Napster Going Legit
mtstump writes "Wired is running a
story stating that Napster has signed deals with three of the five major recording companies in an effort to make Napster legit." It's the perfect model: the users pay you *and* for the bandwidth to share the songs they already bought. Course I still don't see the benefit for us. No doubt we'll see more of these deals as napster becomes less relevant and decentralized networks grow in popularity.
Tie it to your credit card number and personal info. If someone else can access your music, they can access everything else you can as well.
DCMonkey
I think the poster is referring to the EMI/Roxio deal recently announced (and beaten to death in a /. article already).
It's all moot anyhow - the real show is the DRM technologies built into Windows XP. Think XP will let you burn DRM-locked files with its built-in CD burner? Remember that within a year, almost every consumer PC will be shipping with XP installed.
-Isaac
I am not a lawyer, and this is not legal advice. For Entertainment Purposes Only.
Want to hurt the record industry, but you're too hooked on their content?
Screw them the legal way - buy used CDs exclusively!
In the physical world, the first-sale doctrine still applies (gawd knows the recording combines have tried to eliminate it, but it still stands).
So, don't give the RIAA any more of your cash (only to have it used against you in the halls of Congress). When you buy a used CD, you support your local retailer (since most stores with used CDs are independent) - the artist has already been paid whatever pittance their contract stipulates for that copy.
Of course, it's always better to avoid consuming their products entirely (since there's a chance that someone else was looking for the used CD that you bought, but will instead buy a new copy and give the RIAA more money after all), but this is the best way to minimize RIAA revenue and still remain legal.
Respect copyright law - screw the RIAA - buy used!
That is all.
-Isaac
I am not a lawyer, and this is not legal advice. For Entertainment Purposes Only.
Her music really means something to me, and I'd like to give her a six inch cbeck in person.
Of course I'm joking, but it can be hard to reach specific musicians, and what about all the backup/studio musicians?
Hell, I'd pay for Napster the way it was in the glory days. I'd say 50% of the files I downloaded were good rips with correct naming. Another 25% had something nominally wrong with them: something quirky with the RIP or naming. Another 10% had something really annoying, and 15% were just something I pitched because the naming was wrong or the RIP was totally braindamaged.
I think generally it worked pretty well, and I think the popularity and overall quality attests to this.
I'd pay even more ($15/mo?) for a service that let me download guaranteed quality MP3s of any artist/any song. That's $180/year and it's way more money than the record industry has ever gotten out of me or ever will for CD purchases.
Napster has sold out. Use Bearshare instead.
And you wouldn't consider BearShare to have sold out? When you install it, it also installs OnFlow, a nice little piece of spyware.
Cheers,
Ahh, that's good. I actually think it's a neat little program, but the sneakiness of adding the spyware was disturbing, so I just have it on a junk computer that's used for untrusted things. Does their site make that workaround clear to any potential downloaders, or is it something you'd only learn after checking out usenet, forums, etc.?
Anyway, I just thought it was odd that someone would denounce Napster for selling out while promoting something which was using a spyware add-on to make money of their own, all while being more shady about it.
Cheers,
Yes, it's their privilege, as long as the courts continue to interpret copyright law in that way. I'm not arguing that... today.
My point was just that it's not fair to say "Why didn't Napster just cut a deal with the record labels?" If the labels were willing to make such a deal the Internet music landscape would be very different.
Because running the index servers costs something. Napster has to either receive money from somewhere, or close.
You can either pay Napster to help you find the MP3 you want, or pay AMD for a CPU so that you can convert your WAV/AIFF into MP3 yourself. Until the musicians start selling the music to you in the format that you prefer, it will always cost something somehow.
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As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
I'm betting by September 2002 - they are out of business.
Rapigator is quite nice too - http://www.rapigator.com
*gasp* Do you realize that doing that is illegal? I guess next you are going to tell me that you made copies of friends' cassettes and played those in your car too?? or *egads* copied or downloaded movies you didn't purchase? And here I thought 90% of slashdot were impeccable freedom fighters, incapable of abusing our wonderful system?
Once I thought I was wrong...I was mistaken.
I think this model would work great if it allowed access to *every* song made. A SuperJukebox, or an Jukebox Super Highway if you will.
I would never pay for Napster.. in its current form. If I'm paying money, I want to ensure I can find cool songs and that the sound quality is good and the files are properly named. I'm tired of downloading poorly ripped mp3s that have filenames that don't include the album name, track number, or even the artist's name!
Plus Napster is buggy. What version are that up to now.. Beta 9?!?! And it still sucks! It crashes, it freezes, it has an inflexible and intrusive UI, and it lacks useful playlist features. I guess Napster is an example of how "good enough" is better than well-designed..
cpeterso
I think you're right about Napster being better in the good ol' days. When its primary users were computer and music geeks, you know they will be careful to create good rips and properly categorize/name the files. Today Napster is flooded by AOL users who can't figure out in which directory Microsoft Word saved their homework.
I too would pay ~$15/month for unlimited, quality MP3 downloads, if they included lots of artists. I have an eclectic taste in music.
cpeterso
Actually, Sinead O'Connor (er, Prince's) song is actually titled "Nothing Compares 2 U". :-)
And on my computer, I would name that file: Sinead O'Connor - I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got - 06 - Nothing Compares 2 U.mp3. Here are some more examples:
Great White Hype - Bringin' to ya 20 rap house greats - 15 - Blood on the floor, the wall, and yah bitch.mp3
Great White Hype - Bringin' to ya 20 rap house greats - 16 - Music from the PiMp factory.mp3
Great White Hype - Bringin' to ya 20 rap house greats - 17 - Zyklon be off the Heazy!.mp3
cpeterso
Do you mind if I call you "Phred Phuhreenoh"? I'm sure that's what your parents had in mind. Here's the simple fact: names are defined by the way they are said, not by the way they are written.
cpeterso
when you infringe on some ones rights you are stealing their freedom.
Some one owns the rights to that music. Not you. They determine how and when it is distributed. Not you.
If you don't like it then go dl some GPL music.
This seems to be the trend these days. Netscape is abandoning its browser, which is about the only thing it is known for, in favor of becoming a portal. They failed to realize that the only reason people used their portal is because they didn't know how to reconfigure their default home page.
Do you really think that they fail to realize they are fighting a losing battle? You aren't giving them enough credit. They are being forced into these business plans because their original one's failed. It doesn't take a rocket scientist (or an MBA) to realize they probably aren't going to make it, but you have to try to do the best with what you got. You can't just give up and liquidate.
Spoonz
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Looking at the stats on connect the amount of songs on it seems to be around 200gig. (Low during my 2 week incredibly unscientific survey(*) was 145, high was 250). Having fallen from the heights when there was over a TB on it, I think Napster is dying. Possibly because of other networks that are unencumbered by legal suits (OpenNap networks etc), or other networks that do the same as Napster plus more (MusicCity.com's Morpheus software).
Oh well, I won't be sad to see it go.
(* Survey conducted by connecting every so often over the period and looking at the number of songs on it. I know, incredibly accurate)
Users get off their asses and drive their cars to the retail center
:)
When someone equates getting off one's ass with driving a car, there is real trouble a-brewing.
There are at least some bands from the 90s which have kept selling though. From anntecdotal evidence, I've heard Nirvana's Nevermind is still selling at a decent pace. So I checked it out with the link you gave before. Here's the results: http://www.riaa.com/Gold-Search_Results.cfm?start= 26&title=&artist=nirvana&label=&format=&category=& type=&award=&startMonth=1&startYear=1958&endMonth= 1&endYear=2001&before=off&after=off&sort=Artist&se nse=ASC
(This is the second page of the results). As you can see, Nevermind achieved "10.0 multi-platium" level in 1999. I believe that's 10 million records.
However, aside from Nirvana, it's really hard for me to think of a pure-90's group who will still be relevant in 5 or 10 years (disclaimer: I don't listen to rap music, so maybe the story is different there).
I can't tell from the article if the labels that are signing on will be supplying the content on "pay" servers.
Does anyone have a link that explains the plan in a little more detail?
If the idea is to sell music a track at a time over the internet, then I'm all for it. Free market and all that.
I'm sorry.. "Fair Use" means "Since i bought it, i can let anyone i want listen to it?". This is the basis of the argument. Can you copy music and distribute it - make it available to anyone who might want to listen to it - wether they have the CD, or not.
Courtney Love is what is commonly referred to as "made it". She likely doesn't have to worry about money for quite some time. Most people in the music industry aren't so lucky.
I, myself, don't understand 100% how the music industry works. However, i'm willing to venture having a family member who works for a record label and a friend who has written songs for the last 15 years gives me a little more insight than the average person into the operations of the music industry.
I'll pay for napster.
If napster is reasonably priced, reliable, and has a relatively complete selection of music...
I will pay for napster.
I believe in paying people for their work. I believe in people paying me for my work. hence the concept "Capitalism", broken down into bite sizes.
I don't believe for a second that anyone ONLY uses Napster to download music that they already own. I think that's totaly obsurd. Oh yes, we're all good little boys and girls here, we never break any laws, like piracy.
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microsoft, it's what's for dinner
bq--3b7y4vyll6xi5x2rnrj7q.com
it's a sig, wtf?
Some weekend, I'll have to get the entire world over to my house. We can all make copies of our cd's with my burner. Stick it to the RIAA.
On a different note, I completely agree Napster's pay for music plan will be its downfall, but who really cares there are plenty of alternatives (gnutella, mojonation, etc). They all have just as much porn as Napster ever did so lets just forget this conversation ever happened and look at some Hardcore cowboyneal vids, this is the one where he ties hemos up and beats him with a palm pilot :).
The RIAA's power comes from the money they amass from the music-buying public. Don't buy their products and watch them wither. Download it all and copy it all! If you like an artist's work, send them a personal check.
...which is their privilege, is it not? Even if online distribution were going to be massively profitable, you can't *force* the labels to do it. It's their right to not branch into other distribution channels as long as it's their IP, regardless of whether it's a wise decision.
Only the dead have seen the end of war.
Ya, myself, my family, my friends, and pretty much everyone in my classes that I know or have talked to, are a pretty fringe bunch. We do crazy, unimaginable things. My guess? That those people I know are the only ones that used Napster in non-legit fashion.
Give me a break, dude. I think I took a pretty fair sample size.
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python -c "x='python -c %sx=%s; print x%%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))%s'; print x%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))"
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by "you" he means Napster. We are paying Napster for the right to use the service, and then we also pay for the bandwidth to use the service and share songs which we already own. We are getting charged multiple times for the "priviledge" of sharing our songs.
My dog ate my sig...
I agree.
If you own the CD, just RIP it!
