Kazaa Continues to Evolve
Zephy writes "The New York Times (free registration etc.. ) has an article about a new partnership between Kazaa, and Tiscali, the European internet access provider. Seems that Kazaa will carry ads for Tiscali's broadband services in return for a cash 'bounty' when a user signs up for broadband. To quote the article, 'This gives legitimacy to KaZaA.' Also, Cnet has an article about the new Kazaa version which has features designed to help users avoid corrupt or wrong files such as those spread around p2p by the MP/RIAA."
I like to have all of my pr0n named properly
It still has all the nice little trojans and spyware? I'll wait for the lite version.
Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
Is that possible? And how does this give legitimacy to a company that spells its name in mixed case letters? I just love press release speak, says everything, means nothing.
Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
How soon till the RIAA slams Kazaa as long and hard as Napster? Surely they don't think that joining forces with European companies somehow protects them from the long arm of the RIAA?
You can only be young once, but you can be immature forever.
'This gives legitimacy to KaZaA' means the same things as 'This paints a big bulls-eye on KaZaA's back for Rosen & Valenti to shoot at.'
I too agree I use the Kazza lite version and have no problems with it. The only real glitch is when you download movies and find that they are not the ones the titles say they are. I am so sick and tired of downloading eddie murphy movies :-)
The line is what? "Sign up for broadband and you can steal even more music online!"
Sounds legit to me. (end sarcasm)
- SMJ - (It's not just a name: it's a bad aftertaste.)
Wait until Kazaa Lite is released before you go downloading it. Unfortunately www.kazaalite.com doesn't work any more but doa2.host.sk (which is where www.k-lite.tk points to) does.
At the moment they only have 1.7.2 up there, but give them a chance and check back next week.
Avantslash - View Slashdot cleanly on your mobile phone.
Here's the main gist of the article, boiled down into a single rock:
"Under the deal, KaZaA's owner, Sharman Networks Ltd., will advertise high-speed Internet access provided by Tiscali, an Italian Internet provider, to its tens of millions of European users. In return Tiscali, which serves around seven million customers in 15 countries, will pay Sharman a "bounty" for each KaZaA user who signs up for its high-speed access service."
Seems like an OK move for both companies, but I think there are so few people that actually look at and consider banner ads that it won't do much good. On the plus side, Kazaa gets another partner.
It does seem a bit funny that a high speed ISP would partner up with a file-sharing company that eats up all their bandwidth. While some ISPs are figuring out how to ban them, others are joining with them. I hope they have a lot of bandwidth to spare.
Moon Macrosystems. Sun's biggest competitor.
I wonder how long till this system is also exploited to give poor ratings to the real files. Maybe some other alternatives to self moderation can be used.
"There is no teacher but the enemy."-Mazer Rackham
The one time I tried Kazaa, I didn't drop it because of the ads or any of that junk. I don't like it, but that's life. I dropped it, in the end, because every time I tried to download /anything/, it seemed like, the labels were wrong. The filename said one thing, the label said something else, and the thing itself was usually some third thing. I don't /think/ that the MP/RIAA has been masking Eminem as the Indigo Girls claiming to be Ani Difranco, but... I suppose I could be wrong.
'This gives legitimacy to KaZaA'. So does this mean that RIAA/MPAA is going to get off of KaZaA's back about the terabytes of MP3z and Movies and Pr0n that are available on the system? I don't think so. They will be after them more now, since they know that the service has some influx of revenue.
Is there any advantage to kazaa over Gnutella?
There are two types of people; those who divide people into two types of people, and those who don't.
how does this make kazaa more (or less) legit than with other ads?? IIRC kazaa has had ads for soo long time.. onlything worth noting is that they've finally gotten some crc checking(apparently) to get rid of fakes and criplers..
world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
Quick question on the rating system. What's to stop the same people who are
saturating KaZaa with false files to simply rate good files negatively? That
way, they don't even have to flood the network, all they have to do is stomp on
a file at a time and nobody is going to download it to see if it's good or not.
