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3 commentsTuesday, September 30, 2008

Norway Presses Apple To Open Up iTunes

Wants interoperability

A Norway consumer body says it wants to take Apple to court over its iTunes music store for not changing its DRM technology to make its music available on all music players.

Two years ago, Consumer Ombudsman Bjørn Erik Thon criticized iTunes for the use of unfair contract terms in breach of the Norwegian Marketing Control Act.

Apple iTunes

One of the terms Thon found to be unfair, was that most of the music on the iTunes Store is only possible to play on Apple's own portable player, iPod.

Thon says that consumers should be able to choose what music device they would like to use to listen to music purchased from the iTunes Store.

"It's a consumer's right to transfer and play digital content bought and downloaded from the Internet to the music device he himself chooses to use. iTunes makes this impossible or at least difficult, and hence, they act in breach of Norwegian law," said Thon.

Thon says Apple has been given enough time to change its DRM policy in Norway to make iTunes available for all portable devices. The company has made some adjustments to its contract terms to make music files play on other devices, but Thon said that is not enough.

"Even with these adjustments, the ties between iTunes and iPod by use of non-interoperable DRM technology is in breach of the law. Therefore, I have told iTunes that I will now submit the matter to the Norwegian Market Council," said Thon.

In February 2008, Thon met with iTunes representatives in Berlin where they said they wanted to sell music without DRM technology and were open to interoperability.  Since that meeting no progress on the matter has been made.

"The consumer's freedom of choice in the online music market is an important right. This is a matter of great principal importance," said Thon.

iTunes has until November 3rd to respond before the case goes to the Market Council.

 

News Tags: iTunes, Norway, Apple, Legal
About the author:
Mike is a staff writer for WebProNews.

Not Apple

 If Norway had done it's homework, it would have discovered Apple have been fought about this before, and they would have discovered that it is not Apple that is enforcing the DRM, rather the music companies. Even though it's rather nice to be able to lock customers into your own product. 

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