Napster Adding "Protection Layer" 188
bluecalix writes "According to an article on sonicnet, 'In the new Napster, which the company says will be launched "as soon as possible," users will still be able to swap MP3 files ripped from their own CDs. But Napster will add a new "protection layer" to MP3s as they move from one user's computer to another, allowing the service to control what users do with the files they download, according to a statement from the company.'"
Laws are for the Lawless (Score:1)
Taking a lesson from the MPAA (Score:1)
However, as we have learned from the DeCSS case, all you have to do is *try* to protect your content, no matter how flimsy the protection.
Pretty clever of Napster, they could use the DMCA to shift the blame from themselves to the users...
Poisoning MP3 (Score:1)
what I mean to say is, if after a period of time, there might not be any 'untainted' mp3's left...
this jibe's right with a theory I've had for over a year now, a theory explaining how RIAA might kill napster:
Spoil the mp3 format, or
make mp3 trading totally socially unacceptable, tantamount to narcotics or prostitution.
Oooo... (Score:2)
Any takers?
Re:Theory - MP3 bits (Score:2)
All my files are encoded with the keys 6, 5, 11, 4.
Re:Intermediate device drivers will not work. (Score:5)
Watermark != encryption (Score:1)
do your homework (Score:2)
--
Re:HaHa! (Score:1)
---
The Hotmail addres is my decoy account. I read it approximately once per year.
Re:Protection Layer vs. Bitrate (Score:1)
Because I'm not going to rip my CD collection at 24Kbps or really anything else than the settings I use now (using LAME with VBR). If I don't rip my CDs at 24Kbps, they won't be shared. Say goodbye to Napster's "customer" base once the only people who have files available for download are people who are willing to maintain a copy of their MP3 collection at a lower bitrate specifically for trading with Napster users.
Re:The "layer" (Score:1)
It just needs to exist. Wether it works and is broken, or doesn't work and is broken isn't going to make a difference legally or in circumvent-ability.
Re:Theory - MP3 bits (Score:2)
Re:Easy solution... (Score:2)
Yeah, but it doesn't need to.... (Score:1)
Re:Also important (Score:1)
Re:Also important (Score:1)
However even in this scenario, it doesn't mean that the file can no longer be shared. It all depends on how they do the "protection." A form of public key encryption...yes, it would have to be able to remove the encryption. A new file format *could* still be shared, or could be restricted. It could even be done according to the copyright holder's preferences, in case they only want the songs to be downloaded from their own machines (in order to track usage, for example.)
Why does everyone shit on Ogg Vorbis? (Score:2)
But, what about Ogg Vorbis? Everytime this is brought up as a serious subject - people start to trash it: "the format sucks", "only geeks use it", "it will never work".. "blah blah blah". Someone else posted a message saying that one way the RIAA was going to try to kill MP3 is to piss in the pool. If they can flood the MP3 pool with garbage files, then the format will lose credibility and people will stop trading files.
So, rather than complain about Napster and MP3 why not work on alternative and completely open formats? If we all told Napster to go fuck themselves and started to develop Ogg Vorbis in earnest we could have a great alternative. Let the Army of Lusers (AOL) use the "Pay-per-listen" Napster that will be born. And the real traders who have been in the scene for awhile should start to switch formats.
Develop cool software that works well and has *all* the features we want. Develop hardware that plays it. And in the end we can have a truely OPEN format that goes head-to-head with MP3, Windows Media, Liquid Audio, and others. Why is everyone so attached to MP3 anyway? It's not the best format out there... in fact it kind of sucks.
So.. (Score:2)
I think Napster has given up the holy 'cause' they were fighting for.. people can swap files anyway... so it's time we publicly, openly did something new to get attention away from Napster. They're just going to turn into another media whore.
Re:Hard to do, easy to overcome (Score:2)
The flock will follow, and napster will get fat like the media whore they are.
Re:I'm working on just such a thing. (Score:2)
Strict peer-peer will save you. The ISP's will not be bothered by it because as far as they're concerned it's just more layer 3 traffic. Legally they would have a simple time claiming they had no way of policing it. If you're clever and use some encryption, they won't be able to police it.
Peer discovery and propgating queries are the hard bit. How do I know which machines are within (say) a dozen hops? How do I propogate a search? How does it scale.
Yes, it's hard. But a worthy goal, don't you think?
Dave
Re:HaHa! (Score:3)
Dave
Re:Yeah, this'll work (Score:3)
They don't need to: There are open source (BSD licence) cryptogtraphy toolkits that work perfectly well. The sword cuts both ways.
Dave
Green light to open source sharing. (Score:5)
So the message to those wishing to ego-pander by having (say) 100 million people using their software is simple: Go.
It has to work on Windows, like it or not, and it has to be simple. It has to be secure, it has to scale, it has to be able to search, and it would be damn handy to the lamer in the street if it could cut collections of MP3's to audio CD.
Obviously it has to be completely decentralised, cos RIAA are going to go nuts.
Go for it. Make it work. And do yourself a favour by not putting the letters 'GN' at the start of it's name.
Dave
Re:Theory - MP3 bits (Score:5)
Piece of piss. How does it play in an MP3 player? It won't.
Dave
Re:Intermediate device drivers will not work. (Score:1)
Re:Hard to do, easy to overcome (Score:1)
Inevitably, Napster had to go legit (Score:2)
Yes, I'll miss napster. Yes, this sucks. But I'm tired of people acting all hurt and betrayed....
This should be interesting. (Score:2)
However, my best guess is that it will involve storing all mp3's inside a loopback type encrypted filesystem, and all mp3 playback will have to be through napster's program. Of course, this is far from foolproof. A couple days with a disassembler, and all this will be for naught.
Of course, I still say that none of this matters. Napster can be whatever it wants to be. I don't use it, never have used it and don't plan to start anytime soon. I can't keep up with the inflow of mp3's I'm getting now, why would I want to make the "problem" worse.
-Restil
What's wrong with analog outputs? (Score:2)
Dump the "secure audio" to a metal formula cassette tape (assuming you've got a deck that will actually use it well), a DAT tape, or an audio cd burner.
Seriously, you a lot of fidelity from the mp3 encoding process to begin with and virtually none from the analog output to your speakers. All it takes is one person with a DAT drive with line level inputs to supply everone else with an unencumbered version of anything at all.
Until someone comes up with a way to encrypt something up to the point that it reaches our ears then there will be no such thing as "secure audio."
Re:Gnutella Rulez (Score:1)
Gnutella will never pull the kind of critical mass needed. It's only a matter of a very small amount of time before it's shut down. There have been many documents written on the major lack of scalability in the Gnutella architecture - whereby single searches start to require gigabytes of bandwidth when you start to get respectable numbers of users on the system.
Try again.
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So? They don't care. It satisifes the court. (Score:1)
So, don't complain. Napster's thinking just like you are.
Re:OpenNap (Score:2)
WinMX, AudioGNOME, RapIgator ... See for yourself [sourceforge.net]
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Re:Relax and lose. (Score:1)
Do you think Napster would allow you to actually *see* the MP3? My guess is it will be encoded into some sort of super-large cache. And you will have no control over it. And there will be a game where Napster keeps on hiding the songs better and better. And the energy expended in this "game" could be better spent on OpenNap.
And why you're wrong, PhatKat, is because of this:
1. Napster is not platform independent. You can only run Napster on their pre-approved platforms.
2. It would be a mistake to assume that Napster is being careless here. They want to be a viable business much more than you want your free music.
Anyway, that's my two cents, take what you want from it...
Re:Relax! (Score:1)
Yeah, this'll work (Score:2)
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pretty laughable (Score:1)
Re:pretty laughable (Score:1)
Re:Easy solution... (Score:1)
engineered' this system, then it's a violation
of DMCA and they can be sued? The intent of this
system was to prevent people finding the information
contained within it. The intent of CSS was to
prevent people finding the information contained
within it.
Could be an excellent case for someone to trial
Re:This only goes for future downloads (Score:1)
was still quite young, that it had an off by one
buy where it would truncate the last byte off
every download. This didn't really have any
noticable effect on the an mp3, so the bug went
unnoticed. Except that files that were popular
ended up being many generations old and therefore
would have the last part of the song truncated.
It misses the point..... (Score:1)
Regardless of posturing, piracy is the one and only raison d'etre of Napster. Regardless of what they implement or how effective it is, Napster is no more.
Um... no? (Score:1)
This "protection layer" thing is both bullshit and a great way to alienate the user base- this, and it would be a bitch to implement on the Mac. [the Mac version of Napster sucks enough as it is.] If they're going to go through with making the experience shittier for everyone in order to assuage the greed of the record labels, the least they could to is actually, you know, IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF THE SERVICE at the same time. But I doubt we'll see, say, a useable search engine any time soon.
Re:Theory - MP3 bits (Score:2)
Whups. Thanks for the clue, deeznutsclan.
Moderators: He may have been inflammatory, but he was right [oreilly.com]. See table 2-1 in the O'Reilly chapter I linked to.
If the protection bit is on, then a checksum follows the header. They can do this in every frame of the file.
My original point still stands - a third-party utility can just as easily strip or reset the bits after downloading through the NewNapster client. But the bits are in the frame headers, not the ID3 tags. (Serves me right for taking the output of TinAMP seriously :)
Re:Is that a real MP3, or a Sears MP3??? (Score:2)
Paranoid theory: Maybe that's what RIAA's plan is.
Fact: Napster has a large userbase.
Fact: The new napster will also have a large userbase, at least for a period of time
Fact: Users trade MP3s offline
Fact: Newbies are often "compulsive upgraders"
Therefore, we can assume that when NewNapster says "You need to update your MP3 player" to play these MP3s-that-aren't-MP3s, they'll do it.
We can further assume that they'll share these files over other media.
We can conclude that if these files continue to be shared, that not everything that ends in ".mp3" will be playable in old-sk00l MP3 players (hardware or software).
Thus, the base of existing MP3s is sufficiently-contaminated that clued-in users no longer trust that a file ending in ".MP3" is playable, and they stop trading en masse and go back to trading amongst themselves, a few files at a time.
The widespread sharing of MP3 files is stopped. The USENET MP3 groups are also abandoned (think: flood of clueless n00bies with cable modems and NewNapsterized MP3s), and we go back to the dark ages.
I don't think it'll happen - but it's a possibility. All that has to happen is that NewNapster not suck as much as we think it will ;-)
Theory - MP3 bits (Score:3)
Betcha the "new" Napster simply flips these bits, and "asks you" to "upgrade" your MP3 player to something that honors those bits.
WTF else could they do and still have the downloaded files play in an MP3 player?
Re:could it work? (Score:1)
Re:HaHa! (Score:2)
-send_to_server("type=gnapster");
+send_to_server("type=BigBronapster");
Re:HaHa! (Score:3)
Encryption is *not* a pancea, it does not magically make everything unbreakable. Like any other tool, it is useful in places, but it's just that, a tool. It has limitations. Encryption does not allow you to trust the client --- *NOTHING* does.
Re:Theory - MP3 bits (Score:1)
Justin Dubs
Hard to do, easy to overcome (Score:4)
This could be done at the client level, but would need to have everyone using the new client. This is time consuming and does not stop people from using the old client with something like opennap.
How could the new napster client be sure that the mp3 was from his/her own cd collection? As easily as new mp3's come with a new "protection layer", I can remove it.
Napster must realize this, and hopefully this is just a move to keep the RIAA at bay for a while because they're "doing something" to stop it, despite how easy it is to get around.
Hate the playa, not the game. (Score:2)
Here is rule 1 of Business 101 for those that don't know.
"Make money anyway you can. This includes screwing anyone that inhibits this including your own customers."
I think it is going to make it hard for people to continue to support Naps court battle now as things like this come out.
The fight is still crucially important, even though it helps a common whore like Napster.
Re:Theory - MP3 bits (Score:1)
Re:Green light to open source sharing. (Score:2)
Note: I'm not against Napster or rooting for the RIAA, just stating the facts.
Here is an article with more details (Score:3)
http://www.inside.com/jcs/Story?article_id=23794&p od_id=9 [inside.com]
Re:Intermediate device drivers will not work. (Score:2)
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Disclaimer!!! (Score:2)
Re:HaHa! (Score:1)
Once upon a time... (Score:2)
people traded MP3s
the did it with people
they knew in IRC,
and in ICQ,
and with FTP,
and in other ways
that the world wouldn't see.
"Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"
Relax! (Score:2)
I'm convinced this is just an attempt to assuage the powers that be with some meaningless techno-spindoctoring. No worries here. Whatever it is, it sounds lame. And if it is as carelessly implemented as it sounds, it shouldn't be hard protection to sidestep.
Use a cross-platform framework to write this (Score:2)
Apple has announced it has no plans to support a JVM later than 1.1.8 on the classic Mac OS so you can't use all those great collection classes in Java 1.2 and be cross platform! (See Apple's Java Developer page [apple.com] and scroll down to where it says "Mac OS Classic Java".)
Use a cross-platform application framework. That way you can program on Linux, Mac, BeOS, Windows or maybe even QNX and deliver for all those schoolkids running Windows ME on their parents' PC.
One such framework, for C++, is ZooLib [sourceforge.net]. There are many others, as you can see from The GUI Toolkit, Framework Page [theoffice.net].