Is the rating system simply going to make it easier for companies to steer
people away from good files?
SealBeater
-- Its survival of the fittest...and we got the fucking guns!!!
The whole problem is that there are companies that, for a price, will flood kazaa with bogus files. What's to keep them from flooding it with bogus ratings too? There may be more legit users than bogus ones, but if the company is determined enough then this measure won't accomplish much, though I do hope it does.
Now, you may think, hey, free warez, porn, and movies ... but I'll bet you don't work for a site with a few hundred technically bright but security-dumb scientists. These folks like open FTP because it makes it easy to collaborate and share data, but they don't like having their disks fill up with blowjob MPEGs.
So if Tiscali can get its warezers and pr0nsters running Kazaa and shoving spyware onto each other's systems all day, maybe they will go away and leave my users' port 21 alone.
As someone who has to do network support, nothing is worse than a computer which has had kazaa and the accompaning spyware installed. That new.net crap ruins the winsock stuff forcing a total reinstall, and those spyware proxys have people complaining about QoS when its the proxy which is providing the crappy service. I await the day we come to /. to bury kazaa, not to praise it.
There are several interesting developments here. For one thing, Tiscali allies with Kazaa - a natural step for them, because after all, they want to sell bandwidth, and why would people need a lot of bandwidth, if there weren't any applications like Kazaa?
Then in the second article, one of the things that's mentioned is that they partner with a music company for which Kazaa is actually the only way it distributes its music. This may be good for Kazaa's legal case, after all Napster seemed to lose mostly because they couldn't show that their networks were used legitimately at all.
On the other hand, I wonder what the judge will think of the new feature against 'bogus music and video files', that are inserted by the record companies to make the network useless. Almost all of those files will make themselves look like songs that are actually illegal to trade, so making a feature to stop them, however useful and natural to make, could be seen as actively helping to download copyrighted stuff.
But I can't really see them winning the case in the US anyway, after Napster.
I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
I make sure every windows machine I own or work on has it.
Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
Spam I report often originates from Tiscali accounts. I wouldnt give them any of my money for that reason.
no sig.
...but if Kazaa evolves to be radioactive and fire-breathing, I'm leaving the island.
"Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
Are they trying to round up all the kiddies on their network, driving bandwidth costs down?
they are promoting bands and videos on the search page but to play them you need to update your DRM software.
seems to me that kazaa could be trying to set it's self up as a media delivery system when palladium and all the copyright protection is implemented.
KaZaa is the biggest piece of shite ever. It shouldn't even warrant this fluff post on /. . Spyware. DNS hijacking. It completely fucked up our DynDNS system with CommonName.
Comparing it to Windows will be a moot point, since El Dorado is going to have a 40% larger code base than XP.
Has anyone released a version that runs on Macs (either OS 9 or OS X)?
I've searched but haven't found anything.
Am I the only person that still uses LimeWire?
LimeWire has less spyware (only has 1 that know about) and it can be easily removed with out messing up limewire itself (unlike kazza). Additionally, if you donate $8 you can get an ad free version.
Limewire is written in Java, and will run on Windows, Macintosh, Linux, Sun, and other computing platforms.
What do you use?
Woohoo, Kazaa joined an affiliate program. Does that that give my favorite pr0n site legitimacy too?
yeah this weekend I have been noticing that their are more corrupt files on limewire.
For my windows music searching, WinMX is my program of choice. No spyware, no ads.
"I'm a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar."
-Hoban Washburn
How the hell do they reckon they can remove the network itself? Without a centralised server they have to kill about 2.4 million peering clients and as long as at least one copy of Kazaa's client software exists somewhere in the world the network can regrow.
In the new version of the software, several partners are highlighted, including Cornerband, a company that explicitly distributes bands' music through Kazaa. ;-)
If anything this gives more legitimancy to Kazaa rather than the bb partner. Isn't unsigned artists geting exposure one of the main pro P2P arguments? Working with loosely affiliated company Altnet, companies buy keywords inside the Kazaa software and ensure that their products show up search results using those keywords.
