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Cantametrix Plans To Track All MP3s On The Web

Akilesh Rajan writes: "A Stereophile article reports that Cantametrix is further developing its MusicDNA system for identifying and tracking all MP3s on the Internet. MusicDNA's use of DSP (Digital Signal Processing) technology and psychoacoustic modeling allows it to analyze an MP3 and immediately tell what song it is, and so also recognize who, if anyone, owns its copyright. Company reps explain one possible application: 'A MusicDNA Analyzer can be located, for example, on the Web crawler of a large search engine, to ensure that the search engine only points to legal music.'" I could see this working a lot better if all the music on the Web was pristine and complete -- which it's not.

166 comments

  1. Re:Ha ha ha.... by drewish_princess · · Score: 1

    I'd like to see them do this, and encompass the myriad of different protocols and formats that abound on the web today, plus the ones that will be designed just to break it. It seems to me that they'd only need to supply an appropriate codex to decompress it to raw audio before they could analize it. You're absolutely correct though that all it would take would be to wrap it in a zip file with the password in the file name.

  2. Re:Yeah, "original" artist by tftp · · Score: 1

    No laughs, this would make a very good service. I hear many good songs on radio. The catch is that songs and announcements are all in Spanish, and I don't understand it :-( This service would allow me to identify music and then buy it.

  3. It's markwatch for mp3's! by plagiarist · · Score: 1
    Reminds me of Markwatch, a web trademark-monitoring service with an, um, entertaining website. You've probably seen Markwatch's bots, breather and snorkel, all over your weblogs... I have a student on a server at the college where I work who wrote a short story that mentions a Coke machine - they're all over it... how efficient...

    So now we're going to have this kind of thing for sound files??? Oh good - bots downloading all the music students' work constantly... er uh, does this thing respect robots.txt files?? (and if it does, then what good is it... um, scratch that question....)

  4. Heh. by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
    I hope in between all their havering about 'monetizing the artists' they manage to implement one little simple obvious thing- the ability for any random person to submit a song and be directed to the official website of the artist- whether that means a major label site, a 'You're Under Arrest' page, or a page that simply says 'Here is more music like that for you to download'.

    Nothing in this technology _stops_ it from being usable in the last sense- a way to quickly be pointed to the rest of an artist's freely available (typically low bit rate) catalog. That, not 'monetization', is the new concept: the idea that for the first time a good but poorly resourced artist would have the same information distribution resources as the majors- the majors fight and spend billions to try and get some produced 'artist's name into peoples' ears, so that the consumer knows what they're hearing and where to buy more (at your local CD store, of course). For the first time this might be truly decentralised so that anyone, anywhere, who was listening to some anonymous and obscure song they liked, would be able to get the information. So it's on the radio? Hold up a mike and tape the radio. Pirate radio? Same deal. Old cassette tape that never had a label? No problem. mp3 marked "Metallica-One.mp3" erroneously? No problem...

    At that point, you start having a free market again- at that point good local or indie bands or musicians, or really specialised musicians (noise, trad jazz, ragtime, serial composition) can begin shortcircuiting the lines of distribution and undercutting the majors by the simple expedient of 'who cares if I can't make money at this, nobody does but _I_ can afford to voluntarily give out mp3s etc. and FIND MY AUDIENCE'. At a stroke, the barriers to entry for an entire industry fall, and genres like jazz can survive (contrast this with at the major labels, which not only will not support jazz but are known to actually destroy irreplaceable master tapes to save storage costs- refusing to allow anyone to salvage the masters).

    I really hope these people have enough sense to become this type of general resource. The risk is that the majors will not permit information to be stored for any music other than major label 'protected' music, and so the more obscure or indie stuff will turn up as 'no matches'.

  5. Re:covers/bootlegs by VAXman · · Score: 1

    It can distinguish between the original and bootlegs because they are entirely different recordings, with obvious differences (such as the presence of audience applause, and in the case of Pearl Jam, yelling and screaming).

    A much more interesting quuestion would be to ask if it could dinstinguish between to different 're-masters' of the same original recorded piece of music.

  6. This COULD work. It automates whack-a-mole. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 2

    couldn't they send out threatening emails to anybody who has an MP3 with (for instance) Metallica in the file name, with roughly the same effect?

    They did that already. Didn't work all that well (because lots of things other than Metallica files have that in the name, and lots of Metallica MP3s aren't named so simply). It also caused a firestorm.

    Distinguishing between what is real and what's not is probably only useful in court... (correct me if I'm wrong...)

    Whether it's a real Metallica song or an unlicensed cover of it doesn't matter. They're both copyright violations.

    If the technology really does work - or even works moderately well as a bird-dog - using it for a webcrawler to hunt for infringers may work - and be within existing law. They can check manually before going to court. If it's good enough, they can weasel-word a cease-and-desist order and not get much problem from occasionally sending one to a host of a misidentified file.

    No law changes required. If they finally buy a clue and go after the >hostsindexers, they'd be on completely solid legal ground, and the litigation would be reduced to:
    - Did the defendant knowingly host a copyrighted work without obtaining the proper license?
    - Did he refuse to take it down in response to the cease-and-desist order?
    - Does the plantiff hold the copyright (or otherwise have standing)?
    - (In the first few cases) is such hosting fair use?

    But even if it's NEARLY perfect it will sometimes misidentify a non-infringing work. If it does this even once, it opens any subscription hosting service that uses it to civil action for contract violation by its customers.

    As we've seen, in free competition the indexing services that use a filter will lose to those that don't - because they'll lose the portion of the customer base that doesn't care whether they're downloading a copyrighted work. And any flase-positive flakeyness in the technology would produce the same sort of flap as the nannyware web filters. This should preclude attempts to pass and enforce a legal mandate, on first amendment grounds.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  7. Re:quick solution by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

    Chill Out mate. just using windows doesn't make them a fool. Just unenlightened!

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  8. You might be interested in Tropus by willdye · · Score: 1
    For the first time this might be truly deentralised so that anyone, anywhere, who was listening to some anonymous and obscure song they liked, would be able to get the information.

    You might be interested in the Tropus project, at http://tropus.sourceforge.net. We're still in the vaporware stage, but what you're talking about is one of the things on our wishlist.

    --William Dye

  9. Re:quick solution by VAXman · · Score: 1

    If this formula is widespread enough, the program will be able to adapt and ignore seconds 3-5 of the piece.

    If the formula is not widespread enough, then it is useless.

  10. Has anyone actually looked at the facts? by clarkma · · Score: 1

    OK, Cantametrix has 12 references to other people talking about 'Music DNA (TM)', but *no* information about it on its own site.

    Their online presentation is simply about yet another stunningly crude music genre classification technique.

    Now usually if someone has something of substance to say, they are happy to back it up, no?

    My reading is this:
    1. Cantametrix is a company with not particularly special technology looking to up its profile.
    2. The SDMI competition and the Napster / Bertelsmann agreement mean that music copyright issues are particularly newsworthy at the moment.
    3. Cantametrix has *privately* spread around the idea that its technology could be used to help enforce copyrights.
    4. Note that they make no formal claim for themselves claim beyond "For labels and artists, CantaMetrix fingerprinting technology can be a valuable component in the song identification process."

    Therefore, this is PR fluff. Ignore with confidence.

  11. Re:not really by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

    You really think that just because the government says its illegal its bad. You ust have been anti gay rights in the past andprobably still think weed is bad. You are just ignorant!

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  12. Re:This COULD work. It automates whack-a-mole. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 2

    If they finally buy a clue and go after the >hostsindexers, they'd be on completely solid legal ground ...

    Make that:

    If they finally buy a clue and go after the hosts rather than the indexers, they'd be on completely solid legal ground ...

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  13. They don't care about classical by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

    Classical music is not the big money spinner that popular music is. They probably won't bother with that!

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  14. Re:Guilty of their pirating their own tracks by mfnickster · · Score: 1

    Maybe I'm not understanding correctly, but everytime they grab a music file to scan, aren't they making an illegal copy? As is stands, the only people who are copying music illegally are those who go and get it. Now anyone who uses this scanning software will also be a pirate.

    Don't forget, the RIAA is only powerful because we have given them a shitload of our money. The way to take their power away is to stop giving them money!

    - MFN

    --
    "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
  15. Heh heh Stupid Military! by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

    Refer to the subject!

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  16. MP3 File Format by jtdubs · · Score: 1

    Doesn't this plan rather ignorantly assume that the MP3 files will be traded purely. What if you were to gzip it first, or even just rename it to .gz. They can't possibly scan EVERY file as that would be an absurd amount of computer power. Anyway, this seems like a complete and utter waste of effort because people will ALWAYS work around this kind of crap.

  17. Re:Heh heh by homer_ca · · Score: 1

    Or if you really want to confuse their algorithm, edit together different songs to make medley mixes. Like 20 sec of Britney Spears, 20 sec of Metallica, 20 sec of Lawrence Welk, 20 sec of techno, etc. etc. It shouldn't be too hard to automate the process.

  18. This could be good. by brad3378 · · Score: 1


    What if...
    This technology was used for good and not evil?
    They claim that they can identify an mp3 just by it's code by analyzing it.

    What if this technology was used to find all the crappy mp3s on the net.
    Just think about it. I could have some program running in the background on my computer that could search through gigs and gigs of my MP3's and find all the little "blips" and crackles from a poorly encoded MP3.

    Just start the program at night time when you go to bed, and wake up to a full .log file saying something like:


    /home/brad3378/MP3directory/Song_X.mp3 - 2:22 problem found. - verify the quality of this song
    /home/brad3378/MP3directory/Song_Y.mp3 - 2:49 problem found. - verify the quality of this song
    /home/brad3378/MP3directory/Song_Z.mp3 - 4:48 problem found. - verify the quality of this song


    I think this could be a big timesaver to folks like me that spend too much time verifying the quality of their MP3 collection.

    --

    1. Re:This could be good. by acceleriter · · Score: 1
      That would absolutely rock--someone could implement the patented (I presume) signature algorithm and make signatures available offshore via HTTP. Then, when people who know what they're doing are the only ones trading MP3's again :), these signatures could be used to search fileservers on IRC for the b0mb MP3's.

      Of course, there is no way in hell search engines are going to voluntary implement something like this: 1) As long as one search engine doesn't do it, they would be putting themselves at a competitive disadvantage. 2) By starting to do this, they would incur liability for pointing to other illegal content, in whatever local it's illegal in. Not bloody freaking likely, unless the RIAA takes a big equity stake in all the search engines :).

