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Lessons
of Sony BMG's CD Mess
Labels
Need DRM, but DRM Alone Won't Work
Michael
Stroud
11.30.05
Sony
BMG's CD copyright protection fiasco illustrates an obvious
point and a paradox.
The obvious point: if you're going to use digital rights protection
technology to safeguard digital entertainment for consumers,
you'd better make sure you work the bugs out first.
The paradox: Sony BMG needs to have a DRM strategy in place,
but it is bound to fail.
Before I explain the paradox, a quick review. Sony BMG inserted
software onto CDs from artists like Neil Diamond and Celine
Dion designed to keep consumers from making more than three
copies of the discs or freely trading the music online or
with friends. The company (or its subcontractors) also inserted
a little piece of spyware that opened them up to virus attacks
and legal action from Texas New York Attorney General Eliot
Spitzer and practically everyone else. Massive recalls are
underway.
Now, you can argue (correctly) that Sony has a right to protect
its discs, should have a DRM scheme in place and merely goofed
by either overreaching or doing bad quality control.
But the company was bound to fail. Because any copyright scheme
for entertainment ever devised has been cracked and the underlying
content made available to the masses. DVDs, videotapes, cable
and satellite TV, cassettes - all are routinely copied and
will continue to be, no matter how many legal eagles or what
copyright protection scheme the studios employ. You could
almost count in days the time it would take after the release
of a copy-protected Sony BMG disc before gleeful hackers broke
the code and posted how they did it on the web - along with
pirated Sony BMG CDs.
So why do I say Sony BMG needs to have a DRM scheme in place
if it is bound to fail? Because DRM schemes and legal strategies
protect creators of intellectual property against theft by
casual users only if the benefits of paying outweigh the liabilities
of stealing.
Take cable. Anybody with a little chutzpah can steal a signal,
even though it's encrypted. But most people don't because
the perceived benefit of paying $50 a month for unlimited
content to watch and record outweighs the hassle and legal
liability of ripping it off.
Do some people rip off cable? Sure. But last I heard, the
cable companies weren't going out of business and Hollywood
was pretty gung-ho about its cable profits.
So if you define DRM as 100 percent security, the cable industry's
encryption has failed. But they still make plenty of money.
That's the paradox.
The problem for Sony BMG and other record labels is that the
benefits of ripping off CDs still outweighs the liabilities
of getting caught and the hassles of breaking the DRM or downloading
songs from the web. So even if Sony BMG's DRM software is
squeaky clean, it wouldn't completely stop the copying problem.
In fairness to Sony BMG, the company was well aware of that
fact when it began copy-protecting its CDs. "Our intent
was to create an educational speed bumps rather than to create
a full stop," a Sony BMG executive said. "We wanted
to give consumers the functionality they wanted while helping
them understand they shouldn't make hundreds of copies."
For Sony BMG and other labels to stop ordinary people from
hacking and copying, they need to lower prices and intensify
their efforts to create new products like dual video-audio
discs; they need to offer CD buyers exclusive benefits such
as discounted concert tickets, free ringtones and downloads,
and free access to exclusive websites. Ultimately, the labels
will probably have to discard CDs entirely for another business
model that persuades consumers to buy rather than steal.
Only then will a failed DRM strategy have a chance of success.
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