Kazaa Launches Legitimacy Campaign
Beolach writes "The Washington Post has an article on Kazaa launching a $1 million advertising campaign promoting itself as a legitimate media distribution tool. From the article: 'The campaign is the latest push by the Kazaa file-sharing service and its parent company, Sharman Networks, to counter a multi-million-dollar legal and lobbying effort launched by music, software and movie firms convinced that peer-to-peer (P2P) services are a major source of online piracy'."
How will Kazaa Lite promote itself then? ;)
Kazaa is a major source of on-line piracy - they cannot deny this. However, P2P file sharing does have legitimate uses, and the tool cannot be blamed for what it is used for. Rat poison can be used to kill people, but that is about how it is used, not what it is.
I love kazaa. And I think this approach will help... Kazaa needs to highlight it's "other" uses...
however, many people will see this as I see the tobacco companies offering anti-smoking advice/commericals?
Public appearance is everything.
Sharing files is not against the law.
Distributing copyrighted works is.
The various P2P networks are a major source of online piracy.
Now, I'm not saying that that's all they're used for, or that they don't have legitimate uses (distribution of Linux iso images is one that springs immediately to mind), or that the various lobbying groups should succeed. But I can't see how anyone can deny that P2P is used a lot by pirates, both casual and probably organised.
Of course, so is ftp, http, etc, and I'm not saying that they should be banned either. I'm just questioning the tone of that part of the summary, is all.
It's official. Most of you are morons.
They are convinced because.....it is a major source of piracy! :)
Promoting kazaa for legitimate purposes is the right idea, it is a tool. for example ftp can be used for internet piracy as well, it is just another tool.
I found this quote particularly interesting:
"Whenever I talk to people about Kazaa, they treat it like marijuana -- as much as they love it, they have a sense that what they're doing is a little bit wrong."
I also think the pending War on Copyright Violations is a bit like the War on Marijuana: Driven by entrenched intrests; lubricated by political donations; with lots of innocent casualties; and ultimately futile because at the end of the day it criminalizes something which is not immoral.
Who is bankrolling the campaign? How does a company, dare I say, with no visible means of support come up with the scratch? Venture capital? Dunning the sorority girls in Massey Hall? Dollar a piece so you can have your Christina Arugula, girls? I just don't see how they do it?
Illegitimate ?:
BTW, is it just me or is Kazaa's boss a stone-cold hottie?
Comparing it to Windows will be a moot point, since El Dorado is going to have a 40% larger code base than XP.
The MPAA estimates that file sharing has cost the film industry more than $1 billion in the last year.
I estimate that the MPAA overestimates 125% of the stats that they estimate.
Because somebody watches a pirated movie does not directly mean that anybody lost money over it. Money is only lost if that person would have paid money but instead watched it for free.
Owning a legal gun is not against the law.
;-)
Shooting copyright lawyers is.
Disclaimer: Anybody is free to interpret this post as any combination of anti/pro-guns, anti/pro-file, anti/pro-piracy and anti/pro-shooting
Kazaa is a lot like LSD:
1. Designed by scientists in search for cure.
2. Found to be useful in getting high.
3. Agencies experimented with it to see if it's suitable for their own evil needs.
4. Although some legitimate (medical) uses were possible, it was determined to be a drug and thus declared illegal and prohibited for any use.
5. Still wanted by end users and therefore still around in pure form or in variations.
6. Variations, shall we say, vary, therefore it's very difficult to say which is original stuff and which is not.
Like it or not, but it's there and it's not getting away easily. Some publicity sure helps.
I like my outfit, it's inexpensive, but cool -- April Ryan
It is exactly the same argument as "guns are not made for killing people" - and both arguments are correct.
Blaming a gun for a murder is senseless and sophmoric and blaming a file distribution technology for piracy is as well. People have "warez" ftp sites where piracy occurs, does this mean ftp needs to be abolished? How about the internet in general?
It is a simple mathematical case of failing to find the common denominator. People pirate files using ftp. People pirate files using http. People pirate files using P2P. Do you see the common denominator here?
People kill with knives. People kill with vehicles. People kill with guns. People kill with clubs. Did you find the common denominator in this one?
In case you missed it - the answer is "people". If you want to stop piracy you have to make "people" stop doing it - not disable or outlaw the technology and if you want to stop murders you have to make people stop killing each other, not outlaw or abandon guns, knives, etc.
But that's not easy, is it? It's easier to abolish guns than address the *REAL* problem of dealing with people. It's a cop-out.
reminds me of a story: One night a woman is on a street corner looking for something when a man wanders up. He can see the lady's distress and asks what the problem is. The lady tells him that she lost a hundred dollar bill and is looking for it - so the man starts helping her look. After a bit of searching he asks the lady where she thinks she may have dropped it and the lady responds by pointing down the street through the darkness a block away. Puzzled, the man asks the lady why she is searching here? Pointing to the overhead streetlamp above them the lady responds "because the light is better".
We cannot, as a society, try to find the answer to problems where it is easiest to look because, quite simply, the answer simply isn't there. It is far more difficult to find the "answer" to murder is in people, the "answer" to piracy is in people. A far more daunting fix may be in order but it is the correct one. Anything else is as futile as looking for lost money in a place where the light is better.
I have used Napster,gnutella,Morpheus and Kazaa lite.Why?Not to get anything that is legitimate but copyrighted music.Not because i dont want to spend any money but because i cant get here in london what i want.
I dont have a problem if i want to listen britney boobs and company.their music is everywhere.
But good flamenco and jazz is impossible to get.most of it is simply not available anywhere.
so what am i doing ? violating the rights of the artists or am i keeping their legacy alive, some of those artists long dead.
Wanted : A Signature.