The provider hopes to separate its service from other similar subscriptions or mobile services by making downloads permanent. Any songs downloaded during the subscription period will remain after the subscription ends, addressing complaints about past services that render music unplayable when the subscription ends. Orange also notes that it has no contracts and that users can back out of the service at any time.
However, the French carrier has at least temporarily backtracked on hopes for a protection-free music service and chooses to use locked Windows Media files. Songs can be played on both computers and cellphones but are limited to a maximum of five PCs and five portable devices authorized at any given time; the move locks out non-Windows PCs as well as a large number of portable players, including iPods as well as the iPhone offered by Orange itself.
The telecoms company earlier this year said it had considered digital rights management (DRM) a setback for its music plans, which would ideally serve the iPhone as well as every other media-capable device on the Orange network. The company had also considered switching to a streaming-only service that would support a wider range of cellphones than Windows Media but would prevent potentially illegal copying.
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