New MP3 Tunes music service to be DRM Free!

GristyMcFisty used our news submit to tell us that well known Entrepreneur Michael Robertson founder of the well known firm Lindows (now Linspire)  is planning to start his own DRM-free online digital music store next week called MP3 Tunes. The company is set to announce the launch of the service on February 9th along with both hardware and software products to go with the service. Michael Robertson commented on the fact that certain market forces were trying to make users use a proprietary system that made consumers buy particular player or software program.

On the new MP3 Tunes service he said that the service will be the first of many products that will be offered by the company. The MP3 Tunes service will offer tracks free of Digital Rights Management meaning that consumers can use the music on any device or computer as well as burning as many copies as they like. Robertson said that music companies would love consumers to buy music several times over either online or on cd but that consumers want to know that the product they have bought belongs to them whatever device they may be using.

 

Mp3 MICHAEL ROBERTSON, founder of the firm known previously as Lindows, said he is to introduce a digital music company called MP3 Tunes next week. Robertson is set to announce the company on February 9th - it will make hardware devices, software products, and offer an online music store. He claimed "certain market forces" were trying to drive customers away from the MP3 format towards proprietary systems. Those unnamed firms have systems "which lock out some consumers and force everyone to buy a particular company"s player or software program.

"He said MP3 Tunes will provide more options, compelling him to get back into the music sector. He said that the online music store will be the first of the products the new company will offer. But, he said, MP3 Tunes will offer all tracks without digital rights management so that customers can use the music on any player or computer, make unlimited copies of songs, and burn music onto CDs. Certainly there"s a demand for this. While music companies would love people to buy the same album several times over on vinyl, on cassette, on CD, online and goodness knows in what future method, people would like to know that the digital music they"ve bought remains theirs, whatever the device they"re using.

Thankfully there is someone out there that will finally break this DRM obsession with music companies, hopefully MP3 Tunes will be the start of a revolution.

Source: The Inquirer

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