"We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them." -- Albert Einstein
Why is what they are doing now 'legit'? I hate the way those brain-washed tools of corporate america, big media, spin language in the interest of their masters. Legit my ass. Those plunderers of intellectual 'property' (more corporate-speak) are the real crooks.
--Lawrence Lessig for Congress!
You might wish to make sure all words in all of your sentEnces are spelled correctly.
Now lets say people download files from you instead of the *new* servers they will have.. you should be compensated about .01 or two each time.. that would be perfect.. i truly hope no signs up for this new pay service...
Napster wasn't a "music piracy site". There's a strong difference between actually comitting a crime and providing a good/service that allows others to. That's why we allow things that fall under freedom of speech that tell people how to commit crimes, and why we haven't changed the Constitution to make guns alot more difficult or impossible to legally own.
I would be the first one to admit that I can more than understand that risking loosing a lawsuit would take alot of guts, but I don't think Napster was ever in danger of being sued for damages. All they were being sued for was an injunction to force them to filter song names. Filing appeals doesn't risk paying damages either. Yes, there are lawyers fees, but I don't quite see it as "[selling] your computer to pay them damages"
Be the Ultimate Ninja! Play Billy Vs. SNAKEMAN today!
But am I the only one who has noticed they are able to find more of the music that they want to listen to on napster these days? Since I'm not terribly much into the major label offerings, I've been able to find a lot of the stuff from smaller indepentent labels, which I think is a good thing.
But, thats right, most of the people here, they didn't want to hear that, they wanted to listen to the sound of artists selling themselves out to the all mighty dollar. And you the listener, didn't want to pay them for selling out, so you went and tried to rip them off. Sure, the major labels want to charge you out the nose and it is very well possible that those artists agreed to let the record label out the nose contractually.
So, if you want to do something about this, just support your smaller labels who encourage the free exchange of their music and boycott the major labels, this includes downloading pirated copies of their music.
If it had her picture on it I would buy the Britney Spears' toenail clipper...
It's called Bithive and it looks like it may be up and running soon. Looks like it's Windows only right now, but it should be easy to reverse engineer.
Here's my DeCSS mirror, where's yours?
The problem Napster has is that there is no solution which retains the user's right to copy any music they buy as many times as they like FOR THEIR OWN USE, but prevents them from giving it away to all their friends.
Yes there is. It's called ethics. The users and the are all seriously lacking in the aformentioned quality.
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"Goose... Geese... Moose... MOOSE!?!?!"
Higher Logics: where programming meets science.
Here's what I meant to say:
Yes there is. It's called ethics. The users and the RIAA are all seriously lacking in the aformentioned quality.
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"Goose... Geese... Moose... MOOSE!?!?!"
Higher Logics: where programming meets science.
Maybe they read Evil Geniuses in a Nutshell.
Napster? Is that like AudioGalaxy or something?
Got Rhinos?
...but it remains good for what Slashdot has been saying for months is its real purpose of introducing its users to new music?
How are you supposed to get introduced to new music if you don't even know the name of the band? Try Audiogalaxy instead, www.audiogalaxy.com...
--
"I'm surfin the dead zone
--
"I'm surfin the dead zone
In the twilight, unknown"
Well, if you're going to completely ignore IP law, then technically the only thing the store lost is a bunch of plastic and paper with information on it. Since they presumably have other identical copies of the CD, they can replace the lost copy and the accompanying notes for the cost of said plastic and paper.
Funny how it doesn't actually work this way. I wonder why that could be?
There are strong arguments to be made for excepting the type of trading conducted over Napster as "Fair Use". Do you just fail to understand what that means? I'm confused, because you use loaded words like "illegal".
v e/ print.html
Regarding this insipid propaganda about music-sharing hurting artists, I think you (and your Nashville pal) should think about this more carefully... Do you just fail to understand how the music industry currently works? I refer you to Courtney Love's comments on the subject (transcript of a speach, print this out and read it. If you don't understand the implications and subtleties, read it again. It's the most coherent thing I've heard pass her lips, she clearly gets it..):
http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2000/06/14/lo
Don't think it won't eventually happen, especially when digital broadcast TV begins. The Hauppauge WinTV-PVR and ATI All-In-Wonder boards make it painfully simple to capture broadcast videos now. With a little post-processing, we have a library of small, hi-fi MP4 videos that can be shared.
And since they don't sell videos, what losses can they claim THEN? It's a fair-use time-shifting of a television broadcast in my book.
I'm not fan of Napster's legal/business decisions, but, I downright despise Gnutella's useablilty. While Napster may have legal, moral, and philosophical problems - in its hey-day, it was the funktonic-sonic of online music sharing. Back when the average size of the network's storage was about three terabytes (back in the day), you could find anything. Usually, even, you could find several copies of anything, and download many of them. But, with Gnutella and other decentralized networks, it is almost impossible to get a whole album in one sitting. I remember the day when I could search for "One hot minute" and download the whole album. Never more. Even with single files - when they get too big, they get too impossible. I've been trying for weeks to get the second half of Half Baked. No dice. The first half, I got in a few days (note: this is several days of trying, and only a few hours of downloading. I have a T1) but the second half is sooo elusive that any attempts fail before fifty percent. Sure, Gnutella is a technical marvel. Sure, Gnutella makes a statement of freedom and independance. But, at what cost? I think OpenNAP is our best bet (last hope) for the future of music sharing. If only we could get more people to use Napigator, we would eventually have one OpenNAP network come out on top.
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Oh shit! I forgot to click "Post Anonymously"...
No one will pay for Napster. there are too many clones out there, and too many other napster servers not controlled by napster itself.
Unless they start going after ALL those free serices, napster will fail. Maybe that's what the record labels want... one p2p sharing program that they can control. Then, since napster is "official" they can go after the clones, thereby controlling p2p sharing.
28 million people pay $20/month for crappy service, slow dial-up & other content that can be found by the savvy user for little to no charge. I think a "pay-per-Napster" could succeed in this kind of marketplace.
"Laugh and the world laughs with you. Cry and I'll give you somethin' to cry about!"
Now I have to return to my old mp3 sources instead of using Napster's convenient click and search interface. The mp3 trading isn't going to stop and the sooner the RIAA realizes this the sooner they can start working WITH Napster instead of trying to sue them out of existance.
And WTH was my first post moderated down to 0 when the one about smoking a bud was set at 1 for "insightful"?
We've had two previous /. discussions that I know of. (Here and Here ). Info about the Canadian Levy can be found Here, or you can look at the Copyright Board site and get lost there.
. --- If you're looking for free e-mail you won't find it here! http://www.noemailhere.com
You are tipping us off about how young you are.
Anybody over the age of 30 is far more likely to be reminded of Princess Leia's defiant warning to General Tarken.
Quoting it would be redundant, as we all have the whole film memorized. :)
Information wants to be anthropomorphized.
1: Ozzy has not mattered since his Black Sabbath days.
2: Iron Maiden never did.
Both examples you gave of 80's success are small niche players. Even Bruce freakin' Springstein filled more stadiums than either of those acts.
Do any of the current bands you mention have the cultural impact of The Who, Led Zep, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Bob Marley or even Pink Floyd?
Will anybody have anything more than a foggy recolection of who the fuck Limp Bizkit was in two years?
Most people have figured out that Marilyn Manson is just a weak Alice Cooper wanna-be, except he is about 20 years too late, and nobody bothers to be shocked by the used-up horror-movie-drag schtick anymore.
Blink182? More like Blink And You'll Miss Them. By the time W is out of the White House, Blink182 will be in the cut-out bins that have long since cleared out the Dead Eye Dick CD's from waaay back the mid-90's.
A "greatest hits" CD of a band from the 1960's was #1 on the Billboard charts this year. That tells you everything you need to know about the current state of pop music.
Information wants to be anthropomorphized.
Really?
That must have been "long ago, when the dew of creation was fresh upon the earth, and the gods were young and playful", because it certainly has not happened within recorded history.
Information wants to be anthropomorphized.
Oh yeah. That little program I used before I learned mIRC. Say "Hi" to Pets.com for me...
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"The only difference between me and a madman is that I'm not mad." - Salvador Dali (1904-1989)
Haha. Thanks. But a troll was not my intention. There used to be a time when the record companies used to work for musicians. It's just unfortunate that now it's the other way around....
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"The only difference between me and a madman is that I'm not mad." - Salvador Dali (1904-1989)
however, Stocking Caps and Cars can also be used to facilitate crime, so if Honda doesn't immediately shut their doors and stop producing vehicles they are no better than my fictional robbers.
No, because the primary purpose of stocking caps and cars is legitimate. The primary purpose of Napster was to facilitate piracy of copyrighted material.
Put it this way: it is illegal for my to stockpile dynamite in my garage, despite the fact that dynamite has legitimate purposes.
Don't like that analogy? How about this one: The mafia owns a pizza parlor. Perfectly legitimate business -- until they start laundering money. Then it is a crime, because the primary purpose is not selling pizza, it's to launder money.
The intent of a business does matter. And Napster's "wink wink" agreement is worth less than the bits it uses.
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Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
Buy CDs. I do.
Well, that's what I normally do, but that doesn't work well if I just want one obscure song and don't feel like paying $10-$15 for an entire album.
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Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
First you are wrong on this point.. the primary purpose of Napster is file sharing, which is perfectly legal and legitimate
Come on, let's not pretend here. The reason the what's-his-name invented Napster in the first place was so his l33t buddies could get the songs they want. Even if you buy into this ludicrous "hey, all we want is our users to exchange legal songs", you can't deny that 99.9% of all activity was illegal. Not to mention that Napster has been totally abandoned once the heavy duty filtering was in place. If Napster was primarily legigitimate, then that should have made almost no difference in traffic, right?
A screwdriver can be used to break the lock on a house does that mean that all screwdrivers should be illegal?
No, and no one is trying shut down all ftp activity, either.
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Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
So Napster & RIAA is going to be making money off the mp3 files on MY hard drive. Ya right. Napster should trade subscription fees for the use of MY hard drive, than I'll use it. Otherwise Napster has been eatten by the music industry. It sucks now anyway. Onward....
-- "Perceptions create reality. By changing your perceptions you change your reality."
The corporate legal sharks will pull any trick to close down the competition, and will file law suits, even if they are patently (sic) stupid. It doesn't seem to stop them now!
Phil
ps MegaJukebox.net is coming.
Napter is dead. Not only that the RIAA is shooting themselves in the foot. Meanwhile the RIAA is willing to pay broadcasters to play their songs on air, knowing that the the "air time" promotes sales.
