Welcome to p2pnet.net - The original daily p2p and digital news site. Always First!
REGISTER | LOGIN
Cool Stuff
MPAA News
Games / Consoles
News
Music
Movies
Reviews
Open Source
Mobiles
Advertising
Products
P2P
Off Topic
Freedom
Politics
Interviews
Security
DRM
Links
Kids and Kartels
Scroogle Search: 
Search
 
Web p2pnet   
Search: 
Search
Torrent Site Tracker
    Sponsored by
Frostwire
 
p2pnet
 


mp3rocket
 
Add real-time p2pnet headlines to YOUR site ! Click here to download our newsfeed code

Glaser strikes out at Jobs

p2p news / p2pnet: There’s no love lost between RealNetworks’ Rob Glaser and Apple’s Steve Jobs and it looks like their war of words may be recommencing.

Apple won’t allow music from the RealPlayer to be ‘transferred’ to iPods. So Real came up with Harmony which lets people hear Real tracks on any player —- whether Jobs likes it or not. Jobs responded by accusing Real of using hacker tactics.

Harmony mimicked hymn, a free, independent application developed with the same objective and Hymn, in turn, started life as PlayFair (a poke at Apple’s misnomered FairPlay consumer control DRM), eventually becoming hymn (hear your music anywhere) after Apple had tried, and failed, to grind it down.

Now RealNetworks, flush with cash, thanks to Microsoft, is on Jobs’ case once more.

"At the Digital Living Conference here on Monday, Glaser told a packed hotel ballroom that Jobs & Co.’s refusal to make the iPod compatible with music services other than Apple’s iTunes was ‘pigheadedness’," says CNET News.

"Glaser also said that Apple’s unwillingness to cooperate with other online music vendors promotes piracy of copyrighted materials and will eventually draw the wrath of consumers. These are heady times for Glaser and his Internet multimedia company, which announced in October that it had reached a favorable settlement with Microsoft on the $1 billion lawsuit RealNetworks filed in 2003."

Glaser also "called for the music industry to pressure Jobs into opening up the iPod to other online music vendors," says CNET, which also has him stating:

"Steve makes for a good pinata because he’s taken a position against interoperability."

Apple, "being on its own in term of interoperability makes piracy more compelling for consumers. Because, hey, if I take all my MP3s from this illegal site or that illegal site, they’ll work on the iPod or anything else. Whereas if I buy them legitimately, they’ll only work at one place."

It’s all rhetoric, however.

At this point in the game, the corporate music business is insignificant matched against the independent the p2p networks, and the labels seemed determined to keep it that way, maintaining ridiculously high wholesale prices for their digital tracks. In fact, rather than lowering them, they want to increase them.

Apple, meanwhile, entirely dominates what little corporate online business there is with iTunes, its iPod promo vehicle.

But RealNetworks is still trying to grab a piece of the action. Yesterday it announced it’s remodelled its Rhapsody music rental service by putting it online.

Also read:-
HarmonyApple and Real hack it out, July 31, 2005
CNET NewsGlaser turns wrath on Apple, Jobs, December 5, 2005
putting it onlineReal Rhapsodizes on the Web, December 5, 2005

HOME

One Response to “Glaser strikes out at Jobs”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    Of course, he’s right. Well, about Jobs being pigheaded, anyway.

Leave a Reply

ONLY items referencing the post at hand, please. No links to personal sites, no personal attacks, trolling, freebie advertising, or off-topic posts. Thanks. And Cheers!

    Sponsored by
tek savvy