      --

      CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received.

  19. Re:Installed at search engines? by drewish_princess · · Score: 1

    A much easier way to get it in place would be to just buy the search engine. Considering that Disney owns GO Networks, it's not a streach.

  20. Re:My Simple Answer by Rolu · · Score: 2

    The same law that prevents you from putting the mp3's on the server in the first place? :-)

  21. Re:Classical Music by sparrowjk · · Score: 1

    I was wondering about that too, but I figured that, assuming it is based on both harmony/melody and a fairly exact timing, it could probably distinguish between two different versions of the same song. No two pianists will play all the corresponding notes with the same duration, even given a similar tempo. (This is especially true of pieces from the romantic era and later.) But naturally I have no idea how the analysis is really done...

  22. Re:My Simple Solution by drewish_princess · · Score: 1

    Worry about the RIAA not altavista scanning your files. You better believe that they'll have it comming from multiple subnets.

  23. a non-evil use ! by DanThe1Man · · Score: 2
    Wouldn't it be cool (for someone who has a large collection of mp3s on their computer) to gain access to this data base and use a program to change the correct files, based on the files "DNA" to *name of band* - *name of song* ?

    That would correct wrongly named and labed files and make people's collections look neater.
    --

    1. Re:a non-evil use ! by sparrowjk · · Score: 1

      In theory that would be a non-trivial use, but I get the feeling that this technology is not for public consumption -- you could use it to verify that your MP3's were undetectable, and that would defeat the purpose of it. So, I imagine there would be hefty licensing fees.

      However if somebody wanted to create an independent freeware version for this purpose... well, that seems like a lot of work to go to for not much gain.

    2. Re:a non-evil use ! by drewish_princess · · Score: 1

      best freaking idea i've heard all day.

  24. Stream it to me Baby ! by philkerr · · Score: 1
    Of, so this 'may' work with files posted on an internet site, but what about streaming?

    For this to work the DSP filters would have to be fitted to either the backbones, or to clients.

    The former stands 0%, just look at the outcry with Carnivore.

    The latter..... hehehehe I can see the Open Source developers rushing to add this 'feature' :)

    Phil

    The Linux MP3-HOWTO

  25. Re:First Rant. by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

    I totally agree. The reason they came late was not because they had no idea but because they don't want to change. Like oil companies. If i was in charge of one i would look into other technologies so that when the oil runs out you can still be in control. but the don't because they are greedy and only see tomorrow!!!!

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  26. Re:Unfair application of the law by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

    Do you really think a judge, whose interest is in the status quo would really not fine a mp3 'pirate' even if they beat a confession out of him!

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  27. Re:Year 3000 by litheum · · Score: 1

    oh for christ sake what are you talking about? there is such a blaringly obvious fundamental difference between your personal mp3s and your books. the fact that people continue to allude that "censoring" your right to share files is somehow a gesture of government control and domination is absolutely ridiculous. here's why:

    writing a book is free speech
    making copies of something that isn't yours and distributing it for free when someone's trying to make money off of it is just rude and ridiculous. jesus christ think about what you're talking about before you start getting paranoid.

  28. Software on the users Computer by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

    Te articles says that software on the end users computer could scan the mp3s. Firstly they couldn't get me to install this software let alone most people who use mp3s. And i bet this could be hacked to scan harddrives for more than mp3s. -- Challenge the system --

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  29. lemme know by DeXtR · · Score: 1

    let me know exactly what search engines and ill be damned sure NOT to use those ones, LETS HAVE REBELL SEARCH ENGINE WITH A FUNNY LOGO and NO BANNERS... oh wait google's already around... my bad :P

    --

    Istigkeit -"is-ness" being and becoming & i'dfiying it with the mathematical abstraction of the idea

  30. Re:their rights online by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

    Your fucked! Just because the government says its illegal you think it is. You probably agreed with anti gay laws and still think weed is bad. You suck. Do you really think that artists can afford to release cds themself. You don't know what market forces are. The RIAA is not about competition its about monopolies. Ever wonder why cds cost the same no matter where you go. Thats becuase the 4 or 5 majors companies are involved in price fixing!

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  31. Your "true AI" is easier than it seems. Here's how by yerricde · · Score: 2

    2 -- an expert system powerful enough to comprehend and categorize musical information, that could tell a licensed recording of Mozart from a bootleg NIN concert, i.e. practically full-blown Artificial Intelligence.

    1. Convert the .ogg, .mp3, etc. to .wav or some other transparent linear PCM format.
    2. Use a low-pass filter to go down to the low frequencies where the bass line lives.
    3. Use a similar algorithm to the "beat finder" in many XMMS/Winamp plugins, along with the Fourier transform, to reduce the wave to a list of notes being played.
    4. Taking into account transpositions and speed changes, pattern match with MIDI files from the ASCAP, SESAC, BMI, and RIAA libraries.
    5. Sue.
    This technique also would have caught "Ice Ice Baby" (really "Under Pressure") and "Come As You Are" (really "Eighties").
    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  32. Easy to defend against by interiot · · Score: 2

    One possible workaround: prepend a random barely-audible rumble to each MP3.
    --

    1. Re:Easy to defend against by Vryl · · Score: 1
      Very surprised if this would work.

      There is nothing really unfeasible about the tech. For a coupla million I reckon I could make it work quite well.

      They are taking a psycho acoustic model of the track. This is going to filter out things like hiss and rumble in the track, and a noise gate will lose any prepended or appended crap on the file.

      The only way to defeat it is to make the track unrecogzisable, and unfortunately, that would make it unlistenable.

      The other way is to wrap it up steganographically, but ... makes it hard to find, play etc.

      Others have suggested zipping it etc, but that sorta amounts to the same thing, or lends itself to automated tools to unzip and run the softs.

      Anyway, big deal ... too little, too late ... we have won, they have lost, they are just too stupid to recognize it yet. When they start offering something of value at a reasonable price, they will be back in the game, in the meantime, Napster et al will be where the action is.

  33. Re:Year 3000 by jmp100 · · Score: 1
    I think what he was alluding to is the "slippery slope" phenomenon. The basic parts of this technology can probably be modified to examine content OTHER than MP3s - like the aforementioned example: books.

    There are those in this world who seek control in order to destroy. This sort of technology is what they dream of posessing. That article the other week about that company which had mapped every IP address on the Internet by geographic location is a similar case.

  34. Year 3000 by Peter+Dyck · · Score: 4
    And I can see this quote in the future:

    "...to ensure that the search engine only points to legal, government approved books."
    1. Re:Year 3000 by whowhodilly · · Score: 1

      so, is there gonna be an online jail cell for all the violators of copyright infringement, or will we arrest people and stick them in already overcrowed jail cells over the country while there are petafatofiles out there reeking havoc, or, will the government milk money out of us, and pay the overly rich mucisians. (don't get me wrong there are a lot of musicians that i like and stuff!) WHAT IS THE WORLD COMING TO...HOUSE ARREST FOR YOUR COMPUTER?!?!?!!

  35. Corporate Control by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

    THis is just another way that the corporate world destroys our freedom. The greed dominated record companies, as we all know, are afraid of mp3s as it is the one thing that can finally challenge their monopoly. Ever wondered why cds are the same price no matter what store you go to. Thats because the major labels are all involved in robber-baron type price fixing. They crap on about market forces being destroyed but in reality they are the market. I don't see it as stealing in as much as i am not making money off the mp3s. That would be stealing. I support bands by going to concerts. i am not talking about ticketmaster type concerts but small ones at universites and pay at door ones. This battle is indicative of a great struggle in society. The corporate control of our lives and the destruction of the environment are all part of this. If you have any views or thoughts on this instead of just venting your anger here do it else where as well. Join a protest like those at Seattle last year or melbourne (i did). Join a party, speak out. The way to throw off the chains of corporate control is through direct action. Hack a corporate websites such as Nike and expose their treatment of workers. The movement is building join in!

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  36. Re:Heh heh by drsoran · · Score: 1

    I guess you can test that theory about infinite monkeys being able to reproduce the complete works of Britney Spears. :-) "I swear to god, that link was /dev/random. I have no idea how it completely reproduced that song!"

  37. Actually cackmobile@optushome.com.au by Cackmobile · · Score: 1

    If any one is interested drop me a line!

    --
    -- Karma Karma Karma Karma, Karma Chameleon - Boy George
  38. Ha ha ha.... by pb · · Score: 5

    Yeah, right.

    I'd like to see them do this, and encompass the myriad of different protocols and formats that abound on the web today, plus the ones that will be designed just to break it.

    I think that simple passwords, encryption, steganography, and file-sharing will each be enough to defeat this, but who knows, maybe we'll have to go to something really sophisticated, like trading over IRC, or ratioed ftp...

    Companies that base their business model over scare tactics just crack me up...
    ---
    pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.

    --
    pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
    1. Re:Ha ha ha.... by flounder99 · · Score: 1

      Hmmmm...

      Wouldn't any simple compression or encryption like a password encryped zip file render this crawler useless? What if I posted a bunch of mp3's zipped with a password like "music" that I made known to my friends? It couldn't read them. If it broke my encryption wouldn't it be a violation of the DMCA's anti-circumnavigation provisions?

      flounder

      --
      I don't like .spam. in my email address, neither should you
    2. Re:Ha ha ha.... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Anti-circumnavigation? Wow. Guess the US Navy is in deep kimchee now.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    3. Re:Ha ha ha.... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      It amuses me that DNA no longer stands for "deoxyribunucleic acid", and simply means "unique identifier".

      Stupid humans.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    4. Re:Ha ha ha.... by guess256 · · Score: 1

      Funny that they stole the idea from Charlie's Angels - the story line of the movie is detecting and tracking "audio DNA" (voice print) to find and kill Charlie himself.

  39. Re:Yeah, "original" artist by drsoran · · Score: 2

    Ohhh, maybe they will sell this technology too. Then I can finally categorize all my mp3's. I've got a couple that I can't tell whether they're Christina Aguilera or Britney Spears. With this cool technology I could just run it and it'd go grab some info from cddb.com and voila. This rules! heh. ;-)

  40. Time to convert by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3

    Time to convert *.mp3 to *.ogg.

