It's right there in black and white. Here's the
information page. You just have to read the footnote:
*It is necessary to maintain a Napster subscription in order to continue access to songs downloaded through the Napster service.
And here's the
page that details how few devices are compatible with Napster. Of course, the iPod isn't one of them.
Yeah, I'll
Do the Math, Napster. I like my music permanent, and I think both of your services suck.
Mental wrote:That does seem kind of interesting. I use Winamp as my player - not the Napster player - how would they even do that? If you cancel your service, does it mark all of your WMA's downloaded from them as unplayable or something? It seems like that might be hard to do...
WMAs? Yeah, that would be the problem. It's a DRM-compatible format, so that would be easily within its ability. The best way to not get music with strings attached is to not use WMA. Period. Demand MP3s or don't use their service.
Kupek wrote:I figured they'd at least have some sort of spin to make it sound like renting music is somehow better.
I think they prefer the angle of comparing themselves to iTunes to misled the public. Of course, I'm not going to let a ***STAR*** on the end of their tagline not go unnoticed.