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Music Media

New File Sharing Networks 245

An anonymous reader sends in: "Most readers of slashdot have been following the exploits of the RIAA and their attempts to shut down Napster, KaZaA, Morpheus, etc. In response, it appears some live music fans have taken things into their own hands and started new file sharing networks made exclusively for trading live recordings of bands that allow that sort of thing. The main player, RNL has reached version 1.0, features a distributed architecture, supports linux, and is even GPLed. Another peice of interesting software is Furthur. Though still only in beta, Furthur has cool features like allowing a user to piggy-back another user's download to reduce the load of the uploader."
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New File Sharing Networks

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  • WinMX rules! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Archie Steel ( 539670 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:04AM (#2894221)
    Don't know it's not better known...Check it out here [winmx.com].
    • Requirements
      Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000
      Internet Explorer 4.0 or above if running Win95/NT
      Pentium 166 w/ 64MB ram or better recommended


      What about us *nix users??
      • You do point out a obvious problem, but the network and client are in fact great.

        The best ability of the client is that it can be used to connect to any opennap server.

        While not handeling segmented downloads, it does let you rank searches by bit-rate and the like.

        This seems to be the thing that lacks in other clients. This way my draw to Napster, but WinMX is IMHO the only client which compares. Why shouldn't it? It's based on opennap... an obvious napster cloned protocol.

      • Quoted from www.furthernet.com:

        Ack... Furthur's been slashdotted! ;)
        Our slogan is now: "We should have used Apache!"

        Well, d'uh.

        When I saw the IIS Server Busy error, they lost all their credibility with me.

    • Yup, I have to agree... I used it for a bit and found it quite good for my mp3/porn/warez requirements. I don't know if they broke a file up into parts like edonkey2000 and kazaa/morpheous do, or if they had any funky technology like that, but they seemed pretty solid in the ability of the software to get from them to me.

      The main problem, and the reason why I "left" them was as NewbieSpaz points out, there's no *nix client.
  • Etree? (Score:5, Informative)

    by gagravarr ( 148765 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:06AM (#2894235) Homepage

    Haven't these guys heard of etree.org [etree.org]? Etree has been around for a few years, and exists to allow the trading of lossless recordings of live shows from bands who allow trading.

    Its not p2p, mostly ftps and burn + post cds, but it has been there for some time. Loads of good shows too :)

    • as a means on facilitating online transfers instead of mail-trades. all .shn's are md5 verified before being allowed to share.
    • Re:Etree? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by stpitner ( 164196 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:36AM (#2894428)
      burn+post may sound confusing to some. B+P stands for Blanks + Postage where a person mails out blank cd's and return postage to another person who collects the live shows, that person burns copies of the shows onto the blanks, and mails back the cd's in the provided packaging. I do this kind of stuff all the time with my collection, and it works well with helping out many people vs. trying to share up stuff to people via FTP or Direct Connect with my 40k upload cap.

      Also, many may not have heard of SHN vs. mp3 (debates for or against these 2 can cause a war), but SHN is a lossless compression of a WAV file, and it compresses the wav file approximately 50%. This is compared to mp3's where they are lossly compressed about 90%, but it throws out information in the original wav.

      A lot of the hard-core collectors of the live music refuse to collect mp3's due to the loss in quality from original wav->mp3, so that's much larger files that are dealt with when trading the live music. That causes a major strain on the bandwidth, and therefore makes B+P's a prominant figure in the live music trading world.
      • many may not have heard of SHN vs. mp3 (debates for or against these 2 can cause a war), but SHN is a lossless compression of a WAV file, and it compresses the wav file approximately 50%. This is compared to mp3's where they are lossly compressed about 90%, but it throws out information in the original wav.

        For one thing, FLAC [sourceforge.net] performs a few percent better than SHN and has a more free license. For another, tests performed by r3mix.net [r3mix.net] have shown that it's possible to encode MP3 at a variable bit rate centered about 192 kbps and lose nothing audible. (Whether this is legal under the Fraunhofer patents is a different story.) MP3 and Ogg Vorbis produce significant quality loss in only the following situations: 1. low bit-rate operation, 2. crappy encoders, and 3. repeated conversions of wav -> compressed -> wav.

        A lot of the hard-core collectors of the live music refuse to collect mp3's due to the loss in quality from original wav->mp3

        What about the loss in quality from analog->wav? It's negligible [pineight.com], but it's still a measurable loss.

  • usenet (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Carbon Unit 549 ( 325547 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:07AM (#2894239) Homepage
    usenet works just fine thank you. I download at least 1GB/day :)
  • How Long (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Em Emalb ( 452530 ) <ememalb@gmaPARISil.com minus city> on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:07AM (#2894240) Homepage Journal
    Before files start getting traded that the artists DIDN'T want released as free? Someone will crack it and ruin what these honest people seem to be doing, OR, they won't be able to keep up with cleaning out the non-free, copyrighted material.

    Honestly, is it even worth doign anymore? Have a pure idea, watch it get cracked, then fade slowly to the background like the rest of the companies trying to do this. A sad world we live in today.

    Or, maybe I am just jaded on these types of things.

    *sigh*
    • Re:How Long (Score:5, Informative)

      by moron0 ( 13503 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:24AM (#2894352) Homepage
      Furthur is being developed by some of the etree.org [etree.org] crew. Etree.org has an outstanding track record so far. The group trades only "taper-friendly" recordings, and if anyone asks for a recording that isn't taper-friendly, members are sure to jump on the request and tell him to look elsewhere (some are more polite than others).

      You'd think that a group of over 13,000 (that was last I heard a while ago, and with the second related story in a week, there are sure to be many more directed from /.) would be chaos. However, the group is pretty well self-policed.

      The fact is, if someone wants an illegal bootleg, there are plenty of other places to look rather than the etree.org lists. Rather than get flamed and endanger etree.org, those people just go elsewhere for those needs.