Uh Oh, looks like free pron is going to be as hard to find on Kazaa as it is on the web
Does anyone else get 99% of their dl requests stonewalled with "more sources needed"? Reminds me of all the failed transfers I had with napster, yet no problems getting mega-rare tracks from AudioGalaxy.
I was hoping with less and less P2P services, people would flock to a common one, hence boosting the available tracks out there.
I always thought this was illegal. I remember back in 1991 when I basically just discovered the internet, I had second thoughts about port scanning. I can see a single probe being not such a big deal, on a single port. However, since P2P is such a big thing, and lilly padding is becoming the way of the future, it seems as if it could all be automated.
It is theoretically possible to block IP scanning almost instantaneously, if there was a protocol that traded information with other clients when it was abused.
Just an idea.
I am currently using KaZaA, and even after 5 mins of use, I realised it was a piece of 3u11$h17! Full of ads, especially (highly) annoying pop-ups that fill the entire screen.
As for Tiscali, I give them the same rating that's been plastered all over AOL (who happened to join with my local cinema, which has been completely AOL-ised)...4r$3!
It's a shame that JaJa is associated with Tiscali.
Comparing it to Windows will be a moot point, since El Dorado is going to have a 40% larger code base than XP.
The new Kazaa version attempts to address these exact issues. They will even reward the users that rate the content with priority when downloading.
Now go away, you over-moderated troll!
Stop the brainwash
Thanks for giving a shitty program like KaZaA so much attention. That way, it focuses the RI/MPAA's efforts on taking it down, while we quietly continue to undermine them. Fuck em both, fuck KaZaA, fuck all the "Sons of Napster." Long Live Freedom.
"KaZaA" and "Lite". http://www.kazaalite.com/
Cleaning up KaZaa ruined machines makes me a decent part time living! :-)
I'd be out of business if it weren't for KaZaa and WebShots... (well, not really, but I'd be out of _easy_ jobs).
Don't worry, I always tell my users not to use these programs after I've cleaned up their messes.
If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
I've been using Kazaa for a few weeks now and I always find that I can almost never get mp3 with a bitrate higher than 128(while with the now defunt napster and audiogalaxy it was quite easy). Why is is that and is it there any way to get higher bitrates? TIA
Here's my Quality Assurance procedure when I buy new records:
1. Browse the reviews for stuff that looks interesting.
2. Jump online and find samplers
3. If samplers are good after about three listens, buy the disc.
I've avoided quite a few downers by following this procedure.
Stop the brainwash
I can't wait for the first time I can't Meta-Moderate because we've been Googled!
By the way, does anyone know if this will solve the slashdot-effect-site-caching issue?
"Lawyers are for sucks."
- Doug McKenzie
Kazaa's new rating feature mimics what my company, Bitzi, has been offering for many months.
Further, our file ratings and metadata is freely reusable in any P2P program or other application, under a DMOZ-like license.
I am currently using KaZaA, and even after 5 mins of use, I realised it was a piece of 3u11$h17! Full of ads, especially (highly) annoying pop-ups that fill the entire screen. Whatever. I use KaAzA too, and I don't get that much shit. You must be a (closet) Netzero user.
Support Israeli punk bands. Man Alive.
If you use a sufficiently zealous firewall/packet logging system checking what's coming out of your system, then you will know if you have any spyware. Surely spyware is only used if it can send the information back somewhere. It might be a real pain to do but would be perfectly possible to packetsniff out any spyware.
And yes you might have to turn down the logging afterwards...
My own approach is not to trust a machine with kazaa on but...
I know this may be a bit offtopic, but its a serious question for me. I love cartoons, not just anime, but cartoons in general, I am over 21 as well, but again for me its just watching an animated TV series.
Anyway, I have seen almost all the anime i could rent (i live near the biggest anime rental store in the midwest) but they arent able to get a lot of anime stuff even legitamately since its all in japanese (its cool to have a rental store employing only people that like anime).