I wonder if the RIAA is going to go after Boomboxes next, as these might be use for "commercial" playback. Where is the RIAA during all these "rave" parties? Aren't the people there sharing the music for profit and not passing the royalties to the artists?
Sorry if I gave the RIAA any ideas. Ooooops.
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
You thought wrong. Fanning, I think never ever had intentions of being a poor college drop out. And how else would he make money? Why by selling his service.
Like PT said, a sucker is born everyday
Bullshit. A portion of the revenue from each CD-R or RW sold goes to the RIAA "just in case" you're putting pirated material on it. Anyone have a link?
The Blaster Master Fighting for Truth, Justice, and Evil Pie since 1979
Looks like the wired story is called 2Legit 2Quit. Maybe Wired thinks they are 2Cool 4U?
Arthropoid, the Right Clam for the Job
Um, if you already own the song, why are you downloading it from Napster? Get a GRIP.
I do not have a signature
Fuck that. As someone else said, see you on Gnutella.
sulli
RTFJ.
All the girls say that Fanning has poor push technology.
Go Kathryn Thurber!
When something is stolen from you, you no longer have it.
When your copyright is infringed upon, you don't lose anything you already had. Some one else has just done something that the government said only you can do.
And yes, your comment becomes more valid when you don't incorrectly use the word "steal".
All I got to say is..
http://www.limewire.com
Go there.. download your pirate songs/software/books and have fun. I'd like to see the RIAA tackle a de-centralized file sharing system. Screw them, and their $15 cd's which cost them $2 to make..
And what ever happened to that settlement out of court, that found the Record Industry guilty of price fixing? I don't see the cost of CD's in my local record stores dropping one bit. I thought they were supposed to lower them to $11..
Bah.. Greed.. I'd pay money for napster if I knew it went straight to the artist.. no middle man, no execs.. music for the people..
The Meme Wars claims another victim. Every time one of these IP discussions makes its way onto Slashdot there is inevitably someone who regurgitates the IP cartels' bullshit that copying is theft. Witness: Copying is not stealing, as much as the RIAA, MPAA, *AA would like you to believe. It is infringement, and is not even remotely the same as theft in the eyes of the law...
Forget about Napster, DeCSS, et al. The real fight (and where it will be won or lost) lies in memes (and we seem to be one the losing side for the moment, if these discussions are any indication)!
-- Shamus
This space for rent. EZ terms!
I've said it before, and I'll say it again: Thanks Napster for jump starting the revolution, but please die now. Napster is now (and has been for some time) nothing more than Just Another Corporation Out to Make a Buck(tm), and they don't give a rats ass about the people who actually use it.
y our-hard-drive-with-others scheme? Do they understand that they have no content on their servers? Or (as seems more likely) have they bought into the IP cartels meme that they're a website where you can download music for free?
Where is the added value of their new pay-for-the-privilege-of-sharing-the-contents-of-
-- Shamus
Who is the more foolish, the fool or the fool who follows him?
I noticed after posting that it was probably mis-spelled. (I have trouble with 'sentence' for some reason.)
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D. Fischer
ShoutingMan.com
Thanks. That 'you and for bandwidth' word-glob just confounded me. Your paraphrase clarified things
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D. Fischer
ShoutingMan.com
The best thing (IMO) about napster was finding songs by bands you already like and then browsing the collections of others who have those bands in their collections. I do this with my friends. That is a great way to discover bands you like without already knowing the band's name. (I find listening to Pop radio, less than successful)
If you find 20 people with musical taste similar to yours, you will find other bands you like in their collections.
I will continue to do this with my friends and co-workers etc. but with Napster I could do the same thing with thousands of people! And chat with them about it too! A fundamental problem is, the music industry doesn't want you (necessarily) to find bands you like, they want you to buy music by the bands they are hyping.KolinH
it's a straight up napster clone, but it'll also let search for movies and pictures and stuff. And it's pretty cheesy in that it's apparently just an IE plugin, but it works. I wish they would have made their own interface (and abandoned the terrible napster layout) but hey, I can't complain too much. I usually find what I'm looking for with it.
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It takes a special type of arrogance to assume that the use you made of a service is exactly the same use the other 40 million users made.
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We want some answers and all that we get
Some kind of shit about a terrorist threat
- Ministry
If Napster is going legit, it ain't Napster anymore.
They must feel like I do when little Bender fails to salute.
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do you think that *fewer* connections will get *better* results ? The more connections you got the more hosts you can search so it should get better with more connections. I've never found anything useful on Gnutella.
I can still find what I want on Opennap et al. I don't like gnutella, I've got a 10Mb internet connection and even if I keep a hundred gnutella connections open it takes forever to find something useful.
Every time I see a post about Napster's downfall, I always think the same thing. Cross freenet with gnutella, and suddenly the music sharing revolution is completely unstoppable, and untrackable.
Freenet's problem is that it isn't indexed. (At least it wasn't the last time I checked.) If you add a distributed search mechanism to freenet's distributed storage abilities, and put a nice browser together, we might actually have "the next big thing(tm)". Until then Freenet will still stay relatively smalltime, and Gnutella will still result in regular Joes getting sued for copyright infringement.
Anyways, that's enough tangent. Napster was doomed from the start. Now that they are going legit, they will have to turn a profit to stay afloat in the world. And since no one wants to download unknown music at 2k/sec when they can get it at over 100k/sec from mp3.com, Napster will be out of business within the year.
Bah. Maybe I'll go throw my $0.02 at the freenet project....
And how do they determine which is which? When I buy a spindle of CD-R's, I can use them for data or audio.
"Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys" P. J. O'Rourke
I own a lot of CDs. I have an old computer (pent 100) that can't Rip and encode MP3s very well at all, so I download songs that I own from Napster. I can then listen to the songs that I own in the medium I want to listen to them. Nothing illegal about that, but I can't do it if Napster is filtered. So, I abandon Napster for something else.
"Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys" P. J. O'Rourke
I was authorized to post this here by someone who has been following the Napster issue a lot more closely than many of the fellow Slashdot posters. ----- Whining, uninformed, half-awake mental masturbation. If they know so much, let them build something, and let them see their dream stomped by evil moneyed forces, and let them struggle to forge a way to retain the viability of their dream in some form despite a chorus of condemnation from entrenched businessmen; loopy misconceptions, engendered by 14 year old girls and telescoped by irresponsible journalists, that the technological ability to do something transforms it into a Constitutional right; and horrendously short-sighted rulings of law from in injudicious judges prone to shooting of their mouths from the benches. Then let them turn around and hear hopelessly unrealistic critical blather from mere bystanders who wouldn't have been to make it work in the first place. All this talk about Napster being irrelevant because there are decentralized services out there is like saying pharmacies are irrelevant because the black market exists. I'm ALL FOR subversion of the copyright industries through peer to peer technology, but I'm nauseated by people who rush headlong into personification of the saying "opinions are like assholes, everyone has one," and most of them aren't worth the paper they are wiped/written on. These people should do some thinking about the difference between the business world and the world of comic book super heroes, who always win uncompromisingly, before they squirt out then next bit of drivel, the fools.
Classical music/Jazz is definitely for the educated soul. This Agulera\Spears\Bizkit Pop is only for the pre-adolescents with no clue how fscked their corporate tastes are. They're the types that drove Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold nuts. Ignore it - it is only the artistic static that occurs with every generation.
Children, remember, there are no stupid questions - only stupid people.
Now if only more people would share their music on a gnuTella network.
Children, remember, there are no stupid questions - only stupid people.
Nice post. Definitely insightful. However, don't bash Weezer just because they happened to come out with a new album at the same time you decided to post. Here's a band that came out a long time ago (given the anemic half-life of bands nowadays, I think the early 90's qualifies as "a long time ago") and has maintained a huge underground following. If you tried listening to one of their CD's (I recommend their first, the Blue Album), you would notice that their style is markedly different from the generic "alterna-rock" tripe the labels have concocted for you (see Blink 182).
www.flipr.com is a better model.
1-They pay the artists 4cents a download
2-The client is free for users(there's also a value-added client you pay for though)
The system is built, its in beta testing right now.
You can register to become a beta tester thru the site
fairtunes.com
I must burn in hell, suffer and pay for my sins
But Gods the one who's losing, Satan always wins!
This year, I heard that a band called "Destiny's Child" won a bunch of awards. From the TV blub, they look kind of cute, and seem to be a band that sings shopworn 3-part harmonies over shopworn hip-hop beats. At the time, it occurred to me that I have not heard more than a 20-second blip from any of their songs. So tell me, fellow Slashbots, am I really missing anything by ignoring these teen divas and listening to Bethoven's 7th Symphony during my drive home?
Answer : NO.
I killed my TV 8 years go, and I mostly listen to classical music or stuff that's not coming from big labels anyway. All in all, I'm feeling OK.
My $0.02 that I won't give to Britney Spear, no way !
Paraphased:
"The users pay Napster. They also pay their ISP's for the bandwith used to share music with other users. And they are sharing songs they've already paid for."
Indeed, Napster's current filtered-to-the-hilt incarnation is awful and unusuable. However, users will forget about how sucky it is now if the content is improved. The installed base of Napster P2P clients is still way up there (have you uninstalled it yet? I sure haven't - it just sits there waiting for the service to not suck).
To make an analogy to television, the major networks often put out garbage programming, which is just as often rejected by the viewers. We forget that NBC once fielded genius programming like "The Montefuscos" in the same time slot that "Friends" runs in today. Once the crap is gone, viewers/users/consumers run back for what they want *
Thus, Napster can reclaim its former glory. The service has to be what the users want: flat-fee, unlimited access to all other user libraries. Track the usage, pay the royalties, and we'll all be happy
* Not to say that "Friends" doesn't suck, but it's popular
RW
Yes, but the "paying" version of Napster (the one with security built into the client) will require an update/reinstallation. So unless Napster has an auto-update feature built in (and maybe they do), they're not much better off than any other service.
"The truth is, it has already started happening. Concert attendance has been plumetting over the last 10 years, because nobody seriously thinks any band really matters anymore. The biggest draws are leftover bands from the era when people actually cared (like U2). It seems to me that most people no longer consider their favorite music to be an integral part of their identity the way they did in the past. While the latest release from Weezer might be mildly entertaining, nobody is going to worship them the way throngs of stoners once went apeshit over Led Zeppelin; nobody is going to follow them from city to city the way caravans followed the Grateful Dead. Rock n Roll has become a dead religion. "
LimpBizkit, Marilyn Manson, Linkin park, Blink182 T-shirt sales and merchandise are higher than ever, even beating sales of Iron Maiden and Ozzy T-shirts in the 80's.
There are still groups like Ozric Tentacles who have a certain type of fan who will live the deadhead lifestyle.
