Wilfred--
Tower Records just went on the Marshal's auction block, the biggest of the big-box record stores in the USA, a casualty of the encroachment of online music. My point is simply that the most powerful weapon we have against DRM (as currently configured) is the free market. Nothing speaks louder than not buying music in a format we don't like.
My point to Glynor (put not quite so plainly, but by now he's used to it) is that moral outrage is laughable, given the cast of characters we're dealing with. If you really don't like DRM'd music, don't buy it. The fact is that plenty of people are willing to accept it, even in it's current form, which I can't believe will be the final iteration, it is so effing unworkable.
For my money, I agree with exactly what you said, and I think we're headed there. The kind of turmoil you see now in the record industry is typical of an industry that has delayed adaptation to market changes, instead relying on serial price hikes in the face of declining volume. Radical change is comping, I believe, but not because of radicals.