Walmart Pulling Out Of Digital Music Business, DRM Servers To Stay Up ... For Now

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  • admin
    Administrator
    • Nov 2001
    • 8951

    Walmart Pulling Out Of Digital Music Business, DRM Servers To Stay Up ... For Now

    Walmart's digital music store will be closing at the end of the month, according to a leaked memo first published on Digital Music News.

    Walmart's MP3 store was first launched in 2004, with DRM encrypted downloads, which were eventually removed in 2007 to compete with the then DRM-free iTunes. But despite heavy discounting, Walmart's digital music venture seems to have come to an end, due to the inability to compete with the better user experience offered by iTunes.

    "After eight years in business, the Walmart Music Downloads Store located at mp3.walmart.com will close on August 28, 2011. All content in the Store will be disabled and no longer available for download from the store.

    "The sale of physical record music products on Walmart.com as well as in Walmart US retail stores will remain unaffected. Walmart Soundcheck (soundcheck.walmart.com) will remain operational as a live streaming site without any download options," the leaked memo said.

    But what does this mean for all those that purchased DRM encrypted music before 2007? Walmart tried to shut off its DRM servers in 2008, but met with a strong public backlash, the shopping giant backtracked and reinstated DRM authentication.

    Luckily, Walmart seems to have learned from this last incident, and has promised to keep the DRM servers online, for now at least. "We'll continue to provide support to our customers who previously purchased digital music through Walmart Music Downloads so they may continue to enjoy and manage their existing WMA files," a Walmart representative told Digital Music News.

    The biggest criticism of DRM has always been that "buyers" have to rely on the kindness of corporations to keep their "purchases" usable, and Walmart's struggles also show the cost of DRM for content sellers, who have to keep on maintaining expensive DRM servers indefinitely until some point where the public backlash isn't as great.

    (Story Source)
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  • drfsupercenter
    NOT an online superstore
    • Oct 2005
    • 4424

    #2
    I had a few of the DRM-encrypted files that I bought way back when, but I decrypted those long ago. However, I think Walmart should just give people the DRM-free mp3 versions of the songs - if they purchased it, the site has a record of it and it's not really too much to ask that they just give it to you in a more compatible format.

    Then nobody would need to complain about the DRM.
    CYA Later:

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    • admin
      Administrator
      • Nov 2001
      • 8951

      #3
      I agree. Surely it can't cost Walmart more to do this than to indefinitely keep the DRM servers up and running.
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      • MilesAhead
        Eclectician
        • Nov 2006
        • 2615

        #4
        Originally Posted by admin
        I agree. Surely it can't cost Walmart more to do this than to indefinitely keep the DRM servers up and running.
        That's why I won't buy software that has to periodically "call home" to recharge some indeterminate alarm clock that lets it work for x number of additional days on your system. Computer stuff changes too quickly to assume the server is going to be there more than a couple of years.

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        • drfsupercenter
          NOT an online superstore
          • Oct 2005
          • 4424

          #5
          I'll buy DRM protected music as long as there's a way to remove the DRM. Obviously I can't mention HOW to do that here, but thanks to iTunes Plus and Amazon mp3 I haven't even needed to in a while.
          CYA Later:

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          • PurpleDemon
            Digital Video Expert
            Digital Video Expert
            • Mar 2006
            • 716

            #6
            Originally Posted by drfsupercenter
            I'll buy DRM protected music as long as there's a way to remove the DRM. Obviously I can't mention HOW to do that here, but thanks to iTunes Plus and Amazon mp3 I haven't even needed to in a while.
            Good point. I always have to buy DRM free music to play on my USB connection in my car stereo.
            If we refuse to buy DRM, the market should swift?

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            • drfsupercenter
              NOT an online superstore
              • Oct 2005
              • 4424

              #7
              Well that's why Amazon came out with their mp3 store - and iTunes followed suit after many people (including me) were switching to their service. It's clear the public doesn't want DRM - yet some industries still insist on it. (Movies and games, specifically)
              CYA Later:

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              • PurpleDemon
                Digital Video Expert
                Digital Video Expert
                • Mar 2006
                • 716

                #8
                That's is why I don't buy Rhapsody either. It needs cleaned before I can play it in my car

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