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What Are Microsoft And Napster Talking About?

An Anonymous Coward points to this CNN article, writing: "look here, Microsoft and Napster are talking, looks like Microsoft is going to buy Napster." Actually, the story specifically says that Microsoft has rejected buying Napster, and that the ongoing secretive talks actually have another probable outcome: Microsoft's digital protection schemes for music files are a more likely point of confluence between the scrappy, beleagered protector of Internet Freedom and Goodness and, well, Napster.

13 of 137 comments (clear)

  1. MAYBE THEY SAID THIS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4


    Bill, I can't understand it, why you wont buy me
    After all the things I've bought from you
    I bought your Works and windows, put diamonds on your fingers (Diamond on your fingers)
    And still you still won't buy, what am I to do

    My girl uses Napster all the time
    Napster all the time, Napster all the time
    My girl uses Napster all the time
    Napster all the time, Napster all the time

    Ooh...hoo...hoo...
    Napster all the time
    She likes to use Napster all the time
    Napster all the time

    Ooh...hoo...hoo...
    Napster all the time
    She likes to use Napster all the time
    Napster all the time

    Bill, I seen you at the courts, just hangin' out and trollin'
    You plead the 5th to every judge you see
    You never come home at night because you're out controllin'
    I wish you'd bring some of your doe home to me

    But my girl uses Napster all the time
    My girl uses Napster all the time
    Napster all the time, Napster all the time
    My girl uses Napster all the time
    Napster all the time, Napster all the time

    Ooh...hoo...hoo...
    Napster all the time
    She likes to use Napster all the time
    Napster all the time

    Ooh...hoo...hoo...
    Napster all the time
    She likes to use Napster all the time
    Napster all the time

    Ooh...hoo...hoo...
    Napster all the time
    She likes to use Napster all the time
    Napster all the time

    Ooh...hoo...hoo...
    Napster all the time
    She likes to use Napster all the time
    Napster all the time

    \\s0nGdEvIL\\

  2. It went something like this: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4

    Microsoft: Ok, what's it gonna take for you to block all instances of the bootlegged copied of Bill Gates singing "Who Let the Dogs Out". Napster: $125 million dollars...... in quarters. Microsoft: Ok..... the 125 mil is no problem, the quarters part could take a while. So it's a deal? Napster: Sure. Microsoft: Now does that include blocking of B1ll G4T35 and other numerical representations as well? Napster: No. Microsoft: Damn.

  3. Hidden Motivation? by Jethro73 · · Score: 5

    Since MP3s were born Microsoft has been trying to rewrite the standard with their own technology. WMA was their answer, which, granted, provided better sound for the bandwidth cost. Could it be that they see Napster as the biggest proponent for the format that they would love to wipe out? Maybe they wish to buy it an either rewrite things to share WMAs, or throw it in the scrap heap... Interesting, and yet somehow scary...

    (not a troll or a conspiracy theory -- just an observation)

    Jethro

    --
    Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum viditur.
    1. Re:Hidden Motivation? by JiffyPop · · Score: 5

      (not a troll or a conspiracy theory -- just an observation)

      Jethro


      That's too bad. If you were then you'd be "Jethro Troll"...

      *ignoring groans from audience*

  4. Well, it's official. Napster is day-uhd. by revscat · · Score: 4

    I know this sounds trite, but I think we should all mark our calendars as today being the day that Napster finally sunk into the grave, or at least sunk into a coma from which it will likely never recover. Yes yes, people have been saying this for months in relation to other events surrounding Napster, and I am not saying that those claims weren't true. But today it has come to light that Napster is sleeping with the enemy from the technology side, not just the legal side. They now have absolutely no moral leg to stand on insofar as the "Free as in Beer" philophy goes.

    Sad. There are alternatives available, to be sure, but none have the simplicity of Napster. I'm even having a hard time finishing my Bill Hicks collection, goddammit!

    Side note: I think that we should push for legislation that allows for a person (or persons) to be designated as the "primary creator" of any given work, without possiblity of that role being signed over to an Evil Industrial Corporation. If at any time that person(s) or their heirs wishes to release the work into the public domain, they can. Or they could stipulate in their will that works X, Y and Z are in the public domain, but A and B aren't.

    Too simple to work.

    - Rev.
  5. Microsoft Authentication On Web Properties by mbpark · · Score: 5

    I am beginning to see a pattern here.

    First, eBay signed up to use .NET and Hailstorm for their authentication processes.

    Secondly, Microsoft integrated a complete Digital Rights Management system into IE 5.0 and above, with respective authentication in Windows 2000/XP, and a patch for Windows 98/Me.

    If you don't believe me and have IE, go to Tools, Internet Options, Content Tab, Certificates, and click on the Advanced Button on that tab. When you look at Intended Purpose, you will see Digital Rights as a certificate option (among many other things).

    Third, Microsoft is and has been in with the RIAA and assorted other agencies to promote Digital Rights, and has their own WMA format to do so. They can use certificates to provide strong authentication on media files.

    Fourth, the Passport infrastructure that Microsoft is building (which encompasses .NET, Hotmail, their other web services, and Windows Media Player) will allow for full Internet-based Digital Rights Management, with Microsoft acting as the central authenticating authority.

