The evidence for the $350 million DRM case against Apple is in. We still don’t know, at this time, about how those iPod members feel. At this point we have a kind-of idea when it comes to owning iPods, but we need to know how things will go when it comes to juries and all that. The entire complaint relies on how Apple decided it would handle its digital rights management software 10 years ago.
Mark Donnelly argued that the company was always trying to fit more services into new models, and constantly discounted older models.