Marilyn Manson could command kids to do whatever he wanted. Just plant a meme in each song, sprinkle on a little LedZep occultism. Make the parents hate it.
Oops he has already.
hope they enjoyed it while it lasted...at least the record comapanies are trying to get involved
http://monkeyserver.com --- weeeeee
Whether or not you believed in the concept behind Napster or disliked it, the fact remained: Napster users were obtaining and disbanding copyrighted materials on a very, very large scale.
Call the US government's judiciary actions agaisnt Napster what you want too -- in your case, with a sort of whiney ultra-libertarian rheotoric that any halfwit could identify as poppycock -- but I think most people will agree that while it was a shame, it was inevitable. This sort of business about "people reclaiming their rights" -- "rights of the majority" -- "tragedy of the commons with respect to government" -- declarations of injustice way out of proportion with due respect to anything Napster truly stood for. Napster was something relatively small-time that once media made out to be something giantic it became that in public eye; retrospectively, people like yourself make it out to be this martyr of a computer project when in actuality the indirect purpose it was to serve (and yes, I say indirect because I know the whole "P2P is a technical idea, not piracy" argument) wasn't one most people would consider noble.
I don't like modern music one iota. From my perspective its quality does call for blantant copyright disregard. Unfortunately, that's not the way a lot of people think and feel.
Lastly, it won't resemble or be in any way like the old service. Napster was equated with free. All it is now is a brand name.
mwtr / THIS SIG HAS BEEN PRAYED OVER AND MAY BE USED AS A POINT OF CONTACT (ACTS 19:12)
Does anyone know if these deals involve exclusivity toward the big five? One of the biggest problems with the music industry these days seems to be that the major labels control the distribution channels, thereby shutting others out (hmm .. exactly like the software industry it seems). What we don't need (but what the RIAA have been fighting so hard for) is to have the same companies gaining control of 90% or more of the "new big distribution medium".
I don't really see how this is relevant. Napster is now only of historical interest, considering we have opennap, audiogalaxy, IRC, the mp3 newsgroups, FTP, etc. Not to mention gnutella and its clones.
They started something nice, but it's time to say goodbye and move on.
SpamNet - a spam blocker that really works
Slashdot, I think you guys should change your slogan from "news for nerds" to "news for communists".
t i-capitalism.
God damnn it. I was reading over all your headlines and 99% have this stupid slant on pro-piracy/anti-m$/anti-business/pro-communist/an
News for nerds... yeah whatever... Not all nerds are communists.
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Did you just fart? Or do you always smell like that?
eTrade SUCKS
napster wants to go legit. but who wants napster to go legit. no one. napster is dead. it might have been the best but there is no possiblity to force people to pay for a service that is still free. File sharing can never be taxed.
The process for finding a new band that you never heard of was simple, in the late Napster. You find some stuff of a band you already know and like. As you make your search you find that some user own a lot of songs from that band/artist. You browse that user, and oh! surprise! he has a lot of other music you like and some music you had never heard of. As it's only reasonable to think that he has a taste somewhat like yours, you download something from those bands. Not surprisingly, you find many things you like.
I, speaking from my own experience, have learnt to know a lot of new music. Music that you never hear in your local radio/tv: Kiroro (Japonese), Teoman (Turk), Ismael Serrano (Spanish), Kortatu (sing in Spanish, don't know origin), Candan Erçetin (Turk), Herbert Grönemeier (German... yes, German), Julien Clerk (French), Mafalda Arnauth (Portuguese), and many more. And I have an absolutely delicious song that I do not know who composed or sang, because the name is japanese, chinese or korean translated to ASCII, full of funny signs. The user that hosted that song disappeared and was never to be found again. But that songs reminds me that there is still music to discover.
And BTW, I have bought some CD's from those artists. Not for me, I don't buy music anymore, but for gifts. So those artist are better off than if I hadn't got to know them in the first place.
--
Rome taught me patience and assiduous application to detail. Virtues which temper the boldness of great, general views.
It's the perfect model: the users pay you *and* for the bandwidth to share the songs they already bought. Course I still don't see the benefit for us. No doubt we'll see more of these deals as napster becomes less relevant and decentralized networks grow in popularity. Enough with the fair use grandstanding. While there have been numerous models proposed that would infringe on fair use, from the limited details released so far, I don't see this being one. More importantly, why would you use Napster in the first place to get MP3s of songs you already own? Unless you were away from your computer it would quicker for most people to just rip them from their CD player. The strength of napster for me has always been a PULL system of music browsing, as opposed to the antiquated and nauseauting system that is corporate radio. (College radio stations continue to rule.) .jelling
Opinions were like kittens / I was giving them away
Perhaps if not for karma "dimator" would have posted as Anonymous Coward :-).
P.S. Hey, this _is_ insightful!
Otto
be realistic
Hey, this is cool software. Thanks for the link! Why didn't his post get moderated as informative?
I was just thinking, wouldn't it make sense if your ISP increased your supscription fee if you used Napster (or some similar service). Kind of the same way a cable TV provider charges extra for a movie channel or sports channel, etc. That system more or less works for cable TV providers. Sure, there are are people who use pirate decoders and stuff, but the cable companies still get enough money. So mainly, what I'm suggesting is, instead of paying directly to Napster, you pay your Internet provider. Of course there is big problem here: how does your ISP know that use Napster? Can he prevent you from using it? And what if someone dosen't even need an ISP, to go online? Well there are many questions here. I was also thinking, maybe this system could work for downloading software too. And what if people would have the right to tell the ISP, to which software company the extra money should go to (maybe even open source companies). But maybe this is overcomplicating things a bit.
knowone uses it anymore anyway. The overfilter everything
Ok, I'm done with the anonymity. Just didn't have an account :).
I didn't say that Napster/the RIAA is right/wrong. I said the corporate takeovers of virtually everything is irksome.
I mean, give me some mainstream examples of software, products, or even ideas that haven't been packaged, sold, marketed, patented, or in any other way commercialized.
That Marx quote was just a tongue-in-cheek thing that expresses what I feel, not what I feel that others should feel.
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If there were gods, how could I bear to be no god?
----------
If there were gods, how could I bear to be no god?
Consequently there are no gods.
I feel the same. Music/file sharing is never going to be eradicated, and the more the RIAA tries to stop the tide the more evil they look.
Kind of reminds me in ROTJ when Palpatine says to Luke, "Take your weapon, strike me down with all of your hatred and your journey to the dark side will be complete."
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If there were gods, how could I bear to be no god?
----------
If there were gods, how could I bear to be no god?
Consequently there are no gods.
All readers should note that this comment becomes a shameless plug for our site, BarChord.com. If you're not interested in what we offer, many apologies for the interruption.
Our alternative is based on the following principles:
1. the artist determines what is made available (ie. consent is involved);
2. the artist can charge for their music, if they want to, and change that price, depending on customer response and feedback;
3. the artist shares equally with the final price paid by a user (ie. 50/50 split - no service charges or hidden fees); and
4. the user can easily make a payment (without the excessive cost of micropayments).
We tried to account for all of these when we built BarChord.com. The only thing we had a little bit of trouble with was the payment/billing system, but I think we've done OK there. We ultimately chose to 'request' that users make a deposit of $10.
So far things have gone well. Users are registering, they're paying and bands are using us to promote their wares.
Our motto: "Play the Music, Pay the Musician". BarChord.com.
While music is an occasional distraction from my 24+ hour coding binges (I prefer Classical and Perl, thank you very much), I think that P2P has a much more important area to cover, and that the geek who can manage the best system for it will come out with a few million more $$$ for buying some nifty toys at ThinkGeek. And unlike Music or Movies, there's no four-letter, lawyer-ridden organization to come down hard on us. It's something every geek needs, every geek has, and if we pooled ours together, we (and the rest of the world) would be much better off in the long run. Every geek would be happier, more content, and better equipped to spend a few more days in marathon debugging sessions. All we need to do is share it.
Share the pr0n, that is.
It's a really good point. There _is_ no commons in modern society. Almost nobody but obscure open source developers even acknowledge the _concept_ of a commons. These days, it's 'who owns it?'. There is no conception of a commons, and so no 'tragedy of the commons' can occur because NOTHING is public.
I think this had better stop being taken for granted. This loss of public commons (in every sphere) is NOT inevitable, or divinely appointed, or natural law. It is a collective choice, assisted by really extensive lobbying and public relations on the part of entities which repudiate any concept of a commons.
If we're gonna give it up we should LOOK at what we're giving up, not overlook it. That's why I feel the comment was indeed insightful. It touched upon something that's VERY important. Overwhelmingly so. For crying out loud, public resources have always been a hallmark of society! To abandon that is a BIG CHANGE.
Assuming, that is, that new CD writers work with unauthorised burning software, and/or don't contain watermark detection code in their firmware which requires a challenge/response to bypass, or just kills the burn outright.
Remember when, on December 31, 1999, RPC-1 (multi-region) DVD-ROM drives were phased out of manufacturing, and old drives became an expensive black-market item? The same thing could happen to burners.
The sad part is that Gnutella's not sufficiently useable to be a replacement, even on a 1.5 megabit line on a fast computer. And yes, I've tried just about every client out there (BearShare, ToadNode, Limewire, etc.) - while you can get some interesting content every once in a while, it just doesn't measure up to what Napster used to be. The scaling issues inherent in peered networks may be a fundamental stumbling block to their popularity and efficiency, and centralized networks are easily sued.
The kneejerk answer, to take things offshore, seems to currently only be carried out by pretty slimy people (with a few exceptions), with ties to offshore gambling, sketchy offshore banks, etc. (I just helped expose one such venture.) Frankly, I'd trust the RIAA more after looking into some of these things.
So I'm not sure what the answer is, or where things are going to go, other than small, tight sharing networks of people. The record companies are pretty happy, they seem to have won for now.
And oh yeah, the record labels are starting to take stakes in CD recording companies to prevent you from burning data you shouldn't be. =/ Ack.
Welcome to the Future(TM).
David E. Weekly
David E. Weekly
Code / Think / Teach / Learn
h4x0r for
Funny how it doesn't actually work this way. I wonder why that could be?
Because people wouldn't pay $15 for a CD-R copy of the CD, and they don't have the facilities for the silkscreen and printing to make full-fledged duplicate?
Oh, right, and the IP laws. But what does IP law have to do with loss? It just says you can or can't do, not what the CD store loses if robbed. And, technically, what they lost was a CD worth $15. That $15 is a ridiculous price for that product is a secondary issue.
And the fact remains, if you steal something from a CD store, they lost _something_ while copying an mp3 causes no loss at all.
