Dave Goldberg on going DRM-Free on TalkCrunch

As promised in last week’s post, here’s the podcast of Dave talking to Michael Arrington of TechCrunch on TalkCrunch.

My attempt at answering the Amie St question fell a little flat. Let me know if you’d like any clarification in the comments and I’ll attempt to clear things up. :)

ian

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Trackbacks & Pings

  1. Microsoft Attempts to Excuse DRM Fortress, Indie Labels Create “Fifth Major” and Eschew DRM at FISTFULAYEN on 22 Jan 2007 at 12:08 am

    [...] Q: Who benefits from DRM? a) Consumers, b) Media Companies, c) Huge Technology Companies, d) No One. A: c) Huge Technology Companies So it’s no surprise the Microsoft has gone DRM crazy in Windows Vista with an insanely complex system for not only protecting content but moving content between protected formats. Slashdot reported a while back on Peter Guttman’s “Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection”, criticizing the platform for its cost in performance. I’ve written before about the opportunity cost of DRM, and Dave Goldberg alluded to the dollar cost in his Podcast with Michael Arrington a couple weeks back. Now the Vista team has responded, defending their overly complex content protection scheme. To me it reads like a treatise on why not to use Vista for managing and consuming media. [...]

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Comments

  1. cd wrote:

    Oh, but you CAN repeal the laws of economics. All you have to do is wage ongoing warfare on human-nature and free exchange of information. See: former USSR, current North Korea, and closer to home, CUBA.

  2. Lucas wrote:

    Hey Ian, we agree. You look at the labels we already have on the site and that’s exactly what they’re doing. Getting together like minded musicians to make great music, actually crafting a sound, organizing tours etc. There will always be a place for labels like AudioBee, Sunken Treasures, and Daptone.

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