      Check out etree.org's legal page [etree.org] for more information about policy. After 3 years, there still hasn't been an RIAA shakedown.
    • Forever (Score:2, Insightful)

      by pyite69 ( 463042 )

      I have been using etree.org for 3 years now and it is just
      as good as ever. The member stick to only using
      taper-friendly bands (phish, grateful dead, allman bros,
      etc) and use standard protocols: ftp, email, and irc.

      It is a much looser connection than something like napster;
      it is really just a mailing list with a bunch of individual
      ftp servers. If someone puts non-trader-friendly music,
      they are banned from the mailing list for life by the list
      nazi.

      Yes, it is RIAA-proof.

      The only real problem is that there is never enough
      bandwidth!
    • Re:How Long (Score:2, Informative)

      As far as I know, Furthur (which is closed source I believe) receives a list of appropriate artists/bands and limits you to searches for those bands. So as long as no one reverse engineers the protocol and writes another client they should maintain control of their network. There are already plenty of places for people to get their non-taper-friendly music (in addition to warez and whatever else) hopefully they will use them and leave Furthur alone.
    • Or maybe we'll just follow the Gnutella NG method.

      X see's that Y is sending crap... X block's Y in his tables.

      A,B,C,D,E,F,G get table from X, without Y. Y get's ignored by most everyone.
    • Re:How Long (Score:2, Informative)

      How long Before files start getting traded that the artists DIDN'T want released as free?

      That won't happen unless someone does something stupid like post these URLs to slashdot.

      oh....

  • by Perrin-GoldenEyes ( 4296 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:07AM (#2894243)
    I'm just wondering how they actually control the content of their network. If they really are just trading legitimate live recordings, then I don't really see how the RIAA could touch them. But I don't know how they can keep people from trading standard album recordings that will get them in [more] trouble with the RIAA.

    If they do somehow control it, it'll be interesting to see how the RIAA reacts to this.
    • by Bonker ( 243350 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:23AM (#2894348)
      If the src is GPL'd, as it is in the one project, then they *don't* control it. Even if the maintainers religously police their particular network of connections, there's absolutely nothing to stop Joe Q. Hacker from downloading the code, changing a few variables or constants, and releasing 'Gnuster'.
      • Which, unfortunately, means that these are no diferent from the previous crop of file trading utilities. They're just as vulnerable to RIAA legal bludgeoning as everybody else. It's a pretty cool idea to keep it strictly legit and legal (ie no trading of copyrighted content), but they'll just turn into another incarnation of the file trading services that are being systematically dismantled by the RIAA.
        • Another network that primarily is intended to share legal information, but that "happens" to be used for illegal (alt.binaries*) file trading as well.

          Should they do so (and this applies also to this new network so clearly meant for legal exchange only) than it only becomes too obvious that the RIAA in fact wants to forbid any direct communication between people.
    • p>Obviously, they won't be able to control it. But at least they have explicitly stated their intent. When determining whether vicarious or contributory infringement has taken place, apparently a tool's "primary purpose" is taken into account.

      It's a good CYA move.

    • Exactly my thought. What on earth does the type of content have to do with a particular technology? It's like creating an image viewer specifically for pictures of boats.
    • by liquidsin ( 398151 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:53AM (#2894536) Homepage
      from furthur's website:

      All shows on the Furthur Network are 100% MD5 verified! When users initially share a show, Furthur will run an MD5 verification check, to ensure the file integrity. If any file doesn't check out, Furthur won't allow it on the network

      This gives them a lot of control over network content. Don't want something on the network? Pull it's MD5 sum from your database.
    • It might become social boundaries, no? I wouldn't exactly go into the #linux channel asking for windows help or the #cars channel to ask about writing a resume.

      It made me wonder if social boundaries would actually make gnutella and the rest less chatty. Like I don't have any movies on my hd nor am I on them to download movies, why should i receive traffic on it?

      Problem is if I want to be on multiple networks, I have to have multiple connections. That or tags saying what I have, what I don't and the type of traffic I wish to propagte.

      Just food for thought.
    • I'm sure the RIAA will do all in it's power, leagal, ethical and otherwise to kill this. They will surely try to upload their comercial garbage and encourage others to do so. They will also upload poor quality recordings and other noise like the "coo-coo" recordings they stuck on Napster, in a vain attempt to dilute the collection. At least until they have complete control over all network access.

      It's not going to work. When they ruin one service dozens of new ones will be formed.

  • It actually sounds kinda cool...I mean, Gnutella is kinda cool in principle (though the new Limewire superservers are sucky!), but in actuality it's not that efficient. I wonder if Furthur works well on an IP masqueraded machine?
  • by f00zbll ( 526151 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:09AM (#2894249)
    Even though it's not for copyrighted material, I can't help but wonder what RIAA's reaction is going to be. Will they use the same argument "you can't ensure it is only used for non-copyrighted material?" or will they start pushing stadiums to do a body search for tape recorders. In either case, I doubt they will sit back and do nothing.
    • All of the bands they mention are groups that have specifically stated that they allow and/or encourage their fans to record and trade their shows. Hell, Pearl Jam even announced it was okay to trade/make free copies of the 72 live shows they released commercially last year. Presumably the record companies defer to the bands on this point.
      • by nsanit ( 153392 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:41AM (#2894462) Homepage
        Presumably the record companies defer to the bands on this point.

        Well, the way I understand recording contracts is that the recording company owns the recording, but the band still owns the music. The band rarely gets enough of a cut from the contract that sales hurt their personal bottom line. Huge bands like Pearl Jam, Metallica et al are big enough to negotiate that sort of deal. This is why Lars from Metallica was one of the few artists who cared about Napster. If you'll notice the RIAA, not the artists, is suing people. They claim they are protecting the artists, but they are really looking out for their own pockets.

        Most bands dont make money on the record, they make money on the concerts and appearances. Granted, they do make money, but it's usually small compared to what they make from other sources...why else would they tour? The recordings basically serve them as advertisements.

        The bands typically own all rights to the music itself (not the recording) and they have the right to allow or disallow fans to record concerts.

