Month: May 2016

Rumor: Apple Shutting down iTunes Music Downloads in Two Years

iTunesLogo2016According to a web site called Digital Music News which cites sources "close and active business relationships" with Apple, the company is planning to "terminate music downloads from the iTunes Music Store within three to four years".  To further back this up, the site has said that some high up Apple executives are telling them that they are saying "not if, but when" the company will officially shutter the service.

Here's an excerpt from the story:

"The sources indicated that a range of shutdown timetables are being considered by Apple, though one executive noted that "keeping [iTunes music downloads] running forever isn't really on the table anymore." Also under discussion is a plan to "ride the [iTunes music download offering] out for the next 3-4 years, maybe longer," when paid music downloads are likely to be an afterthought in a streaming-dominated industry. [...] 

According to one source, an initial shutdown could take place in 'tier 1' countries like the United States, UK, and leading countries in Europe and Asia, with 'tier 2' and 'tier 3' countries experiencing a staggered shutdown in subsequent years."

Hours after the above story was published, Apple rep Tom Neumayr contacted Recode and said the report that Apple would stop iTunes music downloads in two years is "not true."

We'll continue to follow this story.

Microsoft Kicks Controversial Windows 10 Feature to the Curb

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CNN/Money:

Microsoft announced that it will kill off Wi-Fi Sense in an upcoming Windows 10 update. The feature made a lot of folks uneasy because it shared your Wi-Fi password with all of your Facebook friends' computers, as well as those belonging to your Skype and Outlook.com contacts.

That's not what undid Wi-Fi Sense, though. Microsoft said it took a lot of manpower to maintain, and customers just weren't taking advantage of it.

"The cost of updating the code to keep this feature working combined with low usage and low demand made this not worth further investment," said Gabe Aul, head of the Windows engineering systems team, in a blog post.

Aul said Wi-Fi Sense will continue to work if you already had it enabled.

Wi-Fi Sense allows you to automatically log your friends onto your Wi-Fi network without ever giving them your password. In turn, you can use the feature to automatically connect your Windows 10 PC to your friends' Wi-Fi networks without knowing their passwords.

The fears about Wi-Fi Sense were likely overblown. In fact, it was probably safer to automatically log in your friends to your Wi-Fi network than actually telling them your password, which many people also use for bank and email accounts.

Wi-Fi Sense is enabled by default on Windows 10, but it doesn't share your networks by default. You have to actively choose to share your Wi-Fi network by clicking a box that says "Share network with my contacts" when logging in.

When you do, all of your Facebook, Skype and Outlook.com contacts will be able to automatically log onto your Wi-Fi network when their Windows 10 PCs are in range.

If you use Wi-Fi Sense, your Wi-Fi network password is encrypted and stored on a Microsoft server. But when your friends connect via Wi-Fi Sense, they won't be able to share your network with their friends.

But Microsoft (MSFT, Tech30) did a lousy job at communicating that message to customers. Ever since Windows 10 debuted in July, there have been nonstop reports about how Microsoft is using its new operating system to covertly collect data about its customers.

Microsoft Windows chief Terry Myerson didn't respond to those complaints until September, when he finally publicly discussed the specifics about what information Windows 10 collects and what controls customers have.

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