Real is supposed to make an announcement on Monday, declaring the ability of their music to be played on an iPod. Apparenty, they have unlocked some of the DRM technology behind the worlds most popular player. In addition, this is just one facet of some new software they have created that will allow them to sell music that is compatible with a variety of different players, including microsoft compatible rivals.
They named the software of all things, Harmony. Somehow I don't think this is going to create much around the Apple compound. According to this C|Net article, Harmony does a pretty good job of simulating the DRM from an iTune so the iPod will accept it and send it happily to those white earbuds. This is not going to go over well with Steve Job's, because he hasn't wanted to let other music companies license an iPod compatibility.
What's going to be fun to watch is, RealNetworks didn't ask permission to unleash their iPod fooling software either.
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Harmony also will automatically change songs into an iPod-compatible format. But because Apple has not licensed its FairPlay copy-protection software to anyone, RealNetworks executives said its engineers had to re-create their own version in their labs in order to make the device play them back.
The license accompanying Apple's iPod says purchasers cannot "copy, decompile, reverse engineer, disassemble, (or) attempt to derive the source code of" the software. |
Well, let's stay tuned to this one, as we have to expect some intense posturing and gnashing of teeth this coming week. You can read the entire story from C|Net right here. Check out this quote from Larry Kenswil, president of Universal Music's eLabs. He really rubs some salt in the wound!
"Up to now, the world of downloads has been far too close to a world where the CD you buy in one store wouldn't play on the CD player you bought in another," Larry Kenswil, president of Universal Music's eLabs division, said in a statement. "We applaud RealNetworks' efforts to help correct this situation and appeal to all people and companies in this area to work toward a world of universal interoperability."
I have never been much of a Real fan, but this makes me smile. You just have to love it when a DRM falls apart.
Source: C|Net

As you know, the RealNetworks music store sells songs in 192 kbps AAC (as opposed to iTMS at 128 kbps). When transferring your purchased songs to the iPod, the AAC itself is not touched, but the Helix DRM is transmuxed to the DRM used by the iPod, i.e. fully protected and without trans-coding. If you then transfer the file back to your PC (for instance with Anapod), you get an M4P file, that is a protected MPEG-4 AAC file.You guy jumped into conclusion too soon. I dun like Real either but I have to admit that they're becoming nicer than they used to be. They remove spyware from Real7/8, support Vorbis/Theora/Ogg, GPL'ed Helix Core Player,etc