        Usual dislaimers apply...IANAL, esp a contract lawyer, and have never seen a 'typical' recording contract and am just make observations on what I've heard and read.

    • As somebody who tapes, sometimes with a standard rig, sometimes with stealth equipment, I can tell you that venues already do search for recording equipment. You know that little pat-down you get, they're not just looking for guns. If they find your little Sony PCM-M1 DAT deck, and your ultra-small B&K mics, you don't get to see the show.
  • Hrmmm.... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by $0 31337 ( 225572 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:09AM (#2894257) Homepage
    ... the more people sending you data, the quicker your download will be!

    Really? Even on my blazingly fast 56k dialup connection? If I had 1 person sending me data I could get an amazing 4.5kps while if I had 10 people sending me data I would get .45kps... not so good... Oh well.. I suppose they mean well
    • Re:Hrmmm.... (Score:3, Informative)

      by djweis ( 4792 )
      No, let's say you and 4 friends all have adsl, 640/128. The four friends all have a file you want to download. Getting it from one of them will give you a 128k download, due to their upstream cap. If you grab chunks from all of them at once, you can get it at 512k.
    • But, if you're downloading from another 56k dialup user, he can only upload at 36k, while you can download at ~52k, leaving about 16k of your bandwidth available.

      Instead you download from 2 dialup users, and can use your total 52k.

      As you scale up higher bandwidths, the increase can be more dramatic because it's harder to find upload capacities equal to your download capacity.

      Of course this is with the understanding that your bandwidth at the time is being dedicated to downloading the 1 file.
  • A P2P file sharing network that can only be used for legal files is doomed to failure. Either it'll end up being used for copyrighted material illegally, or it'll never get a decent number of users.

    Go ahead, claim that *everyone* uses filesharing for uncopyrighted material. Just at least admit to yourself that it's not true.
    • i dunno, i've used futhur and found plenty of good
      stuff, haven't seen anything copyrighted there yet.

      But it's for trading whole jamband shows. which
      people have been doing through the mail for years
      with tape trees and with just ftp sites. This is
      just adapting it to another medium. And uses all
      the much hyped 'advantages' of p2p. It's been
      growing consistently so far.
  • FileNavigator Rules (Score:2, Interesting)

    by jbiz_owner ( 119697 )
    Just found this p2p software filenavigator, www.filenavigator.com. Found everything I was looking for. Connnects to gnutella, opennap and its own p2p network. All at the same time!
  • Other types of files like video, text, etc. Doesn't this network have the same basic properties as every other p2p system?
    The piggyback feature would be excellent for larger files types.
  • WinMX (Score:2, Informative)

    Another good one is WinMX [winmx.com]

    I get very good results with this. I have extensively subjected it to my "Matmos" test of file sharing programs, and shown it to be as good as kazaa/morpheus.

    The main strength of the program is that it has its own p2p protocol, but also allows you to connect to multiple OpenNap servers at once (unlike napigator). If you are patient, you can log onto a sh*t load of servers and get excellent results.

    However, there are some drawbacks. The interface is a little buggy (but a little more for the "power" user than morpheus). Also, getting a good list of OpenNap servers into the program can be a real bastard. I strongly advise looking here [trippymx.co.uk] and here [darkservers.net] for solutions to this problem. Also, as the name suggests, there is no linux version :-(
  • by ajs ( 35943 ) <ajs@@@ajs...com> on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:20AM (#2894320) Homepage Journal
    This is what capitolism and a free market are all about.

    The music sharing phenomenon is too big to be a fluke. There's a serious market here, and that's what really has the RIAA scared. They know that, at some point, a market will flurish which breaks their members' business model.

    Now, I have no exposure to this new network, so I don't even know if it's commercial, but I can assure you that with a demand this large, there will be thousands upon thousands of people trying to figure out a way to turn it to their economic advantage, and I say more power to them! The first key is the fact that there are already bands that want their music recorded live (Phish comes to mind). Next, there are new bands who have nothing to lose by sharing their music.

    Given these, I think you could build a base of bands that promote their music (more specifically, their concerts) via a file sharing network. Then, you just have to find a way to brand yourself so that you remove the geeky stigma of file sharing (make it easier to use, get some high-profile musicians to mention that they use it, give it away with low-cost student computers, etc).

    This is going to be a really fund decade. I suspect that this particular business will not descend into the kind of deccadence of the current music industry for at least another 5 years or so, but then, perhahps I'm just an optimist.
    • Capitolism? Is that the ideology that wants to put domes on everything?

      Sorry, I had to.

    • The music business works by legislation. File sharing is outside of their realm of control, but rather than embracing it they have chosen to fight an unwinnable fight. File sharing will always exist, since it is essentially indistinguishable from regular protocols. Heck, if push comes to shove, we'll just ssh-tunnel between our file sharing clients.

      Back to my point.

      The RIAA are history. After all, they've had limited positive effect on the artists they are supposed to ultimately serve. Wanna know how an artist makes serious money? They go on a tour. Then again, we need to hear about the artist and be excited about the artist in order to bother seeing the artist live. That's what the music industry has provided - 'till now.

      I still buy albums that are genuinely good, but I usually check them out on mp3 first. Maybe I'll stop buying albums and start going to more concerts? They are more memorable than a slice of reflective surface, anyhow!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:20AM (#2894323)
    use Freenet ( http://freenetproject.org/ [freenetproject.org] ).

    Small excerpt from their About page:

    Freenet is a large-scale peer-to-peer network which pools the power of member computers around the world to create a massive virtual information store open to anyone to freely publish or view information of all kinds. Freenet is:

    • Highly survivable: All internal processes are completely anonymized and decentralized across the global network, making it virtually impossible for an attacker to destroy information or take control of the system.
    • Private: Freenet makes it extremely difficult for anyone to spy on the information that you are viewing, publishing, or storing.
    • Secure: Information stored in Freenet is protected by strong cryptography against malicious tampering or counterfeiting.
    • Efficient: Freenet dynamically replicates and relocates information in response to demand to provide efficient service and minimal bandwidth usage regardless of load. Significantly, Freenet generally requires log(n) time to retrieve a piece of information in a network of size n.
    -end excerpt-

    Current 0.4 version of Freenet is working fine and 0.5 will be released soon, which should be considered as stable for production use.

