1. mp3 players are now becoming mp4 players and doing video playback, almost as standard these days. All of these will want video on them so there is currently HUGE consumer awareness of the issue of video's on pc's and portability of media.
2. Several recent surveys of the RIAA found that 90% of them thought that removing DRM was the way ahead yet they just wont push to go ahead with it.
3. HD-DVD and Blu-Ray copy protection have both just been blow apart proving to the industry that the millions they invested in it were a waste of money and that the public are desperate for content without protection.
4. Steve Job's public slagging off of DRM and putting it down is a MAJOR market leader against it with a HUGE customer base following and listening to him.
5. Yahoo is publically saying DRM should be removed
6. A Canadian company has just ripped the DRM off of 50,000 of its online tracks it sells further pushing the move towards no DRM.
That's a great summary of what has been happening recently. I just want to point out, though, that even if they do remove the DRM, I still will not be interested in downloading! The problem is that I get CDs for, we'll say an average of $5. Now, let's say the average CD has three good songs on it. I have some that are all good and some with one or zero--one's that the listener personally likes. So that comes out to $3. Now we have some problems.
1) Sure, you get the music you know you like (radio, etc) but you are missing out on discovering new songs from a particular artist. I find a new song from time to time and those are worth quite a bit to me because whenever I can discover new songs, that means I don't have to get sick of my current favorites as fast.
2) No physical media. I don't have anything to fall back on if my drives fail! Yes, I keep backups, but for the average person who doesn't, they have nothing to fall back on and are taking a huge risk. The $5, or the extra $2 is almost like insurance.
3) Plus you get the cover art, a nice CD, case, and inserts which sometimes include some nice things. Some artists hide pages behind the CD holder piece, which makes it more interesting.
4) Technically a lower quality piece. I do hear the difference between many MP3s and lossless audio. On a good stereo or good set of headphones, there's no question that you are losing quality.
So in the end, you're looking at a 30% premium to get a physical piece of media but remember, you're getting 3-5 or more times the tracks! The shorter songs often yield CDs with more than 15 tracks! Say you then want an entire CD? They offer it at $10? That's a rip of!
5) So if you want a whole CD, you're looking at a premium for the download! Of 100%!
I won't be downloading ANYTIME soon! I remember back when the free iTunes codes with Pepsi were around. I got a lot of them but then started buying codes on eBay. What a waste of money. Back then, I was satisfied with low quality recordings. With good speakers, the music sounds terrible, though.