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Morpheus DOS'd and Moving to Gnutella

wackysootroom writes "According to a message from the CEO of Music City, a group of individuals has launched a DOS attack and tampered with the morpheus network in order to disallow logons to the FastTrack P2P filesharing network through the client. According to the CEO's note, the hack involves changing registry settings on the client's machine (ouch) and rerouting the messages destined for their ad servers. The good news in all of this is that morpheus will be giving up the proprietary FastTrack network for a Gnutella based filsharing system." It's an icky framed page and you have to click through to read the really interesting parts, but it looks to be true. Wonder how Gnutella will handle the growth spike.

22 of 280 comments (clear)

  1. an icky framed page? by scamcdan · · Score: 5, Funny

    who writes like this?? was it gross and cootie-filled too?

  2. Grokster w/o spyware by 3ryon · · Score: 5, Informative

    For the many people (myself included) who are now looking for a different FastTrack client check out this execellent page on how to install Grokster without spyware.

    1. Re:Grokster w/o spyware by Constrain_Me · · Score: 4, Informative

      Since you mentioned it... here's Clean LimeWire Limewire without Spyware.

      features include
      * No spyware, trojans, or viruses
      * No advertisements
      * Bleeding edge core LimeWire components
      * LimeWire setup window during first launch for optimum performance
      * Small installer size (Clean LimeWire=2.1 MBs vs Official LimeWire=3.8 MBs)
      * Clean, friendly installation
      * No registry entries
      * Simple uninstaller included
      * Fully compatible with official LimeWire release.
      * Tested for compatibility within the new Windows XP operating system
      * Fixed several bugs: German install compatibility (includes other countries now, too), improved LimeWire execution, corrected desktop icon, failure of LW to minimize to system tray, & more.

    2. Re:Grokster w/o spyware by kz45 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Since you mentioned it... here's Clean LimeWire [geocities.com] Limewire without Spyware

      Filenavigator is better.

      1) never had any spyware to begin with
      2) searches the gnutella network
      3) searches its own p2p network
      4) fast/many search results

  3. Unframed by GSV+NegotiableEthics · · Score: 4, Informative

    Click here for the unframed version. After a very brief introduction, the main story is here.

  4. Gnucleus... by Canis · · Score: 5, Informative
    Morpheus Preview Edition is basically just Gnucleus, which is a GPL'd Gnutella client for Windows. So you might as well just use Gnucleus -- it's got all the same features (plus some Morpheus PE doesn't appear to have yet -- I guess they must've forked off an earlier version).

    Better still, Gnuclues doesn't have banner adverts, let alone (ick) popups.

  5. Gnutella is Toasting better every day by cameronk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As a longtime Gnugella user, I will be happy to see Morpheus users join the network. Per Metcalfe's law, this should make our network much more valuable. The past few revisions of the Limewire client in particular have made the service much more responsive. Although the experience has not yet surpassed Napster's brightest hour, given a few more months there will be no reason for that original fileshareing service to return. The limewire folks have even opensourced their client. Now, if only half the people reading this comment could pitch in...

    --
    "...What is good for General Motors is good for America." -Charles Wilson, Secretary of Defense and fmr President of GM
  6. Not good for other FastTrack clients by Constrain_Me · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Stating the obvious Having the userbase from Morpheus off FastTrack will cut the ammout of files available to oter FastTrack clients like KaZaa, thus decreasing their popularity, and possibly forcing them to move to a new network. If Gnutella scales well, it would be a good thing, if it doesn't...

  7. Gnutella? by Evro · · Score: 5, Informative
    I wonder why they don't use the giFT network.
    What is giFT, you ask? giFT is an acronym which stands for the GNU Internet File Transfer project. This project is an initiative to attempt to unify the divided peer-to-peer community following Napster's demise. The basic underlying concept of giFT is that there should be no direct connection between the user interface preferred by the user, and the back-end protocol. This is tackled using a collection of several components together:

    src/
    The giFT daemon acts as a "bridge" between multiple backend file sharing protocols, exposing them to the end developer in an easy to understand XML-like interface protocol. Yes, I know what you're thinking "hey, that sounds a lot like Jabber!". Well, you're partly correct. Jabber worked by setting up a finite number of translation servers on the Internet, requiring the user to authenticate with one extra remote server in order to take advantage of this technology. We feel that the task would be better handled by a local daemon that acts transparently to the user, feeding the benefits solely to the developer. The giFT team believes that the best way to improve the state of file sharing on the Internet is to allow developers to take on the complex (and unique) tasks specific to their project, rather than re-inventing the wheel that each interface and network must have.

    OpenFT/
    OpenFT is a p2p network designed to exploit all the functionality giFT supports. Loosely based on FastTrack's design, OpenFT aims to become the new pseudo standard in file trading on the Internet, but we'll settle for Total World Domination.
    --
    rooooar
    1. Re:Gnutella? by cduffy · · Score: 4, Informative

      giFT no longer accesses the FastTrack network. It currently accesses the OpenFT network just fine.

