Apple calls French law 'state-sponsored piracy'

By Elinor Mills, CNET News.com
Thursday, March 23, 2006 10:09 AM

A proposed French law that would force Apple Computer to make the songs it sells through its iTunes music store playable on devices that compete with its own iPod amounts to "state-sponsored piracy," Apple said Tuesday.

France's lower house of parliament passed a law Tuesday that would require digital content providers to share details of their rights management technologies with rivals. iTunes songs are protected by Apple's FairPlay technology and are incompatible with most non-iPod players. The bill, designed to prevent any single music-playing technology--and hence, any one media seller or device maker--from dominating the online market, now moves to France's senate.

"The French implementation of the EU Copyright Directive will result in state-sponsored piracy," Apple said in a statement. "If this happens, legal music sales will plummet just when legitimate alternatives to piracy are winning over customers. iPod sales will likely increase as users freely load their iPods with 'interoperable' music which cannot be adequately protected. Free movies for iPods should not be far behind in what will rapidly become a state-sponsored culture of piracy."

Apple's dominant iPod works with songs purchased on iTunes--the dominant online media store--and with tracks that are not copy protected, but it doesn't play songs that are protected by Sony's or Microsoft's digital rights management software and sold through non-iTunes services.

Apple could choose to withdraw iTunes from the French market rather than change its business, Piper Jaffray senior analyst Gene Munster speculated in a research note on Tuesday.

"We believe Apple is more likely to drop out of the French market than open up its FairPlay DRM to allow iTunes to play on competing MP3 players," he wrote. "While this sounds like a drastic move, we believe it would not materially impact business. We estimate that approximately 20 percent of iPod and iTunes sales occur outside of the U.S. The French market alone is likely less than 2 percent of iPod and iTunes business."

An Apple spokesman said he could not comment on what action Apple might take if the measure becomes law in France.

CNET News.com's Ina Fried contributed to this report.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.

Guest user

Guest user

Level: 
Joined: —
Already a member? Log in »



 

Loading...

Tech Jobs Now!

CodeGear extends the Borland legacy

Web Development

Discover what the CodeGear developers are working on.


Read more »



  • HPC Applications

    Ever wondered if High Performing Computing systems really matter in our day-to-day world? Let Dr David Scott from Intel take you a for quick tour on developing HPC applications.
    Play video


  • Maximize IT Spend: Business Acceleration

    How do you ensure your IT solutions are well integrated and streamlined across your enterprise? Rajen from Oracle highlights the important considerations ...
    Play video


  • HPC Architecture: Explained

    Why is High Performance Computing increasingly in demand in today's businesses? Find out which is the most widely deployed HPC architecture today.
    Play video

Tags

  1. bpo
  2. business
  3. china
  4. customers
  5. deal
  6. deals
  7. future
  8. green
  9. hp
  10. icahn
  11. ict
  12. india
  13. indian
  14. jobs
  15. microsoft
  16. microsoft-yahoo
  17. mobile
  18. offer
  19. outsourcing
  20. phones
  21. report
  22. services
  23. spore
  24. study
  25. tech
  26. technology
  27. tier
  28. unveils
  29. us
  30. yahoo

Has the Internet changed our core values?

Blog thumbnail

If you've been following this blog, you might remember that I'm a self-professed sufferer of a, erm, disorder I've come to call, privacy..... by Eileen Yu

Read more »