Here's a link to Apple Insider, which covers it but gets the story wrong (they seem to think it's bad news for Apple).
http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/08/01/10/amazon_mp3_secures_sony_bmg_music_all_four_major_labels.html
Several of the commenters, however, nail it: it's great news for Apple and especially great news for iPhone/iPod owners who can basically now get most music DRM-free and at reasonable prices. (Except for me, who as a Canadian even with NAFTA and Free Trade, can not buy anything, ever, from anyone
)
Apple makes its money on hardware, and previously if you wanted to get music from some other store, but wanted an iPod/iPhone, you were out of luck. iTunes existed mostly just to provide content to iPod/iPhone (given the labels 70% cut, minus bandwidth, hosting, development, and credit card transaction fees/order processing, Apple likely had very thin margins on content).
Now the labels have ceded the DRM ground (and whether it ever comes to iTunes or not is won't really matter), so you can buy music for your iPod/iPhone (or any device as MP3 is ubiquitous) from Amazon (and presumably other places eventually).
And if you prefer Amazon, you're out finally out of the nightmare that is WMA DRM (which even the Zune can't/won't support) and can buy any player you want.
http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/08/01/10/amazon_mp3_secures_sony_bmg_music_all_four_major_labels.html
Several of the commenters, however, nail it: it's great news for Apple and especially great news for iPhone/iPod owners who can basically now get most music DRM-free and at reasonable prices. (Except for me, who as a Canadian even with NAFTA and Free Trade, can not buy anything, ever, from anyone
Apple makes its money on hardware, and previously if you wanted to get music from some other store, but wanted an iPod/iPhone, you were out of luck. iTunes existed mostly just to provide content to iPod/iPhone (given the labels 70% cut, minus bandwidth, hosting, development, and credit card transaction fees/order processing, Apple likely had very thin margins on content).
Now the labels have ceded the DRM ground (and whether it ever comes to iTunes or not is won't really matter), so you can buy music for your iPod/iPhone (or any device as MP3 is ubiquitous) from Amazon (and presumably other places eventually).
And if you prefer Amazon, you're out finally out of the nightmare that is WMA DRM (which even the Zune can't/won't support) and can buy any player you want.