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iTunes Store

The iTunes Store is a digital media store operated by Apple Inc. It opened on April 28, 2003, as a result of Steve Jobs' push to open a digital marketplace for music. As of April 2020, iTunes offered 60 million songs, 2.2 million apps, 25,000 TV shows, and 65,000 films. When it opened, it was the only legal digital catalog of music to offer songs from all five major record labels.[1]

iTunes Store
The iTunes Store, as seen in iTunes 12.12.7.1, running on Windows 10 from January 31, 2023
TypeDigital distribution
Online music store
Video on demand
App store (moved to App Store)
Ebook store (moved to Apple Books)
Launch dateApril 28, 2003; 19 years ago (2003-04-28)
Platform(s)macOS
iOS
tvOS
Windows 7 and later
AvailabilitySee Internationalization
Websiteapple.com/itunes/

The iTunes Store is available on most Apple devices, including the Mac (inside the Music app), the iPhone, the iPad, the iPod touch, and the Apple TV, as well as on Windows (inside iTunes). Video purchases from the iTunes Store are viewable on the Apple TV app on Roku[2] and Amazon Fire TV[3] devices and certain smart televisions.

While initially a dominant player in digital media, by the mid-2010s, streaming media services were generating more revenue than the buy-to-own model used by the iTunes Store.[4][5] Apple now operates its own subscription-based streaming music service, Apple Music, alongside the iTunes Store.

History

Steve Jobs saw the opportunity to open a digital marketplace for music due to the rising popularity of easily downloadable tracks.[6][7][8][9] In 2002, Jobs made an agreement with the five major record labels to offer their content through iTunes.[10] The iTunes Music Store (later iTunes Store) was introduced by Jobs at a special Apple music event in April 2003.[11][12] It was initially available on Mac computers and the iPod,[13] and was later expanded to Microsoft Windows in October 2003.[14]

In April 2008, the iTunes Store was the largest music vendor in the United States,[15] and in February 2010, it was the largest music vendor in the world.[16] The iTunes Store's revenues in the first quarter of 2011 totaled nearly US$1.4 billion.[17] By May 28, 2014, the store had sold 35 billion songs worldwide.[18]

In 2016, it was reported that music streaming services had overtaken digital downloads in sales.[19] It was reported that iTunes-style digital download sales had dropped 24% as streaming continued to increase.[20]

In April 2018, the iTunes app was added to the Microsoft Windows 10 app store.[21] Beginning in the spring of 2019, the iTunes app became available on Samsung Smart TVs.[22]

In October 2019, with the release of macOS Catalina, iTunes was split into separate Music, TV, and Podcasts apps. Apple's storefront for movies and television shows moved inside the TV app. Any music in users' iTunes library would transfer to the Music app, which would still offer access to the iTunes Store.[23][24]

Features and restrictions

Pricing model

History

Following the introduction of the iTunes Store, individual songs were all sold for the same price, though Apple introduced multiple prices in 2007. Music in the store is in the Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) format, which is the MPEG-4-specified successor to MP3. Originally, songs were only available with DRM and were encoded at 128 kbit/s. At the January 2009 Macworld Expo, Apple announced that all iTunes music would be made available without DRM, and encoded at the higher-quality rate of 256 kbit/s. Previously, this model, known as "iTunes Plus", had been available only for music from EMI and some independent labels. Users can sample songs by listening to previews, ninety seconds in length, or thirty seconds for short tracks.

In addition, the iTunes Store offers apps, which are applications used for various purposes (games, productivity, news, etc.) that are compatible with the iPod Touch, iPhone, and iPad, although some apps are specifically for the iPhone or iPad only. Some apps cost money (called "Paid Apps") and some are free (called "Free Apps"). Developers can decide which prices they want to charge for apps, from a pre-set list of pricing tiers, from free to several hundred dollars. When someone downloads an App, 70 percent of the purchase goes to the developer(s), and 30 percent goes to Apple.[25]

At the Macworld 2008 keynote, Steve Jobs, who was Apple's CEO at the time, announced iTunes movie rentals.[26] Movies are available for rent in the iTunes Store on the same day they are released on DVD,[27] though the iTunes Store also offers for rental some movies that are still in theaters. Movie rentals are only viewable for 24 hours (in the US) or 48 hours (in other countries) after users begin viewing them. The iTunes Store also offers one low-priced movie rental a week: in the United States, this rental costs 99 cents. Movie rentals are still not available in all countries but they are available in many countries including the United States, Mexico, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, India and New Zealand. [28] There is a weekly promotion in which one to three songs are available to download for free to logged-in users. Free downloads are available on Tuesdays, and remain free until the following Tuesday, when the store gets refreshed with new content.[29] Some artists choose to have select songs available for no charge. This is not available at all iTunes Stores. Some iTunes television programs have begun the same technique to encourage brand loyalty, although those stay longer. In fact, the iTunes Store has a "Free TV Episodes" page where free episodes are organized by length, either as "featurettes" (shorter than 15 minutes) or full-length episodes (longer than 15 minutes). Free content can vary from a preview of a show to bonus content to pilot episodes and entire seasons of TV shows (examples of free seasons include HBO's The Weight of the Nation and ABC's Pan-Am). Some networks, such as ABC and NBC, have their own pages of "Free Season Premieres".

While previously the US iTunes Store has offered as many as three free songs each week (the single of the week, Discovery Download, and Canción de la Semana) in recent years, the store has instead replaced the three aforementioned categories with a unified "Single of the Week" banner, with the week's single being from a new up-and-coming artist.[30] In 2015, Apple discontinued the "Single of the Week" program.[31]

Current model

Music
  • A song usually costs 99¢; however, for songs with high popularity, the price is usually raised to $1.29. By default, songs that are more than 10 minutes are considered "Album Only"; distributors also have the power to make a song "Album Only." For special offers, song prices can be dropped to 69¢ or free.
  • By default, music albums cost $9.99 or the price of all the songs combined if it is less than $9.99. However, the music album's distributor can set a higher price for the album (as long as it is some amount of dollars and 99 cents), which usually happens on popular music albums. For special offers, prices of music albums can be dropped to $4.99, $5.99, $6.99, or $7.99.
  • On June 30, 2015, Apple launched Apple Music as a subscription service, initially available in 110 countries.[32] New subscribers are offered a three-month free trial with ongoing subscriptions priced from $9.99/month in the US[33] and £9.99 in the UK[34] or €9,99 for countries in the Eurozone.[35]
TV shows
  • By default, HD television episodes cost $2.99, while standard definition television episodes cost $1.99. However, distributors can make a television episode "Season Only."
  • A television season costs either an amount of dollars (determined by number of episodes and definition) and 99 cents with the number in the one's place being a 4, 7, or 9, or the price of all episodes combined.
Movies
  • Unpopular movies cost $7.99 to buy in standard definition and $13.00 or 14.99 to buy in HD. Popular movies or new releases cost $13.00 or 14.99 to buy in standard definition and $17.99 or 19.99 to buy in HD.
  • Unpopular movies cost $2.99 to rent in standard definition and $3.99 to rent in HD. Popular movies cost $3.99 to rent in standard definition and $4.99 to rent in HD. For recent releases, this price is increased by $1.
  • Movies that are available in 4K and HDR (either HDR10 or Dolby Vision with an HDR10 profile) cost the same price as HD, and are automatically upgraded from HD to 4K and HDR at no additional cost. Movies can be played back in 4K and HDR on an Apple TV 4K or a Mac released in 2018 or later running macOS Catalina when hooked up to a compatible display, and can be played back in HDR on an iPhone 8/X or later, a 10.5" or 11" iPad Pro, and a 2nd gen or later 12.9" iPad Pro running iOS 11 or later, or a MacBook released in 2018 or later running macOS Catalina or later.
  • Movies that are available with a Dolby Atmos audio track requires an Apple TV 4K running tvOS 12 or later hooked up to a Dolby Atmos soundbar or receiver, a MacBook released in 2018 or later running macOS Catalina, an iPhone XS/XR running iOS 13 or later, or an 11"/3-gen 12.9" iPad Pro running iPadOS or later.
Apps

App prices are set by the developer; they can be free of charge or charged at 99 cents plus any number of dollars.

iTunes Store for iOS

The iTunes Store allows users to purchase and download items directly to portable Apple devices, such as the iPhone, iPad, Apple TV and iPod Touch.[36] Apple offers three apps, each of which provides access to certain types of content.

  • The App Store app sells apps for iOS, and also provides updates to these apps.
  • The iTunes Store app sells music and videos.
  • The iBooks app sells ebooks.

Other, free content available from the iTunes Store can be accessed from two other iOS apps:

  • The Podcasts apps lets users download, subscribe to and sync podcasts.
  • The iTunes U app gives access to iTunes U educational material.

Originally, mobile users had to be connected to a Wi-Fi network in order to enter the store, hence its original name: iTunes Wi-Fi Music Store. However, at Macworld 2009, Apple issued a software update which automatically allowed 3G and EDGE users to access the store's full functionality for files smaller than 10 megabytes (MB).[37] The iOS 3.0 update added the ability to download movies, TV shows, audiobooks, iTunes U, and ringtones on mobile devices, in addition to the previously available songs and podcasts. On February 18, 2010, Apple increased the 10 MB 3G download limit to 20 MB. In March 2012, Apple increased the 3G download limit to 50 MB,[38] and, in late 2013, Apple increased the limit to 100 MB when they released the final version of iOS 7 for their new iPhones.[39]

Customer support

In the United States, Apple provides technical support for the iTunes Store via email; there is no phone number for issues with iTunes purchases.[40] Most customer service inquiries are handled online, via the Report a Problem link in iTunes.[41]

Charitable donations

In response to major natural disasters, Apple provides the facility for donations to be made through the iTunes Store. Unlike other iTunes purchases, donations made to charitable organizations through this system are not subject to the 30% handling fee Apple usually charges.[42] iTunes donation pages were set up following the 2010 Haiti earthquake,[43] the 2011 Japanese earthquake and ensuing tsunami,[44] and 2012's Hurricane Sandy.[42] In all of these cases, donations were redirected to the Red Cross.

Music

The store began operations after Apple signed deals with five major record companies: EMI, Universal Music Group, Warner Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment, and Bertelsmann Music Group. Songs from more than 2,000 independent labels were added later, the first being from The Orchard on June 24, 2003.

As of April 2020, iTunes offers 60 million songs,[45][46] including exclusive tracks from numerous artists. Not all artists are available on iTunes, but many holdouts, such as Led Zeppelin and Radiohead, have allowed their music to be sold on the iTunes Store in recent years. New songs are added to iTunes catalog on a daily basis, and the iTunes Store is updated each Tuesday.

Downloaded songs come with song information (name, artist, album) already filled out, though iTunes provides a free service by Gracenote to do this for songs not purchased from the store, although they must be imported with iTunes. Songs that have an entry in the iTunes Store also come with album artwork (Artwork is embedded in the metadata). Artwork can be obtained for songs not purchased from the store for free if the user has an iTunes Store account. Purchased songs do not come with lyrics, nor does iTunes provide a service for acquiring the missing lyrics. However, several third-party applications exist to locate and automatically add lyrics to the user's music.

Some albums purchased on iTunes came with booklets. The first instance of this was the release of the album How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb by rock band U2.[47]

"Album Only" songs

Some songs are available from the store by "Album Only", meaning the song can only be acquired through the purchase of the entire album, whereas most songs can be downloaded separately from the album they belong to.

Songs above 10 minutes in length are by default Album Only songs.[48] However, this is not universally true; for example, Living in the Heart of the Beast by Henry Cow is 16 minutes and 18 seconds, yet is available for individual purchase as of December 24, 2013. Soundtracks also often have many Album Only tracks.