The enemies of Democracy are
Let's have a 'Day of Shame' and email all of our criminal mp3's back to the record companies.
We're sorry you can have them back now. I hope Don Henley didn't lose his house.
this is a big problem. if I am going to be paying for it I want it to be encoded in 256+k and I want it to be in prestine condition, no crackles, no pops, no sound distortion... I have a feeling that none of this will happen. In fact, I know this won't happen. Napster will not claim any guarntee, they are too smart for that (scary I know).
at least when it was free there was no worries about quality.. If it sucked you just downloaded another one..
I think someone should do something to IRC and make it a Napster like service.. I wish I had the techie knowhow. I am quite able to get DCC's on IRC, but are others?
I only support the artists that allow the free trade of their music, and I suggest everyone else follow my lead (and push for your favorite artist to do the same). Hippy music has a tendency to be free to the listeners.. Why shouldn't all music?
You could atleast make it a link!
Since Linus and Larry have plenty of copyrighted stuff, it's only natural that they want to see it given all due protection. Hard to fault them for that, really.
I think the average Slashdot reader isn't averse to paying money for music. I certainly have no problem with it. If I could plunk down a reasonable amount of money to get some rare discs I've been looking for, I'd do it in a second rather than rely on lossy mp3s.
What *does* tend to piss off the Slashdot folk is the RIAA's heavy-handed attempts to try and shove excessive control down our collective throats with the use of SDMI, control schemes and other unpleasantries that try to get in the way of enjoying the music we can simply pay for right now.
Ita erat quando hic adveni.
...It will actually do us some good, showing that net distribution controlled by the broadcasting/distribution monopolists is not a viable business model.
--
Life's a bitch but somebody's gotta do it.
I honest to God wouldn't mind paying a small fee every month for the songs I want to listen. As long as I get good quality complete files, I would be happy. However I think there are quite a few things that are going to prevent this from happening.. in no particular order, they are
(a) Given the current mindset of the record labels, I am sure that they will not get anywhere near what I (and you) think is a reasonable price.
(b) I doubt we are going to see a wide variety of songs out there anytime soon... everything from Paul Oakenfold to Mandalay to Ademius to .
(c) I want to be able to transfer all my songs to portable players. I want to hear it at my convenience and not where the record companies dictate. Everything I read seems like they want their way.
If these problemscould be overcome, I would be amongst the first to sign up.
What Would Linus Do?
There's a pretty big intersect between the usual pro-Linus and pro-Napster segments here. (And by pro-Napster, I don't mean only Napster, I'm talking about the general idea that people should be able to download any music they want at anytime, whether they've ever purchased it or not.) I've never really seen it resolved, though, nor has their been too much friction between the groups.
Just as an example, here are some quotes from a couple of Slashdot darlings:
Although both guys often make for good soundbites, I don't expect those two quotes to be making the top ten lists of their fans anytime soon. :)
Cheers,
I've thought from the start that Napster should have cut a deal with the corps to be thier digital music distribution channel, but it didn't happen that way, instead the RIAA and Napster got nasty with each other and the Napster users are hurt.
I bet Napster would've loved to cut a deal. The problem is, if you went to the labels and said "Let's distribute music over the Internet" they would hem and haw and demand that you be "secure" and be afraid of letting the distribution channel be controlled by anyone but themselves. Basically they'd stall and ignore you and hope the whole subject went away.
So the only way Napster could get the labels' attention--and mp3.com before them--was to just make the service and present it as a fait accompli. Then the labels were at least awakened to the fact that digital distribution was going to happen, one way or another. But they still didn't want to give these startups power over a distribution channel, so instead of cutting a deal, they sued. These lawsuits are another stalling tactic, another way to keep things uncertain until the labels can get their own distribution channels in place.
If things are reasonably priced and quality is guaranteed.
I hope they're not going to charge me to download a file just because it has 'Metallica' in the filename, even though it was recorded by some kid off of his AM radio over a microphone plugged into his sound card.
I like the angle on yahoo much better:
s te r_deal.html
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ap/20010606/tc/nap
--------------------------- Politics, Religion, and Sex... Which one do you practice most?
You are not paying for bandwidth AND the cd you bought.
Fallacy 1
If it weren't for Napster I would not be paying for bandwidth.
Of course you would. How do yu download all your porn? You pay for gas to go to the store and buy stuff, go to the movies, or pick up your date. Should all the retailers give you a discount because you had to pay to get there? It is a fact of life that you pay for the highway whether you use it or not. If you only use your bw for Napster then yes, go to the store and just buy the CD. Ooopss...I just used gas. Get over the fact that you bought the bw for email, surfing, napster, IRC, AIM, telnet, DDoS, etc. You buy electricity too.
Fallacy 2
To share CD's I already bought.
Come on people. Stop this lie. You do not go on Napster to download a song you already have. It would be faster and more reliable to rip it yourself. You download stuff you don't have. Few people borrow a paperback from the library, read it, and go buy the thing if they like it. What they are actually doing is sharing their own bought files because...well they want to share them so others do not have to pay for them. I am not paying to share my files. I am paying to download other people's files. If I don't share them then I am not paying to stream them. But, if everyone does this then there will be no files on Napster! What am I paying for? The search engine. Solution? Napster needs to host some songs themselves.
You see, if we are paying we don't want to share. If we are stealing we want to help others do the same. In the end everyone is whining about a cool service that let them get free music going away. The truth is in the juvenille statement "see you on gnutella." Just buy a goddamn CD once in a while. The real proof will be when MP3.com offers mp3's online for purchase and download. If their service does nto take off then the music industry will have been right. We don't really want to pay for it.
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Twisted Little Gnome - The Podcasting Network http://www.twistedlittlegnome.com
It is only wrong to make an unauthorized copy of a digital work if you did not intend to purchase the work in the first place.
i.e., I wouldn't have paid for it, but if I can get it for free, sure.
I'd say the exact opposite. It's only wrong to make an unauthorized copy if you were going to pay for it. In that case, you're depriving the copyright owner of revenues. Otherwise, there's no loss to them.
I think you mean "I grammer don't care about".
[Most of you already know what greedy-ol' Jim Ray is going to say, but I have to say it anyway and I don't care if I'm moderated down.]
/. reader can obtain a free click of e-gold from me by sending me an account number. It benefits me for programmer-types to play with my favorite currency so I don't mind. Thanks.
I can show artists a system that (largely) cuts out any middleman right now, and will lead to (and become the base for) systems that completely do it, like (but not limited-to) ecoin, digigold, and maybe even PayPal (if they're ever profitable, that is...). The demise of Napster, if it happens, will mean very little if I'm right, but it's going to require some new-thinking on all sides.
IMO, to get the full benefit of happy consumers, musicians are going to have to do as Courtney Love said and go to a worldwide-tipjar model that relies on voluntary payments from honest listeners. There will be enough honest listeners to make this worthwhile, even if everyone's not perfectly-honest. For example, I leave nice tips while traveling, even if I know I'm never returning to a place. Part of this has to do with having once had a job that relied on tips, but I think most folks do the same (dare I say it's "good karma" to tip?).
People are used to getting something now for free, and that means the days of $15 CDs' profits sending promoters to Scores while only giving the artists a pittance are over. Fans will voluntarily pay (less, but not nothing) only for non-crappy music, so the days of getting away with bundling it with crappy music are also over. Artists are about to see an age of VERY direct feedback from fans, whether they like it or not. For me, it can't happen soon enough. There will be winners and losers, of course, but overall joe sixpack is going to benefit along with joe musician, while joe promoter busily looks for another sinecure-job and the RIAA bites the dust (good riddance!). The variety of music listened-to will probably VASTLY increase over the next few years, as AOLers discover what more technically-proficient users already know.
Will this all be perfect and utopian and theft-free and wonderful? No. Will it be a better deal than everyone's getting right now from the RIAA quintopoly? Probably so, at least I think it will, but I'm obviously biased-as-hell on this issue, and I'm (as always) speaking only for myself, YMMV, etc.
JMR
PS. Once again, any
Try e-gold - (contact me). I'm NOT e-
So explain to me how the fact that there is a legal difference between infringement and theft makes any real difference to my argument.
Infringement is just as illegal as theft last time I looked. The fact that either can result in being put in prison and made to be a bad man's boyfriend is sufficient for me.
Split hairs as much as you like - my comment is still valid if you replace every instance on 'steal' with 'willfully infringe on copyright'.
Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means
I agree, however you still find that the digital fingerprints can be removed and probably quite easily once you know what you are looking for. Preventing players from playing tunes without a digital fingerprint is tough because you then limit the players to tunes that have been published by someone with the technology to create a fingerprint, so in the end you end up with consumer backlash because their new player doesn't play existing music.
The problem is there is no backward and forward compatible solution that is both fair to users (ie lets them play their music in any device they own) and fair to producers (ie makes it difficult for people to redistribute without paying royalties).
Of course, the software industry has faced this problem for a while and has pretty much come up with the solution of targetting the major offenders and letting minor piracy slip. This is potentially the answer for the record companies - they just have to raise awareness of the fact that redistributing copyrighted material is wrong and get it through to all those college students who think it is their right to get it for free.
Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means
thanks for heads-up, slashdot. maybe later you can tell us about a weather report at cnn.com.
Before anyone bothers to point it out, yes, I know that I misspelled "effect" as "affect."
What's so terrible about that deal? Nobody is forced to sign a recording contract - unknown artists are out there trying desperately to attract the attention of record companies because they want to sell the rights to their songs. If other artists want to distribute their songs online or by mail order instead of going through a record company, then good luck to them. But at the moment most artists want a record deal, so it's nonsense to say that the record companies are exploiting them. If the artists don't like the terms of the contract they won't (or shouldn't) sign.
--
the users pay you *and* for the bandwidth to share the songs they already bought
I can understand that the customer might want to share their bandwidth so that more money can go to their favourite artists, but why should there be a mandatory charge to use Napster on top of the service you already provide?
Also, why should the customer have to pay the Recording Industry Association of America twice: once to download a file from Napster, and then again to buy recordable audio CDs to burn it on to? Surely if you've paid for one, the other should no longer be required.
It all looks a bit silly from the viewpoint of a foreigner. Sorry if I've stated the obvious.
I had thought that Napster was going to fight this out to the bitter end. Have they even gone to appeals court yet? I had been looking forward to watching someone with the support of the public, and of money standing up to the big media groups. I'm aware that pirating music is wrong and don't argue that, I had just been under the impression that Napster was going to fight things out as a simple music-sharing service, not something that promotes piracy.
Be the Ultimate Ninja! Play Billy Vs. SNAKEMAN today!
WHAT YOU SAY!!!
