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Kazaa Forced To Modify Search Engine

An anonymous reader writes "Eminem, Madonna and Kylie Minogue are just some of the popular artists whose songs are to be blocked from being illegally distributed on the peer-to-peer network Kazaa following Federal Court orders in Australia yesterday. Sharman Networks, the owner of Kazaa, was ordered by the courts to modify the file-sharing software to block a list of search terms -- primarily artist and song names. The search terms are also to be supplied by record companies. The directive follows the record companies' court victory in September against individuals and organizations associated with Kazaa."

24 of 258 comments (clear)

  1. Methinks by DrXym · · Score: 4, Funny

    That Erminem and Mardonna are the new hot searches on the Kaaza network

  2. what next? by hug_the_penguin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Perhaps the banning of the keyword phrase `fuck the riaa`? In case they haven't noticed, there are so many fakes on there anyway that a name isnt an accurate guarantee of what a file contains. But of course this matters not so long as the RIAA can line their pockers with consumers' money.

    --
    ~HTP~ Hug that tux ;)
    1. Re:what next? by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Insightful
      There are so many fakes because the RIAA has been happily hiring companies to pollute the search results for certain terms.

      They filed this lawsuit so they could cut some annual spending. /tongue in cheek

      The court has ordered Sharman to release a new version of Kazaa by 5 December that includes a non-optional keyword filter, restricting users' ability to illegally access and swap copyright music.

      Unless Kazaa rolls out a change to the fast track network as well... why the f*** would anyone update their client? Some of the people using such software may not be to brightest lightbulbs in the house, but everyone is going to know this update will break certain functionality.
      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    2. Re:what next? by KiloByte · · Score: 3, Funny

      There are so many fakes because the RIAA has been happily hiring companies to pollute the search results for certain terms.

      Actually, I doubt the fakes can be much worse than the originals. Call me a troll, but blocking access to Eminem, Madonna and Kylie Minogue's songs is a step towards improving the quality of music.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
    3. Re:what next? by jd+nerd · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "downloading and uploading copyrighted material without permission of the copyright holder is illegal. It is theft."

      it is illegal because the music industry has lobbied for it to be so. that doesn't mean it *should* be illegal, though. file sharing networks *should* be available to facilitate legitimate fair uses such as sampling and space-shifting.

      for example, if i want to sample a new song, i shouldn't have to go to a friend's house, go to the music store, or wait for it to come on the radio. if millions of people already have it, and we have the technology to transfer it, why shouldn't i be able to sample their copy? (and i'm not refering to abusive sampling--i'll get to abuse in a second). moreover, if i own the cd at home, i should not have to go to an online music store and purchase another copy of my songs just to listen to them at work.

      these uses should be fair. at some point, however, they do cross over into infringement. we all know the guy who loaded a hard drive with napster music back in the day. i agree that that is wrong. but if we agree, as a society, that mass-piracy is wrong, it doesn't follow that the fair uses i described above are wrong as well. but your approach, and the one taken by the riaa, seeks to ban any unauthrized copying

      note that the last time a shift in technology produced a mixed bag of fair use and abusive copying, the consumers won. that was when the supreme court ruled on what we now call the vcr. copyright holders demonstrated that about 80% of vcr copying was unauthorized. the equipment makers showed that although the uses were unauthorized, many of them should be fair. for example, people used the machines for time-shifting, or viewing programs at a later time. the supreme court allowed the manufacturers to continue selling the machines because of the fair uses

      can you imagine the world if that decision had gone the other way? no vcrs, so probably no video stores. no tivo. perhaps no dvd players, because the video industry and video rental industries would never have developed. perhaps no cd-rws, because they can be used to make unauthorized copies. well, this time around, it has gone (and is still going) the other way, with absolute bans on file sharing, criminal punishments for dmca violations, etc.

      the balancing approach used in the past, and the approach i advocate for file sharing, is reasonable: it provides the music industry a return on its investment (and thus gives incentives for creation) and allows consumers some flexibility over their expressive environment. but that's not the approach advocated by the music industry. they take the approach you advocate: *any* unauthorized copying is theft. that approach is foreign to our intellectual property tradition, which allows for fair uses designed to protect our first amendment freedoms.

      so, you can go around chanting your "any unauthorized copying is theft" mantra, but know that your approach is not necessary, and that it is highly unusual in a legal system that has traditionally allowed flexibile fair uses.

