Dave Horvath
6 Aug 2007 8:53
Talks have begun between mobile phone giant, Nokia and everyone's favorite conglomerate, Microsoft to discuss adding DRM software onto Nokia's Series 60 and Series 40 mobile device platforms. This of course brings forth speculation that Nokie will make the plunge into the world of music downloads. Nokia is stating that the means of having this DRM in place will allow customers to buy content directly through one of its handsets and then transfer it to a PC.
It was reported earlier by serveral news sites that Nokia is potentially about to launch its own service for downloading media content. The speculated launch date for this would happen on August 29th.
Nokia has not mentioned what content will be readily available to its two mobile devices slated for digital rights lockdown or which file formats will be acceptable for the devices to play. It could potentially have quite a few key formats to knock around as PlayReady, Microsoft's DRM software, already supports taking the fun out of WMA, WMV, AAC, AAC+, AMR and H.264.
Series 60 from Nokia is a Graphical User Interface (GUI) and application layer protocol developed so that it could operate on the Symbian operating system. The Series 40, alternatively is a phone based protocol which accesses Nokia's own private operating system which is in use in most Nokia phones already. From Microsoft's point of view, they're already poised to deliver a fine product for Nokia as PlayReady is compatible with Windows Media DRM 10, which claims that it will allow PlayReady devices to access existing DRM encoded media.
Source:
Register