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Apple: foiled in France

p2p news / p2pnet: p2pnet editor on Jon Newton contributes regularly to TechNewsWorld.

Here’s his latest column.>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Foiled in France: Apple’s New Tub of Hot Water
By Jon Newton - TechNewsWorld

Could Apple’s troubles in Europe get any worse? It’s on the wrong end of a lawsuit from The Beatles in the UK, who say iTunes breaks a US$26 million settlement under which Apple Computer agreed to stay away from the music business; there’s a distinct possibility Apple’s digital rights management technology might go down the chiottes in France; and, now two major Danish companies, Maersk and TDC, both with online music stores, would also like to see an end to Apple’s digital rights restrictions.

Through Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, the U.S. is locked behind Apple boss Steve ‘I want it all’ Jobs as the latter bitterly protests France’s 296-to-193 vote in favor of a new copyright law that will effectively turn his DRM (make that, digital rights monopoly) into DRR (digital rights respect).

Jobs’ Plans Stymied

Apple will be compelled by French courts to disclose information to allow third-party software applications to play music bought on iTunes, possibly closing the self-funding iPod promotional vehicle down in France.

Gutierrez says he’ll study the law, just passed by the French parliament’s lower house and which must now be ratified by the Senate. But, echoing the standard entertainment and software cartel line, he was quoted in the press as saying, "Any time something like this happens, any time that we believe that intellectual property rights are being violated, we need to speak up, and in this case, the company is taking the initiative."

The French decision must be doubly galling to Jobs because it may also stymie his efforts to introduce a hard-core marketing scheme that he’s been highly successful with in the U.S., in France.

Under it, Apple gets into major teaching institutions with Apple iPods and iTunes, which are spuriously presented as important teaching aids, and which are promoted and sold on Apple’s behalf by unpaid school staffs.

In the U.S., Duke University was to the fore as well, with Stanford close behind. It doesn’t stop with iPods. In Kutztown, N.Y., for example, students are forced to use Apple laptops at school, whether they want to or not.

Now Apple has started a "collaboration" with the first French teaching unit for a similar arrangement.

Under the terms of the two-year partnership, Apple will work closely with a business school near Versailles on "integrating iPods and other digital technology into classrooms and curricula," says Businessweek Online.

We Want Answers

For Apple, the hookup with the "prestigious" school is the "first step in a plan to penetrate business schools and other institutions of higher learning across Europe," says the story, adding:

"And what of that pesky new French law, which could require Apple to disclose its proprietary copy-protection schemes and let iPod owners download songs from services other than iTunes? In a press statement on Mar. 21, the company called the new law ’state-sponsored piracy.’"

However, at the start of the press event to announce his bid to use French schools to weasel his product into the French educational system, officials said they "wouldn’t comment on the potential impact of the law on Apple’s French business." And when pressed on what a potential Apple pullout from France could mean to the iPod/iTunes deal, Pascal Cagni, who runs the company’s European unit, "couldn’t avoid answering." He merely, "smiled wanly, glanced down, and then said with a sigh, ‘I just don’t know.’"

Amendment Backer Speaks

What of France’s anti-DRM move?

"I had wanted to explain the reasons which led Patrick Bloche and myself to propose this amendment during the second reading of article 7," posted Christian Paul, one of France’s representatives behind the interoperability amendment, on his blog, recently. Continuing on he writes:

"The recent adoption of provisions for DRM interoperability in the French ‘droit d’auteur’ (copyright) law raised eyebrows in the U.S. and caused an alarmed reaction from Apple.

"I would like to explain why we proposed that. First: we want to protect consumers’ freedom of choice and privacy. We oppose the idea that the seller of a song or any other kind of work can impose on the consumer the way to read it, forever, and especially in consumer’s home. It is essential to assure that the consumer can choose whatever device she likes, just as she can use her favorite hi-fi today and does not have to buy a new one for each vendor.

"Second: we want to keep the market free and open. Instead of legally enforcing artificial monopolies, we prefer to create an environment where every innovator has a chance. To do so, innovators need some information on how to interoperate with existing devices. To assure that small innovators can enter the market, we do not want this information to be expensive. As we are discussing an essential freedom here — the one to create and innovate — we estimated that the only acceptable price is: without charge.

