drm
4 ResultsDictionary
DRM
(1) (Digital Radio Mondiale) A digital audio broadcasting (DAB) system for AM radio in Europe. See HD Radio. (2) (Digital Rights Management) A system for authorizing the viewing or playback of...
Dictionary
Definition: DRM
(1) (Digital Radio Mondiale) A digital audio broadcasting (DAB) system for AM radio in Europe. See HD Radio.
(2) (Digital Rights Management) A system for authorizing the viewing or playback of copyrighted material on a user's computer or digital music player. DRM has centered around copyrighted music, with Apple's FairPlay and Microsoft's Windows Digital Rights Manager being the two predominant DRM systems. As broadband Internet and more highly compressed video formats take hold, the focus of DRM broadens to video content. See FairPlay, Windows Digital Rights Manager and copy protection.
Many Scenarios
DRM systems work in conjunction with media player software in the computer and the portable digital music player. They can be designed for various distribution scenarios. For example, songs downloaded from a music service may only be played as long as the user maintains a subscription. Titles can be configured to expire after they have been played some number of times or on a particular date. In many cases, the song titles are tied to some number of computers and portable players. The software prohibits the user from playing titles on other devices without obtaining additional licenses or permission from the vendor, which is why some people call DRM "digital restrictions management." DRM prevents users from converting purchased products to alternate formats that might be more convenient for playback. See analog hole.
The Main Point
DRM enables the artists who create music to be paid for their efforts. If a user pays a dollar for downloading a song, a part of that dollar goes to the music company, and some percentage of that part goes to the artist. Although hundreds of millions of copyrighted songs have been swapped over the Internet, tens of millions of songs have also been paid for since the advent of legitimate online music services. See online music store, peer-to-peer network, MP3, Napster and Rhapsody.
THIS DEFINITION IS FOR PERSONAL USE ONLY
All other reproduction is strictly prohibited without permission from the publisher.
© 1981-2010 The Computer Language Company Inc. All rights reserved.
Sponsored White Papers, Webcasts & Resources
-
Live Webcast: Getting to Microsoft Office 365: The Right Migration for Your Business
If you've been stuck using bare bones, web-based tools, you'll appreciate the full featured collaboration in MS Office 365. Check out this live webcast to learn more about Microsoft Office 365,...
-
Napster and the "The more things change" rule
Drew Wilson at Zero Paid points out that Napster celebrates its 10th birthday this month. The Globe and Mail takes a deeper look in its Download Decade series. In the last decade, iTunes,...
-
Hands-on with the Zune Pass subscription music service
This week, Microsoft announced a major change to its all-you-can-eat music download service. The new Zune Pass costs $14.95 a month and gives subscribers the right to download anything in the Zune...
-
Want to know what over 7,500 ZDNet readers think about copying digital media?
Then get on over to Ed Bott's Microsoft Report, where his poll on digital media ethics has garnered an overwhelming, and highly educational, response.
-
Home digital home
Will digital homes be comfortable and easy to use or a tangle of wires and standards? Intel spokeswoman Jennifer Lashua gives CNET correspondent James Hilliard a tour of the chipmaker's latest...
Additional Results
-
Microsoft quietly rolls out Silverlight 5.1
Microsoft made available for download Silverlight 5.1 on May 8. Here's what's included in this minor update.
-
Supporting the Free Software Foundation's day against DRM
Why is is okay for me to give or loan a book to a friend but not okay to do the same thing, with the same content, when it is in the form of an eBook?
-
Why e-book DRM will die, and why this will make no difference to Amazon and Apple
DRM on e-books will die. Frightened publishers will see to it that it happens.
-
Should the DoJ investigate e-book DRM and hardware lock-in?
The problem is that when you start to examine lock-in to specific hardware, you're opening a can of worms.
-
Textbook of the future? Not until we figure out distribution, DRM, and ecosystem
Hardware is only a tiny part of the problem we need to solve to get educational resources into kids' hands (both literally and figuratively) at scale.
-
Yes, even Amazon's DRM sucks
If it looks like DRM, and smells like DRM, then it IS DRM!
-
Kindle Fire: Edu holy grail or one more DRM-ridden toy?
We're so close I can taste it. But the business models and content just aren't there yet.
-
In the battle for the living room, the ghost of Steve Jobs looms large
The major battles in the post-PC era will be fought in the living room, and the den, and the dorm room, and just about any place where people watch movies and TV programs and listen to music....
-
Amazon Apps need to phone home or fail
When erratic DRM gets in the way of using appplications you have paid for, it's a bad thing, OK?
-
Humble Indie Bundle: DRM-free, pay what you want, and help good causes
Pay what you want for five DRM-free games that work on Windows, Mac and Linux.
-
Google Music proves why it deserves the beta label
After a day with the Google Music Beta, I'm convinced it was rushed out the door too early. Even for a beta, this combination of software and service is too buggy for me to take seriously for now.
-
Steve Jobs' one more thing: iTunes Match
At the WWDC conference in San Francisco, Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveils iTunes Match, part of the company's new iCloud service. For a $24.99 annual fee, users can use iTunes Match to scan their...
-
Did Apple just announce complete music pirate amnesty for $24.95?
I'm still absorbing the Steve Jobs keynote from the annual WWDC, so it'll take an hour or so to shake the unicorn dust from my ears and scrape the reality distortion effect off the bottom of my shoes.
-
Did Microsoft miss the boat...again?
Microsoft had all the components in place to start the cloud music wars. Why are they still unheard from?
-
Can Linux on the desktop and DRM ever coexist?
An interesting piece over on TechRepublic by Jack Wallen got me thinking about Linux and DRM (Digital Rights Management) - could the two ever coexist peacefully or will heavy-handedness from big...
-
Google's own DRM system blocks rooted phones on Blockbuster
Here comes round two of Google vs. Android phone owners with word that the Blockbuster app on the Droid Charge sniffs out rooted phones and blocks video streaming on them.
IBM Sponsored Resources
Resources from our Sponsor
- Oracle Exadata vs IBM: Netezza Compared
- Forrester TEI Report
- CIA Whitepaper
- Harnessing the Power of Advanced Analytics
- Tapping into Unleashed Business Potential with Advanced Analytics
- Unlock Analytic Performance with Revolution R for Enterprise and IBM: Netezza Data Warehouse Appliance
The best of ZDNet, delivered
ZDNet Newsletters
Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox





