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emigroup.com:
EMI Music launches DRM-free superior sound quality downloads across its entire digital repertoire — EMI Group CEO Eric Nicoli today hosted a press conference at EMI's headquarters in London where he announced that EMI Music is launching DRM-free superior quality downloads across …
Discussion:
The Unofficial Apple Weblog, Read/WriteWeb, Engadget, Startup Meme, The Social Web, Fractals of Change, NevilleHobson.com, TechCrunch, hypebot, IP Democracy, 901am, Don Dodge on The Next …, Ars Technica, Good Morning Silicon Valley, Swarming Media, Gizmodo, MacMegasite, Macsimum News, zedgeHeadz, jkOnTheRun, Buzzworthy, franticindustries, Information Overlord, The Tech Report, mathewingram.com/work, Gadget Lab, GottaBeMobile.com, MSTechToday, Paul Kedrosky's …, GigaOM, Technological Winter, Between the Lines, So sue me, Neowin.net, Hardware 2.0, Compiler, The 463, Mickeleh's Take, Jeremy's Blog, Microsoft News Tracker, Podcasting News, Change Is Good, confused of calcutta, Google Blogoscoped, Geek News Central, TechSpot News, Mashable!, Things That, Peer Pressure, WebProNews, TeleRead, Coolfer, michael parekh on IT, The Social Customer Manifesto, I4U News and UNEASYsilence
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Caroline McCarthy / CNET News.com:
EMI, Apple partner on DRM-free premium music — update EMI Group will soon sell digital music with better sound quality and no digital rights management restrictions through Apple's iTunes Store. — EMI's entire music catalog will be available in premium DRM-free form via iTunes in May …
Michael Arrington / TechCrunch:
EMI, Apple To Sell DRM-Free Music for $1.29/song — Update: MP3 file of the press call is here. — April 2, 2007: The day DRM died. — The surprise press conference in London today with today EMI CEO Eric Nicoli and Apple CEO Steve Jobs just started a few minutes ago (1 pm London time).
Cory Doctorow / Boing Boing:
iTunes Store will sell ENTIRE EMI CATALOG DRM-free!! 11! 1ONE! — Hallelujah! Apple and EMI just announced that they will be selling DRM-free Apple songs through the iTunes Music Store. The songs will cost 130 percent of the price of the existing crippled songs, and you'll get to choose.
Thomas Ricker / Engadget:
Steve Jobs and EMI present "an exciting new digital offering" — live! — So what will it be: DRM-free music downloads, the Beatles on iTunes, both or something else entirely? We'll see shortly as things are about to kickoff in London for EMI's and Apple's announcement of "an exciting new digital offering."
USA Today:
EMI will sell songs without copy protection on iTunes — Apple and EMI Music shook up the music industry Monday by announcing plans to sell more than 150,000 digital songs without copy protection. — The songs — from Coldplay, Norah Jones, and other artists on the giant EMI record label — can be freely copied.
Discussion:
Gear Live
AppleInsider:
Jobs talks new iTunes functions, DRM and video, iPod storage [transcript]
Jobs talks new iTunes functions, DRM and video, iPod storage [transcript]
Discussion:
Apple 2.0
Kathy Sierra / Creating Passionate Users:
Update/Joint Statement with Chris Locke — Chris Locke and I agreed to publish a statement, together (both in our own words) in advance of the story which will appear tomorrow (Monday, April 2) on CNN, at 7:20 AM (EST) on "CNN American Morning", and throughout the day on other CNN shows.
Discussion:
Licence to Roam, Epicenter, Phil Windley's Technometria, ALLIED and Silicon Valley Watcher
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Robert Scoble / Scobleizer:
Onward! — Glad to see that Kathy Sierra and Chris Locke …
Onward! — Glad to see that Kathy Sierra and Chris Locke …
Discussion:
One By One Media
Elinor Mills / CNET News.com:
Topix reinvents itself as citizen journalist site — Topix is reinventing itself from a software-based news aggregator site to a citizen journalist hub where anyone can submit news and photos and sign up to be a volunteer editor selecting featured stories. — The site also has redesigned …
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Matt Marshall / VentureBeat:
With Sonopia, you too can be a telecom mogul — Sonopia, two-year-old Menlo Park, Ca. company launches service tomorrow that lets anyone — even you — create their own mobile carrier. — You can create your own calling plan, within limits of course, and sending your customers alerts …
Discussion:
TechCrunch, O'Reilly Radar, Download Squad, Random Culture, MoCoNews, 606Tech and Mad4 Mobile Phones.com
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Steven Levy / Newsweek:
Twitter: Is Brevity The Next Big Thing? — Jack Dorsey has long been obsessed with status. [I'M WRITING THE LEAD TO MY COLUMN] Not in the snob-appeal sense, but status as in "where are you and what are you doing." He became fascinated with the idea while programming software for cab and courier companies.
Discussion:
Cost Per News
Karen / Official Google Blog:
About the New Orleans imagery in Google Maps and Earth — Posted by John Hanke, Director, Google Maps/Local/Earth — This weekend, there has been a lot of discussion about our imagery of New Orleans in Google Maps and Google Earth. I thought I'd give you some background that may clear things up …
Discussion:
Ogle Earth, Googling Google, Google Earth Blog, ZDNet News, Scripting News and Search Engine Land
Matt Marshall / VentureBeat:
Raising money from VCs? Check out Venture Hacks — Venture Hacks is a new site launched by two entrepreneurs to help founders of start-ups navigate the hairy world of venture capital. — It aims to provide tips, such as how to negotiate a good deal when raising money …
USA Today:
Music games won't be solo gigs anymore — Guitar Hero was just the opening act. MTV and the developers of that video game have a headliner in the works called Rock Band, which lets four music lovers gig together in person or online. — Expected in stores for the year-end holidays …
Discussion:
Xbox 360 Fanboy, Joystiq, Kotaku, Game | Life, Reel Pop, DigitalBattle, You NEWB, The Xbox Domain and Crave
Bob Tedeschi / New York Times:
Hoping to Move Guitar Notations Into the Legal Sunshine — IF budding guitarists fail to master "Stairway to Heaven" in the coming months, they can no longer blame the music publishers. — Because of an agreement in March between MusicNotes, an online music publisher and the Harry Fox Agency …
Business Week:
Cold Cash From A Hot Site — Can MySpace pull in revenue fast enough for Rupert? — As numbers go, this one's a whopper. Last year MySpace users called up an average of 31.5 billion unique page views per month. That's as though everyone on the planet visited the site once a week.
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paidContent.org