- j
well as i'm sure you've heard people say before (slashdot editors included), "I don't care about grammar." and it's true: there is no reason to care about grammar.
... except of course if you want people to understand what you're writing.
- j
Hey, don't legions of indie rockers obsess over Radiohead? Go on Napster and do a few searches under Radiohead and you'll see. Didn't caravans of fans follow around Phish (including all the old dead heads after Jerry Garcia died)? Go on Napster and you'll find a shitload of phish bootlegs just like the Dead had. Weren't the beatles initially written off as pop trash and boring guitar music?
The fact remains that people still like music, some of it is innovative (Radiohead), some of it is obsessive (Phish), and some of it is still pop trash (Destiny's Child) but that doesn't mean that they'll stay pop trash forever. Not that I think Destiny's Child is going to be the next beatles, but the parent is simply ignoring both the musical realities of today and yesterday.
I don't think you realize how big those old bands actually were because you've been caught in that fun little distortion field that says everyone around listened to Zepplin and the Dead and all those other bands, which isn't any more true than saying everyone listens to the Backstreet boys now.
"I may not have morals, but I have standards."
"I may not have morals, but I have standards."
While I totally agree that artists should own their own music and that they are getting screwed royally by the record companies, I think that people underestimate how much the record companies do.
The companies don't just package up a recording and ship it off to the store. They have to hire a producer, pay for the cost of recording and producing the album, pay for the promotional materials such as videos on MTV and recordings for radio stations all over the world, pay for advertisements in magazines and such, and pay to scout out new acts.
That's a pretty hefty list. Now imagine that they do it for a ton of artists, where 1 in 100 is really successful. That's a lot of money that you don't recoup.
Because of all that, the cost of simply distributing music is not enough to pay the middleman, and companies should charge more than the very slim fee you're talking about. The thing is, they won't even get close to this number because they've already gone way above it and they're not going back now that they've got the cash cow.
They could use tools like Napster in order to really lower the costs of promotion, but they only see it as a threat to their bottom line so they're going after them full bore.
The other cause of this is the "big hit" model of record sales, where you rely on a band to put out one huge single to move volumes of records in order to recoup any other losses. Ideally, and this is what they used to do more, is that a company will invest in an artist to grow them a fan base and make them profitable overall. These kinds of artists don't sell in the mainstream, but don't put out the singles either and still sell a respectable amount of records. These kinds of artists aren't the cash cows of the industry who are gone 5 years later, but the bands who have a solid fanbase and sell records slowly over the longterm and wind up producing a solid back catalog. Developing artists like this costs a fair amount to start (although not as much as it does to launch a major hit band) but they wind up being solid profit columns on the balance sheet.
If the recording industry used Napster et al. in order to grow these kinds of artists for the long term they wouldn't be so worried about people pirating music. But they themselves have developed a very lucrative model based on singles that is now being threatened by mp3 swapping. The fact that they gouge consumers while only trying to give back fluffy one hit wonders is what's going to hurt them, because they didn't help to develop the artists, no one's going to help develop them.
"I may not have morals, but I have standards."
"I may not have morals, but I have standards."
It is only wrong to make an unauthorized copy of a digital work if you did not intend to purchase the work in the first place.
i.e., I wouldn't have paid for it, but if I can get it for free, sure.
(Note that I am not claiming this to be true, it is merely an idea.) Comments?
"Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
"Napster is dead, they killed themselves on the altar of the RIAA, etc., etc., ad nauseam."
Horseturds. Yes, there are many, many Napster clones out there, and yes, many more spring up as soon as the RIAA clamps down on another one. But the reason Napster was so successful even after its would-be demise is because the NAME was known. Napster became that most coveted of all marketing terms, a "household term" amoung those who have computers.
If Napster DOES go legit, and does it quickly, they will undoubtedly find subscribers, depending on the model they choose. (I, personally, would prefer a monthly fee type of deal. Saves having to buy CDs for one or two songs.) Why? People know the name Napster. With some judicious advertising, they could come back.
Don't forget that that silly Napster client is installed on Joe AOL's computer now. Most people wouldn't bother to get rid of it, they'd just delete the shortcut on the desktop and think they'd deleted the program.
So picture this... Napster goes legit, sets up their model, and advertises through the normal channels (banner ads, bribes to portals to be on the front page, even TV and radio ads). Joe AOL says, "Hey, I've already got that!"
Boom. Success, even if not on the same level as it was apparent before.
And CmdrTaco... buying the bandwidth delivers a HELL of a lot more than Napster. Adding the whole cost of Net access to whatever fees are to be imposed by Napster is specious reasoning.
Zaphod B
Zaphod B
When duplication is outlawed, only outlaws will have
I create a song\ =\=\=\=\
i now have the right to distribute that song teh way I want, cause I created it
I have that right
you copy a song of mine without my permission
my right to distribute that song the way I want no longer exists because once you made a copy you took controll from me
I no longer have the right do distribute my song the way I want
i had something, now I don't
And it's all your fault.
=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=
So with this model, you buy the music and then you pay for access to it as well. This is on top of your actual internet access, no? If so, then you're paying for your bandwitdh consumption twice, and your music twice. Nice trick! In fact, almost like...
CELL PHONES!
Here's the model for a land line: You pay for phone access (monthly), and pay for any outgoing calls outside of your local area.
Here's the model for a cell phone: You pay for phone access (monthly), you pay for every call outgoing AND incoming, and then pay EXTRA for outgoing long distance calls.
This is how technology gets taken over by marketing: Introduce a new technology not just at a high price, but using a cost model that provides more long-term profit when you drop the price to 'mass-market' levels.
Conversely, this is how net technology is used to increase prices and profits. Your cell phone plan was designed to correct the inefficiencies of land line telephone service. Nobody would be willing to get double charged on a phone that they've been single-charged on for the last 50 years, but they'll accept different charges when the technology appears different.
"People who do stupid things with hazardous materials often die." -- Jim Davidson on alt.folklore.urban
I remember Chumbawumba (the stupid anarchist band that went nowhere with songs about the revolution, but suddenly had a hit with a song about getting drunk) saying that if you stole their album from the store they'd still get paid, so go ahead and steal it. Stores then proceeded to remove their albums from the shelves. Gee, too bad they only had one hit.
--
Buy CDs. I do. Hell, check out the songs by listening to the ultra-low-fidelity streaming music on Amazon first if you want to avoid bad albums. Scour the Net for MP3s of a few songs from the new album before buying. But, if you want electronic versions of music that are not copy protected, buy CDs and don't even think of buying SACDs or DVD Audio discs.
Refrag
I have a website. It's about Macs.
It really isn't about the music anymore....
:)
Duh, it hasn't been for a long time. Where do you think musicians make thier money (the majority at least)? Album sales? BZZT! Sorry, wrong answer. From live performances and merchandise was the correct answer... Want to support your favorite musicians? Go see them live and buy a T-shirt.
-----
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"The only difference between me and a madman is that I'm not mad." - Salvador Dali (1904-1989)
And another megacorp gets its way in the crazy world of the USian corporate state.
Uh, Napster was a corporation.
In any case, you have it exactly backwards. This proves that a rogue corporation like Napster determined to rip off people can and will be brought to justice, despite their protestations that they don't support piracy.
I'm not a huge fan of the music industry (I wish they would allow me to buy electronic versions of music that are not copy restricted), but in no way was Napster the good guy. If you facilitate people breaking the law, you are no better than the people breaking it.
--
Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
Come on, let's not pretend here.
:)
Okay, I won't..
The reason the what's-his-name invented Napster in the first place was so his l33t buddies could get the songs they want.
I wasn't there, and I did not know this.. have a link?
Even if you buy into this ludicrous "hey, all we want is our users to exchange legal songs", you can't deny that 99.9% of all activity was illegal.
I personally never used it for an illegal purpose.. The only songs I downloaded using Napster were to recreate old cd's that I had had for years and eventually became to scratched to be usable.. Perhaps some activity was illegal... but then again perhaps some wasn't.. why should the tool be baned when it did have legal uses? The illegal users should definately be punished.. but a tool is a tool... treat it as such.. no tool should ever be made illegal because it's uses could possible be illegal.. stop the people from breaking the law.. don't take away legitimate (or even non-legitimate) tools.. i.e. don't intrude on MY freedom because someone else broke the law...
Not to mention that Napster has been totally abandoned once the heavy duty filtering was in place. If Napster was primarily legigitimate, then that should have made almost no difference in traffic, right?
Wrong.. this is a prime example of my point above.. the filtering assumed EVERYONE was breaking the law, so the legitimate uses were destroyed because someone could use it for illegal purposes.. the filtering killed the service for the legitimate users because it stoped file sharing without discrimenation of the legality of the downloads.. A prime example of someone destroying my freedoms because someone else broke the law..
I thought someone said there was going to be free beer!
If you facilitate people breaking the law, you are no better than the people breaking it.
This is so incorrect that it frightens me.. you are condoning thought police. You are saying that because a tool (one that has a perfectly legitament use) can be used to break the law it should be illegal.
Last week I robbed a store with a friend of mine.. he put on a stocking cap and walked into the store with a gun.. he held the clerk at gun point and demanded all of the money in the store.. he then walked out of the store and got into my honda civic and we drove off..
Obviously this didn't really happen.. but if it did by your logic guns can be used to facilitate crime and should be illegal.. however, Stocking Caps and Cars can also be used to facilitate crime, so if Honda doesn't immediately shut their doors and stop producing vehicles they are no better than my fictional robbers. In fact, Napster specifically requires you to agree to the fact that you wont use their software illegally before you are allowed to use it.. when I bought my Honda no one asked if I was going to use it as a get away vehicle for a store robbery.. they didn't in the slightest way even recommend that I not use it illegally..
I'm sorry but there used to be an old cliche 'innocent until proven guilty'.. that no longer applies.. this case proves that just because a legitament tool CAN be used illegally, that it will be assumed that all uses are illegal and the tool is contra-ban.. think about that next time you drive down the street in your potential law breaking apparatus.. The thought police ARE coming, and they will be here soon.. it all starts with the recovation of innocent until proven guilty, which is clearly the presidence that this case sets..
I thought someone said there was going to be free beer!
And another megacorp gets its way in the crazy world of the USian corporate state. When will people learn that the rampant abuse of power by massive conglomerates is an inevitable slippery slope leading to a police state ruled by corporate warlords?
Napster was a bold venture that stood up to the current regime, allowing people to reclaim their rights in the face of adversary from conglomerates answerable only to their bottom line. And the toothless US government has once again shown that it is nothing other than the tool of the capitalist elite, rather than the defender of the rights of the majority.
