Source : Toronto Star
Latest to join flood of protests aimed at Apple in Europe
AMSTERDAM – A Dutch consumer-advocacy group is pressuring Apple Inc. to change restrictions that tie songs bought on iTunes to the company's market-leading iPod players.
Consumentenbond spokesperson Ewald van Kouwen said his group has filed a formal complaint with the Dutch competition watchdog NMa asking for an investigation into what he called "illegal practices" by Apple's iTunes online store.
"What we want from Apple is that they remove the limitations that prevent you from playing a song you download from iTunes on any player other than an iPod," van Kouwen said.
"When you buy a music CD, it doesn't play only on players made by Panasonic.
"People who download a song from iTunes shouldn't be bound to an iPod for the rest of their lives."
The Dutch complaints follow similar ones from consumer-rights groups in Germany, France and the Nordic countries.
Currently, songs bought on iTunes are designed to play on iPods and not rivals such as those using Microsoft Corp.'s Windows Media system. Furthermore, iPods can't play copy-protected music from other stores, including Napster Inc. and Sony Corp.'s Connect.
Apple spokesperson Tom Neumayr said the company was aware of the concerns and hoped "European governments will encourage a competitive environment that lets innovation thrive."
Van Kouwen said his group was "inspired" by Norway's consumer ombudsman, who this week gave the company a Sept. 30 deadline to change the rules or face legal action.
Simmering European discontent with Apple's rules first boiled over in June 2006, when consumer agencies in Norway, Denmark and Sweden claimed Apple's practices violated contract and copyright laws. French consumer lobby UFC-Que Choisir and German counterpart Ferbraucherzentralen joined the effort late last year, along with Finland's Kuluttajavirasto.
In August, France passed a law giving regulators power to force Apple to license its software or hardware to rivals so they can make compatible music players and stores.
Early drafts of the law would have ordered the outright removal of copy-protection software, which prevents song files from playing on devices using rival copy-protection systems.
Apple complained the law was tantamount to "state-sponsored piracy."
The law in its final form has not led to any significant change in Apple's practices in France.
Van Kouwen said it will take months for the NMa watchdog to investigate the complaint.
He said the Consumentenbond also would oppose Microsoft Corp.'s use of copy-protection software on music for its new Zune player "or Sony or any company that does so."
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Toronto Star