
Good news for libraries that are weary of trying to explain the intricacies of Digital Rights Management to patrons.
DRM is a digital lock that encrypts downloaded files –
get more info here from Defective by Design, a group that opposes
DRM. Library patrons care about
DRM, as it is the reason why they can NOT download
audiobooks to an
iPod as a free “digital checkout” from their public library – something that, until now, only Windows-based media player owners could do.
OverDrive, the leading online distributor of
audiobooks to public libraries, has announced that they are now supplying unlocked MP3 downloads of thousands of titles. Read the good news
here. The MP3 titles are currently only about 15% of
OverDrive’s total catalog, but the company promises that the numbers will quickly increase, as the
rollout is put into place. This means that those
DRM-free titles can be loaded onto any type of media player –
iPod, cell phone, Creative Zen, whatever. Overdrive will also be providing the downloads through Borders, both online and in free-standing kiosks in the store. I am sure that this news will boost
OverDrive’s school-focused digital book collection as well.
Kudos to the move by Random House to remove
DRM from their
audiobooks, along with Blackstone
Audiobooks,
Hachette Book Group, Books In Motion,
CSA Word, Audio Evolution, Audio Realms, and others. I can’t wait until all
audiobooks have been set free!