
Yahoo! has announced that its music store will be going offline at the
end of September, taking with it the authorization keys for any music
purchased. This appears to be something of a trend lately, with
Microsoft announcing similar plans, only to go back on its original
plans a few days later.
As Ars Technica puts it, "The bad dream of DRM
continues"
-- "Once the Yahoo store goes down and the key servers go offline,
existing tracks cannot be authorized to play on new computers."
Major League Baseball and Google Video have both pulled similar
stunts, with Google at least providing a refund for the media, but no
DRM-free replacement.
Yahoo's own Ben Patterson spoke to Michael
Spiegelman, the senior
director for Yahoo! Music, about keeping the DRM servers going, like
MSN has promised to do...
"We can't really talk to the specific numbers [in terms of cost],"
said Spiegelman, adding that Yahoo! uses a
third-party service to host its DRM license keys. "To be honest, it's
a question of whether we want to spend the money supporting DRM
tracks, versus spending that money on what people really do want
[subscription and/or DRM-free music]."
When asked about replacing any purchased, DRM'd Yahoo! Music tracks
with the equivalent DRM free tracks from Rhapsody, Spiegelman replied "We'll take
those situations in a case-by-case fashion... We will be able to help
users out who have a large number of tracks... We're not saying that
that would be an impossible option... We'll see how much of a demand
there is for it."
Take action!
Are you a Yahoo! Music customer? Contact Yahoo!
Support and
demand DRM-free replacements for all the songs you've legally
purchased.
Update: Yahoo: We'll Reimburse Users for Terminated Music
CNET is reporting that customers will be offered refunds or DRM-free downloads, while Wired News is saying any DRM-free downloads could break any agreements Yahoo! has with record labels.