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More on Kazaa and Brilliant Digital Spyware

Vertigo01 writes: "There is an interesting article from CNN.com on the current state of the Kazaa controversy, and Brilliant Digital's plans for the future. Interesting quotes from the article include a statement saying that 'Altnet's seeded software [will be] awakened some time in May' and that 'Brilliant is negotiating with music labels and movie studios to market their material as well. The files will be copy-protected in some way, using Microsoft's digital rights management encryption technology.'"

9 of 220 comments (clear)

  1. Kazaa lite! by JustinMWard · · Score: 3, Informative

    Just get Kazaa Lite and stop worrying about all this.

    Where to get Kazaa Lite? Well, on Kazaa, of course.. or you could be a weenie and go to their web page.

    1. Re:Kazaa lite! by JPriest · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not just Kazaa but others are availible or linked from CleanClients.tk

      --
      Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
  2. Re:I am stunned by benjymous · · Score: 3, Informative

    From what I understand, the altnet stuff comes (will come?) piggybacked on the "b3d projector" advert program that the KaZaA installer automatically installs for you (without prompting if this is ok). You can see it briefly at the end of the installer when it pops up its own installation window in the top left of the screen for about half a second.

    KaZaA lite doesn't install this (but it'll still be there if you haven't fully purged an old version of KaZaA from your system. Get adaware for that)

    --
    Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!
  3. Re:How to remove kazaa spyware by benjymous · · Score: 3, Informative

    You need to download refupdate which will download the latest adaware datafiles for you. It's good practice to run this at least once a week to keep the datafiles up to date (and run adaware straight after, of course)

    --
    Help me! I'm turning into a grapefruit!
  4. gift.sourceforge.net by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you haven't already checked out giFT check it out. It is an open source fast track network implmentation. It is no longer able to connect to the Kazaa network because they changed their protocol to come encrypted stuff, but it still rocks.

    Yes it is still under heavy development, and last I checked you still had to grab the code out of CVS.

    Their network needs a lot of users to test the software etc... go head and grab that source!

  5. Re:Spyware is bad, but... by liquidsin · · Score: 3, Informative

    My spare cpu cycles and bandwidth are being used to cure cancer, which I think is a slightly better use of it than for some dipshit's piggyback trojan.

    --
    do not read this line twice.
  6. Sharman Networks wants a copyright tax on ISPs! by musesoft · · Score: 5, Informative

    Most worrisome part of the article: Nikki Hemming, chief executive of Sharman Networks, advocates a copyright tax on all ISPs. So all ISP users will be forced to pay the RIAA!


    And on the copying and fair use front, Hemming is lobbying Congress for an Intellectual Property Use Fee to settle the quandary of responsibility for distributing copyrighted material. The proposal calls for charging ISPs a fee to compensate copyright holders.

    The IPUF would be a "universal levy that would be applied to everyone in the value chain that benefited from the content available" on the KaZaA network, Hemming says.

    In an open letter to Congress, Sharman Networks writes:

    "We suggest that it is time for Congress to step in and halt the 'whack-a-mole' litigation excesses of the music and movie industries through new legislative initiatives that compel content availability, while establishing a compensation scheme that requires a contribution from all the many industry sectors beyond P2P [peer-to-peer] software that benefit from content availability."

  7. If you need help convincing people... by TDScott · · Score: 4, Informative
    Just a quick note - as I always do in these topics - I've written an under-600-word guide to the problem and how to fix it, designed for the uninitiated.

    Pointing people there could save hours of explanation...

  8. Re:Spyware is bad, but... by GungaDan · · Score: 3, Informative
    Or, on the cynical view, your spare CPU cycles are being used by some other faceless corporation to make money in a different field (i.e., medical research). Given that this is the field I work in, I feel comforable in asserting that "curing cancer" is the last thing on the pharmco investors' Borg-like mind. Finding new treatments... that's where the money is. Find the cure and the revenue stream dries up. This is the problem with research now being undertaken mostly by those with a stake in seeing that it never fully succeeds.

    Anyway, I've drifted way offtopic here with my personal biases. The long story short part is that you shouldn't assume any more pure motive on the part of the people sucking your spare bandwidth "to cure cancer" than the people parasitically draining Kazaa users' bandwidth "to make money." The latter may just be more honest.

    --
    Eloi are stupid, throw morlocks at them!