Unfortunately that means they dont have things like the last season of Berserk, or other anime. Is it illegal for me to go on Kaaza and download things that just arent available here in the US?
This has been a big issue for me, I watched spirited away before it was announced to be in the US, Love Hina, Love Hina Again, and multiple other Anime. Is this kind of thing wrong?
What, portscanning? In the U.S. at least, some courts have ruled it legal, whereas some courts have considered it an element of computer crime. I don't know what the case is in Italy.
Sure. Now, tell me how you'll secure this protocol from forgery -- so that when Joe Hacktivist gets pissed off at CNN kowtowing to Red China again, he can't just tell the world that CNN is scanning him and get them cut off the Net.
Think also of the sheer quantity of processing that is involved in maintaining routing tables now, and how fucked-up the Net gets when routers do stupid things or when rogue ISPs (like Above.net) propagate fraudulent routes as a mechanism of censorship.
... Kazaa will carry ads for Tiscali's broadband services in return for a cash 'bounty' ...
Kazaa users are often called pirates, right? In that case, I think they mean booty.
Arr!
The Kazaa webpage does have a new Kazaa 2 download link but it points to the download.com site with the download of only the 1.72 version. !?!?
I use WinMX for all of my file-sharing needs. Not very many people have heard of it, but it's the closest thing I've found to Napster.
yeah thats it and everyone using Kazaa must be a wanabee internet user. Cheers, J
The P2P's GodFather
Tiscali: Hey, we gonna make you an offer you can't refuse...
KazAa: huh?
Tiscali: Our cousins in the US are very powerful, so be a good boy an let's make business...
came exnihilo, going back there soon
Kazaa is not evolving, just doing some deals.
"Evolution" would be something actually changing.
Maybe a workable ratings system?
Maybe getting rid of their ads and spyware?
Maybe... ah forget it.
One more piece of post-Napster junk.
Will someone please inform Sharman Networm^hks that Kazaa is DEAD?
Sig for sale or rent. One previous user. Inquire within.
By this time you'll also find it in used CD stores, thereby getting it for a reasonable price and pissing off the record companies for the lack of a new sale.
You can't be using Kazaa correctly... just in the past week I've downloaded over 10GB. Of course, I haven't been very choosy about it... I've been sucking down every unique AMV I could find...
:-)
But only 2GB in a month? They should be HAPPY you've kept your usage so low.
"I will trust Google to 'do no evil' until the founders no longer run it." Hello Alphabet.
I'm just curious if you would consider my software Andromeda more friendly for your network. It's not like the main P2P networks insofar as you can't really use it as a mass anonymous downloader.
However, you can use it to stream your collection over a local network and/or over the Internet. Basically, it bulds a complete streaming web site from a collection of MP3 files. PHP and ASP versions are available.
There's no spyware, it doesn't need to talk 'outside' of your network, and it transfers over http so there typically aren't firewall hassles.
Best, -Scott
Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
anyone know if a mac version of kazaa is planned?
*** For a better tommorow, change your life today ***
how do you know that Ad-Aware does not put spyware on your computer?
I downloaded and installed Limewire long before I tried Kazaa. It didn't work for me. Nothing I did seemed to help. Downloads just didn't happen.
I installed Kazaa (Lite, natch) and I was downloading straight away.
Besides anyone who knows how to tie their shoes, uses Kazaa Lite, with no adverts (or spyware) for free.
Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
The fasttrack protocol is well designed. It would be nice to see the protocol available on a system which runs the Linux kernel. Its possible to run Kazaa under wine. But it would be better to have a GTK+ or KDE based client to access this network.
It's only wrong if you think it feels wrong.
I personally have no problem sucking down gigs and gigs of movies on P2P networks. It makes me feel good.
Follow your conscience! Mine tells me to download movies.
Another obnixous one is abunch of stupid kids singing to a midi file playing and they disguise their mp3's with names like Metallica-for-whomthebell-tools or Nirvanna-come-as-you-are-accoustic-rare.
