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Posted by Sumeeth Evans April 23, 2008 2:49 PM with 4 comment(s)
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Customers who have purchased music from Microsoft's now-defunct MSN Music store are now facing a decision they never anticipated making: commit to which computers (and OS) they want to authorize forever, or give up access to the music they paid for. Why? Because Microsoft has decided that it's done supporting the service and will be turning off the MSN Music license servers by the end of this summer.

MSN Entertainment and Video Services general manager Rob Bennett sent out an e-mail this afternoon to customers, advising them to make any and all authorizations or deauthorizations before August 31. "As of August 31, 2008, we will no longer be able to support the retrieval of license keys for the songs you purchased from MSN Music or the authorization of additional computers," reads the e-mail seen by Ars. "You will need to obtain a license key for each of your songs downloaded from MSN Music on any new computer, and you must do so before August 31, 2008. If you attempt to transfer your songs to additional computers after August 31, 2008, those songs will not successfully play."

This doesn't just apply to the five different computers that PlaysForSure allows users to authorize, it also applies to operating systems on the same machine (users need to reauthorize a machine after they upgrade from Windows XP to Windows Vista, for example). Once September rolls around, users are committed to whatever five machines they may have authorized—along with whatever OS they are running. 

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Source: arstechnica.com

Comments

 

Chinpokomon said:

DRM FTL?  If this isn't an arguement against DRM, I don't know what is.

April 23, 2008 7:47 PM
 

Sion Jones said:

Remember there was a piece of software briefly available that would remove the DRM from WMA music files?

I predict that it will re-emerge.

Ideally, it should come from MS themselves, if they want to keep customers happy. I've personally bought nearly a thousand tracks on MSN over the years, and don't look forward to burning CDs of them all, then re-ripping just because of fricking DRM.

April 23, 2008 10:34 PM
 

davery921 said:

Sounds like grounds for a class-action suit to me...

April 25, 2008 4:51 PM
 

Zac B said:

class-action law suit... Law suits are what brought the DRM mess in the first place. You have no options, MS has no options; well you could say they do but so do you. Both parties have crap options though. At least you can burn the cds to remove the DRM.

April 27, 2008 4:07 AM
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