Sometimes, the 10-minute restriction works in an artist's favor. Examples of this include Prince's Lovesexy and the deluxe version of Phoenix's Bankrupt!, which both have an album as a single track instead of being separate, (in Prince's case, the track was the album, while in Phoenix's case, it was a collection of demos and outtakes) forcing the buyer to buy the album itself.

Movie soundtracks normally include songs owned by many different labels, making licensing more complex. For example, Forrest Gump: The Soundtrack includes songs from Peacock Records, Argo Records, and Capitol Records, among many others. Greatest Hits by Red Hot Chili Peppers has only one song, "Higher Ground", that is not available for download on a per song basis, whilst Circus (Britney Spears' 2008 album) has two songs that are available for album download only, Rock Me In and Phonography.

Partial Albums

Some albums on the iTunes store are available only as a "Partial Album" meaning that one or more of the songs on an album's CD release aren't available on its iTunes equivalent, often due to differing copyright holders between songs.[49]

"Work Only" songs

Some tracks are listed as "Work Only", which means they can only be obtained by purchasing the entire piece of work (within the album); the tracks cannot be bought as singles. Works are generally pieces of classical music: symphonies, string quartets, etc., in multiple movements.

"LP" format

In September 2009, Apple introduced the iTunes LP format (known pre-launch by the code name "Cocktail")[50] which features visual, interactive content alongside album tracks and lyrics.

Store Sections

When entering the US music store, there are multiple sections one can visit. Music is divided into genres (Alternative, Classical, Jazz, Soundtrack, etc.), and there are a number of links to other sections of the store under the Quick Links header. These include Recommended for You, Complete My Album, iTunes LP, as well as thematic sections, such as iTunes Festival sections.

On November 1, 2006, Apple created a category for Latino and Hispanic content, "iTunes Latino". Telemundo and Mun2 made some of their popular programs available for purchase, becoming the first Hispanic television content in the store. It offers music, music videos, audiobooks, podcasts and television shows in Spanish in a single concentrated area. The brief descriptions given to the content are in Spanish as well as several subcategories.[51] Gibraltarian Flamenco Metal band Breed 77, released an exclusive album called Un Encuentro to coincide with the launch of "iTunes Latino". It features 11 songs, all from previous albums, but all sung in Spanish.

In 2012, Apple created Mastered for iTunes. When iTunes launched, the decision was made to standardize on AAC instead of the more popular MP3 format on the supposition that it offers better quality compared to other codecs at similar bit rates.[52] Mastered for iTunes (MFiT) is a procedure developed by Apple specifically for Mastering Engineers to follow. This set of tools allows Mastering Engineers to audition Apple's proprietary encoding during the mastering process to take into account how music will eventually interact with Apple's encoding. In addition to auditioning the encoder, there is also a tool (called afclip) that processes the audio file and creates a text file for audio clips. Because of this special encoding process, extra attention must be paid to headroom and inter-sample peaking while mastering.[53] In August 2019 it was announced that the Mastered for iTunes program would be rebranded as Apple Digital Masters. With the rebranding the high resolution masters are now available with Apple Music through streaming.[54] It is speculated that the rebranding came because the functionality of iTunes would be changing in macOS Catalina and therefore the Mastered for iTunes name no longer made sense.

Censorship

There is a policy of censoring profanity in titles on iTunes.[55] This has resulted in a Scunthorpe glitch, by which inoffensive titles are censored due to a coincidental string of letters.[56] If the song has an explicit label, it will be marked "explicit" next to the song title. If a song is marked "explicit" it is unavailable for purchase if "restrict explicit content" is checked under the parental controls preference. Often there will be a "clean" mark next to the title of some songs, meaning the lyrics have been censored, and is available to purchase on all accounts. Generally if a song is marked "clean" there is an explicit version available as well.

Reception and commercial success

 
Sales of iTunes songs, 2003–2010

In the first 18 hours, the iTunes store sold about 275,000 tracks,[57][58] and more than 1 million tracks were sold in its first 5 days.[59][58] When released for Windows in October 2003, iTunes was downloaded more than 1 million times in the first 3 days, selling more than 1 million songs in that period.[citation needed] On December 15, 2003, Apple announced that it had sold 25 million songs.[60]

In January 2004 at the Macworld Conference & Expo in San Francisco, Steve Jobs announced (Sellers, 2004) that an unnamed person had purchased US$29,500 worth of music. On March 15, 2004, Apple announced that iTunes Music Store customers had purchased and downloaded 50 million songs from iTunes Music Store. A song sold on iTunes gives the artist 9 cents in profit. They also reported that customers were purchasing 2.5 million songs a week which translates to a projected annual run rate of 130 million songs a year. The 50 millionth song was "The Path of Thorns" by Sarah McLachlan.[61]

On April 28, 2004, iTunes Music Store marked its first anniversary with 70 million songs sold, clear dominance in the paid online music market and a slight profit.[62] The store also offers hundreds of movie trailers and music videos, in an attempt to boost soundtrack sales. In the conference, Steve Jobs reiterated that a subscription service is still not in the interest of customers and reported that only 5 million of the 100 million songs offered in the Pepsi giveaway campaign were redeemed, which he blamed on technical problems in Pepsi distribution. According to an Apple press release dated August 10, 2004, iTunes Music Store was the first store to have a catalog of more than one million songs.[63] Also, iTunes Music Store at that point maintained a 70 percent market share of legal music downloads.

The emerging monopoly of the store was criticized in 2011 by Mike Lang of Miramax for "effectively strangling the industry". He says that because the music industry has allowed too few content providers, it is now suffering. Lang views the issue as being more of a threat than music piracy.[64]

Sales milestones

Music

  • 100 million songs sold: July 11, 2004
(Kevin Britten of Hays, Kansas, bought the 100 millionth song, and the twenty-year-old received a call from Steve Jobs congratulating him.)[65]
  • 125 million songs sold: September 1, 2004[66]
  • 150 million songs sold: October 14, 2004[67]
  • 200 million songs sold: December 16, 2004
(Ryan Alekman of Belchertown, Massachusetts, bought the 200 millionth song, which was one of the tracks on U2's digital box set The Complete U2.)[68]
  • 250 million songs sold: January 24, 2005[69]
  • 300 million songs sold: March 2, 2005[70]
  • 400 million songs sold: May 10, 2005[71]

On July 5, 2005, Apple announced a promotion counting down to half a billion songs sold.[72]

  • 500 million songs sold: July 18, 2005
(Amy Greer of Lafayette, Indiana, bought the 500 millionth song, "Mississippi Girl" by Faith Hill.)[73]
  • 850 million songs sold: January 10, 2006[74]
  • 1 billion songs sold: February 23, 2006
(Alex Ostrovsky of West Bloomfield, Michigan, bought the billionth song, "Speed of Sound" by Coldplay.[75] He later got a call from Steve Jobs with the news that the sixteen-year-old was getting ten iPods, an iMac, a $10,000 music gift certificate, and a scholarship established in his name at the Juilliard School.)[65]
  • 1.5 billion songs sold: September 12, 2006[76]
  • 2 billion songs sold: January 10, 2007[76]
  • 2.5 billion songs sold: April 9, 2007[77]
  • 3 billion songs sold: July 31, 2007[78]
  • 4 billion songs sold: January 15, 2008
  • 5 billion songs sold: June 19, 2008[79]
  • 6 billion songs sold: January 6, 2009[80]
  • 8 billion songs sold: July 21, 2009
  • 8.6 billion songs sold: September 9, 2009
  • 10 billion songs sold: February 24, 2010[81]
(Louie Sulcer of Woodstock, Georgia, downloaded "Guess Things Happen That Way" by Johnny Cash. At 71 years old, he was the oldest milestone winner to that date. He received a call from Steve Jobs and a $10,000 iTunes gift card.)[82]
  • 15 billion songs sold: June 6, 2011[83]
  • 20 billion songs sold: September 12, 2012[84]
  • 25 billion songs sold: February 6, 2013[85]
  • 35 billion songs sold: May 28, 2014[18]

Video

  • 1 million videos sold: October 31, 2005[86]
  • 3+ million videos sold: December 6, 2005[87]
  • 8 million videos sold: January 10, 2006[74]
  • 15 million videos sold: February 23, 2006[75]
  • 45 million videos sold: September 12, 2006[76]
  • 50 million television episodes sold: January 10, 2007[76]
  • 1.3 million feature-length films sold: January 10, 2007[76]
  • 2 million feature-length films sold: July 31, 2007[88]
  • 200 million television episodes sold: October 16, 2008[89]
  • 1+ million HD episodes sold: October 16, 2008[89]

Applications

  • 10 million apps downloaded: July 14, 2008[90]
  • 100 million apps downloaded: September 9, 2008[91]
  • 200 million apps downloaded: October 22, 2008[92]
  • 300 million apps downloaded: December 5, 2008[93]
  • 500 million apps downloaded: January 16, 2009[94]
  • 800 million apps downloaded: March 17, 2009[95]
  • 1 billion apps downloaded: April 23, 2009[96]
  • 1.5 billion apps downloaded: July 14, 2009[97]
  • 1.8 billion apps downloaded: September 9, 2009
  • 2 billion apps downloaded: September 28, 2009
  • 3 billion apps downloaded: January 5, 2010
  • 7 billion apps downloaded: October 20, 2010
  • 10 billion apps downloaded: January 22, 2011[98]
  • 15 billion apps downloaded: July 7, 2011[99]
  • 25 billion apps downloaded: March 5, 2012[100]
  • 30 billion apps downloaded: June 11, 2012[101]
  • 35 billion apps downloaded: October 23, 2012[102]
  • 40 billion apps downloaded: January 7, 2013[103]
  • 50 billion apps downloaded: May 16, 2013
  • 60 billion apps downloaded: October 22, 2013
  • 75 billion apps downloaded: June 2, 2014[104]
  • 100 billion apps downloaded: June 8, 2015[105]
  • 250 billion apps downloaded: December 2016 [106]

Market share

  • On September 12, 2006, Steve Jobs announced in his "It's Showtime" keynote that Apple had 88% of the legal US music download market.[76]
  • On April 11, 2007, Apple announced that the iTunes Store had sold more than two million movies, making it the world's most popular online movie store.[88]
  • On February 26, 2008, the iTunes Store surpassed Best Buy to become the second-largest music vendor in the US behind Walmart, and became number one on April 3, 2008.[15]
  • On October 10, 2012, the iTunes Store was reported to have a 64% share of the online music market, and a 29% share of all music sales worldwide.[107]

Internationalization

Originally only Mac OS X users who had a US billing address could buy songs with the service, but Steve Jobs announced plans to support both Windows and non-American users. The Windows version of iTunes and support for the Windows platform from iTunes Music Store were announced on October 16, 2003, with immediate availability. Beginning in 2004, the service has become available in a number of countries other than the United States:

