Steve Jobs once agreed with France's DRM law
There has been a lot of hoopla.
But check out what Babak Nivi (a venture capitalist with Bessemer, but who is on temporary assignment helping out Songbird in biz dev) dug up and posted on his blog:
In 2002, Steve Jobs said, "If you legally acquire music, you need to have the right to manage it on all other devices that you own."In 2006, France said, "The consumer must be able to listen to the music they have bought on no matter what platform."
Sounds like Steve agrees with France.
http://www.siliconbeat.com/cgi-bin/mt331/mt-tb.cgi/1251
Links to blogs that reference this entry:
Thanks for the link Matt! By the way, my name is "Babak Nivi". You're not the first! And I don't really help the situation since I go by "Nivi".
Nivi on March 24, 2006 12:02 PMComment link
Nivi,
Sorry about that. Have changed.
Marshall Matt
Marshall Matt on March 24, 2006 12:12 PMComment link
Does Apple's licenses with the music industry specifically cover the type of DRM they were using, and restrictions on the release of source code related to that DRM?
He could very well still agree with the french DRM law, but would have been unable to reconcile that with the current state of Apple's iTunes success. I dont agree with Apple's current stance, but I am not particularly surprised at it.
JonnyRo on March 26, 2006 12:14 PMComment link
I really like this picture of Steve Jobs! Sorry if this is off the topic, but I can't help it:-).
Helen Wang on March 27, 2006 9:32 PMComment link