![]() ![]() In that case, those customers will receive an email shortly after the service’s launch today informing them that a digital copy of that purchase (or purchases) is now available in the cloud for free.Ĭloud Player, which currently works on Amazon Kindle Fire devices, Android phones and tablets, the iPhone, iPad and iPod touch, Roku, Sonos, and Samsung smart TVs and DVD players, also arrived on Ford’s AppLink platform earlier this week. In fact, even if users have never signed up or downloaded the Cloud Player software, the option will be enabled if they’ve ever purchased a CD on Amazon. On the publisher side, Amazon has participation from all the major music publishers and “hundreds, if not thousands,” of smaller publishers, says Boom.Īmazon’s customers won’t have to take any action to switch on AutoRip. According to Steve Boom, Amazon’s VP of Worldwide Digital Music, the company now has deals in place with the three major labels (EMI, now a part of Universal Sony and Warner) as well as hundreds of independent labels. ![]() The option has been made possible by deals made with record labels and music publishers, Amazon says. News of the service’s debut was leaked last night by CNET, which said it would be arriving “soon.”Īt launch, the AutoRip service is offered for over 50,000 albums on, with more on the way, including both back catalog and most new releases. The digital music is being placed in users’ Amazon Cloud Player accounts, the company’s answer to Google Music, iTunes Match, Rdio, and other services that store users’ own music collections in the cloud. Customers will also have access to a growing number of new releases. Amazon is today introducing a new service called Amazon AutoRip, which automatically gives customers free MP3 versions of any CDs they’ve purchased from Amazon since the launch of its Music Store back in 1998. ![]()
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