    OS advocatists take note: Freenet has been written with pure Java, so if you can get a Java interpreter for your OS, you can run Freenet. And in this particular case, using Java doesn't always mean the software will run slow. It's all about the implementation.

    • Frost [sf.net] is a Freenet client which supports discussion boards and keyword-searching. It requires that you have already installed Freenet, but works well. It has an active community of users, and continues to be improved on a daily basis.
    • I started running Freenet about two weeks ago. Here's my impressions:
      • Relatively easy to install (just run the .exe)
      • Requires you to download a newer JVM. Not a big deal.
      • Hard as hell to get connected to another client, because there's no central server. Once you get a single good peer, though, it starts learning new connections and it improves dramatically. The first several days is really frustrating. This is why most people dump Freenet immediately, as first impressions are everything.
      • It's not turnkey. You must search and find peers to put in your hosts file. It doesn't work 'out of the box'.
      • There's no way to search for files. It means you must already know the exact address of what you're trying to download. Writing a search engine is supposedly possible, though non-trivial.
      • Download speeds are poor, due to encryption and other factors relating to anonymity, I believe.
      • Frequently, files will download partially or with zero length, but have their correct name, implying it is complete. (Morpheus/KaZaA use temp names until a file completes, which is nice.)
      • Freenet runs a small web server for configuration and retrieval. The web interface is 'programmer friendly', but not user friendly.
      • Files must be 'inserted' into the network. This is a pain if you're trying to share 40gb of mp3 files, or change what is shared daily.
      • Files are not guaranteed to exist in the network once 'inserted'. Only files which are requested stay alive, from what I've read.

      But, all these issues don't prevent me from running Freenet. I find it comforting to support anonymity on the internet, like in the old days. It's really not up to scratch for P2P file sharing, though. Never will be.
      Frost, on the other hand, seems like a really slick attempt at totally anonymous newsgroups built on top of Freenet. I've run it a few times and like it. It's slow as molasses, but that's not Frost's fault (see above).
      • by Sanity ( 1431 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @02:39PM (#2895846) Homepage Journal
        Requires you to download a newer JVM. Not a big deal.
        This isn't really the fault of the Freenet developers, they actually target Java 1.1, but have discovered bugs in many of the currently available JVMs, including the release version of Kaffe (it is fixed in the CVS version), IBM's Linux JRE is also screwy, Sun's seems to work fine though.
        Hard as hell to get connected to another client, because there's no central server.
        Freenet has improved dramatically in this regard over the past two or three days (with some recent bug-fixes), you may want to try it again.
        It's not turnkey. You must search and find peers to put in your hosts file. It doesn't work 'out of the box'.
        Both the Linux and Windows releases come with up to thirty recently tested node references now (again, just in the last few days). You can also download fresh references here [freenetproject.org] (the Windows installer now does this automatically on node-startup).
        There's no way to search for files.
        Freenet isn't intended to be used in the same way as Napster or Gnutella, none-the-less, you may be interested in trying Frost [sf.net] which not only allows you to do keyword searching for files, but also has a Usenet-like discussion board system over Freenet.
        Download speeds are poor, due to encryption and other factors relating to anonymity, I believe
        Download speeds will improve as data becomes more popular, but you are right, the crypto does impose an overhead.
        Frequently, files will download partially or with zero length, but have their correct name, implying it is complete. (Morpheus/KaZaA use temp names until a file completes, which is nice.)
        This is a client issue, Frost (mentioned above) uses .tmp files just like Morpheus and KaZaA (and without the spyware!).
        Freenet runs a small web server for configuration and retrieval. The web interface is 'programmer friendly', but not user friendly.
        Again, try Frost, it is much more user-friendly than the bear-bones web interface to Freenet.
        Files must be 'inserted' into the network. This is a pain if you're trying to share 40gb of mp3 files, or change what is shared daily.
        Again, Frost makes insertion of files much less painful, and once you insert your files you don't need to keep your node running for them to remain on the network.
  • by CDWert ( 450988 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:20AM (#2894324) Homepage
    Why not just open a unprotected share on you computer set max number of clients, run a port scanner that indexes all other open shares on whather class c you tell it to.

    Set up an index server that does this as well as downloads a lists.txt file that has all the songs in your share directory indexed, a shell script on a cron tab to reindex and upload you lists,

    FUCK the RIAA and MPAA, they would have to remove network capability from all computers.

    Im not trolling Im serious. Make it as grey as possible. There is no way MS / SUN /IBM is going to remove the ability to network file share, make this p2p an extension of that. Most modern operating systems have the cabability built in.

    GREY, GREY, GREY .
    Make it about the comanies violationg free speech, not in the lame ass way others have tried, ALSO a point you can sue judges, and cout officers, police etc, IF IT HAS BEEN PROVEN they VIOLATED you basic civil rights, Making people stop sharing whatever they wish I belive is a violation of my free speech. Set up a honeypot service, that only trades uncopyrigthed materials and lie in wait for the RIAA and some overzealous most likey bribed judges, and open fire, first nail the RIAA on hacking attempts, then go after everyone in line.

    If the courts become succeptiable to injury as weel, maybe some of this crap would never make it in the first place.

    Yes, I have reached karma cap and need no more, please mod this down as needed :)
    • by Anonymous Coward
      The Windows filesharing ports are already blocked by most ISPs (otherwise 'hacking' is as easy as using the network neighborhood).

    • Then the RIAA would lobby for, and receive, the ability to
      have ISP's cut you off. Great.