  8. My Impressions by Master+Of+Ninja · · Score: 4, Informative

    I got the new Morpehus client and it does seem to be a less "polished" client (proabably as it is a knocked off version of Gnutella shipped out in a hurry). The system seems quite good (as I have not used Gnutella much) but I think it will take a few days for traffic to pick up to its usual levels. The UI needs to be changed a wee bit as it is slightly confusing. I'm sure multi-source downloads are in (although you can't tell what each source is doing like before) but I'm not sure if their supernode feature is still there. They need the quick filter system in where you can select what media to search for (e.g. music, video, documents).

    One thing that is lacking in Gnutella is metadata - when downloading songs you can't tell how long they are, what album they are from (important when there are many different versions of a song - radio/street/2 step edits etc.), and comments about this. Hopefully this can be added to a new spec of the Gnutella network so all companies using the standard can have a common format.

    I think this will be good for p2p and gnutella: an open standard, which will (hopefully) become better over time. If musiccity really GPLs their work with Gnucleus, everyone should be a winner.

  9. What's the real story here? by Tom7 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't think that Morpheus is telling the whole story.

    Last week they wrote something like, "one of our software providers made updates without telling us that made Morpheus software unable to connect to the network."

    It sounds to me like FastTrack upgraded protocol versions, or something?

    I don't see why Morpheus would voluntarily move to gnutella, since gnutella is quite inferior and their new software is pretty crummy. I've been looking around their forums and everything, but I can't seem to figure out what's actually going on. Anyone know any more info?

    1. Re:What's the real story here? by ckedge · · Score: 4, Interesting

      > I don't think that Morpheus is telling the whole story.

      No shit!! The entire explanation seems a bit wierd to me, a Software Engineer. It feels like a know-nothing higher up threw together three or four buzzwords to come up with some idiotic story.

      Look at this quote:

      According to the CEO's note, the hack involves changing registry settings on the client's machine (ouch) and rerouting the messages destined for their ad servers.

      He could just be talking about individual users who were blocking their Advertisements by using their hosts file!!!!

      This smells. Not that I'm complaining, it was nice while it lasted, and it was "free" as in beer. But now I've got 2-3 GB of partially downloaded files that are useless. (shagrined is the word.)

      Ok, next time, lets use a "free as in freedom" network that doesn't have any centralized login. Do all the uneducated schmucks out there hear me?

    2. Re:What's the real story here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      There could indeed be more to this story than meets the eye. Check out this interesting post to get an idea of some of the mysterious goings on that are allegedly behind the Morpheus switch.

  10. Gnutella is non-proprietary by tunabomber · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The benifits to using gnutella vs fasttrack are what?
    Gnutella is non-proprietary. That's it.

    Gnutella in order to be faster would have to be more centralized.
    This can easily be done, you just have to make sure that more people use software like Clip2 Reflector that makes Gnutella more scaleable. I could easily see Morpheus creating there own version of Reflector that's bolted onto a Gnutella client so that unsuspecting broadband users will turn their computers into "superpeers".

    I dont know, i like decentralized technology but Gnutella is horrible, theres no security (or maybe they finally fixed this?) meaning anyone can see your IP.
    If you're worried about this, use FreeNet.

    Its slow as hell, the design makes it difficult if not impossible to scale.
    Much of the scalability problems of gnutella have been solved- it's just that not enough people are running gnutella software with these improvements. Since Morpheus has such a large user base, they could easily dump software with more advanced capabilities onto the unbathed masses, making the gnutellanet bigger and faster. Better yet, if their using GPL'd software as their initial codebase, the improvements that they implement will be given back to the community so that an intrepid group of coders can remove any adware or spyware "features".

    --

    pi = 3.141592653589793helpimtrappedinauniversefactory71 ...
  11. GPL Violation? by Majix · · Score: 4, Informative

    I just tried the new version... Morpheus Preview Edition is basically an old version of the GPL'ed program Gnucleus. When you install it even displays the GPL as the click-through license.

    They're however not providing the source, not yet at least. The Gnucleus developers claim that Morpheus didn't even bother contacting them before doing this.

  12. Some experiences with the "new" Morpheus Preview by isdnip · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Like most others here, I'm very curious about what really happened to Streamcast's Morpheus network. But in practical terms, I settled for trying for the new "Preview Edition". The Musiccity web site last night said that it would be available "in two hours" and indeed after that page was unchanged for more than two hours, the new edition was on Download.com. I had been thinking about rebooting into Linux but this gave me another reason to stay in Windows. That and my kids' wanting to play more Jimmy Neutron this morning.... The new client is really Gnucleus -- if you mouse over the "M" logo in the Tray, that's what it shows. The client is much more primitive than the old FastTrack one. It doesn't include an integral player, so you can't listen to files as they upload, unless maybe you have WinAmp or something running. It gives no clue about who the other end of a file is, so you can't choose one that's more likely to work, and it doesn't report the MP3 bit rate or ID3 info that you can usually see inside the FastTrack client. The failure rate is high -- most attempts to download just quit after ten seconds, though some wait and Retry and a few actually work. FastTrack was much more reliable in that regard. It also keeps popping up Internet Exploder windows. That's really annoying; I rarely use IE (only for "IE only" sites). It's mostly ads, I'm sure, but the current popups don't even work, causing another annoying distraction. Being Gnutella based, it probably has scaling problems. I'm on a broadband link, which helps, but I know about the basic math problem with Gnutella's original architecture and I don't know what has been done to fix it, in Gnucleus, Limewire or whatever. Again, FastTrack worked really well, and I hope they can merge its best concepts with Gnutella. I realize they had to get this out in a hurry. It's only a "Preview" so it shouldn't be viewed as a finished product. But it does weaken the competitive position of Morpheus.