I hear a lot about the tragedy of the commons with respect to government. But today we have the exact reverse - the tragedy of the elite. No longer does the majority have its way, instead the chosen few dictate the future of millions through their control over every essential resource.
And anyone that thinks that art is not essential to the well-being of a society is missing one of the wonders of humanity. Unfortunately, when art is subverted to serve the capitalist rulers, humanity suffers as a result.
That said, I noticed that the other major vendor in this deal is Real. I suspect they're going to kill mp3s and try to shove secured RealAudio streams down Napster's users' throats. Sure, you'll have these RealAudio clips on your desktop that you've paid for via subscription, but am I wrong in thinking that RealAudio sucks compared to mp3, which isn't even that good compared to regular .wav audio? I wonder how that'll fly with Napster's userbase.
Next, since quitting Napster, I've been ripping CDs from both the local library (in Cincinnati) and my friends to mp3, and have recently started using Bearshare (de-spywared) to grab the occasional track I don't have. If the Record Industry believes non-techie people will shell out bucks for RealAudio via Napster when they can freely use BearShare or AudioGalaxy, I believe they're mistaken.
Last, as an observation, the desire to download tons of free music from Napster starting in early 2000 has resulted in benefit to the following industries, if not totally the RIAA:
Last, the RIAA has earned my eternal emnity, so voting with my dollars, I will not buy from them ever again unless you count checking out library copies.
Of course I realize I'm a hypocrite on many counts, but I'll live with that (no one else has to).
Cheers.
Bearshare (windows gnutella client) rocks. I can find just about anything I am looking for.
I can pay however much ($5.00 US wasn't it? I don't think the article said) to Napster for the privalege of using their once free service, which does nothing more than let me trade MP3's with other users who are doing the same.
I currently have a $19.95/month service through Newsfeeds (http://www.newsfeeds.com) that gives me high speed (50-80 k/s) access to about a dozen different NNTP servers, each of which is dedicated to a different topic or service, such as MP3's, Multimedia (All the fansubbed anime you can stomach!), Discussion w/Spamfilter, Anonymous postting, etc...
Being that MP3's on Usenet are typically ripped and encoded by people who know what they're doing, and the feed from Newsfeeds is usually pretty complete and error free, *and* I get to download several hundred megabytes of anime, movies, and the discussion groups I visit every day, I think I'm getting a better deal.
Feel free to disagree, however...
The next Slashdot story will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and slashdot the links early!
I think no one expects me to say this: I hate napster. I've downloaded, and shared songs I had no right to, but the problem with Napster is - it made these practice main stream. I didn't go over board, I couldn't - and the main reason I didn't download a lot of crap, and full albums and etc. is because I knew what I was doing was wrong. When people whispered Napster to me - people who don't even own computers that asked if I used it, I said to them: "I have to be against this, it's a service that promotes piracy - point blank." Even though I'm guilty of downloading and sharing MP3's I couldn't support a service, (a huge public service) which is based on downloading or distributing files that you don't have the right to. Anyone who is really kewl, not an elite way, but in a common sense way, should know the service wouldn't last long or you were being set up for the kill. Lets just pay like 3 cents a song and have banner ads or something and make it legit - sure! But who really expects a file sharing service like napster to be legal. I never even used napster except once, and really it pales in comparison to other file sharing services. Lets set up a business model for bands to make cash, sure - but don't screw us, thats all I ask. Don't forget, people have shared files way before Napster started. If I want it I'll find it. But people get over it - there is a million other services popping up. Besides if were really kewl, you'd download songs from USENET or some other ancient service. My two...
Get your Unix fortune now!
Does this mean that Napster may start hosting songs on their servers, so that paying users won't have to worry about people signing off in the middle of uploads?
by far is the fact that napster will not be distributing mp3's that you can do what you want with. You will not be burning cd's with any music you get from napster. It sounds like a pay per play kind of basis which is no good for anyone but the record companies. Make sure to check out www.emusic.com for real mp3's where the artists get compensated directly. Here is an excerpt from http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/so/20010606/en/napste r_strikes_deal_with_three_major_labels_1.html
Napster plans to license the music through MusicNet, the joint venture formed by the three labels in April in order to make their music available online (see). When the subscription service launches, users who pay Napster's regular subscription fee -- previously estimated at $4.95 a month -- will not get access to major-label content and will be limited to trading indie-label music, CEO Hank Barry said in a press conference Tuesday evening (June 5). In order to get MusicNet content -- which will apparently be available only from MusicNet's centralized servers, not through Napster's traditional file-sharing methods -- users will have to pay an additional monthly fee. That fee is expected to be around the cost of a single CD, MusicNet CEO Rob Glaser said. MusicNet will provide both streaming and downloadable music, but only in a yet-to-be-specified secure format, not as MP3s.
Why will a monthly fee be such a bad thing? Isn't this what everyone's been whining for? A new paradigm for buying music in which you don't pay for stuff you don't like. You don't have to buy that entire Britney album any more, you can just download the one song you like.
From what I understand, the scheme will be a flat rate of some sort, in which case you can download as much stuff as you'd like for one fee. That seems reasonable, so long as the flat fee isn't exorbitant. Even if it is a pay-per-download fee, it's still a good thing so long as it's fair.
I mean, kripes, isn't this what everyone's been screaming for? You can download anything, on demand, for a (presumably) reasonable cost. You get only what you want. It may seem like a loss for Napster on the surface, but it really seems like a win to me because the labels are slowly agreeing to the unheard-of model of Internet music sales w/o a "secure" music format. So in a sense Napster has won.
Assuming the selection of music on Napster is as broad as it once was when this new scheme kicks in, the only users who will stop using it are those who just want free music, or people who don't buy enough music to justify paying a monthly fee. I hope they've thought the business model through well enough to address the latter case.
Also, rumor has it that they will discount the rate for users who make their MP3 files available for download by other Napster users. Could be a false rumor, but it would address the issue of people giving away their bandwidth to help out Napster.
It seems Napster and it's corporate sponsors really think people have some sort of lingering sympathy for them. They think if they use Napster to sell music access they can tap into the huge userbase. Well, surprise, surprise, there will be no more users. I hope they waste a lot of money promoting this.
I think I'll stop here.
I honestly wouldn't mind paying a little cash to download a song, I think the artists deserve something (I know, I know, not that it goes to the artist anyway, but it's a nice thought, huh?) It's the convinience of going and getting a song and having it on my computer I like, not the fact that it's free, that's nice too but it just doesn't feel right to me still. Now paying for the "privilege" of having a song up for sharing, that's a little weird.
Any news on when this whole bad napster bit is going to hit the other sites doing similar actions? Audiogalaxy is still alive and well, I can get all kinds of Metallica (or Metallicka, in this case, ha ha) there.
spacefem.com
-----------------
"Bloody marvelous."
Who are they kidding? They are going to get people to pay for MP3's that
1. Are of lower bitrate quality (They might cap bitrate to 96kbps)
2. Cannot be copied, archived, etc.
The main selling point of Napster is its ease of use. Once people get a little more savvy, they will discover the alternatives, like Music City and Gnutella.
By the way, they even closed the Forum down. Very disappointing to a now ex-Forum regular.
This will never happen... Old bands and old music, as well as many new music and new bands are owned by crochity old RIAAsympathizing-onlycareaboutthe$$$-matchbox20lov ing-lovethenewMetallicaalbum-wouldn'tknowgoodmusic ifitbitthemintheass- people who will never release their songs to Napster, especially not now.
The way I see it, Napster paved the way for a whole new type of music consumption, and new bands and music will be distributed differently, using all these other similar technologies that will benefit from what Napster has done... but do it correctly. These Record industry peeps are suckers, but they're smart enough to know when they lose money, they lose their jobs. I look forward to the day when the bandwidth is available for individuals to really cut out the middle-men all together.
be realistic
Don't be too sure about that.
A former colleague used to be one of the sysadmins at one of the -- if not the -- largest sexually explicit server farms in the world (they're in Seattle; wish I could remember the name). These guys can assemble any kind of explicit site you want, filled to the brim with pictures, in under 24 hours. These guys apparently generate over two gigabytes a day just in server logs.
These guys have a database. A massive database. In this database is every picture on their server farm, with information on who the copyright holder is, who the photographer is, who the subjects are and their ages, when it was taken, how many times it's been viewed and from where, how much money has been charged to view it, etc. etc. etc. etc.
If an image previously thought to be public domain or otherwise unencumbered turns out to be copyrighted, they have the logs and database records to make sure they receive back-royalties.
There's a real industry here. Despite it's "unsavory" nature to the general public, any decentralized distribution of their "property" in noticable volumes will get you smacked down. (Due to rapid article expiration and non-existent searching capabilities, USENET does not constitute noticable volumes.)
BTW, most of the people who stand to lose Real Money(TM) in the sexually explicit image industry have a very different way of doing business. They don't send threatening letters. They don't sue you. They just come 'round in the dead of night and break your knees.
Schwab
Editor, A1-AAA AmeriCaptions
it is wether or not you can walk into the proverbial store, grab a CD, and walk out without paying for it.
There is no store, and no CD. Not even a proverbial one.
When you take a CD from a store, that store has one less CD to sell. When you copy an mp3, no one has lost anything. The only thing "lost", and I put that in quotes because you can't lose something you never had, is a potential sale. But even that isn't lost, because as you say:
Napster "Generates sales" to some extent, many people download songs from artists they would never, ever buy albums from.
So, if the person downloads a song that they never, ever would have bought, and no store or retail outlet has lost any of their merchandise to sell to others, what exactly is the problem?
Oh, wait, it's illegal.
Let me tell you something flat out: When the cops aren't watching, I don't give a shit if something is illegal or not. I base my actions on what is moral. Our laws are so fucked, the two (legality and morality) seem to overlap only by coincidence.
Do I think copying is moral? Well, okay, I've been trained to think I should pay for my entertainment, so maybe I don't. That's why I've never used Napster. But I don't think it is so bad that I can't greatly sympathize with what is essentially a reaction to the industry stranglehold on creativity, their gouging of consumers and relentless efforts to hold back technological progress in the name of maximizing their own profits.
And on the scale of morality which I adhere to, causing a corporation to have non-maximal profits means nothing at all to me.
The enemies of Democracy are
from nytimes:
Napster in a new agreement with the recording industry is changing direction using an entirely new version of peer-to-peer technology. According to Napster's VP of Marketing Ken Philps, users wont need to download the Napster client for this service. In fact, they won't need a computer at all. Napster is using the recording industry's large distribution network to ship bulk quantities of CDs to buildings around the nation. Napster calls these buildings "Retail Centers." Users get off their asses and drive their cars to the retail center, where they then can purchase a wide variety of their favorite music labels.