      What is more important is to have bands who allow legal
      trading of their live music be more successful than bands
      who don't. If you measure success by concert ticket
      revenue, bands who allow trading: Phish, the Dead, Metallica, and U2 were among the most successful bands
      of the 90's - Phish and the Dead didn't have a single
      radio hit and weren't exactly big on MTV.

      There is a lot of good legally tradable music available; try
      it out.
      • Probably the reason bands like Phish and the Dead are/were bigger on tour than the radio is that they are much more oriented towards live performance than studio production. They're jam bands, dedicated to excellent live performance. Pop groups are carefully produced for consumption by radio and video, and their live performances tend to recreate the same experience.

        Britney fans would be confused and angry if she explored new variations of her songs on stage ("that's not the way the song goes!"), whereas Phish fans don't want to hear a perfect recreation of a CD track.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    This sort of thing has been going on for a while via FTP and loosely based networks like etree.org trading lossless quality shn files.

    It even works for Hillbilly music. Check out www.bluegrassbox.com for an unbelieveable (hundreds of gigs) resource of extreemly high quality audio files in shn format.

    And remember, Friends don't let Friends use MP3!
  • by Anonymous Coward
    RNL as the main player because it is in version 1.0? I think not. Check out the RNL band list - no one you've ever heard of. Furthur has lots of good live music from bands that most people have heard of and enjoy. I've been using it for about 2 months now, and it makes getting whole shows very easy.

    etree.org is okay, but it is just a listing of ftp sites when you get down to it. Yes, it is organized well and has lots of other info, but when you get down to it, just ftp sites.

    The other major player in the live music scene right now is direct connect and shnapster - this is a live music hub using direct connect software, and it works well.

    Furthur is the easiest to use with the coolest technology. Let's hope it takes off a bit more and continues to be as stable as it is.
  • by clump ( 60191 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:23AM (#2894349)
    * Packet Chain ProtocolTM : PCP chaining allows users to 'piggy back' a download off another user. For example, person A downloads a fileset from the host, person B will then download from person A, person C will download from Person B, etc.. This allows everyone download a show at once.

    Though I am no byte-level expert, this isn't really anything new or its misleading. What this seems to refer to is how the traffic would be routed. IE, if "Joe" has live Pearl Jam and 3 people request it, the network is smart enough to take bytes from people farther along in the download. Even then, thats more load-balancing.

    Otherwise, this is no different from any other P2P filesharing mechanism where files naturally propagte from a source and are eventually downloaded from other nodes. Still, if your network were *smart* enough to resend packets as little as possible (IE, if the network would multicast concurrently-requested packets) then this would be leaps-and-bounds above current P2P.
  • ...live recordings from studio recordings (the kind usually ripped from CD's)? I can't imagine that someone actually listens to all of the music being transferred through the network to determine if it's live or not, and I doubt there's software that can do this either.

    These just looks like yet another crop of well-intentioned systems that are openly inviting abuse. Whether that is the true intention of the developers, with an honest-sounding mission to cover their asses, we really can't speculate... yet.

    We shall certainly see, though, once the RIAA inevitably turns its attention to these new networks.

  • by asv108 ( 141455 ) <.moc.ssovi. .ta. .vsa.> on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:31AM (#2894402) Homepage Journal
    I really like the idea of using MD5 to ensure file integrity across the network. I hate searching for a file on Gnutella and finding 13 different versions. Of course, the tape trading and sharing communities have been on the cutting edge for quite some time. Phish and Grateful dead enthusiasts were the first to embrace, lossless formats such as SHN, and even older technologies such as DAT. Laptop recording is also taking off as well, they even sell a modified cursoe powered picturebook that is made for concert taping.

    As far as illegal uploads are concerned, there is a list [furthurnet.com] of the bands and material types that are currently allowed. I haven't tried this app yet, I will as soon as I get off work, but I would imagine that client communicates with a centralized server to check MD5 sums and also check filenames so the only way to actually put up a illegal file for sharing is change its name to something like 11.29.98-Phish-David-Bowie03.shn and post it as a new file so a MD5sum is created. BTW my domain, http://www.phataudio.org was originally an old school phish mp3 site ;)

    • by jonabbey ( 2498 )

      I would imagine that client communicates with a centralized server to check MD5 sums and also check filenames so the only way to actually put up a illegal file for sharing is change its name to something like 11.29.98-Phish-David-Bowie03.shn and post it as a new file so a MD5sum is created.

      Why would one even need to look at the filename? Calculate the md5 signature, look it up in the database, and if you find a match, you're good to go, regardless of the filename. An md5 signature is 16 bytes long, that's the same length as an IPv6 address, the kind they describe as being sufficient as allowing every atom on earth to have its own I.P. address. Shouldn't it be vanishingly unlikely that someone could alter a piece of music so that its md5 matches with something previously registered?

      That's assuming that someone is actually checking out these files before entering md5's into the database, I guess. Is the safety factor just based on the fact that you won't approve a filename that doesn't match the known list of acceptable bands? I suppose if you can't search for something illegal based on name that it doesn't matter in some sense whether it is in the system or not..

  • by Flagbrew ( 471794 ) <jeff@flaCURIEgbrew.com minus physicist> on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:43AM (#2894474) Homepage
    I have been using Etree [etree.org] for three or four years now. For those not aware here, etree site-op's release their server content on the etree-announce mailing list periodically. Users can download, through FTP, high quality concerts from folks like The Grateful Dead [dead.net] and other microphone friendly bands. I think what keeps etree pure currently, is that with only a (relatively) few site-ops, control over content, is easily implemented. This will undoubtedly collapse under the massive abuse inherent in peer-to-peer networks.

    It would be quite sad to see .shn's of Brittney Spears 2/18/02 Cleveland Show being traded alongside some of music's most influential live bands. For what it's worth check out what is being traded on etree at their database site [etree.org]
    • 1. The content at db.etree is not necessarily what is being traded over the etree mailing lists (see http://db.etree.org/faq/read.php?faq_key=126 [etree.org])

      2. The md5s are not checked against a central database. They are packaged into a text file that is distributed with a file set. Furthur will not allow you to share a file set until all the files check out through md5.

