:17:00

#The launch of music tracks free of digital locks on
iTunes has been overshadowed by the discovery that they contain data
about who bought them.

Some fear this data could be used to identify the owner of the tracks if they turn up on file-sharing sites.

The tracks from record company EMI cost more and are of a better quality than standard iTunes songs.

Apple has yet to comment on what it plans to do with the information embedded in the music files. - Lock off

The tracks without the digital locks, known as Digital
Rights Management (DRM) technology, officially went on sale on 30 May
under the iTunes Plus banner. The downloads cost $1.29 (99p) rather
than $0.99 (79p).

Apple uses a technology known as Fairplay to limit what
people can do with downloads. Fairplay can be cir*****vented by burning
tracks to a CD and then converting them to another format.

News site Ars Technica was among the first to discover
that downloaded tracks free of Fairplay have embedded within them the
full name and account information, including e-mail address, of who
bought them.

It suggested that this information could be an
anti-piracy measure as it could help work out who was putting downloads
on file-sharing sites.

But it also added that the user information was found on all the tracks that people buy on iTunes whether free of DRM or not.

It was not clear, said Ars Technica, whether the data
was part of Apple's administration system for iTunes or something else.
It said because the data was easy to spoof Apple needed to explain why
the data was present.

The BBC has contacted Apple seeking comment but so far the company has made no official response.

Other websites said it was only a matter of time before
a utility program was produced that which stripped out the identifying
information.
At this point it is not yet clear how deeply the user data is buried in the track or how easy it is to remove.

EMI's decision to sell DRM-free tracks was announced in April.

At the launch event Apple boss Steve Jobs announced that the iTunes store was the first to sign up to sell them.

Tracks by artists such as Coldplay, Joss Stone, Frank Sinatra and Pink Floyd are available without DRM technology.

The EMI/Apple move followed an open letter penned by
Steve Jobs in February that called for music companies to release
tracks without digital locks.
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