Country Product type Affiliate program[108] Price/song
Music[109] Music Videos[109] Podcasts[109] TV shows[109] Movies[109] Apps[109] Books[109] iTunes Match[110] iTunes U[109] iTunes Radio[110]
United States April 28, 2003 Yes Yes October 12, 2005 Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Discontinued January 28, 2016[111] Yes US$0.69–1.29
United Kingdom June 15, 2004 Yes Yes Yes June 4, 2008 Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes £0.59–0.99
($0.91–1.53)[113]
France June 15, 2004 Yes Yes Yes April 30, 2009 Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Germany June 15, 2004 Yes Yes April 2, 2008[114] April 16, 2009[115] Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Austria October 26, 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes April 30, 2012[116] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Belgium October 26, 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Finland October 26, 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 9, 2013 Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Greece October 26, 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes April 30, 2012[116] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Italy October 26, 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes April 30, 2012[116] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Luxembourg October 26, 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Netherlands October 26, 2004 Yes Yes No September 27, 2011[117] Yes Yes January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Portugal October 26, 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes April 30, 2012[116] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Spain October 26, 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Canada December 2, 2004 Yes Yes Yes June 4, 2008 Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes 0.69 – 1.29 CAD
($0.67–1.25)[113]
Ireland January 6, 2005 Yes Yes No April 30, 2009 Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Sweden May 10, 2005 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 9, 2013 Yes No Yes 9 – 12 SEK
($1.25–1.67)[113]
Norway May 10, 2005 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 9, 2013 Yes No Yes 8 – 10 NOK
($1.32–1.66)[113]
Switzerland May 10, 2005 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes 1.60 – 2.20 CHF
($1.53–2.11)[113]
Denmark May 10, 2005 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 9, 2013 Yes No Yes 8 – 10 DKK
($1.52–1.90)[113]
Japan August 4, 2005[119] Yes Yes No Yes Yes March 6, 2013[120] May 2, 2014 Yes No Yes 150 – 250 JPY
($1.81–3.02)[113]
Australia October 25, 2005 October 25, 2005 Yes June 24, 2008[121] August 14, 2008 Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes Discontinued January 28, 2016[122] Yes 1.19 – 2.19 AUD
($1.28–2.35)[113]
New Zealand December 6, 2005[123] Yes Yes No August 14, 2008 Yes October 22, 2012[124] December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes 1.79 – 2.39 NZD
($1.47–1.96)[113]
Mexico August 4, 2009[125] Yes Yes No November 9, 2010[126] Yes October 22, 2012[124] December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes 9 – 15 MXN
($0.71–1.19)[113]
Bulgaria September 29, 2011[127] Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes April 30, 2012[116] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Cyprus September 29, 2011[127] Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Czech Republic September 29, 2011[127] Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Estonia September 29, 2011[127] Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Hungary September 29, 2011[127] Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes July 19, 2012[128] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Latvia September 29, 2011[127] Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Lithuania September 29, 2011[127] Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Malta September 29, 2011[127] Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15, 2011[112] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Poland September 29, 2011[127] Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes July 19, 2012[128] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Romania September 29, 2011[127] Yes Yes No No Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Slovenia September 29, 2011[127] Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes April 30, 2012[116] Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Slovakia September 29, 2011[127] Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes €0.69–1.29
($0.92–1.72)[113]
Argentina December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Brazil December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] December 13, 2011 Yes No Yes 1,90 – 2,90 BRL
Bolivia December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Chile December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Colombia December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Costa Rica December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Dominican Republic December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Ecuador December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
El Salvador December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Guatemala December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Honduras December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Nicaragua December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Panama December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Paraguay December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Peru December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Venezuela December 13, 2011[129] Yes Yes No December 13, 2011[129] Yes October 22, 2012[124] January 16, 2012[118] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Brunei June 27, 2012[130] Yes Yes No June 27, 2012[130] Yes free books June 27, 2012[130] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Cambodia June 27, 2012[130] Yes June 21, 2012 No June 27, 2012[130] June 21, 2012[131] free books June 27, 2012[130] June 21, 2012 No Yes $0.69–1.29
Hong Kong June 27, 2012[130] Yes Yes No June 27, 2012[130] Yes free books June 27, 2012[130] Yes No Yes 5 – 8 HKD
Laos June 27, 2012[130] Yes June 21, 2012 No June 27, 2012[130] June 21, 2012[131] free books June 27, 2012[130] June 21, 2012 No Yes $0.69–1.29
Macao June 27, 2012[130] Yes Yes No June 27, 2012[130] Yes free books June 27, 2012[130] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Malaysia June 27, 2012[130] Yes Yes No June 27, 2012[130] Yes free books June 27, 2012[130] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Philippines June 27, 2012[130] Yes Yes No June 27, 2012[130] Yes free books June 27, 2012[130] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Singapore June 27, 2012[130] Yes Yes No June 27, 2012[130] Yes free books June 27, 2012[130] Yes No Yes 0.98 – 1.48 SGD
Sri Lanka June 27, 2012[130] Yes Yes No June 27, 2012[130] Yes free books June 27, 2012[130] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Taiwan June 27, 2012[130] Yes Yes No June 27, 2012[130] Yes free books June 27, 2012[130] Yes No Yes 15 – 30 TWD
($0.51–1.02)[113]
Thailand June 27, 2012[130] Yes Yes No June 27, 2012[130] Yes free books June 27, 2012[130] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Vietnam June 27, 2012[130] Yes Yes No June 27, 2012[130] Yes free books June 27, 2012[130] Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Anguilla December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Antigua and Barbuda December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Armenia December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Azerbaijan December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Bahamas December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Bahrain December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Barbados December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Belarus December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes $0.69–1.29
Belize December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Bermuda December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No Yes Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Botswana December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Burkina Faso December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
British Virgin Islands December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Cape Verde December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Cayman Islands December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Dominica December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Egypt December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Fiji December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Gambia December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Ghana December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Grenada December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Guinea-Bissau December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
India December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 4, 2012[132] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes 9–15 INR
($0.18–0.30)
Indonesia December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 4, 2012[132] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes 3000 – 7000 IDR
Israel December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes 1.90 – 3.90 ILS
Jordan December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Kazakhstan December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Kenya December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Kyrgyzstan December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Lebanon December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Mauritius December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Federated States of Micronesia December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Republic of Moldova December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Mongolia December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes 0.49 – 1.29 USD
Mozambique December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Namibia December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Nepal December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Niger December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Nigeria December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Oman December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Papua New Guinea December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Qatar December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Russia December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] April 21, 2008 No December 4, 2012[132] April 21, 2008[134] free books Yes April 21, 2008 No Yes 15 – 19 RUB ($0.49–0.62)
Saint Kitts and Nevis December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Saudi Arabia December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
South Africa December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Swaziland December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Trinidad and Tobago December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Turkey December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 4, 2012[132] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes 0.69 – 1.49 TRY
Tajikistan December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Turkmenistan December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Uganda December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Ukraine December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
United Arab Emirates December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Uzbekistan December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Zimbabwe December 4, 2012[132] December 4, 2012[132] Yes No December 12, 2012[133] Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes
Afghanistan No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Albania No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No Yes
Algeria No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Angola No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Benin No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No Yes
Bhutan No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No Yes
Bosnia and Herzegovina No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Cameroon No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Chad No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No No
China No No Yes No No Yes September 30, 2015[136] No Yes No Yes
Republic of the Congo No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No No
Croatia No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Gabon No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Georgia No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Guyana No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Iceland No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Iraq No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Ivory Coast No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Jamaica No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Kosovo No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Korea, South No No Yes No No June 10, 2008 free books No Yes No Yes
Kuwait No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Liberia No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No No
Libya No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Macedonia No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Madagascar No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No No
Malawi No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No Yes
Maldives No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Mali No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No No
Mauritania No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No No
Montenegro No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Montserrat No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Morocco No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Mozambique No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Myanmar No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Nauru No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Pakistan No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Palau No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No Yes
Rwanda No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Saint Lucia No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
São Tomé and Príncipe No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No Yes
Senegal No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No No
Serbia No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Seychelles No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No Yes
Sierra Leone No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No Yes
Solomon Islands No No June 21, 2012 No No June 21, 2012[131] free books No June 21, 2012 No Yes
Suriname No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Tanzania No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Tonga No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Tunisia No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Turks and Caicos Islands No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Uruguay No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Vanuatu No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Yemen No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes
Zambia No No April 21, 2020[135] No No April 21, 2020[135] No No No No
Country Music Music Videos Podcasts TV shows Movies Apps Books iTunes Match iTunes U iTunes Radio Affiliate program Price/song
Product type
 
The countries where the iTunes Store is available are shown in green.

To buy files through the store, a user must install the proprietary digital media player iTunes to access the store. This software is available only for certain versions of the Macintosh or Windows operating systems.

 
iTunes Store availability. Green: full functionality (music, apps, videos, etc.) Red: available, but with limitations (only apps, iTunes U, etc.)
  • According to an Apple press release, the European iTunes Music Stores sold a combined total of 800,000 songs in one week, with 450,000 of those songs sold in the UK.[137]
  • The Italian, Portuguese, Dutch, Greek stores have been localized.
  • On December 3, 2004, the British Office of Fair Trading referred iTunes Music Store to the European Commission because it prevents consumers in one EU country from buying music from stores in other EU countries, in violation of EU free-trade legislation; the immediate cause of the referral was because the €0.99 price charged in the Eurozone equates to GB£0.68 in sterling, rather than the GB£0.79 actually charged there.
  • iTunes Music Store in Japan had 1 million songs available at start.[119] In the next four days the store had sold one million songs – the pace faster than that of the US store.[138] In addition to a long delay, Apple failed to have one set price for singles. Pundits[who?] speculated that this may have indicated the introduction of new price structure to the rest of the stores in future, in favor of record labels[who?] who would like to see higher prices for new songs. This extension to other countries was announced in January 2009.
  • The release of video-capable iPods also saw the store launch in Australia with music videos and short films by Pixar. iTunes Gift Cards (as they are now known) are now also available in many more stores such as JB Hi-Fi, David Jones, and the Woolworths chain of stores. Access was inadvertently given to some people in New Zealand, too.[139] Failed negotiations with the Sony BMG label meant that none of that label's artists were available at the time of launch; they were later added on January 17, 2006.
  • New Zealand users had briefly been able to buy from the Australian store when it first opened until that loophole was closed.
  • On November 1, 2006, the store started offering a range of Latino content including television shows and music for its Hispanic American, Mexican and Puerto Rican clients.[140]
  • The Spanish used on the Mexican store has been modified to Mexican Spanish.[141]
  • As of the 2009 Macworld Conference & Expo, Apple had given no new information of the (possible; future) inclusion and expansion of music videos, TV-shows and movies in other European countries. The stores of the UK, Germany and France currently remain the only European Stores with local and/or localized selections of TV-shows, movies and music videos.

Payment options

A user must also pay with an iTunes gift card or a credit card with a billing address in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brunei, Bulgaria, Brazil, Cambodia, Canada, Colombia, the Czech Republic, Cyprus, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Indonesia, the Republic of Ireland, Italy, Japan, Laos, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macau, Malaysia, Malta, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Puerto Rico, Romania, Russia, Singapore, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, United Kingdom, the United States or Vietnam. Apple also offers other payment methods (like PayPal), which differ from country to country. Residents in other countries can only buy a gift card from a merchant or download free podcasts and previews.

Digital rights management

 
A fifth-generation iPod with earphones. The only portable devices licensed to play protected music from the iTunes Store are iPods, the iPhone, the iPod Touch, the iPad and selected Motorola mobile phones, such as the ROKR.

The iTunes Store used in the past Apple's FairPlay digital rights management (DRM) technology. FairPlay is built into the MP4 multimedia file format as an encrypted AAC audio layer, and is used by the company to protect copyrighted works sold through the store, allowing only authorized devices to play the content.[142][143] The restrictions imposed by FairPlay, mainly limited device compatibility, have sparked criticism, with a lawsuit alleging antitrust violation[144] that was eventually closed in Apple's favor,[145] and various successful efforts to remove the DRM protection from files,[146][147] with Apple continually updating its software to counteract such projects.[148]

In February 2007, an open letter by Steve Jobs, Apple's then-CEO, discussed the use of DRM on music, raising points about the future of the protection and announcing the company's support for ending the use of DRM.[149][150] Although the open letter initially caused mixed industry reactions,[151][152] Apple signed a deal with a major record label the following month to offer iTunes customers a purchase option for a higher-quality, DRM-free version of the label's tracks.[153] In January 2009, Apple signed deals with all major record labels as well as a large number of independent labels to offer all iTunes music in the DRM-free option.[154][155][156] On January 6, 2009, Apple announced that DRM had been removed from 80% of its music catalog in the US.[157] Full iTunes Plus availability was achieved in the US on April 7, 2009, coinciding with the introduction of a three-tiered pricing model.[158] This does not apply to songs downloaded while using Apple Music, Apple's subscription-based music streaming service.[159] Television episodes, many books, and films are still FairPlay-protected.

