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Decoy Files on P2P Sites Become Ad Vehicles

Carl Bialik from WSJ writes "Some record labels hire outside companies to plant fake files on peer-to-peer sites. Now, labels are turning these decoy files into vehicles for marketing to music pirates by inserting promotional material into the files, such as an eight-minute clip from a Jay-Z concert, the Wall Street Journal reports." From the article: "'The concept here is making the peer-to-peer networks work for us,' says Jay-Z's attorney, Michael Guido. 'While peer-to-peer users are stealing the intellectual property, they are also the active music audience,' and 'this technology allows us to market back to them.'"

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  1. The link by The_Abortionist · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    If America wins the war on terror, Linux will be as good as dead.

    Equally, there is a link between P2P activity and (lack of) economic growth inside and outside the US.

    --
    Linux violates 235 Microsoft patents.