Interview With Lucas Gonze of Webjay
Richard MacManus writes "I've published an interview with Lucas Gonze, creator of the P2P music-sharing web app Webjay. Lucas was an early developer of peer-to-peer applications and back in 2000 he created a P2P start-up called World OS (the product was called Goa). In this interview we discuss World OS / Goa, how it compared to other P2P apps such as Gnutella, the 'Internet as Platform' concept, how Webjay works, some P2P History and Decentralization Theory, and ways around the legal hassles of P2P."
Do you see p2p becoming anything other than an academic plaything? It's inherent "sometimes" nature (Sometimes you'll find the file you are looking for, sometimes it's busy/not found due to you not having the right connections) would seem to run counter to most business' requirements for reliability. How do you plan on redressing this?
Joe
P2P is becoming viewed more and more like warez. Whether or not there are thorny legal issues, it will still die. Joe User doesn't know his rights, he just listens to the propaganda.
My sig would have been a lot cooler if
when I first read this, I thought it was going to be another negative Star Wars thread:
"Interview with Lucas gone Gonzo"
Will they last?
--
Brandon Petersen
Get Firefox!
... and remember that processed sugar shortens life expectancy. Erm, and that a study has recently proved that fat could damage the brain. No dessert? Fine by me.
BitTorrent is a form of P2P.
I came up with Gnutella independent of hearing about it. Bittorrent puts you in line, based on when you entered, but its flawed as I see it.
If the man above you has only a 1k upload time, you're stuck with the 1k download, and so is everyone below you. What if bittorrent allowed users to change their spot in the downloading based on the less upload or downloading.
I bet you could even stream television(aka the new Cable).
God spoke to me:
www.geocities.com/James_Sager_PA
God spoke to me
i'm sure it's been said before, but i haven't seen it put this way:
why don't artists just give away their music, and charge for concerts?
the cost of distributing used to be the promotion of a cd, the making of the cds, yadda. but with p2p those costs go to nothing.
artists don't make much on cd sales anyways
they make most of their money on concerts as it is.
(from what i've heard)
Instead, it lets you build and publish playlists that point to content served by other boxes -- it doesn't "share" anything as much as it shares pointers to those things (a big difference from conventional "p2p" apps).
Also, I believe Lucas' intent is that it only share authorized work (another big difference from conventional "p2p").
Here's what I do: Bitty Browser & Andromeda
i thought it's just playlists collection of music/video on the web. Does that qualify as mpoint to point?
This Sig is removed due to factual inaccuracy
I'm hoping that it's possible to implement P2P web content.
Bandwidth would be paid for by the consumer rather than the web page in question. Unfortunately pages would no longer be vulnerable to slashdotting.
Most of the criticisms folks sling against P2P these days are surprisingly similar to the ones they addressed against the Internet about ten years ago.
Then, it was "You can't trust anyone on the internet. You can't depend on a web server being there when you need it. And you can't really get people to buy anything from you!"
I think those criticisms answered themselves with time. The Net changed business and dating forever, and now seems to be leading the U.S.A. into a great standoff between the intelligent and the stupid. (You know what I'm talking about.)
And P2P is just for copyright pirates? Get real. It's a mass movement that's going to destroy copyright as we know it. Then what will you say it's for?
vicious, untreated political sewage...niche entertainment for the spiritually unattractive...worshipless pap
Sounds to me like it's worth a try.
The domain name system is not decentralized. You pay a domain registration fee because running the core DNS servers is expensive (besides Verisign making a buck). Chances are when you browse to a domain there will only be 3 or 4 layers to one of the core DNS servers, run by large communications companies. National internet authorities will feed off them and cache the domain information. Then your ISPs DNS server will feed off those on higher layers. Just because ISPs run their own servers doesn't mean DNS is decentralized. There is no way a decentralized system for something as universal as domain names could ever work.
My parents are huge people who bitterly resented the the fact that they were going to have to take me to Star Wars.
I've been personnally in touch with Lucas Gonze on some Creative Commons mailinglists, and he's a very nice guy.
:
But when I read this from his interview
" Webjay will be history the instant somebody sues, no matter how stupid and wrong the suit is. Obviously. "
Well, that's not serious in any way... I mean how can he go on with this project, under this kind of threat ?
Isn't there a foundation like the FSF, but for P2P, which could help with at least obviously "wrong" suits ?
Wow, I thought the blink tag on webpages was dead.
I was wrong : http://webjay.org/about
Men are born ignorant, not stupid; they are made stupid by education. Bertrand Russel
P2P is becoming viewed more and more like warez.
Is warez dying?
Actually, the original Star Wars, and the prequels, could qualify as Gonzo movies. (Gonzo, not Gonzo)
Both are very stylized and both styles are based on exaggerations in attempts to evoke familiar forms (Nazism, 50's lines, etc). The Star Wars movies are all indie films and have all been shot in ways considered unconventional at the time.
If you believe the text scroll before the movies, it even qualifies on the journalism part...
No. It usees teh bitorent technology. p2p only uses teh p2p-tecknoloogy.
In other words, don't steal music
Wow - way to take his opinion-neutral reasoning and conflate it with the RIAA's credo.
His argument was "be polite" - as in, respect the producer's wishes - without comment on whether copying is stealing or whether copying music is morally, or should be legally, wrong.
The problem with reading between the lines is subjective interpretation. Maybe you should have tried to just interpret his words at face value.