  3. Same legal battle by newell98 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Is this the same legal battle thats been going on for the last few years? Or is this a completely new one?

  4. Bring on the l337 speak! by Samir+Gupta · · Score: 4, Funny

    or Pig Latin, etc... when will they learn?

    --
    -- Samir Gupta, Ph. D. Head, New Technology Research Group, Nintendo Co. Ltd., Kyoto, Japan.
  5. Eh? by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Apart from the obvious slashdot also has this technology in place:
    Nothing for you to see here. Please move along.

    I thought kazaa was long dead and buried and reduced to nothingness.

    I know noone who uses it anymore, its all BT and eDonkey type stuff.

    Another obvious thought here, could I supply my own list of copyrighted files and make sure they aren't searchable, my company has copyrighted files which should be protectable, wheres the web interface to do it?

    Or is this another anal raping by the music industry just to get their own way?

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
  6. Problem with generics... by Denyer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I highly doubt Kylie Minogue is the only Kylie out there with recorded material, for example. Blocking specific artist+album+song combinations might be reasonable, but there's a lot of room for false positives.

    In time, even more absurd terms may become blocked... eg, The.

    --
    Ph-nglui mglw'nafh Gates M'dna wgah'nagl fhtagn.
  7. This will block legal file transfers by bloodbob · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Here is an example of one of the song names that was a part of the complaint against kazaa "Yellow". This basicly means anyone searching for "yellow something" is going to have their download blocked.

  8. kazaa is dead long live p2p. by leuk_he · · Score: 3, Informative

    You can always use eMule (win32) / amule (linux/max/e.a.) Shareaza (win32) or limewire (win/max/javathingy) to perform those searches for you.

    The music labels got to realize if they push the p2p networks too hard the p2p clients will go underground into anonymous networks

  9. Let the syntax war begin! by file-exists-p · · Score: 5, Funny

    So what are the standard rewritting rules to evade dumb pattern matching ? Writing backward ? L33tsp33k ? doubling characters ? Cockney Rhyming Slang ?

    The W3C should set up a list of standardized procedure.

  10. Arrogance of the RIAA by martinmcc · · Score: 5, Insightful


    Yet again, we have the RIAA showing their complete ignorance of technology, and applying bullish tactics that will only succeed in irritating.

    10,000 words list? I can pretty much bet that most of these will be very general i.e. 'Kylie' instead of 'Kylie Minogue', so any artist named Kylie who want to bypass the grabing hands of the record industry and distribute themselves will now have a much harder time.

    It is absolutely crazy how this can happen. RIAA get a levy on blank media because some might end up with their copyright material. They install software on you machines becuase you might try to copy one of their cds. They now block 10,000 search terms on Kazaa because they might be used to 'steal' their copyright material. And for the many people who wish to use those terms for ligitimate reasons? Tough luck.

    Have a look at the riaa web site, and you will read much about how they see themselves as the protectors of culture and music. What a load of crap. They are just middle men, and middle men that have no purpose, now that technology can provide the functionailty that they have in the past.

  11. The inteersting bit from the article by Zog+The+Undeniable · · Score: 3, Interesting
    ...was about Audible Magic, a technology that is supposed to identify music from a "fingerprint", regardless of what it's called, and theoretically would negate the need for a keyword search filter. I'd be genuinely interested to see how this works, given that different mp3 encoders produce different results given the same CD or can use different bitrates - and that's without OGG, WMA and other home-creatable formats.

    Maybe it's a large scale meatware solution where a downloading clip is streamed in real time into a room full of music experts, probably in Bombay?

    --
    When I am king, you will be first against the wall.
  12. Several Obvious Problems: by mrRay720 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1) Generic terms to block will make it difficult to search for other items. My favourite artist, "Kylie Kylie" distributes only through Kazaa. Now I can't find her stuff.

    2) Not everything related to those the scum are allegedly protecting is copyrighted. I'm sure there used to be several free public domain photos of Eminem that you could find on Kazaa. No longer possible.

    3) They just plain suck, don't they?

    Idiots. Instead of researching the reason why people are willing to download music from P2P (such as CDs no longer being a trustable source, and legally downloadable music has impractical DRM and low quality sound, prices too high across the board) they sue people and make stupid keyword blocks on software.