What is wrong with these downloaders? If you guys get burned, please do us all a favor and just delete the bad movie and mp3 files?
http://saveie6.com/
Last time I checked they used FastTrack.
Morpheus used to use FastTrack too. Then, one day Sherman networks decided to kill them off. Within a day the entire Morpheus network was gone forcing them to switch to Gnutella instead.
So, if they wanted to they could kill it by killing the FastTrack system.
There is a place to set minimum and maximum bitrates. If you have teenagers, one may have changed the settings for faster downloads. Teens mostly don't care how crappy the audio quality of a tune is, as long as the bass makes the windows rattle.
As NYTimes allows Google News to link directly to its articles (no registration)... Here you go.
I'm a little bit confused. Every bad video file that I've ever seen or downloaded turned out to be pr0n instead of the music video or tv episode I was trying to get.
I sincerly doubt that actions by RIAA and the MPAA influenced the new design anywhere near so much as the kids w/their misnamed pr0n and broken files.
I'm using limewire on the winxp machine and it's linux version of Gnutella on my slashdot friendly machine. - so why is everyone still using kazaa-look-what-i-install-too-software?
Ave Molech Setting
You should add the ability to download files and you will have a *killer* idea! All the traffic would travel over port 80 so your ISP couldn't block you or ban certain ports. All you need is to set up a META TAG generator so that Google can index the files. Then we can use Google as the world's biggest P2P network! Muahahahahahahahahahahahahaha!
That is where the future of P2P is going to be! I'd like to see the assholes at the RIAA/MPAA/BSA shut that shit down!
I remember back in 1991 when I basically just discovered the internet
Oh come, Al Gore did it waaay before that!
Well, you'll be happy to know that you can indeed download files - just right-click a file name in the left-hand column, and choose 'save as'. fwiw, site operators can also configure Andromeda to disable the download links.
As for Google, since Andromeda generates web pages, Google can index that. Again, if you don't want to be indexed, you can run Andromeda behind a password, and/or set up a robots.txt file.
Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
I simply don't understand why /. would even give the time of day to Sharman Networks and their spyware/trojan-infested POS p2p program "KaZaA". The company is clearly using its popularity with the clueless masses who use this p2p application to leverage its own interests. This is nothing but a quick attempt to capitalize on the p2p craze left in the wake of Napster.
Now, of course, there will be avid Kazaa supporters like "Ninenine" (nice porn site there, really classy) chiming in with : "Use Kazaa Lite"; "KAZAA LITE!"; "IT'S TEH BEST I DOWNLOADED 2539287 GIGS with NO SPYWARE". People have to realize, though, that to use even a bastardized client is nonetheless supportive of the company and its crap. Any time that you patronize the Fasttrack network you are supporting spyware, ads, and the invasion of privacy, and you are aligning yourself with the clueless masses that use this crap.
Lastly, why aren't there open-source clients that connect to the fasttrack network? If this p2p network had any value at all, 3rd party open-source clients would be freely allowed to connect to it.
*FUCK* Sharman networks, *FUCK* Kazaa{lite}, and *FUCK* the porn/movie/mp3 kiddies who don't care about the ethical implications of patronizing the wrong things...
I think Kazaa will die like Napster or AudioGalaxy did. Don't use Kazaa. Please try edonkey2000 network. It's free, it's available not only for Windows, and you don't need to watch any commercials.
official (closed source) client: edonkey2000free (GPL) client: mldonkey
free, Windows-only client: emule
ShareReactor community: ShareReactor
just get Soulseek. http://www.slsk.org it's not a polished as kazaa, but it has all the music, all the porn, etc.. with none of the ads, and a version in python
Try finding some good jazz at a higher bitrate on there. I'm finding that unless you like whatever's popular with the kids these days you're pretty much screwed on the p2p networks. Oh how I miss Audiogalaxy.
Keep Austin Weird!
Would be nice to not need windows for anything..
---- Booth was a patriot ----
It's "wanton", not "wonton."
:(
Off topic but I truly miss east coast Chinese Wonton soup. Chinese food is *terrible* out west. I miss going to WoHops in China Town in NYC.
