MSN Music

MSN Music is a part of MSN's web services. It delivers music news, music videos, spotlights on new music, artist information, and live performances of artists. The website also served as a digital music store from 2004 to 2008.

MSN Music
MSN Music logo, circa 2008
Type of site
Music website
Available inEnglish
OwnerMicrosoft
LaunchedFebruary 18, 2002 (2002-02-18)

History

In 2004, Microsoft created an MSN Music download store to compete with Apple's iTunes Music Store, though its sales in comparison were negligible. The store utilized Microsoft's Windows Media Player application and proprietary Windows Media Format files (protected .wma files).

It started out with 1.5 million songs, but decreased to 1.1 million songs due to lagging sales and lack of real support from Microsoft.

The MSN Music store was not compatible with Microsoft's own Zune music player. As of 14 November 2006, MSN Music ceased music sales and now redirects viewers to either Zune or Real Rhapsody websites.

Microsoft acquired MongoMusic on September 13, 2000 and merged its technology.[1]

In 2006, when announcing the closing of MSN Music in the United States, Microsoft promised users that license servers would be maintained for five years but in April 2008, Microsoft announced that the DRM servers for MSN Music would be deactivated on 2008-08-31. After this date, it was no longer possible to reauthorize purchased songs when changing computers or operating systems.[2] They have suggested that customers back-up their music by burning it to CD.[3] They later relented, and committed to keeping the DRM servers online through the end of 2011.[4]

MSN's music section nonetheless remained online after 2008, hosting content such as music blogs and photo galleries; it has continued to be referred to as MSN Music.[5]

Other countries

Although MSN Music Downloads have ceased in the US, MSN Music Downloads (DRM Protected) are still available in the UK via the MSN UK Portal and/or through Windows Media Player although the service is powered by Nokia (formerly OD2).

gollark: No, the message-content-as-privileged-intent thing does fix it if they don't give it out much.
gollark: With message content access being available and widely used, all of the giant thousands-of-servers bots could store all messages they see or something.
gollark: ↑
gollark: Discord is just beeing.
gollark: It seems like the actual bot concerns could have been addressed better by letting *server admins* filter what messages bots see by regex or something.

References

  1. "Microsoft Acquires MongoMusic". News Center. Microsoft. September 13, 2000. Retrieved May 13, 2008.
  2. Sandoval, Greg (April 22, 2008). "Defunct MSN Music has a DRM controversy on its hands". CNET. CBS Interactive. Retrieved May 13, 2008.
  3. Sandoval, Greg (April 23, 2008). "Interview: Microsoft's Rob Bennett defends DRM decision". CNET. CBS Interactive. Retrieved May 13, 2008.
  4. "MSN Music Store Support Notification". 2008-06-19. Archived from the original on 2009-01-24.
  5. Emigh, Jacqueline (October 27, 2009). "MSN Music to Add Content From MySpace?". PC World. IDG. Retrieved July 10, 2016.
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