  41. Re:Infeasible by mpe · · Score: 2

    and they don't discover serious flaws while doing it (say, discover 100 different tracks that have the same fingerprint)

    More likely to end up with 100 different fingerprints for the same track. Well the same track so far as humans are concerned, different tracks because of the way they have been ripped and processed. Remember that MP3 uses a lossy compression.

  42. Pirate Islands by interiot · · Score: 2
    Yeah, one of the most common ways for "pirates" to survive is to break themselves into a bunch of little islands, so there's lots of small targets rather than one large target. "Islands" can be back alleys, secret societies, separated napster/gnutella networks, little-known alternative protocols (eg. Hotline or Napster when they first came out), dorm buildings, VPNs, etc... The idea is to be small or unknown enough to keep under the radar of the authorities but still recruit enough people that their collective scavenging makes it worthwhile (which, with zero-cost copying, is almost always).

    But after a while, the pirates get greedy and form larger clumps, which makes them more visible to the authorities. Eventually the clump gets raided and everyone scatters. Some form small islands again and grow over time and the cycle continues.

    As for me, my particular island got raided and somehow I've never gotten back into it. Other than the casual Napster use, which doesn't count because Napster is an island that was allowed unmitigated growth for long enough via unanswered legal questions that it grew to an immense size and its members are now powerful enough to openly do damage to the authorities (eg. Metallica vs. The Fans) and maybe even force The Rules Of The Game to change.

    That said, pirate islands will still be able to play by whatever rules they want.
    --

  43. quick solution by clinko · · Score: 1

    Quick Solution, Quick Program

    1. make a program to insert Junk From 3 to 5 seconds
    2. make a winamp plugin to remove the 3rd to 5th second.
    3. Wash Rinse Repeat...

  44. Re:Your "true AI" is easier than it seems. Here's by drsoran · · Score: 1

    Well NOW you tell them. It may have also saved us from the "Oops I did it again" album(really "crap").

  45. big brother by cybercyph · · Score: 1

    great. now they can track our music, what sites we visit(think doubleclick), and all the emails we send. i can just imagine: "he downloaded a korn song, he must be planning on shooting up his school!"

    1. Re:big brother by sith · · Score: 1

      even worse... "he downloaded a techno mp3, he must be a hacker like we saw on the tee-vee!"

  46. Yeah, this is as good as censorship. by Ace905 · · Score: 1

    "A MusicDNA Analyzer can be located, for example, on the Web crawler of a large search engine, to ensure that the search engine only points to legal music."

    First of all, is this software going to have its own database of every copyrighted work in existance, no. It's going to use some form of CRC or HASH checking which will further limit its functionality. Take into account the number of songs it is going to be required to search through and the number of songs it is going to be required to compare against - and all of a sudden the methods used to discern one song from another become more simple, and less accurate.

    They should call it NetNazi (tm)

    --

    Ace
  47. Mass bandwidth use? by sith · · Score: 5

    So this means that a search engine is now going to need to download every mp3 file it finds each time it crawls the net? Boy I feel sorry for mp3.com when one day some machine @ inktomi decides to pull down *every* mp3 on the site. Thats gonna be an expensive bill...

    1. Re:Mass bandwidth use? by blonde+rser · · Score: 1

      it occurs to me that google already does this. They have a cache of every page found by their search engine.

  48. What this won't do... by Gnobody · · Score: 2
    is make music copyright enfringement enforcable.

    What it will do is create a new genre of music, "Sonographic Clone Rock." Creating a program that can identify sonic patterns across encoding formats, bit rate qualities and whatever slight effects can be added to a copyrighted song will make it broad enough set off false alarms with something as simple as a spoof song.

    Or at least that's my prediction.

    1. Re:What this won't do... by cerulean · · Score: 1

      Not that I particularly like or dislike any of the 'artists' you mentioned, but your post makes me wonder:

      Are 'artists' like Van Gogh and Picasso examples of 'Pictrographic Clone Painting?'

      --
      -------------------- the list is long. dirac angestung gesept
    2. Re:What this won't do... by Dannon · · Score: 1

      something as simple as a spoof song.

      Look out, Weird Al....

      ---

      --
      Good judgment comes from experience.
      Experience comes from bad judgment.
    3. Re:What this won't do... by Elvis+Maximus · · Score: 1

      What it will do is create a new genre of music, "Sonographic Clone Rock."

      Isn't this the genre that the Backstreet Boys belong to?

      -

      --

      -
      Give me liberty or give me something of equal or lesser value from your glossy 32-page catalog.

    4. Re:What this won't do... by VAXman · · Score: 1

      Nope, you are confused. Backstreet Boys have nothing to do with rock, and are 'Sonographic Clone Pop'. Example of 'Sonographic Clone Rock' are 'artists' like Moby, Matchbox 20, Nine Inch Nails, etc., etc., etc.

  49. Yeah, "original" artist by kris · · Score: 5

    I could see this working a lot better if all the music on the Web was pristine and complete -- which it's not.

    Now, that's funny. I could see this working a lot better if all the music on the radio was new and original. How would you tell one Britney Spears song from another, or from any Ace Of Base title?


    © Copyright 2000 Kristian Köhntopp

  50. not really by drewish_princess · · Score: 1

    What's the problem? Metalica proved that bands are more than happy to go to quite a bit of trouble to find people illegally distributing their music. I'd much rather see this used in one of those searches. If it works as advertised it would cut down on false positives, instead of getting five thousand people who just had a cover or remix of the song you'd limit the list of IPs/Users to those with copies of your music. Since distributing music that's not yours is illegal I'd have no problem with this tech being used to single people out on Gnotella.

    1. Re:not really by drewish_princess · · Score: 1

      and if it doesn't work, so what? the record companies spent some money on vapor?

  51. they've already sold it to them by drewish_princess · · Score: 2
    Sounds to me like someone has found a creative way to make money off the fear that big record companies have towards mp3. Sell them some fancy system that will basically just be a big waste of time.

    oh i thought you were talking about SDMI...

  52. First Rant. by Deus+Ex+Machina · · Score: 1

    Okay, this idea has basically broken the bounds of good sense in my mind here. At this point, it has become clear to me that the RIAA and the whole music industry who are against the transmission of copyrighted work over the Internet are totally without a clue. Think I'm being overly harsh, judgemental and trollish? Well, look at what's gone on through jaded eyes shall we? First they see that people are getting copyrighted music for free on the Net, and rightfully see it as being dangerous to their capital, so they threaten to sue everyone and actually sue the biggest offenders. Then they realize that they were basically the LAST ones to show up at the party per say, since everyone and their cat now downloads MP3s (unless you simply don't, which of course is possible, but everyone I know does, and everyone they know does too). So then they start a guilt/FUD campaign (ads like that "Artists against music piracy" or whathever it is) and in the meantime decide that they have to compete in the "digital arena" rather than in court, so they develop SDMI. Right off, we know that SDMI is a joke, no one will use it when they can have just as good for free, but let's humor them. They develop SDMI, thereby trying to trump MP3 in terms of technological brilliance, and in the process stick a bandaid on a gushing headwound. So now it's time to REWORK OUR STRATEGY FOLKS!! Yup, when lawsuits and technology don't work, let's combine the two so that we can fight MP3s all over the net and censor search engines! That'll keep human nature from manifesting!

    Okay, I'm sorry about the vehemnance, but this whole issue has gotten very ridiculous. The RIAA/Music Industry couldn't have gone about this in a worse way if they had gone to the Supreme Court and asked for a law to make it a capital offense to distribute copyrighted material, punishable by death. I'm not going to lie and say that getting copyrighted material for free is not stealing, but the RIAA has screwed this whole issue up so badly, that it has become a laughingstock and an object of ridicule. If they had acted in a manner befitting of supply and demand in a consumer-friendly fashon, MP3s would never have caught on so well, and they might have been prepared for online digital music ahead of time. But this is it, in my mind. Pack up your suitcases and lawyers boys, you've lost. You took out your guns, pointed them at your respective heads and fired, and you deserved every bit of it. The Music Industry as a whole will survive, in some form or another, without you. And stay the hell away from my search engines and my Internet, because you don't know how to play our game.

    --
    Know ye not that ye are Gods???
    1. Re:First Rant. by fatphil · · Score: 1

      Someone's got to disagree with soething in that rant, let it be me!

      Personally I think that the RIAA has screwed this whole issue up so badly, that it has become a laughingstock and an object of ridicule. If they had acted in a manner befitting of supply and demand in a consumer-friendly fashion, they'd have promoted and used the new medium from the outset. They'd (individually for sure) have set up their own MP3.com-style distribution 'outlets'. They'd have pulled themselves out of the mid-1900s.

      There, that was different enough wasn't it?

      FP

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
  53. Re:My Simple Solution by Kjella · · Score: 1

    Well then the engine won't show any of your files, including potentially illegal ones, so the engine will work as intended in the sense that it'll still only be legal mp3s.. so it won't include yours, but it won't include all anyway... there's no law against people using another engine, so what's the problem? actually I think this would sort itself out just fine, if the US requires it to be installed, go european. If that fails, go japanse, or whereever the hell else needed.. all it takes is one country denying to implement it

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  54. Re:Idiotic bluster, much like the "GIFworm" by Shotgun · · Score: 2

    Why does everyone forget that:

    a) they don't have to send out a cease and desist letter directly from the output of the program. Lawyer for RIAA will use the output of the program to find where an infringing MP3 might be, use that to go look for him/herself, and then decide if the C&D letter is appropriate. The program will just be used to improve lawyer efficiency.

    b) they don't have to catch every bootleg MP3. Just enough to put a chill on the free speech issue.

    c) they only have to search for a subset of their copyrighted songs. Those top 100 that are currently popular. They aren't loosing much money on the rest, and those are scarce on the Net anyway.

    d) the RIAA et.al., can run their own damn search engines on mainframes with all the money they've ripped from artist.

    Hasn't Microsoft proven time and again that software technology doesn't have to be good to fool the sheople, just good enough?

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  55. Re:I've wanted this, and a photo version, for year by jpm165 · · Score: 1

    oh, that was me. you can download my mp3's here.

  56. It could legitimize Napster by loosenut · · Score: 1

    So this means that a search engine is now going to need to download every mp3 file it finds each time it crawls the net?

    That might be true, but a more logical use of the tech would be to integrate it with Napster. That would allow Napster to only share "legal" songs, or songs that are owned by companies that made a deal with them.