Promotions

On Super Bowl Sunday, February 1, 2004, Apple launched a promotion with Pepsi in which they gave away 100 million songs, through tokens on selected soft drink bottle caps. Unfortunately for Apple, Pepsi failed to properly distribute the bottles to major metropolitan areas until only weeks before the promotion ended, despite a one-month extension of the deadline by Apple. The promotion was repeated beginning January 31, 2005, with 200 million songs available, and an iPod Mini given away every hour.

On July 1, 2004, Apple announced that, starting with the sale of the 95 millionth song, an iPod would be given away to the buyer of each 100 thousandth song, for a total of 50 iPods. The buyer of the 100 millionth song would receive a PowerBook, iPod, and US$10,000 gift certificate to iTunes Music Store.

Ten days later, on July 11, Apple announced that 100 million songs had been sold through iTunes Music Store. The 100 millionth song was titled "Somersault (Dangermouse Remix)" by Zero 7, purchased by Kevin Britten of Hays, Kansas. He then received a phone call from Apple CEO Steve Jobs, who offered his congratulations, as well as a 40 GB 3rd Generation iPod laser-engraved with a message of thanks.

Inspired by Pepsi's marketing success with iTunes giveaways, Coca-Cola partnered with 7-Eleven to give away a free iTunes song with every 32 US fl oz (950 ml). Slurpee frozen beverage until July 31, 2005. Songs could be redeemed until August 31, 2005, by entering a code printed on the Slurpee cup into iTunes Music Store application. Coca-Cola did this in spite of having its own music store, myCokeMusic.com, that competed with iTunes Music Store in Europe. myCokeMusic.com ceased business on July 31, 2006.[160]

On July 5, 2005, Apple announced that they were counting down to half a billion songs. The buyer of every 100 thousandth song up to 500 million would receive an iPod Mini and a 50-song gift card. The grand prize for the person who downloads the 500 millionth song was 10 iPods of their choice, a 10,000-song gift card, 10 50-song gift cards or 4 tickets to the Coldplay world tour. Twelve days later, on July 17, Apple announced that 500 million songs had been sold through iTunes Music Store. The 500 millionth song, purchased by Amy Greer of Lafayette, Indiana, was "Mississippi Girl" by Faith Hill.

On July 28, 2005, Apple and The Gap announced a promotion to award iTunes music downloads to Gap customers who tried on a pair of Gap jeans.[161] From August 8 to 31, 2005, each customer who tried on any pair of Gap jeans could receive a free download for a song of their choice from iTunes Music Store.

On February 7, 2006, Apple announced that they were counting down to the billionth song download and began a promotion similar to the previous 100 million and 500 million countdown. Whoever downloaded the billionth song would receive a 20" iMac, ten 60 GB iPods, and a US$10,000 iTunes Music Card. The billionth song was purchased on February 23, 2006, by Alex Ostrovsky of West Bloomfield, Michigan. The purchased song was "Speed of Sound" as part of Coldplay's X&Y album.

On July 25, 2006, Facebook and iTunes began offering a promotion where members of the Apple Students group would receive a free 25 song sampler each week until September 30 in various music genres. The idea behind the promotion was to get students more familiar and enthusiastic with each service as Autumn classes approached.[162] However, in order to prevent abuse of the promotion, the weekly code that Facebook provided stopped working after it was redeemed one million times. In addition, the promotion caused discontent among international students, as the code was only valid in the US iTunes Music Store.

On April 10, 2009, Apple announced that it will be counting down to the billionth app (apps being the applications for iPod Touch and iPhone). Apple launched a continuous counter to the billionth app on Good Friday.[96] Connor Mulcahey, age 13 of Weston, CT, downloaded the billionth app, "Bump" by Bump Technologies, and received a 17" MacBook Pro, a 32GB iPod Touch, a Time Capsule, and a $10,000 Gift Card for the iTunes Store.

On February 11, 2010, Apple announced that it would be counting down to 10 billion songs downloaded. A $10,000 gift card was offered as a prize. On February 24, 2010, the 10 billionth song, "Guess Things Happen That Way" by Johnny Cash, was purchased by Louie Sulcer of Woodstock, Georgia.[163]

Other platforms

Currently, iTunes is supported on the macOS (Leopard and above) and Microsoft Windows operating systems. iTunes was known to run passably well in Linux on x86-based computers using the Wine compatibility layer; however, by December 2011, this was no longer the case.[164] Users without iTunes installed can see a content database (but not hear or view the content itself) using the iTunes Preview service, which runs inside their internet browser. This service also allows users to watch trailers for upcoming film releases. Should they choose to purchase any media, they will be redirected to iTunes.

Technical details

Store pages are delivered using standard HTML with a special header. This change was made when iTunes 9.0 was released. iTunes uses WebKit to render these pages on the screen.[165] These pages are also accessible on the Web, at iTunes.apple.com, allowing pages from the iTunes Store to show up in search engine search results.

Prior to iTunes 9.0, the iTunes Store was delivered using a custom XML format that describes the position of all of the elements, boxes, album art and all of their properties – including whether a reference link can be dragged out of iTunes and into another document.

The store's back-end software uses WebObjects – Apple's own application server it acquired from NeXT. Content is uploaded to iTunes data store using an internal Apple program called iTunes Producer, which automatically encodes and adds metadata to uploaded files.[citation needed]

Legal disputes

Apple records

For three years, The Beatles' record company Apple Records were in a legal dispute, Apple Corps v Apple Computer, with Apple Computer over the name "Apple." On May 8, 2006, a ruling was declared in favor of Apple Computer, but Apple Records said it would appeal the ruling. Despite this, plans were announced by Neil Aspinall in April 2006 to remaster completely and release the entire Beatles catalog on an unspecified online music service, as well as release some previously unheard work by the band. No date was set at that time.[166] It has also been reported that the Beatles' music catalog might initially be appearing on iTunes only, as Apple is reported to be negotiating with Britain's EMI group over an online distribution deal that might be exclusive for a limited time.[167]

During his Macworld Keynote address on January 9, 2007, Apple CEO Steve Jobs used the band's song "Lovely Rita" to introduce the music-playing capabilities of the company's new iPhone. This was regarded by industry observers as further evidence that the Beatles catalog would be introduced to iTunes Music Store catalog in the near future.[168] On February 5, 2007, Apple Corps and Apple Inc. announced they had reached a settlement in their legal dispute.[169]

In a related development, Apple announced on August 14, 2007, that the entire solo catalog of John Lennon would be available on iTunes.[170] The solo catalogs of the other three Beatles, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and George Harrison, are also available on iTunes.

On November 16, 2010, the entire Beatles catalog was officially made available on the iTunes Store.

The Consumer Council of Norway EULA challenge

On June 6, 2006, The Consumer Ombudsmen in Norway, Sweden and Denmark launched a common open letter to Apple regarding the EULA of iTunes through the Norwegian Consumer Ombudsman Bjørn Erik Thon.[171] The iTunes case is based upon an official complaint[172] filed by The Consumer Council of Norway on January 25, 2006.

The main allegations were that:

  • The EULA is unbalanced to disfavor the customer. Scandinavian law requires any written agreement to favor both parties. The weak party also enjoys protection from exploitation according to Norwegian consumer laws.
  • The iTunes Store's use of Digital rights management limits the number of devices purchased songs can be played on.
  • iTunes' contract entitles the company to at any time change the terms of the contract without notice, including the selection of players or software that must be used for iTunes files, and also the number of times a customer can change or copy already purchased files.
  • The EULA is both vague and hard to understand for the customers.
  • The EULA states that the legal relationship between the company and customers is regulated by English contract law. It is unreasonable to expect Norwegian consumers to have comprehensive knowledge of English law. Products marketed to Norwegian consumers in Norway are subject to Norwegian law—a right that cannot be waived by a clause in a company's standard customer contract.
  • The EULA removes iTunes' responsibility regarding damage to the consumer's computer caused by software errors even though responsibility cannot be waived in Scandinavian Law.

Apple responded July 31, 2006.[173]

On January 22, 2007, German and French consumer groups joined forces with Norway and Finland.[174][175] Their goal is to create a united European front against iTunes (Germany and France have each had their own negotiation process with iTunes). According to the press statement Apple is in favor of this. The key points in the negotiations were:

  • Interoperability: the consumer should have the right and ability to play his or her music on any device of his or her own choice.
  • Change of conditions: iTunes must revoke their right to change the terms and conditions (EULA) at any time without the consent of the consumer.
  • Liability: iTunes should change its clause limiting its liability to recover consumer damages if they are caused by content sold by iTunes.
  • Applicable Law: Consumers entering into a contract with iTunes should be able to rely on the consumer protection rules according to the law of the country in which they live.

EU antitrust case

In 2004, Which? magazine complained to the European Commission about the higher prices in the UK for the same songs sold in other parts of the European Union: typically €0.99 in the rest of the EU and £0.79 in the UK.[176] In 2008, the Commission withdrew its investigation after Apple agreed to end the price disparity.[176]

Content disputes

Universal Music Group

On July 1, 2007, the New York Times reported[177] that Universal (the world's largest music corporation at the time of writing) would not renew its annual contract to sell music through iTunes. Instead, Universal said that it would market music to Apple at will, allowing it to remove its songs from the iTunes service on short notice if the two sides did not agree on pricing or other terms.

On August 9, 2007, UMG announced a plan to sell some songs in MP3 format, without Digital rights management, through a variety of online services such as Amazon Music and the newly created gBox. While these tracks continue to be available through the iTunes Store, Universal chose to license these songs in DRM-free formats only through other services.[178]

NBC Universal TV series

On August 31, 2007, Apple announced that programs on NBC's 2007–08 television schedule would not be available on iTunes.[179] NBC had informed Apple the previous day that it would not be renewing its contract.[180] It was later clarified that this change only applied to series produced by NBC Universal-owned Universal Media Studios, including Universal-produced shows on other networks such as House. NBC programs produced by other studios, such as Chuck (Warner Bros.) and Journeyman (20th Century Fox), would remain available on iTunes.[181]

Apple has publicly asserted that NBC would only renew their contract if Apple agreed to a price increase of US$4.99 per episode, which they did not. NBC disputes that claim, claiming that Apple balked at NBC's request to package shows together and make wholesale pricing more flexible.[182] NBC claims that they never asked to double the wholesale price and insisted that their shows would be sold by the iTunes Store through early December.[183] Other networks who sold their shows via iTunes did not follow suit. On December 1, 2007, NBC shows were pulled from the iTunes Store.

On September 9, 2008, Apple and NBC Universal announced that NBC's TV shows were once again available on the US iTunes Store.[184]

The UK iTunes Store has many shows from NBC available, although they are distributed by Universal Studios. The pricing for these seasons are higher than they were on the US store, an example being, Season 3 of The Office is priced at £43 (2008) (equivalent to £53 or US$68 in 2019)[185] vs. US$52.99 (equivalent to $66.69 in 2021) (US Store HD).

