Apple’s recent deal with EMI to sell DRM-free songs

A few months ago I was at a big family dinner at Capsouto Frères, a fancy French bistro in Tribeca. One of the partygoers runs a small computer and electronics shop and considers himself an authority on computers and consumer electronics. His opinions on Apple (AAPL) and its products bug me (to put it simply).

I held my tongue as he chattered on about all the supposedly fascinating things he was doing with his Microsoft (MSFT) Windows machines. We barely know each other, and he had no idea what I write about for a living. But when the subject turned to the iPod, he gave me an opening I couldn’t resist. “Oh those iPods,” he said dismissively. “People are always bringing them into the shop with complaints, and they don’t even play standard MP3 songs like all the others.”

“Absolutely not true,” I said, breaking my silence. “I don’t know where you got that idea, but it’s patently false.”
A Popular Misconception

His convoluted explanation, as best I could understand it, was that he thought iPods played some “Apple-only” format, which he called ACC (it’s actually AAC, as in Advanced Audio Coding, and it isn’t “Apple-only”). I explained that the iPod plays every major digital audio format save two, Windows Media Audio (WMA) and Ogg Vorbis.

He had somehow gotten it into his head that all online music stores, save iTunes, sell MP3s on which there are no copy restrictions. Noting that he was vastly misinformed, I told him that in in fact no online music store sells unprotected MP3s—the exception being eMusic.com—while Napster (NAPS) and Yahoo! Music (YHOO), for instance, sell heavily protected WMA files, which are compatible with a wide range of portable players, but not the iPod. Where he got his set of ideas, I don’t know.

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