iTunes 4.5: 7 instead of 10
p2pnet.net News:- "So after one year and 70 million songs, $0.99 now buys you less rather than more …"
So writes Jason Schultz on LawGeek here, and his subject is, of course, Apple iTunes 4.5.
Schultz refers to Jim Heid’s Mac iLife 04 Site where, it’s noted, one of the major changes is "stricter DRM on the songs you buy from the iTunes Music Store".
In iTunes 4.5, you can authorize up to five Macs or Windows computers to play your purchased music - up from three, "But Apple giveth and Apple taketh away: you can now burn a playlist containing purchased music up to seven times (down from ten). And the old workaround of simply changing the playlist slightly does not work," says Schultz
"So after one year and 70 million songs, $0.99 now buys you less rather than more - seven hard burns instead of ten soft ones. What will Apple ‘allow’ us to do with the music we ‘buy’ next year? three burns? one? zero?
"And what about the songs you’ve already bought? Don’t we get to keep the rights we had before the change?"
Nope, says LawGeek. And that’s because Apple, "has conveniently reserved its rights to make changes - unilaterially - to its DRM and your ability to make fair use via its Terms of Service and Terms of Sale pretty much anytime it pleases, without even having to give you notice."
And having said this, Schultz quotes the appropriate Apple Commandments, to wit
You shall be entitled to burn and export Products solely for personal, non-commercial use."
Any burning or exporting capabilities are solely an accommodation to you and shall not constitute a grant or waiver (or other limitation or implication) of any rights of the copyright owners of any content, sound recording, underlying musical composition or artwork embodied in any Product.
Apple reserves the right to change the terms and conditions of sale at the iTunes Music Store at any time. Customers are encouraged to review the Sales Policies on a periodic basis for modifications.






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April 30th, 2004 at 4:59 pm
Steve Jobs despite his past successes is an idiot., If big music doesn’t get its way (changing laws, complete an utter control of how we view/listen to media) Jobs will go down with them since he seems to have hung Apples future viability on this model.
April 30th, 2004 at 8:17 pm
Why don’t you get your facts right? Music that you bought before 4/28/04 can still be burned 10 times. The change in terms is NOT retroactive (except that you can now listen to that music on 5 computers instead of 3).
Maybe LawGeek should find out the truth before spouting off next time.
May 2nd, 2004 at 1:34 am
god this website blows.. pure heresay lmfao…
oh yeah… apple’s gonna make it so you can only burn onto 1 cd…
lick my bag p2p..
May 2nd, 2004 at 5:03 am
Yes, the moron has really outdone himself this time, with this new venture.
I turned my back on Apple after the superbowl advert.
That was an utter disgrace.
May 3rd, 2004 at 9:18 pm
You’re pathetic. You insult this Website, yet you waste your time replying to news posted here.