Most Popular
| Top Stories | Commented | Featured |
TechSpot Blog: Disable Windows automatic check for solutions after a program crashes featured
Weekend Open Forum: Google Chrome OS and the future of cloud computing featured
Tech Tip of the Week: Unearth Region-Specific Windows 7 Themes featured
Sony: PlayStation 3 to be 3D-capable via firmware update
Radeon HD 5970 supplies dry up quick, not a big surprise
Xbox Live bans prompt class action lawsuit
Mozilla reveals 2008 revenue, rumors say Firefox coming to PS3
Weekend tech reading: How to run Chrome OS as a virtual machine
TS Community
| User Gallery | Recent Discussion |
Para OWNAGE by Sean | OS History - WinME by lopdog |
Semi-finished product by HanoverFist | Camaro by Bigben69 |
The Web
Wal-Mart rescinds decision to shut down DRM servers
At the end of last month, Wal-Mart announced they would shut down their DRM servers. That would have resulted in anyone who purchased DRM-laden music from Wal-Mart stuck with a worthless purchase down the road unless they burn their music to a CD beforehand. The decision was a reminder of how dangerous DRM can be for the consumer, and how it truly is a method of “renting” content rather than “buying” it. The company has wised up in recent days and now plans to offer DRM-free music on its online store, but that won't help those who jumped on the service when it was first offered.
Naturally this caused a lot of upset among those Wal-Mart customers who felt their paid-for music was in danger. They protested, and as a result the retail chain will be extending the server shut-down deadline. Wal-Mart hasn't given a specific date – only mentioning that they will maintain and operate these servers for the foreseeable future.
Naturally this caused a lot of upset among those Wal-Mart customers who felt their paid-for music was in danger. They protested, and as a result the retail chain will be extending the server shut-down deadline. Wal-Mart hasn't given a specific date – only mentioning that they will maintain and operate these servers for the foreseeable future.
TechSpot RSS