See also

References

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itunes, store, digital, media, store, operated, apple, opened, april, 2003, result, steve, jobs, push, open, digital, marketplace, music, april, 2020, update, itunes, offered, million, songs, million, apps, shows, films, when, opened, only, legal, digital, cat. The iTunes Store is a digital media store operated by Apple Inc It opened on April 28 2003 as a result of Steve Jobs push to open a digital marketplace for music As of April 2020 update iTunes offered 60 million songs 2 2 million apps 25 000 TV shows and 65 000 films When it opened it was the only legal digital catalog of music to offer songs from all five major record labels 1 iTunes StoreThe iTunes Store as seen in iTunes 12 12 7 1 running on Windows 10 from January 31 2023TypeDigital distributionOnline music storeVideo on demandApp store moved to App Store Ebook store moved to Apple Books Launch dateApril 28 2003 19 years ago 2003 04 28 Platform s macOS iOS tvOS Windows 7 and laterAvailabilitySee InternationalizationWebsiteapple wbr com wbr itunes wbr The iTunes Store is available on most Apple devices including the Mac inside the Music app the iPhone the iPad the iPod touch and the Apple TV as well as on Windows inside iTunes Video purchases from the iTunes Store are viewable on the Apple TV app on Roku 2 and Amazon Fire TV 3 devices and certain smart televisions While initially a dominant player in digital media by the mid 2010s streaming media services were generating more revenue than the buy to own model used by the iTunes Store 4 5 Apple now operates its own subscription based streaming music service Apple Music alongside the iTunes Store Contents 1 History 2 Features and restrictions 2 1 Pricing model 2 1 1 History 2 1 2 Current model 2 1 2 1 Music 2 1 2 2 TV shows 2 1 2 3 Movies 2 1 2 4 Apps 2 2 iTunes Store for iOS 2 3 Customer support 2 4 Charitable donations 2 5 Music 2 5 1 Album Only songs 2 5 2 Partial Albums 2 5 3 Work Only songs 2 5 4 LP format 2 5 5 Store Sections 3 Censorship 4 Reception and commercial success 5 Sales milestones 5 1 Music 5 2 Video 5 3 Applications 5 4 Market share 6 Internationalization 6 1 Payment options 7 Digital rights management 8 Promotions 9 Other platforms 10 Technical details 11 Legal disputes 11 1 Apple records 11 2 The Consumer Council of Norway EULA challenge 11 2 1 EU antitrust case 12 Content disputes 12 1 Universal Music Group 12 2 NBC Universal TV series 13 See also 14 ReferencesHistory EditSteve Jobs saw the opportunity to open a digital marketplace for music due to the rising popularity of easily downloadable tracks 6 7 8 9 In 2002 Jobs made an agreement with the five major record labels to offer their content through iTunes 10 The iTunes Music Store later iTunes Store was introduced by Jobs at a special Apple music event in April 2003 11 12 It was initially available on Mac computers and the iPod 13 and was later expanded to Microsoft Windows in October 2003 14 In April 2008 the iTunes Store was the largest music vendor in the United States 15 and in February 2010 it was the largest music vendor in the world 16 The iTunes Store s revenues in the first quarter of 2011 totaled nearly US 1 4 billion 17 By May 28 2014 the store had sold 35 billion songs worldwide 18 In 2016 it was reported that music streaming services had overtaken digital downloads in sales 19 It was reported that iTunes style digital download sales had dropped 24 as streaming continued to increase 20 In April 2018 the iTunes app was added to the Microsoft Windows 10 app store 21 Beginning in the spring of 2019 the iTunes app became available on Samsung Smart TVs 22 In October 2019 with the release of macOS Catalina iTunes was split into separate Music TV and Podcasts apps Apple s storefront for movies and television shows moved inside the TV app Any music in users iTunes library would transfer to the Music app which would still offer access to the iTunes Store 23 24 Features and restrictions EditPricing model Edit History Edit Following the introduction of the iTunes Store individual songs were all sold for the same price though Apple introduced multiple prices in 2007 Music in the store is in the Advanced Audio Coding AAC format which is the MPEG 4 specified successor to MP3 Originally songs were only available with DRM and were encoded at 128 kbit s At the January 2009 Macworld Expo Apple announced that all iTunes music would be made available without DRM and encoded at the higher quality rate of 256 kbit s Previously this model known as iTunes Plus had been available only for music from EMI and some independent labels Users can sample songs by listening to previews ninety seconds in length or thirty seconds for short tracks In addition the iTunes Store offers apps which are applications used for various purposes games productivity news etc that are compatible with the iPod Touch iPhone and iPad although some apps are specifically for the iPhone or iPad only Some apps cost money called Paid Apps and some are free called Free Apps Developers can decide which prices they want to charge for apps from a pre set list of pricing tiers from free to several hundred dollars When someone downloads an App 70 percent of the purchase goes to the developer s and 30 percent goes to Apple 25 At the Macworld 2008 keynote Steve Jobs who was Apple s CEO at the time announced iTunes movie rentals 26 Movies are available for rent in the iTunes Store on the same day they are released on DVD 27 though the iTunes Store also offers for rental some movies that are still in theaters Movie rentals are only viewable for 24 hours in the US or 48 hours in other countries after users begin viewing them The iTunes Store also offers one low priced movie rental a week in the United States this rental costs 99 cents Movie rentals are still not available in all countries but they are available in many countries including the United States Mexico the United Kingdom Canada Australia India and New Zealand 28 There is a weekly promotion in which one to three songs are available to download for free to logged in users Free downloads are available on Tuesdays and remain free until the following Tuesday when the store gets refreshed with new content 29 Some artists choose to have select songs available for no charge This is not available at all iTunes Stores Some iTunes television programs have begun the same technique to encourage brand loyalty although those stay longer In fact the iTunes Store has a Free TV Episodes page where free episodes are organized by length either as featurettes shorter than 15 minutes or full length episodes longer than 15 minutes Free content can vary from a preview of a show to bonus content to pilot episodes and entire seasons of TV shows examples of free seasons include HBO s The Weight of the Nation and ABC s Pan Am Some networks such as ABC and NBC have their own pages of Free Season Premieres While previously the US iTunes Store has offered as many as three free songs each week the single of the week Discovery Download and Cancion de la Semana in recent years the store has instead replaced the three aforementioned categories with a unified Single of the Week banner with the week s single being from a new up and coming artist 30 In 2015 Apple discontinued the Single of the Week program 31 Current model Edit The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Music Edit A song usually costs 99 however for songs with high popularity the price is usually raised to 1 29 By default songs that are more than 10 minutes are considered Album Only distributors also have the power to make a song Album Only For special offers song prices can be dropped to 69 or free By default music albums cost 9 99 or the price of all the songs combined if it is less than 9 99 However the music album s distributor can set a higher price for the album as long as it is some amount of dollars and 99 cents which usually happens on popular music albums For special offers prices of music albums can be dropped to 4 99 5 99 6 99 or 7 99 On June 30 2015 Apple launched Apple Music as a subscription service initially available in 110 countries 32 New subscribers are offered a three month free trial with ongoing subscriptions priced from 9 99 month in the US 33 and 9 99 in the UK 34 or 9 99 for countries in the Eurozone 35 TV shows Edit By default HD television episodes cost 2 99 while standard definition television episodes cost 1 99 However distributors can make a television episode Season Only A television season costs either an amount of dollars determined by number of episodes and definition and 99 cents with the number in the one s place being a 4 7 or 9 or the price of all episodes combined Movies Edit Unpopular movies cost 7 99 to buy in standard definition and 13 00 or 14 99 to buy in HD Popular movies or new releases cost 13 00 or 14 99 to buy in standard definition and 17 99 or 19 99 to buy in HD Unpopular movies cost 2 99 to rent in standard definition and 3 99 to rent in HD Popular movies cost 3 99 to rent in standard definition and 4 99 to rent in HD For recent releases this price is increased by 1 Movies that are available in 4K and HDR either HDR10 or Dolby Vision with an HDR10 profile cost the same price as HD and are automatically upgraded from HD to 4K and HDR at no additional cost Movies can be played back in 4K and HDR on an Apple TV 4K or a Mac released in 2018 or later running macOS Catalina when hooked up to a compatible display and can be played back in HDR on an iPhone 8 X or later a 10 5 or 11 iPad Pro and a 2nd gen or later 12 9 iPad Pro running iOS 11 or later or a MacBook released in 2018 or later running macOS Catalina or later Movies that are available with a Dolby Atmos audio track requires an Apple TV 4K running tvOS 12 or later hooked up to a Dolby Atmos soundbar or receiver a MacBook released in 2018 or later running macOS Catalina an iPhone XS XR running iOS 13 or later or an 11 3 gen 12 9 iPad Pro running iPadOS or later Apps Edit App prices are set by the developer they can be free of charge or charged at 99 cents plus any number of dollars iTunes Store for iOS Edit The iTunes Store allows users to purchase and download items directly to portable Apple devices such as the iPhone iPad Apple TV and iPod Touch 36 Apple offers three apps each of which provides access to certain types of content The App Store app sells apps for iOS and also provides updates to these apps The iTunes Store app sells music and videos The iBooks app sells ebooks Other free content available from the iTunes Store can be accessed from two other iOS apps The Podcasts apps lets users download subscribe to and sync podcasts The iTunes U app gives access to iTunes U educational material Originally mobile users had to be connected to a Wi Fi network in order to enter the store hence its original name iTunes Wi Fi Music Store However at Macworld 2009 Apple issued a software update which automatically allowed 3G and EDGE users to access the store s full functionality for files smaller than 10 megabytes MB 37 The iOS 3 0 update added the ability to download movies TV shows audiobooks iTunes U and ringtones on mobile devices in addition to the previously available songs and podcasts On February 18 2010 Apple increased the 10 MB 3G download limit to 20 MB In March 2012 Apple increased the 3G download limit to 50 MB 38 and in late 2013 Apple increased the limit to 100 MB when they released the final version of iOS 7 for their new iPhones 39 Customer support Edit In the United States Apple provides technical support for the iTunes Store via email there is no phone number for issues with iTunes purchases 40 Most customer service inquiries are handled online via the Report a Problem link in iTunes 41 Charitable donations Edit In response to major natural disasters Apple provides the facility for donations to be made through the iTunes Store Unlike other iTunes purchases donations made to charitable organizations through this system are not subject to the 30 handling fee Apple usually charges 42 iTunes donation pages were set up following the 2010 Haiti earthquake 43 the 2011 Japanese earthquake and ensuing tsunami 44 and 2012 s Hurricane Sandy 42 In all of these cases donations were redirected to the Red Cross Music Edit The store began operations after Apple signed deals with five major record companies EMI Universal Music Group Warner Music Group Sony Music Entertainment and Bertelsmann Music Group Songs from more than 2 000 independent labels were added later the first being from The Orchard on June 24 2003 As of April 2020 iTunes offers 60 million songs 45 46 including exclusive tracks from numerous artists Not all artists are available on iTunes but many holdouts such as Led Zeppelin and Radiohead have allowed their music to be sold on the iTunes Store in recent years New songs are added to iTunes catalog on a daily basis and the iTunes Store is updated each Tuesday Downloaded songs come with song information name artist album already filled out though iTunes provides a free service by Gracenote to do this for songs not purchased from the store although they must be imported with iTunes Songs that have an entry in the iTunes Store also come with album artwork Artwork is embedded in the metadata Artwork can be obtained for songs not purchased from the store for free if the user has an iTunes Store account Purchased songs do not come with lyrics nor does iTunes provide a service for acquiring the missing lyrics However several third party applications exist to locate and automatically add lyrics to the user s music Some albums purchased on iTunes came with booklets The first instance of this was the release of the album How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb by rock band U2 47 Album Only songs Edit Some songs are available from the store by Album Only meaning the song can only be acquired through the purchase of the entire album whereas most songs can be downloaded separately from the album they belong to Songs above 10 minutes in length are by default Album Only songs 48 However this is not universally true for example Living in the Heart of the Beast by Henry Cow is 16 minutes and 18 seconds yet is available for individual purchase as of December 24 2013 Soundtracks also often have many Album Only tracks Sometimes the 10 minute restriction works in an artist s favor Examples of this include Prince s Lovesexy and the deluxe version of Phoenix s Bankrupt which both have an album as a single track instead of being separate in Prince s case the track was the album while in Phoenix s case it was a collection of demos and outtakes forcing the buyer to buy the album itself Movie soundtracks normally include songs owned by many different labels making licensing more complex For example Forrest Gump The Soundtrack includes songs from Peacock Records Argo Records and Capitol Records among many others Greatest Hits by Red Hot Chili Peppers has only one song Higher Ground that is not available for download on a per song basis whilst Circus Britney Spears 2008 album has two songs that are available for album download only Rock Me In and Phonography Partial Albums Edit Some albums on the iTunes store are available only as a Partial Album meaning that one or more of the songs on an album s CD release aren t available on its iTunes equivalent often due to differing copyright holders between songs 49 Work Only songs Edit Some tracks are listed as Work Only which means they can only be obtained by purchasing the entire piece of work within the album the tracks cannot be bought as singles Works are generally pieces of classical music symphonies string quartets etc in multiple movements LP format Edit In September 2009 Apple introduced the iTunes LP format known pre launch