Napster, Audio Fingerprinting, and the Future of P2P
mjmalone writes "Napster founder Sean Fanning is poised for a comeback, seems the now 22 year old Fanning has developed technology which creates "audio fingerprinting" of individual tracks and compares them against fingerprints in his firm's database to determine legality. A fee may be set and collected on a copyrighted track by its rightful owner. Fanning is actively recruiting industry support as well as pushing the idea to p2p services such as kazaa and grokster. " This isn't exactly new technology, but it's still interesting to see what Fanning is up to these days besides movie cameos.
if(md5sum("myfile.mp3") == md5sum("Limp_Bizkit-Crap.mp3")
cout "PIRATE!";
Will it be able to tell the diff between...
:)
Backstreet boys, N'Sync and other boy bands?
Creed, Nickleback and other "rock bands"?
50-cent and DMX?
I wonder if record companies will accept mistakes when differentiating between these artists
--
"I'm not bright. Big words confuse me. But Wanda loves me and that should be enough for you." - Cosmo
He has a good business plan: create a big problem, then solve it.
Sure- I'll volunteer all my files to be tested by some random company, and they can tell me whether I owe them money or broke the law in some way.
Just contact me here: Hao_Wu@not-likely-to-happen.com, care of GET FUCKED.
I suggest you read Slashdot
Father O'Malley,
Your music file "Angels We Have Heard On High.mp3" matches "Smack My Bitch Up" by The Prodigy in our audio fingerprint database. Our lawyers will be in contact with you about this infringement.
Sincerely,
Recording Industry Association of America