    Songs don't need to be re-encoded, in fact, the tech works on any song format. It looks for key elements of a sound and compares that data with a master database to ID a song. So it won't make things lossy, and it should be able to overcome attempts to bypass it by renaming or using a different song format. Encryption or zipping still might work, but Napster could stop files with certain headers from being sent. Of course there is no way to ever stop the illegal sharing of music, but this could make it more difficult for the common folk.

  57. Re:Rapes in prisons by nekid_singularity · · Score: 1

    NOT in Texas prisons! I read a long article trying to prove that the incredible level of rape in Texas prisons force inmates to band together for protection, and that is how the two morons who dragged that black man were intoduced to that kind of violent racism. They were forced to join the Aryan Brotherhood or something, and get disgusting racist tatoos to prove there allegiance. That kind of coersion can break a weak mind.

    --
    Numbers 31:17,18 Now kill all the boys. And kill every woman who has slept with a man,but save for yourselves every virg
  58. Odd.. nobody scans my system.. by MikeFM · · Score: 2

    This and that stupid map of the Internet that was on /. the other day are more amusing than not. I have gigs of MP3's and various other files that are probably questionable and I certainly haven't seen anyone that shouldn't be there in my iplogs scanning those files. People scp the files from me all the time so it does make me wonder what exactly they are tracking.

    --
    At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
  59. primitive tracking by UVaRob · · Score: 1

    the essence of this plan is to identify which of the mp3's are copyrighted (most likely by certain record labels who pay for a service) so that unrecognized mp3's can be distinguished from those that are recognized as copyrighted. Any use of this stagnates the development of the web as a medium for music sales as they're not suggesting being able to recognize specific rips, only specific songs. So if Artist X releases track Y as an mp3 and on an album, there will be no way of determining whether an mp3 floating about is from the released mp3 or ripped from the album. So if this tracking is ever utilized, it will act as an impediment to the web's capability for legitimate sales of music.

  60. Re:useless search engine by Sadfsdaf · · Score: 1

    They probably wouldn't give it away free IMHO

  61. But... by centron · · Score: 1

    What about remixes of songs? These can be identical in places to the original, while still being a work by an independent artist. Are unauthorized remixes legal? What would this software do if it found one?

    --

    XeoMage

    1. Re:But... by topham · · Score: 1
      A remix isn't legal to be distributed without permission from the original copyright holders.

      (Of the song/lyrics, etc).

      The only 'exception' for derivitive works is something like a parody. While dependant on the existance of the original material is generally something new.

      Otherwise it is still partially covered by the original copyright.

  62. Newest DNA fingerprint TECHnology!!! by TheMutantPenguin · · Score: 1

    Freetantrum. Free, open-source song fingerprinting with a sample client that can decode WAV, MP3, and Vorbis. They have an online database of all known songs with their fingerprints, and the client automatically looks the song up in the database.

  63. wrong Re:Your "true AI" is easier than it seems. by StandardDeviant · · Score: 2

    By basing the pattern matching strictly on low-range frequencies, you're FFT/"beat finder" algo isn't going to catch any of the patterns in the higher frequencies (thus being b0rked by songs with sounds strictly >= 1000Hz or so, or different songs that use the same base sounds, like, say, every rap song in existence). Further, you're planning on running this algorithm (which requires doing a digital format change and computing a FFT, neither of which is cheap in terms of disk or CPU) on every song retrieved by a search engine (more resources in terms of bandwidth)? The search engnies would laugh at you if you proposed they spend money on this to actually put it into service on their machines. Oh, and now any search with music terms in it takes a leisurely 12 hours to complete if you match more than about 3 songs. Also, given the inherently distorted nature of the found song once you've bandpassed it, wouldn't you have to do the same thing to the MIDI files in the auth lib?

    So even if your non-AI algo were to work reliably (which I highly doubt), it would be prohibitively expensive in terms of system resources (now or a decade from now).


    --

  64. Aren't you people underestimating this a bit? by Lux · · Score: 1

    If they can have code that automatically scans music, and can accurately identify it, it's use will NOT be in licencing it to existing search engines. The search engines simply wouldn't buy it unless some law forced them to. It could only serve to alienate users.

    It's far more likely that they'll get hired (by the RIAA, or certain artists I can think of) to write their own spiders that go out and seek music, and write script-generated cease-and-desist E-Mails to webmasters and ISPs.

    It's almost certainly possible to plug something like this into Napster or Gnutella as well.

    If this kind of technology is both efficient and accurate, it *could* actually change things.

    -Lux

    1. Re:Aren't you people underestimating this a bit? by sparrowjk · · Score: 1

      I get your point, but... couldn't they send out threatening emails to anybody who has an MP3 with (for instance) Metallica in the file name, with roughly the same effect? Distinguishing between what is real and what's not is probably only useful in court... (correct me if I'm wrong...) But which is more convincing to a judge? A printout that says "This MP3 REALLY is a Metallica song," or listening to the CD version and the MP3 version in turn? At the very least I guess it could help the RIAA decide who to file charges against... but I've yet to see actual trials.

      Threatening emails are one thing; publicized court action is quite another. As soon we start seeing some martyrs, I imagine we'll think twice before signing up for the next Napster-clone.

  65. Time for a privacy amendment by theDigitizer · · Score: 3
    I'm am so tired of corporations/government scanning everything and everyone. Sure me have privacy legislation, but it's not doing enough.

    A privacy amendment will also us to quote it like we do now, such as, "take the 5th", "1st amendment rights", So we need an amendment that gives the people basic privacy rights, that pertains to the 21st century, and while were in there, we could probably solve some copyright use issues as well."

    --
    Contrary to popular belief, I don't actually make my website for other people to look at.
    1. Re:Time for a privacy amendment by PhilHibbs · · Score: 2
      I'm am so tired of corporations/government scanning everything and everyone.
      Is scanning your publicly-available files an invasion of privacy? If I run an ad in the newspaper offering pirate CDs, should I be able to put small print that says "Under the Privacy Act, no RIAA member or law enforcement agent or anyone acting on their behalf may reply to this advert"?
    2. Re:Time for a privacy amendment by karnal · · Score: 1

      that reminds me of some of the logon banners of FTP sites:

      "I verify that I am not a law enforcement agent" etc -- how would we know anyways? :)

      --
      Karnal
  66. Idiotic bluster, much like the "GIFworm" by StandardDeviant · · Score: 5

    I remember not long after I got an internet connection (through the U, august of 94), this big brouhaha happened about some people (Unisys? Lawyers acting for them? How quickly brain cells die when soaked with hard alcohol...) that were supposedly releasing a worm onto the Internet to "ferret out" patent-infringing GIFs...

    The small problem with that was, it was impossible. Even if some secret header code existed in "licensed" gifs, which to my semi-sketchy knowledge about graphics file formats does not (unless maybe gifs from "licensed" authoring tools had some sort of characteristic fingerprint like "made by gimp" or whatever), imagine for a second the difficulty of finding, cataloging, and determining the ownership of every gif on the net.

    Now take all of the previous difficulties of this type of InfringeWare, undiminished and in fact probably heightened, and add to them the fact that now instead of being concerned about the file format (a relatively fixed thing), you're trying to judge infringe/not-infringe based on the content itself. This would require one of two things to work (from what I can tell talking out my ass on slashdot @ 5am whilst drinking):

    • 1 -- a complete DB of every song ever recorded in any digital format, possibly at different bitrates. This would be for a "dumb" approach using pattern matching/comparison (like a global regular expression for mp3 contents, which might actually be a nifty hack for a local program ("computer, play me someting hardcore, with lots of drums" and the machine looks for patterns in the files themselves to spit something out into the soundstream)).
    • 2 -- an expert system powerful enough to comprehend and categorize musical information, that could tell a licensed recording of Mozart from a bootleg NIN concert, i.e. practically full-blown Artificial Intelligence.
    Both of these things seem less than likely to occur anytime soon. (If they had the former they'd be whoring it out a la terraserver's approach to space imagery, if they had the latter I hope as a human being that we could find more meaningful things to do with true AI than searching for mp3z! :-) )

    No, I think that this is just hot air intended to scare people into thinking the Big Bad Patent/Copyright-Holding Wolf is Just Around The Corner, so It's Time To Shape Up And Quit Trading Mp3s You Little Monsters... Another option is this is a vaporware company trying to feed of the greed and stupidity of the record labels...


    --

    1. Re:Idiotic bluster, much like the "GIFworm" by musicmaker · · Score: 1

      Obviously you are forgetting something very major. There are already people who do this. How do you think *CD figures out what song is playing on the radio... see earlier story for more info! It's probably exactly the same algorithmic technology

      --
      Everyone is living in a personal delusion, just some are more delusional than others.
    2. Re:Idiotic bluster, much like the "GIFworm" by Kynes · · Score: 1

      they don't already do this... *CD only works with "participating" radio stations (i.e. the ones who provide some kind of "what song is playing now"). Just type in the station's call letters and it checks the current listings. Besides, you average Top 40 station keeps less than 100 songs in rotation at any given point in time, thats a far cry from "every piece of digitally recorded music that exists"

    3. Re:Idiotic bluster, much like the "GIFworm" by Mawbid · · Score: 1

      It was claimed in the *CD discussion that the scheme doesn't rely on direct access to the stations' playlist. Instead, their radio tuners monitor several stations and run something like Songprint to recognise the songs. Their FAQ backs that up.
      --

      --
      Fuck the system? Nah, you might catch something.
  67. There is a use for this by Uncle+Jimmy · · Score: 3

    Let's say it can only match perfect rips (ok, of course it will have some sort of tolerance, but anyway), then this would be useful to weed out bad copies. How many times have you downloaded an mp3 to find that it has been encoded really bad, or worse still recorded off the radio, complete with back-announcements? Very, very annoying, because they never manage to announce the next song right.

  68. Re:My Simple Solution by JimDabell · · Score: 1

    Well then the engine won't show any of your files, including potentially illegal ones, so the engine will work as intended in the sense that it'll still only be legal mp3s.

    OK, what about configuring your server to return random noise to the search engine subnets, but the real MP3s to other people?

  69. Re:Installed at search engines? by ideut · · Score: 1
    A much easier way to get it in place would be to just buy the search engine. Considering that Disney owns GO Networks, it's not a streach.