"There's no subscription attached to this service. This gives our user a whole new level of flexibility, and allows us to tap into an entirely new market of non-computer users. We believe this new market will grow in years to come, " said Philps.
Someone you trust is one of us.
"It's the perfect model: the users pay you *and* for the bandwidth to share the songs they already bought"
Maybe if the users stopped "sharing" the files with people who did NOT buy them, this wouldn't have been such a big deal to begin with.
"Course I still don't see the benefit for us."
Taco, you must be blind. How is being able to get music digitally, and legitimatly, without actually buying a cd is not a benefit? Not to mention that Individual artists could work with Napster to sell their own music online in such a manner, giving them an easy way to distribute their work via an incredibly popular online service for little cost, without ever getting involved with record companies to begin with?
"No doubt we'll see more of these deals as napster becomes less relevant and decentralized networks grow in popularity."
Not too likely. Given that peer-to-peer networks like GNUtella scale poorly (See the Slashdot story about that here.), Napster is likely to experience a nice rebirth of sorts. Once users realize that they can just buy a few songs they want from record company whores like Britney Spears and J-Lo, instead of getting the less catching songs used as album filler between hits, money-conscious pop fans will jump right back to Napster.
This is just another crappy Slashdot post about the big evil record companies versus Napster, hero of the people and savior of artists. The Slashdot crew posts these because even though they hate the record companies (Rightly so, the record companies and their affects on music are disgusting.), they are too lazy to make a concerted effort to help artists survive independantly. Anyone with a brain knows that Napster is just as sleazy as Sony or BMG, and cares even less about the artists. At least the record companies front musicians money to work with. Napster just wants to leech off of the artists and record companies, growing fat on the blood of artists, as well as the pus and bile that fills the veins of record execs.
If Slashdot really wants to fight the record companies, perhaps they should bring up Prince's successful online music club, or review the work of independent artist Ani DiFranco, both working outside the world of record companies.
Stories like this are the product of laziness. If anything is to become less relevant on the net, it will be Slashdot, as a result of this crap, not Napster.
If you go to download.com, their most popular download is no longer Napster... It's AudioGalaxy.
.mp3 trader goes on.
I believe AudioGalaxy is already filtering some stuff, but when they become the target of the RIAA, something else will become the new fad.
And so the life of the
Yay.
Sorry, you are wrong. After reading about Napster on Slashdot, I began downloading all of the music that I already own.
Believe it or not, I began buying CD's left and right. Right after buying a CD, I would download all of the tracks to support the artist!
I also discovered alot of new independent bands that I never heard of. I'm not quite sure how I found these new artists, since you have to search for a song to download it, but I did. Right after downloading, I clicked the little CDnow button and supported the artists! Sometimes I even mailed money to the artists for no apparent reason!
Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
There was a time when I may have paid for Napster service. That was before overfiltering and the RIAA suing everyone and their grandmother. If the RIAA is going to get a dime from Napster, they wont get one from me.
I'd like to see the artists get paid. I'd also like to see the RIAAers get nut-rot.
I'd like to see the artists own all their own music.
The way I see it is:
The record company can make money selling media- they buy the blank CD for whatever it costs them, the CD case, the paper cover, the plastic wrap, etc... they can jack up the price on the piece of plastic and make a profit on it. They shouldnt get any money from the music itself. That is money that the artist, not the record company, earned.
Therefore, all of the money made from selling just the song itself (an electronic copy from Napster) rightfully belongs to the artist, and NONE of that belongs to the record company, since there is nothing tangible involved in the transactions.
Maybe they can charge for the electrons.
Other than that, the music shouldnt belong to them. They didnt create it.. they should get paid for making music distribution possible. When they have no part in doingthe music distribution (a la napster) they have no right to whatever money is involved. THat should be between the artist, the user, and napster.
-Johnny 5000
The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
its too late now. be a nice dot-com and get in the grave with the others ok? see you on gnutella.
---
"i was saying gnu-rd"
Everyone was claiming that the music industry was doing itself serious long term damage persecuting Napster in the name of saving short term licensing revenue, and now we're seeing that come true.
If the record companies had kept Napster running at full tilt as a honeypot to keep all the users attracted, then just started charging a couple bucks and improved the service with the income, I'd still be using Napster. But they made it suck, so there was incentive to develop competing services, and now the market is fractured. Sure Napster could become popular again, but will it ever see the 80-90% market share it did before? Already the service is seeing a 47% decrease in logins.
The sad thing about all this is that the main problem here is how do we pay the artist? When Napster was dominant there were several interesting solutions to that problem, now who knows?
I think this model would work great if it allowed access to *every* song made. A SuperJukebox, or an Jukebox Super Highway if you will.
Heck, I'd even accept some copy protection on the songs from the JSH, if that means I could get songs from out of print, or pick songs from albums that I don't want.
But it's not going to be that easy, not at first. What this will do is kill Napster. Fine, Napster is alot like a 1850s abolitionist movement, in that they are doing something quasi-legal while calling it a right. Napster had a flawed model and it got into it with the Recording Industry, now it's draging out it's death. The sharing of files that you don't know any media of isn't legal in most of the Industrialized World at this time. That's the fact of it, and Napster was a conduit for piracy.
CmdrTaco says "the users pay you *and* for the bandwidth to share the songs they already bought"...That's not completely accurate. How many people that used Napster have downloaded something they don't own on a physical media? I know I have. That's against the rules in the current system, at least in the system that Napster argued about. Personally if I was Napster I would have yelled about that fair home use law, and the fact that monitoring the sharing of files is invasion of privacy, but no they didn't do that.
I've thought from the start that Napster should have cut a deal with the corps to be thier digital music distribution channel, but it didn't happen that way, instead the RIAA and Napster got nasty with each other and the Napster users are hurt.
But on the Good side, someone else will know not to make the same mistakes as Napster, and eventually, a stable file exchange system will develop.
The problem Napster has is that there is no solution which retains the user's right to copy any music they buy as many times as they like FOR THEIR OWN USE, but prevents them from giving it away to all their friends.
Basically what the record companies need is a technology that allows them to sell music to a user once and that user can then use that music whenever and wherever they want personally. This is fair use, and pretty much what people have at the moment with music stored on physical media. With electronic copies, it is so easy just to copy the bits the whole things becomes unworkable given the fact that people WILL steal music (ie make a copy to give someone else) because it is a soft crime that doesn't leave you feeling bad.
What the technology has to prevent is the creation of more instances of that music for other people.
The only solutions are:
(i) Make everyone have their own personal key (like a social security number) that is required to access their copy of the music. This doesn't work because someone can just give their key to another person (assuming it too is digital). A physical key - like a dongle - has possibilities here but is too cumbersome at the moment to catch on.
(ii) Prevent anyone from accessing the "bits" and control the software. This is what the music industry is trying to do at the moment but it is doomed to failure because there are so many places the "bits" are available - right down to the interface at the sound card. The only way to achieve this is having hardware only decoders with a 'secret' key and a secure algorithm. Even then it is only a matter of time before someone extracts the key and the game is over.
What it comes down to is there is no solution - no matter what the RIAA tries to do they are screwed unless they control 100% of the hardware that can play music. This is simply not a feasible situation for many reasons - most of the commercial and not ethical.
Fear: When you see B8 00 4C CD 21 and know what it means
You're assuming that napsteresque trading is always a legal trade. Lets be realistic - 95% of the trading that went on in the free-range napster days was far, far from legal.
:P
You said it yourself in your title. "Napster going legit". I quote:
legitimate adj. Being in compliance with the law; lawful: a legitimate business.
and then your statement, paraphrased:
"Napster is no longer/becoming less relevant"
indicates to me that your mindset likely also acknowledges that the majority of trading on napster is or rather was indeed, illegal.
The core of this discussion is apparently not wether or not you can share files (Obviously you can. If illegal activities werent being executed on a horrendus scale, the gov't wouldn't care.) it is wether or not you can walk into the proverbial store, grab a CD, and walk out without paying for it.
Napster is the perfect example of a situation where one can get something for free. quite often illegally, and with no accountability. Somewhat like having a descrambler on cable.
If we have indeed found a way to make napster legitimate, i'm more than willing to pay for my entertainment. the way it tends to be in a capitalist society where most forms of entertainment is considered a product.
Napster is a tool. Like any it can be used constructively or destructively. The object on which it acts is the Music industries microeconomy. Napster "Generates sales" to some extent, but many people download songs from artists they would never, ever buy albums from. Do they listen once then throw away? no.
Bands-in-a-box, which are increasingly popular nowadays, tend to operate on the principal of put one or two good singles on a CD. Throw fluff for the rest (to satiate the need to pay songwriters who are contractually obligated to produce sales of $xx.xxx in songs in exchange for pay of $xx.xxx.
Most people don't want the fluff. Most people arent willing to pay for the fluff. This pisses the recording industry off. This pisses the songwriters off (I happen to know a songwriter or two, living in nashville.) There is a bigger picture.
LLAP
It's the perfect model: the users pay you *and* for the bandwidth to share the songs they already bought.
Can we all stop pretending that we already own the cd's whose tracks we download from napster? That is utter bull shit.
I use(d) napster for the following: downloading full CD's that I do not own, and never will, so that I could burn them to audio and listen to them in my car. Everyone I know did the same thing. Now that Napster is worthless, we use other means of doing the same damn thing.
Stealing? Yep. Copyright infringement? Sure, why not. But for everyone (taco) to claim that they only downloaded tracks that they had a legal right to is completely ridiculous, and no one is buying it.
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python -c "x='python -c %sx=%s; print x%%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))%s'; print x%(chr(34),repr(x),chr(34))"
Likewise, Napster is wound-licking after it lost the MP3 wars. It has no chance, because they're failing to realize that the only reason people used Napster was because the common man finally realized that he could get music for free. Now that the comman man knows that, he's not going to go back to paying for it.
Got Rhinos?
the users pay you and for the bandwidth to share the songs they already bought
Maybe I'm just slow today, but I can't make sense of that sentance. Could someone parse it for me? Who or what is the antecedent to "you"? For what are users paying "you" in addition to paying for bandwidth?
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D. Fischer
ShoutingMan.com
Not to mention a perfect model for the industry. If Napster is (as much of us believe it to be) a great promoter of music in general, and the users are the one footing the bill, the industry is basically having promotion of its commodity done FOR it, all expenses paid.
This is pretty much like going to the store and forking over 18$ for a Nike T-shirt, paying for a company to brand their logo on you. If they can pull this off, they're geniuses. Evil genuises, but genuises nonetheless...
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Bleah! Heh heh heh... BLEAH BLEAH!!! Ha ha ha ha...