Gates: DRM Not Where It Should Be

Talking with a group of bloggers, Microsoft's Bill Gates says he doesn't think anyone's gotten DRM technology right, and causes headaches for consumers.

Speaking wth a small group of bloggers at his company’s Redmond campus during the company’s Mix n’ Mash 07 junket, Microsoft’s Bill Gates offered the opinion that he didn’t think anyone had gotten DRM technology “right” yet, and said he hoped the technology would evolve more flexible usage models, move away from device-specific intelligence, and cause less trouble for consumers.

Digital rights management, or DRM technology, is use to restrict copying and illegal piracy of digital media such as music and video. Microsoft is itself a primary developer of DRM technologies used by music services like Napster, Urge, and Yahoo Music, as well as movie download services. Microsoft recently introduced a new form of DRM technologies with its Zune media players. Apple’s iPods and iTunes music store use a different, incompatible DRM technology.

Gates’ comments were covered by several blogs, including TechCrunch and Micro Persuasion.

According to Michael Arrington on TechCrunch, Gates’ advice for people wanting to transfer music easily from one system to another until DRM issues are sorted out was to “buy a CD and rip it.” A bold statement for a man who’s globally-watched company is deep in bed with music and video distributors deathly concerned digital technology is destroying their business.

Showing 2 comments

  1. Ian Bell and Dan Gaul at 11:29am 15th December 2006 What scares me is that the founder of Microsoft is preaching one thing while his company does the complete opposite. All of Microsoft's products are tied down by DRM. Has he bothered to fix this?
  2. Ted Murphy at 10:54am 15th December 2006 Well, Mr. Gates has got it exactly right. DRM is poorly implemented; it needs to move away from a machine-centric paradigm.

    Lets hope he convinces the music companies to go along. If the music companies would be willing to sell streamed songs, the legal digital music world would finally have an advantage over illegal alternatives.
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