Rhapsody’s DRM-free music store offers little to excite

Written on June 30, 2008 – 6:07 pm | by GoogleBot |

Rhapsody launched its own MP3 store today, joining the ranks of Amazon MP3, Napster, and a slew of others competing in the unprotected digital music market. Rhapsody’s MP3 store is available in public beta form today, and sells music from the Big Four (Universal Music Group, Sony BMG, Warner Music Group, and EMI) in addition to a slew of independent artists. Individual songs can be purchased for the typical 99Ā¢ apiece and most albums land around $9.99, on par with most other online music services.

The move is part of what the company refers to as its “Music Without Limits” initiative—something that just as easily be called the “Assault Against iTunes” initiative. Rhapsody says that it wants to “turbocharge” the industry by moving away from proprietary DRM, and “empower” fans by allowing them to buy music in interoperable MP3 format.

Full story: arstechnica.com

Post a Comment

Comment spam protected by SpamBam

About this site

Welcome to Techbeta. Techbeta is a site focussed on tech news, and freeware/open source software for Windows, Mac OS X, Pocket PC and Linux. More

Want to subscribe?

 Subscribe in a reader Or, subscribe via email:
Enter your email address:  
Find entries :