Chapter 13. Shop the iTunes Store
You’ll learn to:
Navigate the iTunes store
Buy and download music, videos, books, and more
Set up an Apple account
Subscribe to podcasts
Share your tastes on Facebook and Twitter
Give iTunes gifts
MUSIC FANS HAVE BEEN downloading songs from the Internet since the 1990s, from sites that were legal and others that were, well, not so much. People loved the convenience, but record companies saw potential profits slipping down millions of modem lines. They fought back by suing file-sharing services and other software companies for aiding and abetting copyright infringement.
The need for a legal music-download site was obvious, but most early efforts resulted in skimpy song catalogs and confusing usage rights. Things changed dramatically in April 2003, when Apple opened its online iTunes Music Store, selling legal, iPod-ready digital versions of popular songs for 99 cents a pop. In January 2009, Apple did away with the restrictive copy protections built into most Store songs. This liberating act gave consumers unfettered use of their songs and even the ability to play them on (gasp!) non-Apple players.
Now simply called the iTunes Store, the media emporium’s virtual shelves stock millions of songs, plus full-length movies, TV shows, iPod Touch programs, audio books, ebooks, podcasts, music videos, and more. It’s all custom-tailored for the iPod, and best of all, ...
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