by the code name Cocktail 50 which features visual interactive content alongside album tracks and lyrics Store Sections Edit When entering the US music store there are multiple sections one can visit Music is divided into genres Alternative Classical Jazz Soundtrack etc and there are a number of links to other sections of the store under the Quick Links header These include Recommended for You Complete My Album iTunes LP as well as thematic sections such as iTunes Festival sections On November 1 2006 Apple created a category for Latino and Hispanic content iTunes Latino Telemundo and Mun2 made some of their popular programs available for purchase becoming the first Hispanic television content in the store It offers music music videos audiobooks podcasts and television shows in Spanish in a single concentrated area The brief descriptions given to the content are in Spanish as well as several subcategories 51 Gibraltarian Flamenco Metal band Breed 77 released an exclusive album called Un Encuentro to coincide with the launch of iTunes Latino It features 11 songs all from previous albums but all sung in Spanish In 2012 Apple created Mastered for iTunes When iTunes launched the decision was made to standardize on AAC instead of the more popular MP3 format on the supposition that it offers better quality compared to other codecs at similar bit rates 52 Mastered for iTunes MFiT is a procedure developed by Apple specifically for Mastering Engineers to follow This set of tools allows Mastering Engineers to audition Apple s proprietary encoding during the mastering process to take into account how music will eventually interact with Apple s encoding In addition to auditioning the encoder there is also a tool called afclip that processes the audio file and creates a text file for audio clips Because of this special encoding process extra attention must be paid to headroom and inter sample peaking while mastering 53 In August 2019 it was announced that the Mastered for iTunes program would be rebranded as Apple Digital Masters With the rebranding the high resolution masters are now available with Apple Music through streaming 54 It is speculated that the rebranding came because the functionality of iTunes would be changing in macOS Catalina and therefore the Mastered for iTunes name no longer made sense Censorship EditMain articles Censorship by Apple and Censorship of the iTunes Store There is a policy of censoring profanity in titles on iTunes 55 This has resulted in a Scunthorpe glitch by which inoffensive titles are censored due to a coincidental string of letters 56 If the song has an explicit label it will be marked explicit next to the song title If a song is marked explicit it is unavailable for purchase if restrict explicit content is checked under the parental controls preference Often there will be a clean mark next to the title of some songs meaning the lyrics have been censored and is available to purchase on all accounts Generally if a song is marked clean there is an explicit version available as well Reception and commercial success Edit Sales of iTunes songs 2003 2010 In the first 18 hours the iTunes store sold about 275 000 tracks 57 58 and more than 1 million tracks were sold in its first 5 days 59 58 When released for Windows in October 2003 iTunes was downloaded more than 1 million times in the first 3 days selling more than 1 million songs in that period citation needed On December 15 2003 Apple announced that it had sold 25 million songs 60 In January 2004 at the Macworld Conference amp Expo in San Francisco Steve Jobs announced Sellers 2004 that an unnamed person had purchased US 29 500 worth of music On March 15 2004 Apple announced that iTunes Music Store customers had purchased and downloaded 50 million songs from iTunes Music Store A song sold on iTunes gives the artist 9 cents in profit They also reported that customers were purchasing 2 5 million songs a week which translates to a projected annual run rate of 130 million songs a year The 50 millionth song was The Path of Thorns by Sarah McLachlan 61 On April 28 2004 iTunes Music Store marked its first anniversary with 70 million songs sold clear dominance in the paid online music market and a slight profit 62 The store also offers hundreds of movie trailers and music videos in an attempt to boost soundtrack sales In the conference Steve Jobs reiterated that a subscription service is still not in the interest of customers and reported that only 5 million of the 100 million songs offered in the Pepsi giveaway campaign were redeemed which he blamed on technical problems in Pepsi distribution According to an Apple press release dated August 10 2004 iTunes Music Store was the first store to have a catalog of more than one million songs 63 Also iTunes Music Store at that point maintained a 70 percent market share of legal music downloads The emerging monopoly of the store was criticized in 2011 by Mike Lang of Miramax for effectively strangling the industry He says that because the music industry has allowed too few content providers it is now suffering Lang views the issue as being more of a threat than music piracy 64 Sales milestones EditMusic Edit 100 million songs sold July 11 2004 Kevin Britten of Hays Kansas bought the 100 millionth song and the twenty year old received a call from Steve Jobs congratulating him 65 125 million songs sold September 1 2004 66 150 million songs sold October 14 2004 67 200 million songs sold December 16 2004 Ryan Alekman of Belchertown Massachusetts bought the 200 millionth song which was one of the tracks on U2 s digital box set The Complete U2 68 250 million songs sold January 24 2005 69 300 million songs sold March 2 2005 70 400 million songs sold May 10 2005 71 dd On July 5 2005 Apple announced a promotion counting down to half a billion songs sold 72 500 million songs sold July 18 2005 Amy Greer of Lafayette Indiana bought the 500 millionth song Mississippi Girl by Faith Hill 73 850 million songs sold January 10 2006 74 1 billion songs sold February 23 2006 Alex Ostrovsky of West Bloomfield Michigan bought the billionth song Speed of Sound by Coldplay 75 He later got a call from Steve Jobs with the news that the sixteen year old was getting ten iPods an iMac a 10 000 music gift certificate and a scholarship established in his name at the Juilliard School 65 1 5 billion songs sold September 12 2006 76 2 billion songs sold January 10 2007 76 2 5 billion songs sold April 9 2007 77 3 billion songs sold July 31 2007 78 4 billion songs sold January 15 2008 5 billion songs sold June 19 2008 79 6 billion songs sold January 6 2009 80 8 billion songs sold July 21 2009 8 6 billion songs sold September 9 2009 10 billion songs sold February 24 2010 81 Louie Sulcer of Woodstock Georgia downloaded Guess Things Happen That Way by Johnny Cash At 71 years old he was the oldest milestone winner to that date He received a call from Steve Jobs and a 10 000 iTunes gift card 82 15 billion songs sold June 6 2011 83 20 billion songs sold September 12 2012 84 25 billion songs sold February 6 2013 85 35 billion songs sold May 28 2014 18 dd Video Edit 1 million videos sold October 31 2005 86 3 million videos sold December 6 2005 87 8 million videos sold January 10 2006 74 15 million videos sold February 23 2006 75 45 million videos sold September 12 2006 76 50 million television episodes sold January 10 2007 76 1 3 million feature length films sold January 10 2007 76 2 million feature length films sold July 31 2007 88 200 million television episodes sold October 16 2008 89 1 million HD episodes sold October 16 2008 89 Applications Edit 10 million apps downloaded July 14 2008 90 100 million apps downloaded September 9 2008 91 200 million apps downloaded October 22 2008 92 300 million apps downloaded December 5 2008 93 500 million apps downloaded January 16 2009 94 800 million apps downloaded March 17 2009 95 1 billion apps downloaded April 23 2009 96 1 5 billion apps downloaded July 14 2009 97 1 8 billion apps downloaded September 9 2009 2 billion apps downloaded September 28 2009 3 billion apps downloaded January 5 2010 7 billion apps downloaded October 20 2010 10 billion apps downloaded January 22 2011 98 15 billion apps downloaded July 7 2011 99 25 billion apps downloaded March 5 2012 100 30 billion apps downloaded June 11 2012 101 35 billion apps downloaded October 23 2012 102 40 billion apps downloaded January 7 2013 103 50 billion apps downloaded May 16 2013 60 billion apps downloaded October 22 2013 75 billion apps downloaded June 2 2014 104 100 billion apps downloaded June 8 2015 105 250 billion apps downloaded December 2016 106 Market share Edit On September 12 2006 Steve Jobs announced in his It s Showtime keynote that Apple had 88 of the legal US music download market 76 On April 11 2007 Apple announced that the iTunes Store had sold more than two million movies making it the world s most popular online movie store 88 On February 26 2008 the iTunes Store surpassed Best Buy to become the second largest music vendor in the US behind Walmart and became number one on April 3 2008 15 On October 10 2012 the iTunes Store was reported to have a 64 share of the online music market and a 29 share of all music sales worldwide 107 Internationalization EditOriginally only Mac OS X users who had a US billing address could buy songs with the service but Steve Jobs announced plans to support both Windows and non American users The Windows version of iTunes and support for the Windows platform from iTunes Music Store were announced on October 16 2003 with immediate availability Beginning in 2004 the service has become available in a number of countries other than the United States Country Product type Affiliate program 108 Price songMusic 109 Music Videos 109 Podcasts 109 TV shows 109 Movies 109 Apps 109 Books 109 iTunes Match 110 iTunes U 109 iTunes Radio 110 United States April 28 2003 Yes Yes October 12 2005 Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Discontinued January 28 2016 111 Yes US 0 69 1 29United Kingdom June 15 2004 Yes Yes Yes June 4 2008 Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 0 59 0 99 0 91 1 53 113 France June 15 2004 Yes Yes Yes April 30 2009 Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Germany June 15 2004 Yes Yes April 2 2008 114 April 16 2009 115 Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Austria October 26 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes April 30 2012 116 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Belgium October 26 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Finland October 26 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 9 2013 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Greece October 26 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes April 30 2012 116 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Italy October 26 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes April 30 2012 116 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Luxembourg October 26 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Netherlands October 26 2004 Yes Yes No September 27 2011 117 Yes Yes January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Portugal October 26 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes April 30 2012 116 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Spain October 26 2004 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Canada December 2 2004 Yes Yes Yes June 4 2008 Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 CAD 0 67 1 25 113 Ireland January 6 2005 Yes Yes No April 30 2009 Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Sweden May 10 2005 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 9 2013 Yes No Yes 9 12 SEK 1 25 1 67 113 Norway May 10 2005 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 9 2013 Yes No Yes 8 10 NOK 1 32 1 66 113 Switzerland May 10 2005 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 1 60 2 20 CHF 1 53 2 11 113 Denmark May 10 2005 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 9 2013 Yes No Yes 8 10 DKK 1 52 1 90 113 Japan August 4 2005 119 Yes Yes No Yes Yes March 6 2013 120 May 2 2014 Yes No Yes 150 250 JPY 1 81 3 02 113 Australia October 25 2005 October 25 2005 Yes June 24 2008 121 August 14 2008 Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes Discontinued January 28 2016 122 Yes 1 19 2 19 AUD 1 28 2 35 113 New Zealand December 6 2005 123 Yes Yes No August 14 2008 Yes October 22 2012 124 December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 1 79 2 39 NZD 1 47 1 96 113 Mexico August 4 2009 125 Yes Yes No November 9 2010 126 Yes October 22 2012 124 December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 9 15 MXN 0 71 1 19 113 Bulgaria September 29 2011 127 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes April 30 2012 116 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Cyprus September 29 2011 127 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Czech Republic September 29 2011 127 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Estonia September 29 2011 127 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Hungary September 29 2011 127 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes July 19 2012 128 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Latvia September 29 2011 127 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Lithuania September 29 2011 127 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Malta September 29 2011 127 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes December 15 2011 112 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Poland September 29 2011 127 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes July 19 2012 128 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Romania September 29 2011 127 Yes Yes No No Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Slovenia September 29 2011 127 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes April 30 2012 116 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Slovakia September 29 2011 127 Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29 0 92 1 72 113 Argentina December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Brazil December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 December 13 2011 Yes No Yes 1 90 2 90 BRLBolivia December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Chile December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Colombia December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Costa Rica December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Dominican Republic December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Ecuador December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29El Salvador December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Guatemala December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Honduras December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Nicaragua December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Panama December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Paraguay December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Peru December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Venezuela December 13 2011 129 Yes Yes No December 13 2011 129 Yes October 22 2012 124 January 16 2012 118 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Brunei June 27 2012 130 Yes Yes No June 27 2012 130 Yes free books June 27 2012 130 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Cambodia June 27 2012 130 Yes June 21 2012 No June 27 2012 130 June 21 2012 131 free books June 27 2012 130 June 21 2012 No Yes 0 69 1 29Hong Kong June 27 2012 130 Yes Yes No June 27 2012 130 Yes free books June 27 2012 130 Yes No Yes 5 8 HKDLaos June 27 2012 130 Yes June 21 2012 No