"Third: we want to protect free (as in freedom) software developers. Many of them are individuals coding for fun, not for profit. Getting information required for interoperability without charge is key to them. They must also be able to publish the source code of software interoperating with any DRM. We have put this last guarantee in law.

"Let’s put it more simply: Can we allow a couple of vendors to establish monopolies tightly controlling their clients and excluding competition? I think that no American can wish for that. Neither Apple, nor Microsoft, nor anyone else is threatened by this law if they intend to play fairly with competitors and consumers. If Apple wants to remain a big player, it will have to innovate and continue providing exciting new products. This is a good news for consumers, who will get better, cheaper competition. And it is also a great news in the long term for Apple."

Back in the U.S, Apple’s DRM was recently re-defined as C.R.A.P., or "Cancellation, Restriction, and Punishment" by ZDNet Executive Editor David Berlind.

Fitting.

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6 Responses to “Apple: foiled in France”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    “What of France’s anti-DRM move?”

    It is attempting to force digital music suppliers to use DRM systems that are compatable with each other. Apple will do fine. Interoperability will probably be GOOD for Apple’s music biz in France, they are just too pig headed to see it.

  2. Reader's Write Says:

    I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again (quite a feat for an Englishman apparently) Viva La France!!! Anti-Iraq war! Anti-short term contracts for young folk! And now this! At least it seems as though a modicum of sanity has broken out somewhere!

  3. Reader's Write Says:

    It is a ood thing what the French are doing… defeating DRM through the law.

    But it will soon be academic as (I predict) soon we will be seeing two insertable chip mp3 players/data copiers. With twin 32GB chips (just announced by Samsung) inserted, one chip with up to 50,000 songs and a second chip for copying the contents of the first chip, up to 50,000 songs or 10 movies.

    For a lack of name I call these copying devices the “Twin Pods”.

    When these Twin Pod copiers are owned by kids and serious computer users (to backup or distribute data) the copying floodgate will be totally uncontrollable. Everyone will have a chip with 50,000 songs.

    Surely there is no way that traditional distribution of digital files has any chance of suvival when one considers that

    - Owning infringing copies of anything is not an infringement.
    - Only the act of copying and distributing itself is infringement.
    - With the Twin Pod there is no need to have a deteactable and raidable manufacturing facility.
    - The copying process can be done in shirt pocket, abroad.
    - The Twin Pod has many legal uses such a copying and backup of
    data, fair use copying, legal distribution, etc.

    Surely the Twin Pod is already on drawang bords at Samsung and at China. In time the Twuin Pod idea will be available on cameras and cell phones. Imagine a cell phone with a city’s telephone directory in one chip and 50,000 songs or 5,000 voice recordings on chip number 2!

    Of course the Americans (Apple?) could use the screwed up patent registration system to patent the idea, regardless of its obviousness and simplicity and prior use and then not license anyone to use the patented idea or litigate the idea to death, to delay the obvious, the death of for profit digital file distribution as is known at present. Its been done before, the use of the patent system to screw up innovation.

    First it was P2P and now is the Twin Pod.

    Rafael Venegas
    http://www.gvenegas.com

  4. Reader's Write Says:

    yeah but not using DRM would be good for everyone (musicians included) but you’ll never see the RIAA or it’s puppet organizations admit it!

  5. Reader's Write Says:

    I don’t agree with the comment on people being “forced” to use apple laptops at once school.

    I can’t simply say how stupid a comment that would be, seeing as most institutions make you work on machine running windows only.

  6. Reader's Write Says:

    That’s why they say France has to be “modernised”.

    If modernisation means lawyers everywhere, short-term contracts, war$ for mon€y and oil & stuff like this, I’m happy to live in an old fashioned country :-). No France will never become Florida ! (Sorry if somme Florida people reads this, I’m sure there are cool people there too, I’ve relatives there myself, and they provided me the information about how s**** the mentality is there…)

    However, if the governement was indeed anti-iraq war (Because we’re among the only countries that have an independent spying satellite network and therefore knew there were no WMD in Iraq), the CRAP interoperability thing proposed by Paul & Bloche was voted AGAINST the governement’s will and the short term contracts for young folk is also an issue the opponents to our governement made that big.

    We’re indeed an original folk.
    Remember that when other countries lived under dictatorial kingdoms, we cut our king’s head.

    That’s our cultural exception :-)

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