    Nope. They would still be destroying the value of the search engine with their actions. The next week everyone will be using the latest startup search engine, because it will have greater utility, and now that one will be worth billions. They can't go on buying them up and destroying their value for long. A law change is required.

    --

    --

  70. Re:Your "true AI" is easier than it seems. Here's by Wah · · Score: 1

    This technique also would have caught "Ice Ice Baby" (really "Under Pressure") and "Come As You Are" (really "Eighties").

    Which pretty much invalidates any confidence you might have as to knowing what file you have. Not to mention covers, and how does this thing deal with real bootlegs (i.e. live recordings)?
    --

    --
    +&x
  71. A new game... by Cybril2000 · · Score: 1

    Sounds like a hi-tech version of name that tune. I can name it in 3 TCP packets, any one else?

  72. Am I just ignorant by Ronnie+Frown · · Score: 1

    Or could we just "remix" all our mp3z by adding a few seconds of silence (or static) at the front and end, thus changing the signature?

    --
    Kinda like a dog with seven pupils in its eyes... Kinda like a madness that refuses to subside...
  73. Other Copyright issues ..... by Alien54 · · Score: 2
    I once took a piece of music (un-named) and using certain sound editing software sped up the music without screwing up the pitch.

    The result was a piece of music, a performance, that had never existed before, done are a tempo that had more punch and groove.

    This worked out really well. But now I have a bit of music that is something the original artist never recorded.

    Who owns the copyright to that, and how would it sort out according to this proposed technology?

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    1. Re:Other Copyright issues ..... by vectro · · Score: 1

      What you have is a derivative work. The rules on a deritive work, are such that you own the copyright but cannot distribute it without permission of the author. It is as though it were copyrighted by both of you; Permission from both you and the original author is required for distribution.

  74. Expected by topham · · Score: 1
    Yes, it probably would contribute to the disapearance of free music. (Atleast any which is not approved of by copyright holder).

    Yes, a percentage of it would slip underground to be forgotten. But it would slow stuff like Napster considerably since it could, in theory, sample available music from each subscriber and removed any subscribers with Copyrighted material.

    None of this is a suprise to me. I was telling my girlfriend I expected to see something like this show up soon.

    Whether or not we think RIAA and its members overcharge for CD's (they do!), they do have the right to protect their stuff.

    I would rather see them use this to limit something like Napster, than to hunt down and sue individuals.

    Which they could also do.

    I won't make people happy saying this, but I prefer they do this than SDMI. SDMI limits fair use, this limits distribution.

  75. Good MP3 sites by Mchud · · Score: 1

    The article mentions that it will block all sites that have illeagal MP3's and only show sites that have good leagal MP3's. With all major record labels denouncing the trading of MP3's all together, it would be next to impossible to have a site with "leagal MP3's". In order for this to work as planned, the record labels would have flip flop and allow MP3's to be traded, which is unlikely. So who is this software going to please?

  76. Unfair application of the law by Masem · · Score: 3
    Stuff like this, and the earlier /. stories on geographically mapping the web and such, make me upset. We have that cybercrime treaty that's pending that would probably make all these things illegal, yet if Hacker X were to do what this article talks about they'd get jail time, while if Corporation Y does it, they get praised.

    The other problem is, will they adhere to robots.txt files? If they do, then bypassing the mp3 'sniffer' is a joke; if not, then they should be considered to be violating the explicit denial of a site to allow 'hacking tools' such as a search bot and are still in the wrong. In other words, this will either be uneffictive, or treading illegal water territories (and not necessarily in the vein of copyright infringement).

    --
    "Pinky, you've left the lens cap of your mind on again." - P&TB
    "I can see my house from here!" - ST:
  77. full blown artificial unintelligence by nounderscores · · Score: 1

    >an expert system powerful enough to comprehend > and categorize musical information, that could >tell a licensed recording of Mozart from a >bootleg NIN concert, i.e. practically full-blown >Artificial Intelligence. if they're this serious about pouring resources into harrassing mp3 listeners... imagine if they ended global unemployment by paying people to hunt down ripped songs and send off threatening form letters! you could even have a little ad-bar for the record lable running in the top right hand corner while you work...

  78. Savior for the Internet, nightmare for the idiots? by jorbettis · · Score: 5

    From the I can't believe they're this stupid dept.

    Could this be the Technolibertarian's dream come true and the end for constant vigilance and street corner phophetizing as we know it? FuckedFromtheOutset has announced a preliminary effort to start the planning process on some more vaporwear. Music DNA, that the company claims *cough* that it is capable of identifing and tracking of billions of existing and new MP3 files on the internet providing (get this) exact accounting for the copyright. "Thus enabling file sharing and linking value added data to songs" Fucked said in a pathetic attempt to spin. When asked if they were suggesting that it is currently illegal to share files, Fucked said "No Comment."

    Fucked also announced that, in order to cover it's massive burn rate, it has duped some brainless Europeans (similar to brainless Americans, but know more than one lanugage) into throwing money at Fucked. Musican Eric Clapton has been starving in recent months due to the evils of Napster, but still managed to scrape up a few million dollars to throw into the furnace. "Mr. Clapton's investment in the company speaks of the importance importance Music DNA will have in returning to the record labels their rightful monopolies, I mean, I saw the guy, he's all skin and bones." Someone said in another interestingly unattributed quote.

    The company anticipates that with industry-wide adoption of its music registry, acceptence by every node on the internet, a constutional amendment, a UN Resolution, and a few minor acts of God, the system will enable copyright holders to identify their content usage through at least a portion of the internet, thus ensuring that ownership and royalty right are fully "exploited, oops, don't print that, I meant 'monetized'". According to Fucked, Music DNA dosen't have an offical ship date but should come out "in a few months".

    Music DNA is an extension of other FuckedFromTheOutset products which have already made a huge impact on the distribution of copyrighted material across the Internet, which include a bunch of neat sounding jargon and buzzwords. "I assure you, we have tons of buzzwords. MCSE's bow to our buzzword dominance".

    FuckedFromTheOutset bullshits about how the process works: "Ok, see, it's sorta like this, Songs have patterns, right? and these don't change much if you have an exact digital copy, like a compressed 40kpbs mp3 recorded throught an analog bridge, see? So bitrate dosen't matter because this is about the information carred in it, all codec's have the same information, they don't try to elimanate information and guess at what's in the gaps." our weakly attributed source continued making a fool of himself for a few minutes, then said "Search engines can increase by atleast tenfold the amount of time and bandwith their spiders crawl through to make sure they're not linking to copyrighted materal, they're really gung ho about that, plus, an analyzer can be incorperated into a peice of client software residing on the PC to er, make sure the music is complete? Appearently, one can't figure that out by listening to it. We've talked with the XMMS people, they're all over that."

    Mor E. Assplease, an investor in the company fumbles: "Obviously, copyright protection rackets maintainence is a seminal issue confronting the Cyber-eNew iEconomy.com at the moment, and music is at the heard of the matter. With Music DNA, Napster and Scour could cover their asses by putting a lame block that dosen't work to appease the courts. We can now account to the artists and songwriters who have been shortchanged by the labels for long before the eInternet iEconomy.com, or wait, I didn't mean that". The company's Olsen Wells expresses his hopes for the process, adding that "as the industry transitions from music as a product to music as a service, Music DNA could conceivably have the greatest single impact on the music buisness since the creation of the MP3 format". When asked if he could clarify that statment, remove a few buzzwords, or somehow make it make sense, Wells replied "No Comment".

    Richard Stallman, leader of the Free Software Foundation, and proponent of free music, corrected our use of the word 'Linux' (appearently, it's GNU/Linux) but then began to laugh hysterically as we attempted to explain what Music DNA was. "I can just mess it up with dd on my Linux box" He continued, "GNU! GNU/Linux box I mean! please don't print that".

    Lawrence Lessing, a Technolibertian known for his book Code and other Laws of Cyberspace, when asked about it, faught to keep an amused look off of his face and said "Well, we've obviously overestimated the enemy here, I'll have to drastically restructure my 'invisable hand' theory, it assumes a much higher caliber opponent than that with which we are dealing".

    --

    Jordan Bettis

    ``Wherever you go, there's another stupid sigfile quote.''
  79. Re:What's the real value? by enneff · · Score: 1
    (Although I can't really envision a court case involving MP3's... perhaps at some point MP3 trading will be an offense akin to speeding, with a similar fine. And those fined for it will complain as bitterly as when fined for speeding -- "everyone does it! it's not like anyone is hurt")

    Except speeding kills people, whereas trading MP3's could only possibly effect record sales.

  80. Relatable .. does this already... by stevey · · Score: 1

    Relatable does something similar to this already.

    If you're using the stunning, portable, MP3 player FreeAmp there is the option of "signaturing" all the MP3's in your playlist.

    The intention is that then you can do automatic lookup of them on the Relatable site - and I suppose perform automatic MP3 info tagging.


    Steve
    ---
  81. Actually, their business model may work by athmanb · · Score: 1

    With the current state of music piracy, the RIAA is desperate. The success of SDMA (marketing-wise, certainly not from the technical side) shows this.
    I believe it's right now easier to get rich by licensing fluke Anti-MP3-Piracy software to the RIAA than by selling magnetic "lose 50 pounds in one week" bracelets to Iowa farmer wives...
    --------------------------------------

  82. Re:But would it help? by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 1

    And many of us will still be running Linux 2.4.32, it'll just be a "Pirate OS".

    --
    -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
  83. Political Pressure by interiot · · Score: 4
    How 'bout just using political pressure? "Ladies and Gentlemen, this company could easily ensure that it doesn't trade in illegal wares. We have refined the program to a point where anyone can use it, in fact, Joe Schmoe here, a kindergarden teacher, was able to install it in his school's library in two hours. If search engine X isn't willing to take such easy steps, then the statement they're intending to send is that they wish to support trafficing in illegal wares."

    An argument similar to this was used to get the mandatory-porn-filters-in-schools-n-libraries amendment included in the House Appropriations bill that has a good possibility of being passed in the next week or two:

    • Mr. McCain: Internet filtering system work[s], and they need not be blunt instruments that unduly constrain the availability of legitimately instructional material. Today they are adaptable, capable of being fine-tuned to accommodate changes in websites as well as the evolving needs of individual schools and even individual lesson-plans. ...

      As we have seen through an increasing flurry of shocking media reports, the Internet has become the tool of choice for pedophiles who utilize the Internet to lure and seduce children into illegal and abusive sexual activity. ...As we wire America's children to the Internet, we are inviting these lowlifes to prey upon our children in every classroom and library in America.