      3. The central server has information about what artists are ok to trade across the network. This does not prevent someone from creating a new client that ignores the central server and allows non-taper friendly bands, but it does limit liability of the central server.

      Some members of the etree server team have been involved in the development of furthur since the beginning (thanks Mike!) so, as another person asked, yes, etree has heard of it.

      etree will continue to be ftp centric but Furthur is the first p2p app that meets the requirements for etree, that is: free as in speach and beer, no banner ads, no money changes hands anywhere.

      Tom A.
      http://db.etree.org

      P.S. Etree was founded in the summer of 98 so it would be hard to have used it for 4 years :)
  • by raindog151 ( 157588 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:49AM (#2894515) Homepage
    Welcome to RNL!

    Would you like to install xGator? xGator allows you to fine great deals on products specifically tailored to you!

    [ ] Yes [*] No

    installing RNL-1.0-01a.rpm.....
    installing xGator-2.4.1....^C^C........
    modifying /etc/hosts.allow.^C^C^C^C^C....^C^C...
    modifying /etc/xident.conf..^C^C^C^C^C^C^C^C^C....

    Congratulations! RNL has been installed!

  • some other info (Score:4, Informative)

    by jon_c ( 100593 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:52AM (#2894532) Homepage
    a good overview of different p2p architectures is over here [openp2p.com] at openp2p.com.

    One system the author fails to mention is Circle [monash.edu.au], which uses a decentralized hashtable system., more about it at his system is in a pdf slideshow [monash.edu.au] he'll be giving at linux.conf.au [linux.conf.au]

    My favorite quote from his page: "FastTrack (aka Kazza/Morpheus) is kind of like trying to optimize a bublesort", which leads me to believe he has a regular quicksort at hand. (actually he does claim O(n log n) seachs, so its about right)

    Also to note are Chord [mit.edu] and GISP [jxta.org] which seem to use simular schemes, where Chord is pure acadamia (someones masters thesis). GISP is an implementation of something from JXTA, suns p2p framework.
    • My understanding of the quick sort using a binary tree would mean the data would have to be in order.... Ordering the list would take a centralized system... Or some real voodoo w/ idle network data transfer and a distributed idle proccess usage such as distributed.net/set@home.
  • by ImaLamer ( 260199 ) <john.lamar@g m a i l . com> on Thursday January 24, 2002 @11:54AM (#2894539) Homepage Journal
    At this point, the question needs to be asked:

    Why doesn't the RIAA come out with their own damn P2P?

    It could be fully under their control. They would be able to block certain songs, and maybe only let certain 'hot' singles out. Most of all, this would give them stronger legal basis when fighting current P2P companies and networks. They can point to their own network saying they own all rights to distribute their music, and thus other programs are violating their own legal market. Their refusal to distribute music electronically has hurt them more than anything else. We 'steal' music online, because there isn't one good for-pay network out there.

    But, of course we still don't buy into the fact that P2P has hurt music sales. I believe one problem is the fact that a average CD costs $15! When I was still paying for music a CD usually cost $12.99 - if it was $15 I wouldn't buy it. I was shocked to see "SALE!" signs over CD's at Media Play reading in the upwards of 15-16 bucks.

    But by their own account P2P saves the Recording Industry money. They haven't admitted this out loud, but read this from their website: [speaking on why the price on a CD isn't 30 cents]

    Then come marketing and promotion costs -- perhaps the most expensive part of the music business today. They include increasingly expensive video clips, public relations, tour support, marketing campaigns, and promotion to get the songs played on the radio. For example, when you hear a song played on the radio -- that didn't just happen! Labels make investments in artists by paying for both the production and the promotion of the album, and promotion is very expensive. New technology such as the Internet offers new ways for artists to reach music fans, but it still requires that some entity, whether it is a traditional label or another kind of company, market and promote that artist so that fans are aware of new releases.

    Huh? Makes sense... kinda'. But when I search for an artist I find all sorts of new songs. Many of which are great, but never make it to the radio.

    If the RIAA adapted the Fast Track technology [and of course make other than Windows clients] they could promote their own music on that main page. They could even tag certain songs as "hot" or "new".

    I mean, they can iron out the details, but considering they've got loads of cash. They've got the marketing minds that brough us O-Town and the like. Why can't they put this together?

    Why are we hard at work marketing their songs? Why are we using our bandwidth and time? Why are we donating our computers to distribute music? Why are we bothering with P2P?

    Simple: It works. We've found a better way. It's not free music. It's because they refuse to step into the year we live in.

    Wake up RIAA, you can't fight it any longer. Go after the guy pressing thousands of CD's and making money off of your work. Leave us alone, we aren't making a thing. It's wrong to be making cash on their works. It's not wrong to refuse to go back to an old system that is dying quickly.

    Every computer today is sold with a CD-RW. Let us do it.
    • Why doesn't the RIAA come out with their own damn P2P?

      Because if it has filters nobody is going to use.

      Long emotional question, short factual answer ;-)
      • Nobody? I think not.

        If they offered a service where I can download an mp3, ogg, etc, with unlimited rights to those songs [no wma] - that would be a start.

        I don't want to sit here typing out a huge plan, it's not my job. But if they offered a 'premium' service where you can download any song, any full album, many music geeks would pay up. Not everyone wants everything for free.

        If they had a free service where all the search results are displayed, but only their 'hot' songs could be downloaded - that would be a start. Let me get the latest Britney Spears hit for free. If I liked it, I'll pay for the rest.

        Furthermore, they can make songs available which there is no market in making more CD's. Cd's that are 'out of print' would be a huge draw for consumers.

        Sure, there are people out there that want free, illegal, music. But plenty of people just wished we could get music legally, and cheap.

        If they had the P2P program they could advertise there [with restraint]. They could promote what they wanted, and they could best develop a plan which provides a fair system to us, and them.

        They do have rights to.