A little theory in steps:
http://www.kazaa.com/us/services/altnet.htm)
RIAA satisfied, Tiscali satified, Altnet satified, Kazaa satisfied.
The BIIIGG question is: which US provider will join Tiscali?
And I thought about this in 5 mins. Imagine what schemes you will think if you're having a couple of months. This Italian family is NOT crazy (heck, they bought the much larger World Online a couple of years ago).
--
Regards,
Marko
(argus AT dds . nl)
...it evolves into an OS X version?
Please?
(There is a serious lack of P2P software on OS X, all help is appreciated)
Hey, its works on slashdot, it can work on kazaa. Meta moderation keeps the trolls from abusing their moderation power, it can stop the RIAA too.
Gordon's post wasn't offtopic, in fact the Bitzi system is exactly the sort of functionality the article is talking about. I think it's too bad that Kazaa's developers didn't implement the existing solution, a solution which has already shown up in other apps like Bearshare and eDonkey.
A "standard" for metadata would be a great thing for p2p IMO.
What the fuck are you doing on Kazaa to get Anime? Get Hotline, then after a while when you have accounts on good servers, you can download the latest anime a few days after the DVD comes out... in Japan. Of course, it requires a bit more effort since you have to fill people's request and find servers, but it's well worth it.
Karma: Could be worse (could be raining)
1. I tell Norton internet security that 1214 is a web port so it filters for ads & viruses. 2. I run XP and log in as an unpriviledged user and deny myself write access to the directories where Kazaa keeps its advertising. Works for me! :-P
In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
The new version is sluggish and seems to have memory leaks... the database system they use for your files information freeze the whole program for a few seconds to a minute everytime you modify a file or enter a new folder... and after a few hours running the task manager tells me Kazaa is taking up 43 MB in memory. What's this, a fucking BETA?
Karma: Could be worse (could be raining)
mozilla has built-in popup killer. 1.2 has solved the speed issues. I've been using mozilla off and on since milestone 8. Mostly off. I used to think it was the bloated, most unusable piece of crap. I've changed my mind. It may be a little bloated, but it is very usable.
Given the well-established evilness of KaZaA, is there any free (speech, not beer) client for the network? (I don't do Windows, so the `lite' version won't cut it, ideological issues aside.) In my experience, the Gnutella network is much poorer in content than the Fasttrack one, but I'm not willing to run Windows to access it.
In principio creauit Linus Linucem.
In case you haven't put some hard thought into it yet, there _are_ uses for the Kazaa network besides prOn and piracy.
Propagating classical literature is one such example. There is a site called Project Gutenberg (promo.net/pg) whose FTP sites contain about 4.5 GB each of audio, text, and images of just about anything imaginable, chronicled from about 4,000 years of human history. Most (and nearly all) of this has long been in the public domain.
When I first started downloading this stuff, most of the FTP servers were either dead slow - or down - at the time, so I did it via P2P and ended up finding what I wanted.
If you honestly think this cannot be called "legitimate use", then I do not know what qualifies as such, and you do not deserve the privilege of using a computer or reading a book.
Actually, "yours" is defined by the legal system, so, no, it isn't yours.
You have the right to own and listen to your copy, though. You also have a few other specifically granted rights. But you do not hold the copyright on the music, which is the mark of ownership of that music.
You do own the raw CD, and you could melt it and then do whatever you like with the raw materials...but you do not have ownership of the data that comes pre-recorded on the CD.
May we never see th
Until it is shown that most people pirate content that they either already own, have owned or purchase legally in the future....
Riiight.
Also, purchasing in the future does not make pirating the song legal. It also makes sense not to have that make it legal -- to some degree, you decrease the value of the song by listening to it, since the best time is the first time. Also, the artist/company does not have your money in the meantime, and cannot be using the money to produce more goods or earn interest.
It doesn't matter what you're doing is even in the RIAA or even artists' best interests -- it's still illegal.
Now, whether you're concerned over whether what you do is a crime is your own concern...