June 27 2012 130 June 21 2012 131 free books June 27 2012 130 June 21 2012 No Yes 0 69 1 29Macao June 27 2012 130 Yes Yes No June 27 2012 130 Yes free books June 27 2012 130 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Malaysia June 27 2012 130 Yes Yes No June 27 2012 130 Yes free books June 27 2012 130 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Philippines June 27 2012 130 Yes Yes No June 27 2012 130 Yes free books June 27 2012 130 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Singapore June 27 2012 130 Yes Yes No June 27 2012 130 Yes free books June 27 2012 130 Yes No Yes 0 98 1 48 SGDSri Lanka June 27 2012 130 Yes Yes No June 27 2012 130 Yes free books June 27 2012 130 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Taiwan June 27 2012 130 Yes Yes No June 27 2012 130 Yes free books June 27 2012 130 Yes No Yes 15 30 TWD 0 51 1 02 113 Thailand June 27 2012 130 Yes Yes No June 27 2012 130 Yes free books June 27 2012 130 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Vietnam June 27 2012 130 Yes Yes No June 27 2012 130 Yes free books June 27 2012 130 Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Anguilla December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Antigua and Barbuda December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Armenia December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Azerbaijan December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Bahamas December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Bahrain December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Barbados December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Belarus December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes 0 69 1 29Belize December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Bermuda December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No Yes Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Botswana December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Burkina Faso December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes British Virgin Islands December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Cape Verde December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Cayman Islands December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Dominica December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Egypt December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Fiji December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Gambia December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Ghana December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Grenada December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Guinea Bissau December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes India December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 4 2012 132 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes 9 15 INR 0 18 0 30 Indonesia December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 4 2012 132 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes 3000 7000 IDRIsrael December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes 1 90 3 90 ILSJordan December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Kazakhstan December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Kenya December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Kyrgyzstan December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Lebanon December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Mauritius December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Federated States of Micronesia December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Republic of Moldova December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Mongolia December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes 0 49 1 29 USDMozambique December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Namibia December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Nepal December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Niger December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Nigeria December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Oman December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Papua New Guinea December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Qatar December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Russia December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 April 21 2008 No December 4 2012 132 April 21 2008 134 free books Yes April 21 2008 No Yes 15 19 RUB 0 49 0 62 Saint Kitts and Nevis December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Saudi Arabia December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes South Africa December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Swaziland December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Trinidad and Tobago December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Turkey December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 4 2012 132 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes 0 69 1 49 TRYTajikistan December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Turkmenistan December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Uganda December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Ukraine December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes United Arab Emirates December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Uzbekistan December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No No Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Zimbabwe December 4 2012 132 December 4 2012 132 Yes No December 12 2012 133 Yes free books Yes Yes No Yes Afghanistan No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Albania No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No Yes Algeria No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Angola No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Benin No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No Yes Bhutan No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No Yes Bosnia and Herzegovina No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Cameroon No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Chad No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No No China No No Yes No No Yes September 30 2015 136 No Yes No Yes Republic of the Congo No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No No Croatia No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Gabon No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Georgia No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Guyana No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Iceland No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Iraq No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Ivory Coast No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Jamaica No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Kosovo No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Korea South No No Yes No No June 10 2008 free books No Yes No Yes Kuwait No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Liberia No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No No Libya No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Macedonia No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Madagascar No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No No Malawi No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No Yes Maldives No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Mali No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No No Mauritania No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No No Montenegro No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Montserrat No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Morocco No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Mozambique No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Myanmar No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Nauru No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Pakistan No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Palau No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No Yes Rwanda No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Saint Lucia No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Saint Vincent and the Grenadines No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Sao Tome and Principe No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No Yes Senegal No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No No Serbia No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Seychelles No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No Yes Sierra Leone No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No Yes Solomon Islands No No June 21 2012 No No June 21 2012 131 free books No June 21 2012 No Yes Suriname No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Tanzania No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Tonga No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Tunisia No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Turks and Caicos Islands No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Uruguay No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Vanuatu No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Yemen No No Yes No No Yes free books No Yes No Yes Zambia No No April 21 2020 135 No No April 21 2020 135 No No No No Country Music Music Videos Podcasts TV shows Movies Apps Books iTunes Match iTunes U iTunes Radio Affiliate program Price songProduct type The countries where the iTunes Store is available are shown in green To buy files through the store a user must install the proprietary digital media player iTunes to access the store This software is available only for certain versions of the Macintosh or Windows operating systems iTunes Store availability Green full functionality music apps videos etc Red available but with limitations only apps iTunes U etc According to an Apple press release the European iTunes Music Stores sold a combined total of 800 000 songs in one week with 450 000 of those songs sold in the UK 137 The Italian Portuguese Dutch Greek stores have been localized On December 3 2004 the British Office of Fair Trading referred iTunes Music Store to the European Commission because it prevents consumers in one EU country from buying music from stores in other EU countries in violation of EU free trade legislation the immediate cause of the referral was because the 0 99 price charged in the Eurozone equates to GB 0 68 in sterling rather than the GB 0 79 actually charged there iTunes Music Store in Japan had 1 million songs available at start 119 In the next four days the store had sold one million songs the pace faster than that of the US store 138 In addition to a long delay Apple failed to have one set price for singles Pundits who speculated that this may have indicated the introduction of new price structure to the rest of the stores in future in favor of record labels who who would like to see higher prices for new songs This extension to other countries was announced in January 2009 The release of video capable iPods also saw the store launch in Australia with music videos and short films by Pixar iTunes Gift Cards as they are now known are now also available in many more stores such as JB Hi Fi David Jones and the Woolworths chain of stores Access was inadvertently given to some people in New Zealand too 139 Failed negotiations with the Sony BMG label meant that none of that label s artists were available at the time of launch they were later added on January 17 2006 New Zealand users had briefly been able to buy from the Australian store when it first opened until that loophole was closed On November 1 2006 the store started offering a range of Latino content including television shows and music for its Hispanic American Mexican and Puerto Rican clients 140 The Spanish used on the Mexican store has been modified to Mexican Spanish 141 As of the 2009 Macworld Conference amp Expo Apple had given no new information of the possible future inclusion and expansion of music videos TV shows and movies in other European countries The stores of the UK Germany and France currently remain the only European Stores with local and or localized selections of TV shows movies and music videos Payment options Edit A user must also pay with an iTunes gift card or a credit card with a billing address in Australia Austria Belgium Brunei Bulgaria Brazil Cambodia Canada Colombia the Czech Republic Cyprus Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Hong Kong Hungary India Indonesia the Republic of Ireland Italy Japan Laos Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Macau Malaysia Malta Mexico the Netherlands New Zealand Norway Philippines Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Romania Russia Singapore Slovakia Slovenia Spain Sri Lanka Sweden Switzerland Taiwan Thailand Turkey United Kingdom the United States or Vietnam Apple also offers other payment methods like PayPal which differ from country to country Residents in other countries can only buy a gift card from a merchant or download free podcasts and previews Digital rights management EditMain article FairPlay A fifth generation iPod with earphones The only portable devices licensed to play protected music from the iTunes Store are iPods the iPhone the iPod Touch the iPad and selected Motorola mobile phones such as the ROKR The iTunes Store used in the past Apple s FairPlay digital rights management DRM technology FairPlay is built into the MP4 multimedia file format as an encrypted AAC audio layer and is used by the company to protect copyrighted works sold through the store allowing only authorized devices to play the content 142 143 The restrictions imposed by FairPlay mainly limited device compatibility have sparked criticism with a lawsuit alleging antitrust violation 144 that was eventually closed in Apple s favor 145 and various successful efforts to remove the DRM protection from files 146 147 with Apple continually updating its software to counteract such projects 148 In February 2007 an open letter by Steve Jobs Apple s then CEO discussed the use of DRM on music raising points about the future of the protection and announcing the company s support for ending the use of DRM 149 150 Although the open letter initially caused mixed industry reactions 151 152 Apple signed a deal with a major record label the following month to offer iTunes customers a purchase option for a higher quality DRM free version of the label s tracks 153 In January 2009 Apple signed deals with all major record labels as well as a large number of independent labels to offer all iTunes music in the DRM free option 154 155 156 On January 6 2009 Apple announced that DRM had been removed from 80 of its music catalog in the US 157 Full iTunes Plus availability was achieved in the US on April 7 2009 coinciding with the introduction of a three tiered pricing model 158 This does not apply to songs downloaded while using Apple Music Apple s subscription based music streaming service 159 Television episodes many books and films are still FairPlay protected Promotions EditOn Super Bowl Sunday February 1 2004 Apple launched a promotion with Pepsi in which they gave away 100 million songs through tokens on selected soft drink bottle caps Unfortunately for Apple Pepsi failed to properly distribute the bottles to major metropolitan areas until only weeks before the promotion ended despite a one month extension of the deadline by Apple The promotion was repeated beginning January 31 2005 with 200 million songs available and an iPod Mini given away every hour On July 1 2004 Apple announced that starting with the sale of the 95 millionth song an iPod