  13. I know that Kazaa is not performing as well by sam_handelman · · Score: 4, Informative

    I believe that Morpheus is telling the truth, since my personal experiences back them up. I will ramble now:

    Okay, silly man that I am, I had both Morpheus and Kazaa installed on my machine (even though, until recently, they were exactly the same.)

    So, last week, Kazaa, which is what I ordinarily used since I have a sick attraction to the color yellow, stops working well. The number of hits I get for searches drops by about a quarter, when I search successfully at all; for some reason I keep getting booted from the network and having to reconnect. "That's odd" I say to myself. Also, it proceeds to ignore the "maximum uploads" setting in my preferences, which I keep low so that other broadband users can get my files in reasonable time. Personally, I suspect that Kazaa installed some "upgrades" for itself without prompting me (or I clicked through the prompt without noticing, always a possibility); I should probably check timestamps and see. I have it set to prompt before auto-updates, but since it's ignoring some of my preferences I don't know how much I trust that.

    Out of curiosity, I start Morpheus; and I get the message about being unable to connect to the network. So, Morpheus' failure to connect seems to coincide with Kazaa's service collapse - which is exactly what I'd expect given that 90% of the users within four hops of me (New York City) use Morpheus instead of Kazaa.

    Now, I don't know about these DOS attacks / advertisement hacks. I tried to connect to Morpheus several times during this period, and none of my regsitry keys have been fiddled with, at least as far as I can tell. Ad-aware doesn't find anything wrong.

    Okay, back to the conspiracy theory. I assume that the Aussie company that bought Kazaa is trying to crowd Morpheus out. While you and I know this is stupid, to them this must make sense; they think they can get all of Morpheus' old users to switch to Kazaa, boosting their add revenues.

    Given this sort of despicable behavior on their part, I am willing to give Morpheus' the benefit of the doubt: the implication of Morpheus' comments is that someone involved in the Kazaa stack - that is to say, this Australian company that bought Kazaa - is behind whatever attacks occured.

    Personally, I want to see the contract that Morpheus entered into with Kazaa for use of their network/software.

    --
    The good and new comes from no quarter where it is looked for, and is always something different from what is expected.
  14. Re:Excellent, if the gnutella network can scale... by jilles · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's doing fine so far.

    If you go to the limewire site, click on the "network size" menu option and than the "historical", you will get a nice graph of the gnutella network size. You will notice two significant increases in network size over the past few months.

    The first one occured when limewire released their 2.0 client with super peer functionality. Essentially this eliminated most of the scalability issues. The second little bump occured when morpheus released their gnutella client yesterday.

    Right now the graph indicates over 200K nodes in the network. I'm connected to it using the limewire client. I consider this to be one of the best gnutella GUIs but luckily there's plenty of alternatives for those who don't like it.

    Two notable features are missing however (also in the new morpheus client): Browsing someone else's files (like napster used to be able to do, morpheus consistently crashed if I tried to use this feature) and displaying/searching meta information (like album or song name).

    The first feature would require a change to the protocol. Limewire tried to implement it using download slots but generally there are not enough available for this to work. The second feature requires some standard way of handling queries (right now it is unspecified what a gnutella client should do with a query).

    --

    Jilles
  15. Re: The real story here by sam_handelman · · Score: 4, Redundant

    Moderate that post up!

    Just in case no-one does moderate him up, I'm reposting his link with my bonus. I can't be whoring because I'm capped :). All credit due to the guy I'm responding to.

    Excellent journalism here.

    --
    The good and new comes from no quarter where it is looked for, and is always something different from what is expected.
  16. Now I rember... by speedfreak_5 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    from news.zdnet.co.uk, October 2001: "A copy of the legislation proposed by the RIAA last week would appear to have given the group broad latitude to attack file-swappers' computers without suffering any civil liability. No civil liability would result from "any impairment of the availability of data, a program, a system or information, resulting from measures taken by an owner of copyright," the proposed text read. " Speaking of hacking a computer's registry...

    --
    Why yes I am paranoid! Thanks for asking!
  17. READ THIS NOW by billybob · · Score: 5, Informative

    What's really happening (probably).

    I was one of the people who installed kazaa, and after readnig that, it is getting immediately uninstalled.

    --
    Joseph?