    From porn filtering to copyright filtering. Not a large leap.
    --
  84. Easily foiled with WinZip by cryptwhomp · · Score: 2

    or any other lossless compression mechanism. Wouldn't be too hard to develop 3pm, either, which stores the files backwards, or shuffles every n seconds, where n is a number between say 1 and 10 (depending on bandwidth).

    When will they realise (like BMG) that working with this new paradigm is much better than trying to defeat it? Oops, I guess they still haven't figured it out, witness the losing 'War on Drugs'

    --
    "Those who would give up essential liberty for temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - Benjamin Franklin,
  85. their rights online by totopo · · Score: 1

    Alright, first let's agree on one thing: trading of copyrighted materials is illegal.

    You people on Slashdot should embrace technology such as this. It would still let you keep all your vaunted "rights on-line" while only persecuting those that do wrong. It's a much better solution than shutting down Napster or making it a subscription service right? If the entire point of Napster was to promote non-RIAA artists (as i have so oftenly heard), then this should be the salvation to Napster. It would allow napster to do nothing but to trade those non-RIAA artist's songs for free, without any legal complication. But why does everyone at Slashdot complain? Could it be that they only care about themselves and don't care about other people's rights? Rights that slashdotters try so hard to keep themselves? That all they really want is free illegal warez? Just say that already and throw off all your pretenses of legallity and free-speach; say, "I want everyone to work for only for me. I want free songs, free software, free os, free food, free cars, me me me me me."

    And then you say, "har har, the artists are getting shortchanged by the RIAA, we are doing them a favor by letting them make even less money than they already are." Well guess what, the RIAA doesn't force the artists to sign a contract, but they do. Have you people heard of a market economy? The RIAA provides a service, the artists accept the service. What problem do you have with that? There is a lot of work and a lot of peoples times going into making each cd. The cost of the cd is not in packaging, but in the production cost, which is so huge that no independet artists could even imagine of doing it themselves. The artists could make 100% of the profits if instead they decided to produce and market their own CD's BUT THEY DON'T. And your downloading of their songs instead of buying their CD's definately does not help their case at all.

    Now how does this technology infringe on your legal rights at all? It does nothing at all to fair-use. you can still make your own copies of mp3's. So why are you still complaining? If you want to protect rights that you don't have, go become active in the government and get new rights passed.

    And about all your *snort* it won't work *snort* and i'll just get illegal mp3's and steal other people's work some other way. So why do you care about this technology? It will just make the major distributing systems unusable, you can always go back to ratio ftp. It's just the RIAA trying to stop illegal copying as much as it can. It will just make it much harder for the normal joe to get illegal songs. I'm sure there will always be a way for you 7331 haX0rs to get around it. And what about Gnutella? easy, just sick the program loose on the top 1% of file sharers, sue them past bankruptcy, and your done. You think that everyone who knows how to use computers thinks filesharing of copyrighted materials is good?

    conclusion: Stop pretending you care about your-rights-online and just admit that you want to steal things because it benifits you.

    1. Re:their rights online by CompKid · · Score: 1

      Sorry. Can't agree that trading of copyrighted material is illegal. Collecting money from the use of copyrighted material without the permission of the copyright owner, now that's illegal. So the rest of your argument?

  86. this is the same snake oil as 'porno filters' by porky_pig_jr · · Score: 1

    reminds me of the software capable of recognizing porno images. sounds familiar? Gosh, I wish I were working for those companies. This is better than a pyramid scam.

  87. Research == good by disarray · · Score: 1
    The statement "if all the music on the Web was pristine and complete" is erroneous. If this were a requirement, the "technology" would be nothing more than a hash function like MD5. Rather, it pyschoacoustically analyzes the sound. This isn't an impossibility--relatable's technology already does this. If you don't believe this, download FreeAmp and try it yourself. See if you can slip it up, rather than simply speculating about a technology's viability.

    Also, relatable's technology, which seems similar, though I hesitate to jump to any conclusions, is format-ambivalent. It supports any audio format; thus using ogg or wav or something other than mp3 won't defeat it.

  88. How's that business model? by Plum · · Score: 1

    This will work, for sure. It'll peg out every single MP3 on earth. Of course, it'll be a moot point when we're using an entirely different file format altogether by then anyway. I feel like my parents are trying to keep me from listening to rap music again.

  89. I don't think so. by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 2
    I want my lossy MP3s to become even lossier by running them through another codec. Right.

    - A.P.

    --
    * CmdrTaco is an idiot.

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
  90. I dismissed the company as a bunch of morons... by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 2
    ...when, upon reading the article, I saw they used the "word" "monetized".

    Please. Anybody who thinks that's a word obviously has about 3 working brain cells (i.e. marketing.)

    - A.P.

    --
    * CmdrTaco is an idiot.

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
  91. This is a good thing! by OnanTheBarbarian · · Score: 1

    First of all, ignore their stated business model. It's obvious gibberish and will never work. Relax.

    However, the software tools that they'll develop to do the matching are going to be fairly useful. At some point (probably when they come down off the crack cocaine they were smoking when they came up with their original business plan) they'll realize that there's probably a lot more money in making a useful product for consumers; namely, something that plugs into systems like Napster clients and helps you sort out what music is what. I hate messing around with weirdly-named mp3s (missing track numbers, incorrect titles, etc) off these kinds of services.

  92. My tummy hurts from laughing! by GameGuy · · Score: 1

    Well put!

    --
    The Game Guy
  93. Google doesn't cache non-text files does it? by Jakdaw · · Score: 1

    I thought Google only cached text and html files but didn't bother with things like images, sounds, movies, mp3's etc

  94. Re:Installed at search engines? YES by Jakdaw · · Score: 1
    Come on! If you added the option to have this sort of thing filter your search results (perhaps with some means for a this option to be fixed for certain clients) then I'm sure that it would be embraced by schools and businesses around the globe.

    As I understand it search engines will do almost anything to compete with one another - surely adding this as an option is only going to increase their customer base?

  95. "Their" music only? by Kotetsu · · Score: 1

    A MusicDNA Analyzer can be located, for example, on the web crawler of a large search engine, to ensure that the search engine only points to legal music. Alternatively the analyzer can be incorporated into a piece of client software residing on a PC to ensure that the music being transferred is the correct music and the complete song.

    Isn't another way of looking at this that the program will only allow the use of approved music? Isn't this yet another way of shutting down independent musicians? If you're a musician and you don't get on their approved list, this software would also mark your stuff as unapproved.

    The real use of software like this is to produce a list of approved content. The real question is, "approved by whom?"

    --

    "Bite me, it's fun!" - Crowe T. Robot
  96. Calm down, folks... by J.+T.+MacLeod · · Score: 1

    As has been pointed out, between bandwidth charges, the clever use of ipchains and it just being nearly impossible to pull off, this really isn't going to happen.

    So here's what will ACTUALLY happen:

    • Cantametrix will announce to the RIAA, etc. that they have a working system in place.
    • Cantametrix asks those evil record companies for samples of every song they have.
    • Cantametrix hires a bunch of web surfers to goof around online and occasionally report the odd http/ftp server distributing copyrighted mp3s in hopes of keeping the RIAA's lawyers satisfied.
    • Cantametrix distributes all the music given to them over Napster for the people!
    • Alternate: Cantametrix distributes all the music given to them over their own network to compete with Napster--hey, the RIAA is happy again.

    You laugh, but it could happen 8)

    J. T. MacLeod

  97. Big Brother by CakerX · · Score: 1

    This technology can be made so that when the RIAA gives a search engine $100 million, they won'y point to bands not signed with them, no mp3s of indie artists. and the mp3's of big name artists which would be strategicly located, would cost a buck fifty a pop. This technology is going to strangle freedom, squeeze independance. But they if they dirrect it right, it COULD be the end of misplaced ID3 tags.

  98. Re:Infeasible by rmstar · · Score: 1
    I think they're just bluffing, trying to get some easy cash from clueless VCs.

    Nowadays they call this a ''sound business modell''.

    You are right. And even if they manage to do that anywhere close to reasnonable, they will have to process an unreasonable amount of data that is also very likely to grow with the available computing power.

    Or something like this.

    rmstar

  99. covers/bootlegs by mgebbers · · Score: 2

    If this works as it should, how is it going to distinguish between covers/bootlegs and the original? This is particularly important with bands like Pearl Jam allowing bootlegs to be distributed for non profit purposes freely on the internet.

    1. Re:covers/bootlegs by fatphil · · Score: 2

      And the MP3's of my band are going to start the flashing lights saying "sounds like stevie ray, but can't make out which song. wait! it's all of them!"

      It's as good an idea as the Strategic Defense Initiative.
      And it will be as succesful.

      FatPhil

      --
      Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
  100. Even better: Re:quick solution by asackett · · Score: 2
    A workaround that's even easier to implement, and doesn't affect exisiting software: Use Apache's mod_rewrite so that every visit from the evil crawler gets fed the same small file, no matter what is requested.

    If the file contains a brief obscenity, so much the better.

    Those not running Apache, well, they need their own solution. Or to upgrade to Apache!

    --

    Warning: This signature may offend some viewers.

  101. Not bloody likely by KillerBob · · Score: 1

    It's not bloody likely that they'll ever get around to doing this. There's not enough bandwidth on the Internet to go around, and when the common users learn that their search engines are what's causing the net to slow to a crawl, they're not exactly going to be happy.
    Not everybody can afford the 100MBit connection offered by Cogent, and those poor saps still using a 14,400 are completely screwed by such a move. Hell, most servers on the 'net are on a T1, or a T3 at most.

    --
    If you believe everything you read, you'd better not read. - Japanese proverb
  102. "DNA" is not a lawyer! by stevens · · Score: 3

    Their "application" (a webcrawler not logging 'illegal' mp3s) is a load of crap. Let's say I have cut in the first 15 seconds of a copywritten song--without permission--as a sample that I go on to critique in the audio file. I think that's fair use.

    IANAL, but neither is the webcrawler a lawyer. It doesn't have the ability to judge fair use.

    Worse, think if this 'webcrawler' is an RIAA bot looking for people to sue. It could lead to lots of frivolous actions.

    Steve
  103. Re:How would this even work reliably? by topham · · Score: 1
    It isn't about the binary data.