    Fifth, they can also use their commerce infrastructure for micropayments, or leverage the common billing authority they are working on with .NET to give all users of Microsoft Products a common Microsoft Services Bill. They will be able to handle micropayments because they will have themselves set up as a centralized billing authority for all premium web content. This will may include Office, Windows Update, Windows Media Services (which in Windows XP will expand this to high-quality video), MSN, and Hotmail premium services.

    Fifth, bringing Napster aboard means that Microsoft can track all files, and therefore all users, by giving them a centralized Passport ID (which you already have). They will have the ability, in Windows 2000 and XP, to link that to a root certificate that identifies your computer, users on it, and files you have downloaded.

    Napster will be still able to download large amounts of audio files if this strategy is going where I've taken it. However, they will not be file you can play. You will have to use the Passport infrastructure to pay for these files to listen to them. Integrating Hailstorm and .NET will allow Napster to still have file sharing, but adds complete authentication services that the RIAA likes (note that I did not say couldn't be broken. I'd be stupid to think anything is uncrackable), and adds micropayments through Microsoft Billing Services.

    eBay is switching to the model too, which scares me in that many popular sites seem to be more than willing to cede control of user authentication to a central authority that I would never trust with my personal information. Yahoo does the same thing, but they don't associate a user with a machine, hardware, registered software products, or personal information to the level that Microsoft does.

    Napster joining with Microsoft is a BAD thing. It's one more step for Passport/.NET/HailStorm before they end up controlling a large portion of the sites on the net through their services. That, and it would make Napster pay, which would only make Lars happy :).

  6. Very Cool by Kagato · · Score: 5

    No, not the Napster Microsoft story it self, Timmy's comments showing he took the time and energy to read and analyize the story that was submitted.

  7. MS vs RIAA by Amon+CMB · · Score: 5

    MS: "All your MP3s are belong to us."

    RIAA: "No, all your MP3s are belong to us."

    MS: "NO!! All your MP3s are belong to us!!"

    RIAA: "All your MP3s are copyright to us!!"

    MS: "YOU are belong to us. How much?"

    RIAA: "One legal threat and a dozen long drawn-out court battles!"

    MS: "You are on the path to bankruptcy. You have no chance to survive make your time."

    (Meanwhile Linux users watch the ongoing battle of the titans, consuming lots of popcorn and soda and cheering with joy.)

    --


    Men believe what they want. - Caesar
  8. Crippled tunes by sulli · · Score: 5
    The article I read talked about M$' "rights management" doing crap like limiting playing of tunes and so on. You can be sure that no Napster user will move to this. User hostile and useless in the extreme!

    Yes, they will probably try to foist .wma's on the user base. No, they won't succeed, I don't think.

    Repeat after me: flat rate, unlimited MP3 sharing or NOTHING. The model is ASCAP: royalties are apportioned by share of downloads.

    (!MP3 || !unlimited || !flatrate) == !Napster.

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  9. digital protection for all you ereet napstah kidz by dasmegabyte · · Score: 5

    Whilst driving in my car, I had the following thought: Napster users get files from file sharing, not from other sources. And thus, they all have the same digital copy of the same song. You can see this effect any time you do a napster search for something common; say, bob dylan. Notice that 80% of the files will have the same bitrate, file size and title, and another 10% will be interrupted downloads of the above. Now, since all mp3 encoders are different and have a different approach to compression, even compressing the same track at the same rate on different encoders will produce different effects. This means that all those users had the same source, a sort of digital music analogy of mitochondrial Eve. If that first file is cooked or truncated or a special version, all users will hve those cooks or truncations.

    So what does this mean? Well, if digital protection stops 95% of users from copying an mp3, it won't matter a pair od fetid dingo's kidneys to the music theft scene. One lucky champ will manage to get a decent sounding version somehow, and then everybody will trade that. In this scenario, copy prot only serves to slow down the trade of cds among friends, which most of the industry agrees should be encouraged (or at least not discouraged).

    To Recap: Napster users aren't particularly picky and all tend to grab the first example of a track they find. Digital protection will serve only to alienate the end user, making him or her more reliant on Napster and less able to deal with his or her own music. Result: more Napster usage, further development of the music release scene and less money for the music industry (namely, the money spent on the copy protection infrastructure).

    The only solution is freedom...I'm whistling "unforgiven" right now...

    --
    Hey freaks: now you're ju
  10. Re:Microsoft's Desperation by sleeper0 · · Score: 5
    Microsoft charges money, lots of it, for tools that encrypt audio and video into the Windows Media format.

    This statement is blatently false. Did you even try to do any research? Perhaps you are thinking of Real? Microsoft's player, encoder, and DRM tools are all available for free. Almost everything can be instantly downloaded over the internet.

    http://www.microsoft.com/windowsmedia/

  11. Drag it out... by Snar+Bloot · · Score: 5

    If nothing else, maybe Microsoft could help Napster drag the whole thing out for a few years.

  12. On the bright side... by Guppy06 · · Score: 4

    Such a merger would mean that Microsoft's software will have a little demon for a logo. How fitting...