More songs to buy, download and share

ByABC News
August 25, 2007, 10:35 PM

— -- Artists such as Jay-Z, Amy Winehouse and the Beach Boys today will join the Rolling Stones, Norah Jones and others who have tunes for sale online free of copy restrictions.

Major label Universal, which also is home to 50 Cent, Sting and Gwen Stefani, begins testing the market for digital music without digital rights management built in to hinder sharing. Tracks will be available through online music retailers such as Google, Wal-Mart, Best Buy and Rhapsody but not the largest seller of music downloads, iTunes.

The songs and albums will be priced comparably to what retailers charge, usually 79 to 99 cents a track or $9.99 per album.

The label would not comment on the experiment, which is set to run until the end of the year. When he announced the plan this month, Universal Music Group's Doug Morris said he expected the project to "provide valuable insights into the implications of selling our music in an open format."

Restricting indiscriminant copying has been a concern since Napster made online music swapping wildly popular in the late 1990s. As record companies ventured into online sales of legitimate music downloads, several digital rights management systems have been used to control how music is shared and transferred to portables.

Online sales have been on the upswing. Downloads and subscription fees totaled about $1 billion in 2006, according to market tracking firm Jupiter Research, and are expected to grow 20% this year. But observers have wondered whether the market would grow faster without restrictions and the confusion they cause.

In April, EMI, home to the Stones, Jones and Coldplay, was the first major label to sell unprotected tracks. Universal's move "is another step toward a world where we can have some simple compatibility," Jupiter's David Card says.

Various forms of management have tripped up buyers of digital music. Most iTunes music, for example, is sold in a format that can't be moved directly to devices based on Windows software; Windows Media files sold through sites such as Walmart.com can't be added directly to Apple's iPods.