Abstract: "Digital Rights Management and the Pricing of Digital Products"
As it becomes cheaper to copy and share digital content, vendors are
turning to technical protections such as encryption. We argue that if protection is
nevertheless imperfect, this transition will generally lower the prices of content relative
to perfect legal enforcement. However, the effect on prices depends on whether the
content providers use independent protection standards or a shared one, and if shared,
on the governance of the system. Even if a shared system permits content providers to
set their prices independently, the equilibrium prices will depend on how the vendors
share the costs, and may be higher than with perfect legal protection. We show
that demand-based cost sharing generally leads to higher prices than revenue-based
cost sharing. Users, vendors and the antitrust authorities will typically have different
views on what capabilities the DRM system should have. We argue that, when a DRM
system is implemented as an industry standard, there is a potential for “collusion
through technology.”