Gundato: Actually...
Music: Notice how there is a heavy emphasis on a shift toward digital distribution. iTunes. Zune. Even Amazon MP3. We have gotten to the point where they generally stop putting DRM on the files themselves (in some cases, if you pay more. In other cases, by default), but we are still heavily restricted by the services themselves (as mentioned, iTunes has problems).
Huh? MP3s are DRM free now on all major platforms, CDs are DRM free, I don't see your point.
Also, to address your minor point, some 80% of music sales are still on CD. I just read about it on CNN the other day. The whole "digital taking over" thing is highly exaggerated.
Gundato: Movies: Thought the physical copies were still pretty DRM heavy. Especially with that emphasis on "digital copy" and the like. Plus, there is a heavy emphasis on renting movies from set-top boxes and game consoles these days.
Renting is not owning, and when people want to own a movie they buy a DVD or BD which are DRM free. They might have disc copyright technology on them, but we're talking internet DRM here where you have to ask to play your content.
Gundato: Books: So far, it has gone pretty well (to the extent that you don't consider the written word to be dead). But things like Kindle are changing that.
Meh... last I heard digital books were competing with hardcovers which are a minor part of the book business, which is all about paperbacks. I'm not really sure of the DRM on books either, as I have never bought a digital one.
Gundato: So yeah, boned on all fronts :p
Uhh, not really.