would be given away to the buyer of each 100 thousandth song for a total of 50 iPods The buyer of the 100 millionth song would receive a PowerBook iPod and US 10 000 gift certificate to iTunes Music Store Ten days later on July 11 Apple announced that 100 million songs had been sold through iTunes Music Store The 100 millionth song was titled Somersault Dangermouse Remix by Zero 7 purchased by Kevin Britten of Hays Kansas He then received a phone call from Apple CEO Steve Jobs who offered his congratulations as well as a 40 GB 3rd Generation iPod laser engraved with a message of thanks Inspired by Pepsi s marketing success with iTunes giveaways Coca Cola partnered with 7 Eleven to give away a free iTunes song with every 32 US fl oz 950 ml Slurpee frozen beverage until July 31 2005 Songs could be redeemed until August 31 2005 by entering a code printed on the Slurpee cup into iTunes Music Store application Coca Cola did this in spite of having its own music store myCokeMusic com that competed with iTunes Music Store in Europe myCokeMusic com ceased business on July 31 2006 160 On July 5 2005 Apple announced that they were counting down to half a billion songs The buyer of every 100 thousandth song up to 500 million would receive an iPod Mini and a 50 song gift card The grand prize for the person who downloads the 500 millionth song was 10 iPods of their choice a 10 000 song gift card 10 50 song gift cards or 4 tickets to the Coldplay world tour Twelve days later on July 17 Apple announced that 500 million songs had been sold through iTunes Music Store The 500 millionth song purchased by Amy Greer of Lafayette Indiana was Mississippi Girl by Faith Hill On July 28 2005 Apple and The Gap announced a promotion to award iTunes music downloads to Gap customers who tried on a pair of Gap jeans 161 From August 8 to 31 2005 each customer who tried on any pair of Gap jeans could receive a free download for a song of their choice from iTunes Music Store On February 7 2006 Apple announced that they were counting down to the billionth song download and began a promotion similar to the previous 100 million and 500 million countdown Whoever downloaded the billionth song would receive a 20 iMac ten 60 GB iPods and a US 10 000 iTunes Music Card The billionth song was purchased on February 23 2006 by Alex Ostrovsky of West Bloomfield Michigan The purchased song was Speed of Sound as part of Coldplay s X amp Y album On July 25 2006 Facebook and iTunes began offering a promotion where members of the Apple Students group would receive a free 25 song sampler each week until September 30 in various music genres The idea behind the promotion was to get students more familiar and enthusiastic with each service as Autumn classes approached 162 However in order to prevent abuse of the promotion the weekly code that Facebook provided stopped working after it was redeemed one million times In addition the promotion caused discontent among international students as the code was only valid in the US iTunes Music Store On April 10 2009 Apple announced that it will be counting down to the billionth app apps being the applications for iPod Touch and iPhone Apple launched a continuous counter to the billionth app on Good Friday 96 Connor Mulcahey age 13 of Weston CT downloaded the billionth app Bump by Bump Technologies and received a 17 MacBook Pro a 32GB iPod Touch a Time Capsule and a 10 000 Gift Card for the iTunes Store On February 11 2010 Apple announced that it would be counting down to 10 billion songs downloaded A 10 000 gift card was offered as a prize On February 24 2010 the 10 billionth song Guess Things Happen That Way by Johnny Cash was purchased by Louie Sulcer of Woodstock Georgia 163 Other platforms EditCurrently iTunes is supported on the macOS Leopard and above and Microsoft Windows operating systems iTunes was known to run passably well in Linux on x86 based computers using the Wine compatibility layer however by December 2011 this was no longer the case 164 Users without iTunes installed can see a content database but not hear or view the content itself using the iTunes Preview service which runs inside their internet browser This service also allows users to watch trailers for upcoming film releases Should they choose to purchase any media they will be redirected to iTunes Technical details EditStore pages are delivered using standard HTML with a special header This change was made when iTunes 9 0 was released iTunes uses WebKit to render these pages on the screen 165 These pages are also accessible on the Web at iTunes apple com allowing pages from the iTunes Store to show up in search engine search results Prior to iTunes 9 0 the iTunes Store was delivered using a custom XML format that describes the position of all of the elements boxes album art and all of their properties including whether a reference link can be dragged out of iTunes and into another document The store s back end software uses WebObjects Apple s own application server it acquired from NeXT Content is uploaded to iTunes data store using an internal Apple program called iTunes Producer which automatically encodes and adds metadata to uploaded files citation needed Legal disputes EditMain article Apple Inc litigation Apple records Edit Main article Apple Corps v Apple Computer For three years The Beatles record company Apple Records were in a legal dispute Apple Corps v Apple Computer with Apple Computer over the name Apple On May 8 2006 a ruling was declared in favor of Apple Computer but Apple Records said it would appeal the ruling Despite this plans were announced by Neil Aspinall in April 2006 to remaster completely and release the entire Beatles catalog on an unspecified online music service as well as release some previously unheard work by the band No date was set at that time 166 It has also been reported that the Beatles music catalog might initially be appearing on iTunes only as Apple is reported to be negotiating with Britain s EMI group over an online distribution deal that might be exclusive for a limited time 167 During his Macworld Keynote address on January 9 2007 Apple CEO Steve Jobs used the band s song Lovely Rita to introduce the music playing capabilities of the company s new iPhone This was regarded by industry observers as further evidence that the Beatles catalog would be introduced to iTunes Music Store catalog in the near future 168 On February 5 2007 Apple Corps and Apple Inc announced they had reached a settlement in their legal dispute 169 In a related development Apple announced on August 14 2007 that the entire solo catalog of John Lennon would be available on iTunes 170 The solo catalogs of the other three Beatles Paul McCartney Ringo Starr and George Harrison are also available on iTunes On November 16 2010 the entire Beatles catalog was officially made available on the iTunes Store The Consumer Council of Norway EULA challenge Edit On June 6 2006 The Consumer Ombudsmen in Norway Sweden and Denmark launched a common open letter to Apple regarding the EULA of iTunes through the Norwegian Consumer Ombudsman Bjorn Erik Thon 171 The iTunes case is based upon an official complaint 172 filed by The Consumer Council of Norway on January 25 2006 The main allegations were that The EULA is unbalanced to disfavor the customer Scandinavian law requires any written agreement to favor both parties The weak party also enjoys protection from exploitation according to Norwegian consumer laws The iTunes Store s use of Digital rights management limits the number of devices purchased songs can be played on iTunes contract entitles the company to at any time change the terms of the contract without notice including the selection of players or software that must be used for iTunes files and also the number of times a customer can change or copy already purchased files The EULA is both vague and hard to understand for the customers The EULA states that the legal relationship between the company and customers is regulated by English contract law It is unreasonable to expect Norwegian consumers to have comprehensive knowledge of English law Products marketed to Norwegian consumers in Norway are subject to Norwegian law a right that cannot be waived by a clause in a company s standard customer contract The EULA removes iTunes responsibility regarding damage to the consumer s computer caused by software errors even though responsibility cannot be waived in Scandinavian Law Apple responded July 31 2006 173 On January 22 2007 German and French consumer groups joined forces with Norway and Finland 174 175 Their goal is to create a united European front against iTunes Germany and France have each had their own negotiation process with iTunes According to the press statement Apple is in favor of this The key points in the negotiations were Interoperability the consumer should have the right and ability to play his or her music on any device of his or her own choice Change of conditions iTunes must revoke their right to change the terms and conditions EULA at any time without the consent of the consumer Liability iTunes should change its clause limiting its liability to recover consumer damages if they are caused by content sold by iTunes Applicable Law Consumers entering into a contract with iTunes should be able to rely on the consumer protection rules according to the law of the country in which they live EU antitrust case Edit In 2004 Which magazine complained to the European Commission about the higher prices in the UK for the same songs sold in other parts of the European Union typically 0 99 in the rest of the EU and 0 79 in the UK 176 In 2008 the Commission withdrew its investigation after Apple agreed to end the price disparity 176 Content disputes EditUniversal Music Group Edit This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information August 2010 On July 1 2007 the New York Times reported 177 that Universal the world s largest music corporation at the time of writing would not renew its annual contract to sell music through iTunes Instead Universal said that it would market music to Apple at will allowing it to remove its songs from the iTunes service on short notice if the two sides did not agree on pricing or other terms On August 9 2007 UMG announced a plan to sell some songs in MP3 format without Digital rights management through a variety of online services such as Amazon Music and the newly created gBox While these tracks continue to be available through the iTunes Store Universal chose to license these songs in DRM free formats only through other services 178 NBC Universal TV series Edit On August 31 2007 Apple announced that programs on NBC s 2007 08 television schedule would not be available on iTunes 179 NBC had informed Apple the previous day that it would not be renewing its contract 180 It was later clarified that this change only applied to series produced by NBC Universal owned Universal Media Studios including Universal produced shows on other networks such as House NBC programs produced by other studios such as Chuck Warner Bros and Journeyman 20th Century Fox would remain available on iTunes 181 Apple has publicly asserted that NBC would only renew their contract if Apple agreed to a price increase of US 4 99 per episode which they did not NBC disputes that claim claiming that Apple balked at NBC s request to package shows together and make wholesale pricing more flexible 182 NBC claims that they never asked to double the wholesale price and insisted that their shows would be sold by the iTunes Store through early December 183 Other networks who sold their shows via iTunes did not follow suit On December 1 2007 NBC shows were pulled from the iTunes Store On September 9 2008 Apple and NBC Universal announced that NBC s TV shows were once again available on the US iTunes Store 184 The UK iTunes Store has many shows from NBC available although they are distributed by Universal Studios The pricing for these seasons are higher than they were on the US store an example being Season 3 of The Office is priced at 43 2008 equivalent to 53 or US 68 in 2019 185 vs US 52 99 equivalent to 66 69 in 2021 US Store HD See also EditiTunes Apple Music iTunes Festival Apple Inc Apple TV iBookstore Comparison of digital music storesReferences Edit Langer Andy September 10 2014 Is Steve Jobs the God of Music Esquire Hearst Communications Retrieved July 10 2017 Apple TV is now available on the Roku platform Roku Inc October 15 2019 Retrieved February 11 2020 Kastrenakes Jacob October 24 2019 Apple TV app launches on Amazon Fire TV devices The Verge Vox Media Apple May Finally Shutter iTunes But the iTunes Era Ended 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Promotion After 11 Years Business Insider Retrieved January 13 2015 List of Countries Where Apple Music and Beats 1 Radio Are Now Available MacRumors com Retrieved July 7 2017 Apple Music FAQ The ins and outs of Apple s new streaming music service MacWorld com Retrieved July 7 2017 Take Apple Music for a spin Apple com Retrieved July 7 2017 Dutch Apple Music nu beschikbaar voor iedereen nl CCM net Retrieved May 6 2019 iPod touch Features apple com Retrieved September 25 2007 Apple Ditches iTunes DRM Adds Variable Prices 3G Downloads About com Archived from the original on December 2 2009 Retrieved April 28 2009 You Can Now Download iOS Apps Up to 50MB Over 3G or 4G Gizmodo March 7 2012 Retrieved June 12 2012 Apple ups limit of App Store downloads over cellular to 100MB appleinsider com September 18 2013 Kazmucha Allyson July 2011 Daily Tip how to contact iTunes support with billing and account questions Mobile Nations Retrieved July 8 2013 iTunes Store Support Customer Service Apple Inc Retrieved February 17 2006 a b Kelly Meghan November 1 2012 Support Sandy victims by donating through iTunes and eBay VentureBeat Retrieved November 1 2012 iDonate iTunes and the Haiti Earthquake Current January 15 2010 Archived from the original on January 16 2013 Retrieved November 1 2012 Olivarez Giles Nathan March 13 2011 Apple iTunes accepting Red Cross donations for Japan quake and tsunami relief Los Angeles Times Retrieved November 1 2012 Apple Unveils New iTunes Apple September 12 2012 Retrieved September 27 2012 Apple iTunes Apple Inc Retrieved September 13 2017 Kirkville Finally Digital Booklets with iTunes Music Download Archived from the original on July 14 2011 Retrieved November 27 2009 Allan Ripp June 17 2015 The iTunes Download Model Is Broken Here s How to Fix It The New York Observer Observer Media Retrieved April 1 2016 Distributor and Label Help Apple Music Provider Support Rosoff Matt September 9 2009 New iTunes LP format is live CNET Archived from the original 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are intermediaries that end up totally controlling an industry He added that another problem is the emergence of digital monopolies such as the one Apple has in the digital music business The music business is suffering because it allowed too few players to flog content presumably fearful of their content being stolen Encouraging Apple s iTunes at the expense of others is effectively strangling the industry he said a b Levy Steven 2006 The Perfect Thing How the iPod Shuffles New York NY Simon amp Schuster Apple Launches iTunes Affiliate Program Apple Inc September 1 2004 Archived from the original on February 12 2006 Retrieved February 17 2006 iTunes Music Store Downloads Top 150 Million Songs Apple Inc October 14 2004 Archived from the original on February 13 2006 Retrieved February 17 2006 iTunes Music Store Downloads Top 200 Million Songs Apple Inc December 16 2004 Archived from the original on February 6 2006 Retrieved February 17 2006 iTunes Music Store Downloads Top a Quarter 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