Music lovers, iPod groupies and general technophiles have a lot to thank Steve Jobs for. He is responsible to for a dramatic paradigm shift in the music industry, and I’m not talking about getting music companies to license their music to Apple. The shift I’m referring to hasn’t happened, yet. Picture Jobs standing over a pot of water on top of a stove. Into the water, he places a frog and turns on the flame. We’ll get back to this in a moment.
I was listening to NPR either this morning, or yesterday morning which is when I first heard of Apple’s latest move in the music industry. Apparently, Jobs is calling for music companies to abolish their digital rights management (DRM) choke hold, and his reasons are pretty compelling:
I love the confidence and Maverick style that’s coming through from Apple here. Lifting the DRM means that iPod users would no longer be bound to the iTunes music store, but I don’t think that bothers Apple that much. First, I’m sure most of the $0.99 goes to the music company. Second, I’m sure it’s incredibly expensive to maintain a water-tight DRM (In fact, they have to or the music companies can pull their entire catalogs if a breach persists for too long). Lastly, I think Apple is very confident in their position because of their iPods and because of me.
Back to boiling the frog
The frog is the music company, and the water is world of digital downloads. The flame is the demand and popularity of digital music, and it’s Mr. Jobs that’s controlling the flame. He made us want music online, and for the sake of beating this metaphor into the ground, he made music online hot. In the end, it will be Apple who is responsible for cooking the frog, and serving us all some delicious frog soup.
This is what I want (besides a heaping bowl of gooey frog)
I have 4 iTunes libraries on 4 separate computers. I want to take my iPod from computer to computer and add each library to my pod. I’m the type of music consumer that doesn’t mind paying for music. I don’t know if it’s the Napster law suit scare from my college days, or because I feel like I’m supporting struggling artists, but paying for music is something I’ve always felt good about. And I will even make Apple a promise. If they open everything, and abolish DRM, I will buy a new iPod. After all, that’s what all this is about, right?