Chris Gorog is convinced people won’t continue to pay $1 a song for online music. That is despite Apple’s record string of recent achievements, including 200 million songs sold at its iTunes Music Store, and nearly 4 million iPod digital music players moved into consumers’ homes this year. Gorog runs Apple rival Napster, which offers digital downloads and a music subscription deal. Consumers get unlimited access to listen to 700,000 songs for $9.95 monthly.
The hitch is that to move songs onto a portable digital device or to a CD costs extra: $1 a song. That’s one of the reasons digital music fans have not taken to the subscription model — also offered by Real Networks’ Rhapsody — in a big way. But Gorog thinks that will change next year. And he has other heavyweights such as Yahoo and Microsoft in his corner.
Microsoft earlier this year developed a new copyright protection plan that allows for the transfer of subscription songs to portable players. For $5 more a month, consumers can transfer Napster’s entire catalog to their device — and listen as often as they’d like — as long as they subscribe.
Now that sounds like a good idea of MS! If it will actually work as described above, this will get really popular. Even I might even start downloading music legally.
Read the full article at Forbes.com.
lol, you might even start downloading music legally??
well you aint speaking for the rest of us