    It's about the music (frequencies) itself.

    Not to say that it would be easy, but, you could do a spectrum analysis of an MP3, and, within certain parameters the same song from different sources, with different encoders would have the same, or highly-similar results.

    Thats the theory anyway.

  104. Installed at search engines? by EasyTarget · · Score: 4

    mp3, pron, are by far the two biggest search catagories out there, if the shlock-horror headlines in most rags is true.

    "Dear Mrs search engine owner, please may we install something on your search engine servers to cut out a sizeable proportion of your customer base?"

    What a great business model? it will -require- a law change to work, unless they think UCITA/DMCA can already be used to imtimidate big players like altaVista.

    EZ
    -'Press Ctrl + Alt + Delete to log on..'

    --
    "Oops, I always forget the purpose of competition is to divide people into winners and losers." - Hobbes
  105. and never the twain shall meet... by peterjm · · Score: 1

    whoops. meant to post something there...
    anyway, as I was going to say.
    it seems as though there's a lot of resistance to companies trying to come up with new ideas to force old world thinking (buy your music at the wharehouse) and new world thinking (download your music off napster)to meet.
    I didn't see a lot of positive feed back on the napster going subscription story a few days ago, and timothy just can't seem to say something nice about this one either.
    I could see this working a lot better if all the music on the Web was pristine and complete -- which it's not.

    well, propose something better. propose something feasible that's better than what big bad big brother has come up with and go make your fortune. I garuntee that there's a fortune to be made.

  106. It doesn't matter by BeanThere · · Score: 1

    It sounds like the software is some sort of audio pattern-recognition system backed with a large database of songs to recognize. There is then no reason why the software wouldn't be able to check that you don't have the entire song, making fair use more unlikely already. But that's probably irrelevant anyway ...

    If they detected less than (say) 70% of a song, they could just as well leave it, rather than have to worry about fair use cases. However, any serious music pirate site would most likely (1) include a large number of .mp3 files, and (2) include the entire songs. Detecting these characteristics will be able to tell you with probably 99.99% certainty that a site is guilty of piracy. Not proof, of course - but more than enough evidence to prove guilt in court.

    This is probably the only type of site that this software is really going to be used to stop anyway, so if your thesis or whatever happens to contain 30 seconds of one or two songs, I wouldn't worry, the record industry couldn't be bothered. Much like Microsoft who mainly go after large software piracy organizations.

    Anyway, the software isn't going to *be* a lawyer/judge. If you were caught by this software with some mp3's, I'm sure you'll still have the opportunity to defend yourself - and if you were in the right, you'd be OK.

    So I suspect your point may be moot.

    The majority of mp3 music piracy probably happens in (1) LAN-based SMB file-sharing in dorms etc, (2) napster, (3) ratio'd ftp's. The web is generally a stupid place to look for pirated mp3's. Napster is probably the only one of the abovementioned that "they"'ll eventually be able to integrate this detection into. Most mp3 piracy will therefore still go undetected anyway. Plus, protocols like gnutella will no doubt continue to improve and will probably eventually include encryption as some sort of standard. It's a technology one-up-manship battle that the RIAA cannot win - they are already behind, and they are much slower than the technology piracy "underground", and they are legally entitled to do everything 'properly'.

    Might this software constitute some sort of 'unreasonable search' or invasion of privacy .. ? Hmm .. probably not if it's scouring websites .. but if it sits on routers checking passing emails etc (like carnivore) it might ..

  107. Can't keep up by Ben+Pflaum · · Score: 1

    It will not work, if very many people don't want this system to analize there mp3s it won't be long before someone writes a program that allows one to scramble mp3s for download and descramble mp3s once they have been downloaded. If the program learn how to descramble the the mp3s the people will use real encryption on the mp3s and figure out a crafty way to give away the key or just switch to another codec. I'm not sure that a search engine would be to keen on the idea of doing something that computationally expensive just so people can be less succesful searching for mp3s and switch to another search engine.

  108. The full monty by Ben+Pflaum · · Score: 1

    I think it supposed to crack into every ftp site on the internet, every home computer, it will check every news group for uuencoded mp3s, in fact every wire connecting computers on the internet, and even wireless connections, will have a device made by them to check every packet for copyrighted mp3s, it will also recognize and decrypt any encrypted data to check for mp3s. The _whole_ internet will be checked.

  109. Synchronisation by isorox · · Score: 2

    This could be a great system. A friend and me are looking for a way of synchronising our mp3 collection - but not copying the same song if theres a few seconds in difference in size, or a different name.

    this system could be very useful :)

  110. What about DeCSS by isorox · · Score: 1

    When they are installing this software, what is to stop them blocking DeCSS? It would be a lot simpler to detect then copyrighted mp3's (what If I rip me a copy of my new britney spears CD?)

    Of course, DeCSS relys on deep linking to a certain extent. Illegal mp3 sites would not be affected, neither would links to pages that say "click this to download an mp3".

  111. Re:Stereophile?! by handybundler · · Score: 1

    Were you ever alone with the stereo? Did you touch the stereo inappropriately?

    --


    a/s/l here. Sorry, adding domain tags to your s
  112. Re:My Simple Solution by CakerX · · Score: 1

    its called figure out there class c's and ban them all via xxx.xxx.xxx.*

  113. 2nd (condensed) Rant. by sparrowjk · · Score: 1

    Actually let's look at this from another perspective. OK. So, the music industry likes to harass people. Frankly, I don't blame them. If I had power and money, I'd love kicking around the proles as well. And, in this case, since the majority of mp3 listeners are so addicted to music that they are unable to go a day without a download, it's pretty fair to say that no amount of harassing is going to get them to stop listening to music. All they have to do is harass us *enough* that we'll stop trading MP3's illegally. You see, they know that MP3's are actually good for them, because they create dependence in the listener... drug dealers don't give away samples out of the goodness of their heart. And they also know that if they can cut off our free source, they can get us to pay. At the same time, they can retain the moral high ground, and the mp3 addicts can be dismissed as a bunch of whiny kids who want something for nothing. Never mind that many napster users are in their 30's or older. It's really quite heart-warming to see worldwide addiction on such a massive scale.

    As for this whole Music DNA crap or whatever it is -- it's just Hillary Rosen dressed up as the bogeyman.

  114. Heh heh by Greyfox · · Score: 2
    Create a page with 15,000 links to /dev/random, each with a different .mp3 filename.

    Could be great for hours of fun.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  115. Deep thoughts by ka9dgx · · Score: 2
    #1. It's easy to do
    It seems fairly easy to me do do a good "fingerprint" of a song by doing the math, determining the notes of the song, and the tempo, and maybe even determining who is singing based on voice sample matches once you're close.

    #2. It's hard to defeat
    Once you've got the code to do it, you can tweak the engine to work with different bit rates, streaming, etc.

    Because they base it on the psychoacoustic model, it pays attention only to the parts you want to hear anyway. It will ignore the various means you use to tweak the files, as long as they sound the same, which is the main goal for the consumer of the files in the first place.

    #3. It's hard/impossible to implement
    What's also obvious is that the "search engine" would now have to download every instance of MP3 file it happens to encounter. This whould result in a massive increase in the amount of traffic for an already futile system of indexing the web.

    We've already seen that the spiders that back search engines just don't have a prayer of keeping up with everything that is available. This is just dealing with the text part of web pages. Imagine trying to deal with millions of 3-10 Megabyte files that change every day!

    #4. It must surface in a different model
    It's just not feasible to download all of the MP3s that are available to do this, which means that the system is going to have to be selective in its downloading, and will, by necessity, result in "selective enforcement" of any laws this may detect the violation thereof.

    If lawmakers decide to run with this approach, they'll have to settle for selective enforcement (with the resulting requirement of making the penalty huge to compensate for the odds of getting caught), or they will have to resort to the insipid approach of requiring ISPs to run the program against their own servers. (The FBI could also be even more insidious and build it into Carnivore). Let's also consider it might get built as a feature into the web servers. (Good thing Apache is open source!)

    Mike Warot, Hoosier

  116. How would this even work reliably? by reubenking · · Score: 1

    You could rip an MP3 of a single CD track using two seperate programs, and the digital data could conceivably be totally different due to the code differences of two seperate brand codec's, right?

  117. Very funny by Gay+Mr.+T · · Score: 1
    This is just like that "fleshtones" censorware product.

    Of course, who the hell is going to use this? Search engines certainly do not have the CPU cycles or bandwidth to waste downloading and analyzing mp3s. What a fucking stupid idea.
    ---

    --
    Moderators: I've got tons of accounts, do your worst.
  118. Too Little, Too Late ... by Vryl · · Score: 2
    Yep, this is obvious tech ... but, the genie is out of the bottle.

    How is this going to deal with gnutella, freenet, mojonation etc?

    Me, I like the 'private networking' option in Gnotella and others. Me and my buddies setup private little sharing networks. I believe that Groove and others have taken this P2P thing to new heights also.

    Sure, this may well work for all those geocities accounts and stuff, but at last count there were about, what? 20million+ Napster users ...

    When will these turkeys wake up and stop trying to prosecute their customers.

  119. Classical Music by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    This system is gonna have a really hard time with classical music. How can it know whether it's an amateur interpretation or a CD rip? The system can either accept everything or accept nothing, hereby insulting either the music labels or common sense.

    1. Re:Classical Music by msaavedra · · Score: 1
      You need to get a clue. Solo classical piano music is not "songs".
      Not entirely true. Felix Mendelssohn wrote many "Songs without Words", which were all solo piano pieces. I understand that a few other composers continued this form, though I'm not very familiar with them.

      ---------------------------
      "The people. Could you patent the sun?"
      --
      "Any fool can make a rule, and any fool will mind it."
      --Henry David Thoreau
    2. Re:Classical Music by VAXman · · Score: 1

      The main reason this thing is going to have trouble with classical music is that it can only detect songs, but very little classical music is made up of songs (instead it is made up of symphonies, concertos, opera, and chamber pieces).

      That said, I doubt it would have any problem at all distinguishing between different interpretations of the same piece, especially an amateur performance vs. a recorded performance. I doubt it would have trouble distinguishing between Bernstein's 1965 Mahler's Seventh vs. the one he recorded in the 1980's. All of the timings of different performances are completely different, not to mention the different instrumentation, different acoustics in the recording hall, different interpretations of the parts, etc., etc.