        {and imalamer goes back to search for mp3s}
    • But by their own account P2P saves the Recording Industry money. They haven't admitted this out loud, but read this from their website: [speaking on why the price on a CD isn't 30 cents]

      Then come marketing and promotion costs -- perhaps the most expensive part of the music business today. They include increasingly expensive video clips, public relations, tour support, marketing campaigns, and promotion to get the songs played on the radio. For example, when you hear a song played on the radio -- that didn't just happen! Labels make investments in artists by paying for both the production and the promotion of the album, and promotion is very expensive. New technology such as the Internet offers new ways for artists to reach music fans, but it still requires that some entity, whether it is a traditional label or another kind of company, market and promote that artist so that fans are aware of new releases.

      Its not about money, its never been about the money. Think the stars are being starved because of P2P? Watch MTV Cribs sometime, they don't seem to be doing too bad.

      Its about control. It isn't that you might hear something new you like off the net and buy the CD, that's irrelevent. You might hear something other than what they want you to hear. They control every aspect of music - when it is played, how often, what songs are singles, and who gets the next shot at stardom. Most telling IMO is that the record studios time the release of new singles and albums based on when the artists last song drops off of the "TRL" program on MTV. If people can simply go out willy-nilly listening to whatever they want, the perpetual butt-raping of artists might have to end.

      See, if everyone keeps listening to the same great artists instead of picking up the next diva or boyband that comes down the pipe the record company isn't dealing with wide eyed new stars that they can lock into a contract and squeeze for an insane amounnt of money. They are dealing with artists who've been around the block and won't sign anything just to avoid the risk of being turned away.
      • I think you're right.

        It's also about distribution rights. Not the record company, but the stores, the CD makers, etc.

        But please let's not blame MTV for bad music. They take it up the a** for the RIAA a lot, but plenty of what you see if based on what you buy. People buy crap.

        Look at MTV2. They represent consumers better. The range of music is greater and barely do I see 'boybands'.

        RIAA and MTV didn't invent boy bands, we did. They just laugh at us and collect the dough.
    • I don't think that production and distribution of CDs is the big expense that the recording industry bears, I think its the costs involved in recording and production that are so expensive.

      Think of what studio time must cost to have a five-man band and all the people involved. Its not just the band, a recording engineer and a producer. There's loads of other engineers to mic everything, a couple of guys on the console, producer, roadies, catering, not to mention the time to rent the studio equipment. Then there's the guys involved in the mixdown (producer, engineers) and the equipment time. Mastering, etc etc. All expensive, equipment and people intensive.

      Production and distribution, as has been stated elsewhere, is a buck or two per disc.
      • Music production has little to do with the costs.

        The majority of it, by RIAA's words, is marketing.

        That's the thing. With the internet they can slash their marketing costs in half. Word of mouth, the biggest seller of music, has been expanded a thousand times by the use of the 'net.
    • Why won't the RIAA make their own P2P app? Because then they'd lose control of the music. Granted, they're losing control anyway, but let's step into the RIAA's shoes for a second.

      The only thing that gives them "power" is the fact that they control the distribution of quite a lot of music. If they were to let people download MP3s of their songs, those people would be able to pass the MP3s to their friends. They'd lose "physical" control of the music. (Physical in this sense meaning who the file goes to.) Nevermind that MP3 rippers, P2P apps, and CD burners already have loosened this control.

      If the RIAA charged even a nominal fee for the MP3s, the fee would be "shared" by friends. (E.g. Say the fee was $10 a month. Four friends and I could get together, register under my name, and split the $10 a month, paying only $2 each instead of $50 combined.) Thus they'd lose monetary control. Nevermind that those same MP3 rippers, P2P apps, and CD burners can turn a $15 CD into 5, 10, or even 50 CDs to pass along to your friends.

      The RIAA execs look at the Internet and see a swarming mass of music pirates nipping at their heals. Yet even they can't discount that there's money to be made online. That's why they're trying to come up with a means of controling online content.

      (Ok, time to step out of those RIAA shoes)

      Of course, the record execs should realize that they could *gain* control via an online music service. If done right, the service would reduce the reason to pirate music. (Why pirate that $18 CD when you can buy it online for $5?)

      As the public relied more and more on their distribution services, less and less people would sign on to P2P apps to trade music. Thus less and less music would appear on the P2P networks.

      And from a PR standpoint, they could be seen as being "pro-public" instead of being seen as control freaks who want to restrict how the public listens to music so they [the execs] can maximize their profits. And the subject of fair payment of artists would be much easier to sweep under the rug. Let's face it, Joe Q. Public really doesn't care whether or not Britteny Spears is getting fairly paid for her music so long as he can download it off the 'Net. (This isn't to say that the RIAA's treatment of artists should be swept under the rug, just that it's in the RIAA exec's best interests for it to be. After all, less money to the artist means more in the exec's pockets.)

      So they *should* make a P2P app, but they *won't.* (Or if they do, it'll contain so many built-in "control" features that it will be much less useful than a copy of the latest P2P program.)
  • It seems Kazaa is locking out Linux clients from connecting to their network. I know the network was down due to their recent sale to another company, but now the Windows clients work (apparently), but the Linux client remains unlinked from their download pages, *AND* existing clients cannot connect.

    Oh well. The gift project (http://gift.sourceforge.net/ [sourceforge.net]) appears to be coming along nicely, so screw Kazaa. :p

  • Windows (Score:3, Informative)

    by inerte ( 452992 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @12:18PM (#2894723) Homepage Journal
    For Windows users:

    There's an Open Source project hosted on Sourceforge [sourceforge.net] called Gnucleus [gnucleus.net]. Here is the project page [sourceforge.net].

    It supports multiple hosts download, so if you were an user of Xolox [xolox.nl], but want a client that development still continues and you want to get those large files using multiple connections, get it now. Sadly, download of partial files from other hosts is still not possible (since there's no consensus from the Gnutella protocol developers about how this should work).