May we never see th
Yes. The network was not originally based around a single central point of failure, but in an effort to make money, the Kazaa people added a centralized authentication system in. If this point is shut down, the entire network goes down.
May we never see th
It's there. Here's the link
(note: I hope they survive the slashdotting)
Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
What more evidence do you creationists need?
From the article:
/.ers can write a small program that defeats it, so what stops the RIAA?
'Kazaa's new software allows people to rate files so that corrupt or false files will quickly collect ratings poor enough to warn people away from downloading them. It also comes with a setting called "filter bogus music and video files" that is set by default as active.'
Whoop de do. Most music piracy is done in the local networks of college campuses, and other boarding schools. Stopping the tiny percent of people doing it over larger distances gets you nothing. It's like trying to plug a few cracks in the wall, when there's a giant bulldozer on the other side and soon to be a crane with a wrecking ball.
There is no practical way to prevent people from duplicating data. These new measures also won't stop people from damaging the Kazaa network. The rating system is flawed in that noone can be adequately authenticated before they rate media. Most
FTP? Don't you think it's time to look at scp? And ssh? Don't tell me they're still using telnet!
Guns don't kill people -- people kill people.
But the guns seem to help a bit. (apologies to Eddie Izzard)
I don't like the idea of having to give the NYT my personal details to be able to access the article. Instead of reading it now, I think I'll just wait until it becomes available on one of the many P2P applications.
Look, I've been reading the comments in this thread and in just about every second one, someone is bitching about Kazaa launching porn ads into their face constantly or crashing the computer.
:)
.
Sheesh. And you people call yourselves geeks?
First, get Kazaa Lite if you can. You can find it on the Kazaa network (go for the largest file you can find, it works).
Second, if you don't want the annoying ads to appear, turn off the scripting options in Windows. It's quite easy to do, really:
Internet Options > Security > Custom . .
Disable ActiveX, disable Active Scripting, and disable anything else that happens to make your paranoia kick in.
You won't be able to use IE with ActiveX and javascript enhanced websites afterwards, but who cares? You can just as easily download Mozilla 1.1 and use that instead.
Of course, if you have a firewall and don't want to disable IE, you can always run a network sniffer to find out *where* the ads are coming from, then take note of the IP addresses and add them to your filtering list.
Last but not least, GET AN ANTIVIRUS PROGRAM if you plan to start downloading strange executable files. Virii are rare on Kazaa (about 1 for every 2000 files I downloaded) but you shouldn't take chances if you value your data.
Using these methods, I get ZERO popup ads when using Kazaa. My PC has not been infected with any virii from their network, and this is without any firewall filtering at all.
So there you go; problems solved! Pass this on to your users / friends / fellow pirates at will.
Kindly use Kazaalite. Feel the difference :)
Last summer, I stole from a farmer. Let me tell you how.
I was driving along, and saw one of those roadside produce stands. I stopped by a bought (i.e. paid for, with cash) a watermelon. I had thought that that was the end of the transaction-- I had my melon, and could do what I wanted with it, and he had his money, which he could use in whatever way he wanted with no say from me.
So I took the watermelon home, ate it, and spit the seeds into my backyard. Lo and behold, those seeds grew into watermelon plants, and in a few months, I had dozens of more watermelons. I love watermelons, sure, but there was no way I could ever eat that many. So I gave them to my friends and relatives.
A week later, I received a letter in the mail from an attorney representing the farmer who'd sold me the original watermelon. He claimed that I was guilty of stealing watermelons, since the original seeds were the intellectual property of the farmer, and that by giving my melons away, I was depriving the farmer of potential income. Even though the farmer still had my money, and was not deprived of any actual melons.
I tore up the letter and spit another seed.
I guess everyone's entitled to their own opinion. But, I do use KaZaA. Thanks.
If you use kazaa then bloud should shoot from your ears.....
(I tried to get some documentation out of Digital on this, but as far as ;-)
I can tell even _they_ don't have it
-- Linus Torvalds, in an article on a dnserver
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