Topic: DRM music from Wal*Mart
Lynann's photo
Sun 09/28/08 04:24 PM
I haven't bought anything from Walmart in a very long time. This isn't a Walmart bashing thread.

I decided to post it because it annoys me that consumers who have legally purchased music are out of luck now after doing it right?

What this says to me is that the consumer is basically $crewed.

Any thoughts?

From BoingBoing

Wal*Mart shutting down DRM server, nuking your music collection -- only people who pay for music risk losing it to DRM shenanigans
Posted by Cory Doctorow, September 26, 2008 8:34 PM | permalink
Hey suckers! Did you buy DRM music from Wal*Mart instead of downloading MP3s for free from the P2P networks? Well, they're repaying your honesty by taking away your music. Unless you go through a bunch of hoops (that you may never find out about, if you've changed email addresses or if you're not a very technical person), your music will no longer be playable after October 9th.

But don't worry, this will never ever happen to all those other DRM companies -- unlike little fly-by-night mom-and-pop operations like Wal*Mart, the DRM companies are rock-ribbed veterans of commerce and industry, sure to be here for a thousand years. So go on buying your Audible books, your iTunes DRM songs, your Zune media, your EA games... None of these companies will ever disappear, nor will the third-party DRM suppliers they use. They are as solid and permanent as Commodore, Atari, the Soviet Union, the American credit system and the Roman Empire.

Boy, the entertainment industry sure makes a good case for ripping them off, huh? Buy your media and risk having it confiscated by a DRM-server shutdown. Take it for free and keep it forever.

From: Walmart Music Team
Date: Fri, Sep 26, 2008 at 7:42 PM
Subject: Important Information About Your Walmart.com Digital Music Purchases
To: xxxxxx@gmail.com

Important Information About Your Digital Music Purchases

We hope you are enjoying the increased music quality/bitrate and the improved usability of Walmart's MP3 music downloads. We began offering MP3s in August 2007 and have offered only DRM (digital rights management) -free MP3s since February 2008. As the final stage of our transition to a full DRM-free MP3 download store, Walmart will be shutting down our digital rights management system that supports protected songs and albums purchased from our site.

If you have purchased protected WMA music files from our site prior to Feb 2008, we strongly recommend that you back up your songs by burning them to a recordable audio CD. By backing up your songs, you will be able to access them from any personal computer. This change does not impact songs or albums purchased after Feb 2008, as those are DRM-free.

Beginning October 9, we will no longer be able to assist with digital rights management issues for protected WMA files purchased from Walmart.com. If you do not back up your files before this date, you will no longer be able to transfer your songs to other computers or access your songs after changing or reinstalling your operating system or in the event of a system crash. Your music and video collections will still play on the originally authorized computer.

Thank you for using Walmart.com for music downloads. We are working hard to make our store better than ever and easier to use.

Walmart Music Team

t22learner's photo
Sun 09/28/08 04:27 PM
Not that I've purchased an AC/DC record since "Back In Black" while in college, but they have an exclusive with Wal-Mart, so I won't be buying the new one...

DRM is Bull$hit and it seems AC/DC is stuck in an 80's mentality.

no photo
Sun 09/28/08 04:29 PM
what exactly is DRM? all the music I've accumulated over the last twenty years has been MP3, copying friends files

talldub's photo
Sun 09/28/08 04:31 PM
Edited by talldub on Sun 09/28/08 04:32 PM

what exactly is DRM? all the music I've accumulated over the last twenty years has been MP3, copying friends files

Essentially it's a modification to most operating systems to stop you copying DRM protected files to more than x number of devices. Non DRM is the way to go.

Edit And isn't MP3 format newer than 20 years?!

no photo
Sun 09/28/08 04:32 PM
Edited by quiet_2008 on Sun 09/28/08 04:32 PM
ohhhhhh copy guard type stuff

those bastards!!


hahaha 20 years? i guess so. I DO exagerate don't I




talldub's photo
Sun 09/28/08 04:33 PM

hahaha 20 years? i guess so. I DO exagerate don't I

Not at all wink wink!

Mindsi's photo
Sun 09/28/08 04:41 PM
Digital rights management basically is extra code it the mp3 or wma that controls what computer it may be played on (such as only works on the computer that downloaded it) or only allows it to be copied so many times.

It sounds like Wal-Mart was using pretty weak drm in any case. If you could burn it to cd than copy it to another computer, it's not much of a control.

I always made sure all the music I've purchased was drm-free. Most of it was from amazon.


no photo
Sun 09/28/08 04:42 PM
so it's prolly DRM free if you get it from lime wire

talldub's photo
Sun 09/28/08 04:43 PM
Edited by talldub on Sun 09/28/08 04:44 PM

so it's prolly DRM free if you get it from lime wire

Surprisingly not always. Some people are annoying enough to share DRM music.


EDIT (They usually zip up the files and share the zips, which are essentially useless).