    Gnucleus even has a LAN mode, so you may run it to share files over your network that has locked ports or net access blocked (great for colleges!).
  • Finally! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by thesupermikey ( 220055 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @12:29PM (#2894803) Homepage Journal
    It's been a pain in the ass to find A place to get Mp3s of live music. Napster was a breading ground for mislabeled music, and the other programs are just as bad. Don't get me wrong http://www.nugs.net is one of the best places to find Phish http://www.phish.com and dead http://dead.net . Other sites dont update or are slow, unreliable and tend to have very little buy way of new bands.
  • I'm still looking for a good case-study/white-paper on successful use of peer-to-peer technologies inside a business.

    Like instant messaging, most of the services are created with home users in mind. That means they lack the enterprise-strength management and security features needed by business.

    Trying to use MSN Messenger (for example) inside our organization allows connections to the outside world. Same thing with the Fasttrack file sharing systems.

    Has anyone used IM or P2P successully in a business? What did you do to keep the system secure, and how did you manage it?

    These technologies are awesome and it's easy to see how they could benefit business.
    • by Orasis ( 23315 )
      Jibe [jibeinc.com] has a wonderful product for enterprise file and data sharing and I think is making some good progress and will be quite successful.

      My employer, Onion Networks [onionnetworks.com], is focused on building enterprise content delivery solutions using P2P. 2002 is off to a great start for us as companies are immediately seeing the value of P2P for cutting costs and increasing reliability within their networks.

      --
      Justin Chapweske, Onion Networks [onionnetworks.com]
  • currently I get all my live bootlegs from alt.binaries.sound.mp3.bootlegs, but instead of going out and looking for a particular artist, Im presented with a vast array of stuff that I may or may not want, the only way to tell is to DL a song or two.. I have found many good concerts by people I dont normally like.
  • by ethank ( 443757 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @01:22PM (#2895221) Homepage
    I run a website called Murmurs.com, which is for the band REM. We run a Napster-clone on our servers using SlavaNap as the main server (Windows yes, I know, but it was more stable than OpenNap). The desired client is WinMX.

    REM has a kind of blind-eye mentality toward the sharing network, so long as what is being shared is live or unreleased tracks. As well, we allow sharing of other bands which support this mentality (Wilco, Pearl Jam, Patti Smith, Radiohead, U2, etc).

    A lot of the files are sourced by someone running a free FTP server (called ThinkTankDecoy, which makes sense if you know REM history). People download from that server and it permeates through the shared server.

    Ice Magazine recently ran a feature on our sharing system, a U2 one and Pearl Jam. Here's a quote:

    "At www.murmurs.com, www.fivehorizons.com and www.u2bloodredsky.com- three unofficial but overt REM, pearl Jam, and U2 sites- one can easily nevigate past message forums and band news to locate mp3 concerts uploaded by fans. The U2 site is set up like a database, and provides tips for people un familiar with PTP. The REM site requires user registration, and directs how to install its own custom file-swapping software. It also recently featured an exclusive interview with guitarist peter Buck. when told that both a rare 1980 show and thhe entire, unedited portion of the recent MTV "Unplugged" broadccast had been posted to Murmurs.com, he replied "I like the fact that we've done this huge mountain of work, and that every now and then I'll find a bootleg of some 85 German tv show...."

    Ice Magazine is maintstream industry press.

    Considering the size of U2, PJ and REM, its nice to see that at least some big bands don't listen to the RIAA's squawking.

    Ethan
  • linux p2p Issues (Score:4, Insightful)

    by WyldOne ( 29955 ) on Thursday January 24, 2002 @01:41PM (#2895350) Homepage

    After dabbling in p2p for a bit. I found PHEX [sourceforge.net]worked for some large files. However I found all the p2p client/servers had a few things problematic about them.

    • While they all could search, none could find matching files by hash code(be it rc5 or whatever it uses).
    • Of the ones that did multi-home download, none ever kept trying to find sources for the files in progress (enhancment/feature?).
    • My biggest beef with all of them is that none could continue a d/l that had stopped. So every time it re-started it would start at the beginning.
    • Only a few of them could resume searching/downloading if the client died(or I killed it) (gtk-gnutella could save the d/l requests)
    • Spammage - you could do a exact title serch, and get hacking info, or porno or ... well you know what I mean. Heavans forbid if any commercial company really got serious about it.

    'Piggy-backing' would be nice, but reliabe would be better. In the end it has a ways to go. Large files are the biggest problem.
    • While they all could search, none could find matching files by hash code(be it rc5 or whatever it uses)

      Furthur does md5 checking to group together the files, and once you start downloading it looks at md5's to figure out what it needs to download. AFAIK, All internal file identification is done by md5, and not by file name.

      Of the ones that did multi-home download, none ever kept trying to find sources for the files in progress (enhancment/feature?).

      Furthur will look for other sources every 15 minutes (or whatever you set it to). If you start a download, and the guys you are downloading from all leave, you can just let it sit in the Partial tab. Come back in a few days (or whatever), and the show will probably be fully downloading. You never have to do anything after you click "download".

      My biggest beef with all of them is that none could continue a d/l that had stopped. So every time it re-started it would start at the beginning.

      Furthur can do this of course. It can piece together downloads from multiple people who already have the file, and even from others who are currently downloading. And if the download is interupted, it will pick up where it left off when a source becomes available.

      Only a few of them could resume searching/downloading if the client died(or I killed it) (gtk-gnutella could save the d/l requests)

      Furthur can do this, too.

      Spammage - you could do a exact title serch, and get hacking info, or porno or ... well you know what I mean. Heavans forbid if any commercial company really got serious about it.

      Well, furthur is still dependent on what people put in the file descriptions, so if someone wanted to put a bunch of spam in there, they could. I haven't seen that happen yet, though.

      -Mike
      PS I'm not afiliated with Furthur in any way, other than as a satisfied user

  • Claims like "New search technology, fastest search times yet" are nice, but where are the details? How do these systems actually work?

"Only the hypocrite is really rotten to the core." -- Hannah Arendt.

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