    I always used to do the best job I could to ensure artists are compensated, by buying music I listen to (ok, the suits and lawers got the money not the artists, but that's not the point). Nowadays they're making it increasingly hard for people to actually do the right thing. Sorry, I don't want a virus ridden PC thanks to your infected CDs - I feel much safer downloading my music. And since your stupid DRM sites don't work with my music player, I have no choice but to P2P. It's your own fault, guys. Give me no valid source, and I have no choice but to make my own.

  13. Re:A simple solution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting
    *shrug* Just like every other form of copy protection this inconveniences Average Joe but doesn't stop a dedicated attacker. Remember the old C64 days with software that would check for bad sectors on the floppies they were distributed on? Remember "fast hack'em" which copied discs bitwise to avoid the trap? Remember codewheels and how folks dis-assembled the app to provide the answers the game would actually ask for? Remember manual checks and how folks just shared photocopies of the relevant portions of the manual? As I recall SimCity originally had a copy protection screen which required you to hold a small red lens against the page in order to read the right answer -- I seem to recall that the solution was to wrap the entire manual in three wraps of the pink Reynolds wrap before copying it with the brightness turned down a touch.

    And notice how many games I haven't mentioned which have been hacked by dis-assembly alone and JMP instructions to bypass the copy protection checks.

    The world is now a world where digital information is passed from point to point without any real interference. A "recording industry" is a relic of times gone by -- if they'd slim down and offer cheap recording to all then they'd be able to make a tidy profit 'cause _everyone_ wants to record something these days and studio space is not that expensive to maintain...

  14. Control by KitesWorld · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Like you said, it's about lining their pockets. One method : Deliberately add words to the list that end up with independant artists (who might release their music on Kazaa themselves) getting blocked.

    Prevent your competition from getting exposure = preventing them from becoming 'real' competition.

    Me? Paranoid? naaaaaaa.

    1. Re:Control by hug_the_penguin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's an interesting point i hadn't thought of. If it comes to the day when they're using it to monopolise, that's the day we can take the entire institution down. Mod guys, that post deserves points.

      --
      ~HTP~ Hug that tux ;)
    2. Re:Control by falsified · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Example:

      My favorite band (And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead) has an LP named Madonna. While I believe they're on a major label now, and I don't know their stance on filesharing, anyone who wants to check out that CD can't, especially since they're sure as hell not gonna play it on the radio. (By the way, check them out. They're not death metal, despite their name.)

      --
      HI, MY NAME IS ISAAC.
    3. Re:Control by tepples · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's by no means similar to web page censorship that confuses breast cancer with porn.

      How not, specifically?

  15. And remember the DMCA by DrYak · · Score: 3, Informative

    rot13, l33t, pig-latin, backward spelled....

    all these are methods used to *crypt* the filename.
    under the DMCA it *IS COMPLETLY ILLEGAL* to the ??AA to try to circumvent them.
    If they try to add "3m1n3m", "adona-may", or "brit. sraeps" to the list, they're breaking an encryption scheme and that's illegal for them !!!

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  16. From "Name That Tune" to "Block That Tune"... by The_REAL_DZA · · Score: 3, Funny

    [Constestant] I can block that tune in ONE search phrase.
    [Host] Ok, Block That Tune!!
    [Contestant] Asterisk.

    --


    This space intentionally left (almost) blank.
  17. Other clients? by daikokatana · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Last time I checked the Kazaa network, there were still some 3 million users counted, so that gives me the general idea that Kazaa is still in use... or is it?

    Didn't everybody already move to KazaaLite, K++, or whatever hacked/rewritten client there is out there? Who is still using the original Kazaa client?

    And how is the RIAA going to force those clients to include the forbidden search list?

    --
    http://jcsnippets.atspace.com/ - a collection of Java & C# snippets
  18. LimeWire, eMule, BitTorrent by tepples · · Score: 3, Interesting

    10,000 words list? I can pretty much bet that most of these will be very general i.e. 'Kylie' instead of 'Kylie Minogue', so any artist named Kylie who want to bypass the grabing hands of the record industry and distribute themselves will now have a much harder time.

    No. Independent artists can use LimeWire, which now recognizes Creative Commons licenses on shared media. Or she can use eMule or BitTorrent. But then, independent songwriters will still run into the risk of subconsciously copying a copyrighted song.