    3. Re:Classical Music by VAXman · · Score: 1

      I was wondering about that too, but I figured that, assuming it is based on both harmony/melody and a fairly exact timing, it could probably distinguish between two different versions of the same song. No two pianists will play all the corresponding notes with the same duration, even given a similar tempo.

      You need to get a clue. Solo classical piano music is not "songs".

  120. But would it help? by Marketolog · · Score: 1
    I do not think this would help.

    1. I already see some sites blocking access to the crawlers known to have music sniffer installed.

    2. The music files can be placed in RAR archives, protected by some silly password, posted on the site - hence blocking the sniffer, but not the people.

    3. Some wicked re-sampler, that splits the music into something relatively distorted, unless the correct settings for play are used (frequency, bit order, etc.). The more parameters, the smaller chance to the sniffer.

    4. There are other numerious solutions possible, like the one against "anti-porn software" - the pictures are cut into smaller pieces and then placed in a table to make them look as one big picture. The software does not see it correctly, but people do. Who says this cannot be done to music?

    1. Re:But would it help? by Peter+Dyck · · Score: 2
      You are right.

      The only working method (taking things like freenet into account) that I can think of would be the closing up of both the hardware and software that's used in connecting to the net.

      Integrate the network adapter into the motherboard and make it add a unique and traceable (who bought it, physical location, packet contents hint,...) ID into every packet.

      No more self-assembled computers. Access to the stuff inside the chassis would be allowed only to authorized personnel. Just like heroin can be manufactured and sold legally today but only by the authorized people in the drug industry. Any unauthorized access would be a criminal offence.

      Only authorized Operating Systems and device drivers allowed. Programming tools would also become controlled material.

  121. Re:This post is here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I moderate this up...only to see it moderated down. I think someone dislikes you signal 12.

    Any first post that says something worthwhile needs to be moderated up. It reminds of the time I was doing meta-moderation to see a first post marked down as "redundant."

  122. My Simple Solution by frenchs · · Score: 3
    I was thinking... (which is sometimes a dangerous thing)

    Let's just say you have a server with a bunch of MP3's on it. And let's say this analysis of mp3's becomes a viable technology. Well then what is to prevent me from configuring *my* server (banning the ip) to ignore the search engine that implements this? :)

    Steve

  123. How fast... by Technician · · Score: 1

    How fast will the IP of the search be noted on server logs and shared. I love IPCHAINS. Hmmm broken link from 240.0.23.1

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
  124. Re:Stereophile?! by handybundler · · Score: 1

    No one implied that you had sex with the stereo, or is that some thing we should know about Mr. Coward?

    --


    a/s/l here. Sorry, adding domain tags to your s
  125. Bahahahaha... by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 1

    Look at what has happened to DeCSS?
    It has been forced underground which has effectively killed it.


    You must know nothing of the Divx scene. Countless titles have been ripped and are out there if you can find them. (And it's only hard to find them because they're big, not because they're illegal.) DVD ripping software is advancing at an incredible pace; already there are DeCSS counterparts that are faster, easier and more compliant than DeCSS ever was. I don't see people in a hurry to mirror VOBDec or put it on t-shirts. DeCSS is, in fact, more popular than it would be without these lawsuits.

    Why is that? Because DVD ripping is equated with piracy. DVD ripping software is equated with free speech; and by challenging DeCSS, the MPAA has pissed off a lot of people who wouldn't normally touch the stuff.

    --

  126. Pron by Ben+Pflaum · · Score: 1

    Isn't pron little fish or shrip or something like that? I didn't know anybody search for pron on the internet.

  127. yeah but.... by tq_at_sju · · Score: 1

    " I could see this working a lot better if all the music on the Web was pristine and complete -- which it's not. " well these ^^^^ are the exact type of songs the record industry / greedy artists don't care about. In other words, songs that are not cd quality or almost exactly the same quality as the originals pose no threat to cd sales etc.... So who cares if they can't track the crappy ones!!

    --
    http://www.vanillaafro.com - take me seriously and I will shoot you
  128. a reasonable tool for copyright holders by spage · · Score: 1
    Most of the comments on here make no sense. Or course commercial search engines won't use this technology unless forced to. Of course there will be myriad ways around this technology, crackers are ingenious.

    It's just a tool that (among other uses) helps copyright holders figure out "Who might be ripping me off?". Why is this so upsetting?

    When I contact my ISP, I see
    --- Storing pirated software on our system is illegal and also against our acceptable use policy.
    --- Copyrighted audio files (i.e. MP3's) fall under the above policy; if you store them in a public directory your access will be removed.

    Sounds as if my ISP and Eric Clapton are in agreement, Cantametrix just gives them another tool to help enforce this. The many posts that are essentially "Nyaaah, nyaah, can't catch me" just make their authors sound like amoral badly-raised children. At least put "Disclaimer: I think copyrights should have no legal basis" at the start of them.
    --

    --
    =S
  129. Web vs Internet by djocyko · · Score: 1
    I have issues. How about the fact that people (even on /.!) use 'the web' and 'the internet' as equal terms. I could be way off, but it seems to me 'hte web' refers (most basically) to only http and https. The internet is far broader and I would expect any /. reader to know that. Point? Well..it applies here. I didn't read the article, but if this means they will track mp3s on the web, ok. Who uses the web to get commercial mp3s? If it means they will try to track mp3s on the net. LOL, good luck.

    Just my thoughts.

  130. Watermarks by djrogers · · Score: 1

    Maybe one could just insert a 'warez' watermark to obfuscate the results of the analysis...

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    Think outside the... Hey, where'd the friggin' box go?
  131. Another use for this... by CompKid · · Score: 1

    ...is to identify the rightful owner of the song you wish to voluntarily make a payment for. If it works, it could insure that no one swaps tags or otherwise subverts the process of getting money back to artists. It could possibly be used to direct payment for samples within songs.

  132. Legal?! by mmol_6453 · · Score: 1

    I have a serious problem when someone thinks that music can be illegal.

    In "The New Meriam-Webster Dictionary", (ISBN 0-87779-900-8) (Copyright date 1989) here are the definitions of words beginning with 'music' :

    music. n. 1 : the science or art of combining tones into a composition having structure and continuity: /also/ : vocal or instrumental sounds having rythm, melody, or harmony. 2 : an agreeable sound 3 : the unpleasant consequences of one's actions (face the ~)

    (1)musical adj 1 : of or relating to music or musicians 2 : having the pleasing tonal qualities of music 3 : having an interest in or a talent for music -- musically

    (2)musical n : a film or theatrical production consisting of musical numbers and dialogue based on a unifying plot

    musicale n : a usu. private social gathering featuring music

    musician n : a composer, conductor, or performer of music -- musicianly adj -- musicianship n

    musicology n : a study of music as a field of knowledge or research -- musicological adj -- musicologist n

    Are the good folks dictating our language going to need to add the word 'legal' into each of those definitions? hm.

    music. n. 1 : the science or art of combining tones into a composition having legal structure and continuity: /also/ : vocal or instrumental sounds having legal rythm, melody, or harmony. 2 : the science or art of combining tones into a composition having illegal structure and continuity: /also/ : vocal or instrumental sounds having illegal rythm, melody, or harmony. 3 : an agreeable legal sound 4: an agreeable illegal sound 4 : the unpleasant consequences of one's actions (face the ~)

    (1)musical adj 1 : of or relating to legal music or musicians 2 : of or relating to illegal music or musicians 3 : having the pleasing tonal qualities of legal music 4: having the pleasing tonal qualities of illegal music 5 : having an interest in or a talent for legal music 6: having an interest in or a talent for illegal music -- musically

    (2)musical n 1 : a legal film or theatrical production consisting of musical numbers and dialogue based on a unifying plot 2 : an illegal film or theatrical production consisting of musical numbers and dialog based on a unifying plot

    musicale n 1 : a usu. private social gathering featuring legal music 2 : a usu. private social gathering featuring illegal music

    musician n 1 : a composer, conductor, or performer of legal music 2 : a composer, conductor, or performer of illegal music -- musicianly adj -- musicianship n

    musicology n 1 : a study of legal music as a field of knowledge or research 2 : a study of illegal music as a field of knowledge or research -- musicological adj -- musicologist n

    My rewrite here /sounds/ rediculous, but consider this: At the direction this is going, /is/ it rediculous?

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    What's this Submit thingy do?
  133. The question is... by Goldberg's+Pants · · Score: 1
    Can this project detect the "DNA" of tracks that were, to be blunt, done via a piss poor encoder? I mean I have tracks done at a KBPS of 128 that sound like they were recorded underwater they're so bad. I find it hard to believe that ANY software could determine what was real music, and what was compression artifacts.

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  134. a little twiddling will change everything by corvi42 · · Score: 2

    Sounds to me like someone has found a creative way to make money off the fear that big record companies have towards mp3. Sell them some fancy system that will basically just be a big waste of time.

    Let's think about just a few of the simple ways to defeat such a system.

    Firstly - password protect mp3 download sites - Duh. In which case if the robot gets unauthorized access to the site, the ppl running it would be liable to break & enter charges.

    Secondly, it would be a very simple matter to have an mp3 encoder shift a lot of the audio values around so that any track appears quite differently from the perspective of a binary analysis, but doesn't alter the end sound remarkably.

    Yet another example of how AI isn't. And how it is always much simpler to fool an AI than it is to improve it. Think of the Iraqi techniques to fool american smart-bombs - current AI systems are all incredibly stupid when put against even moderate human ingenuity.

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    There are a thousand forms of subversion, but few can equal the convenience and immediacy of a cream pie -Noel Godin
  135. What's the real value? by sparrowjk · · Score: 1

    Even assuming the techonology operates perfectly, I can't imagine this having any effect whatsoever. When someone posts an MP3 file, it is pretty much a given that the music is authentic and illegal. Having proof positive of that fact is not particularly useful is it?

    If it were to be used in a legal case I would think that actually playing the MP3s in court would be far more persuasive than the results of this program. (Although I can't really envision a court case involving MP3's... perhaps at some point MP3 trading will be an offense akin to speeding, with a similar fine. And those fined for it will complain as bitterly as when fined for speeding -- "everyone does it! it's not like anyone is hurt")

    And of course this assumes that people won't take the simple precautions that have already been suggested to keep the bots away. All in all I can't imagine this having any real value except as a scare tactic. But perhaps that value is enough...