Read about why it's important to write cross-platform code. [sourceforge.net]
I'm most familiar with ZooLib, because I've been working with it on the products I write for my clients, and I helped ZooLib author Andy Green prepare it for open source release late last year under the MIT License [sourceforge.net].
ZooLib offers all of the following implemented as C++ classes:
ZooLib 0.81 is known to build with MetroWerks CodeWarrior [metrowerks.com] on Windows and Mac OS, gcc on Linux, and gcc on BeOS [be.com] for Pentium.
If you use CodeWarrior you can cross-compile and cross-debug; check out Thursby Software [thursby.com] for some filesharing solutions that work well for this. (Tip - on Windows, select the "MacBinarize" post-linker in the target linker prefs when building a Mac target - you also need to derez all your resource files and include them as Rez text source).
While it should ultimately work, there are known build problems with BSD, CodeWarrior for BeOS PowerPC and Visual C++ on Windows. These are all being worked on and full support for all these platforms is expected before long.
Other cross-platform frameworks I'd like to note are:
People often mistake these problems for valid arguments that one should not do cross-platform development, or perhaps not render your own widgets when doing so but depend on platform specific ones (like AWT vs. Swing), but I think the lightweight, well architected, efficient and easy to use ZooLib answers those arguments very eloquently.
Help me teach the Free Software community to write quality code [sunsite.dk].
Mike [goingware.com]
Which P2P will replace Napster? (Score:2)
What P2P 'file sharing' service should I install if I want to share my files with my friends, most of whom run Win95?
What P2P client should I install if I want to be able to download MP3s from random strangers? Which alternative to Napster has the biggest library?
Lastly, which service gives me the most 'protection' (anonymity, etc) against being sued by RIAA or raided by the FBI?
wow - this is useful! (Score:2)
"Hey all you record labels! Time to get happy! Call off your lawyers because we're still going to let our users pirate your songs, but they can only give them away if they actually bought your CD! Oh, sure they can still give away billions of copies - but those people can't pirate them! Until they crack our protection algorithm which we think they pretty much will, because if we change the file format too much then it breaks every MP3 player ever made. Oh, and even if they don't crack our file format, they sure as hell will Digital-Analog-Digital the songs and redistribute them that way."
My take on this: Napster ignores lawsuits until they have huge market. Napster gets huge market. Napster redefines onlines music from
Re:Oh, that's wonderful (Score:2)
And if you circumvent this, they will just put in more advertising, but integral to the music. The Boston Symphony will be required to modify the last few bars of Beethoven's Ninth to include the Coca-Cola jingle. Backstreet Boys will be comissioned by AT&T to sing about the wonders of 1-800-CALL-ATT in every song. Etc. Etc. Etc.
Why don't you just pay the artists so it doesn't have to come to this? I would much rather have pure music, than music diluted by advertsting.
Watch napster sink... (Score:2)
Napster is a centralised index and a company. That means there's ONE source to go after, ONE company to sue, and ONE entity to force changes on. Napster knuckles under, and here we are.
However, fewer people are going to use this new Napster, especially when other (better) systems are coming to maturity. This may be the push Gnutella needs for widespread legitimacy.
good bye napster (Score:2)
Good bye Napster,
Good bye Napster,
I won't be using you now.
I think it's time to uninstall it.
Maybe if Napster moved to Canada we could use it without all this crap.
Then of course the RIAA's song would be "Blame Canada".......
--
Re: (Score:2)
Just like a small dose of antibiotic (Score:4)
Rather, the RIAA's contribution to shutting Napster down or gimping it with ridiculous restrictions will ultimately work against those who wish to prohibit sharing of music and files.
It reminds me of what my doctor says about taking antibiotics, "Take them until they're gone. If you only take a few, you'll just kill off the weak bacteria and eventually create a stronger strain."
Well, this is exactly what will happen. Once a central server-based system like Napster goes down, we will see noncentralized systems like the Gnutella model increase in size and reliability. The RIAA will shoot itself in the foot by forcing file-sharing to become easier to use by consumers and increasingly untouchable by industry and government.
Centralized servers are points of failure. (Score:2)
what if the mp3 is encrypted with a key that has to be checked out of a centralized server?
One word: OpenNap. OpenNap servers will use one well-known key. If you trade MP3s over OpenNap instead of Napster Inc's network, you already have the key to descramble them.
See also Pinocchio's comments on Napdot [napster.com] to see why a restricted Napster just won't work.
All your hallucinogen [pineight.com] are belong to us.
The trusted client problem (Score:2)
What if they where to the protection it locally on your PC?
It would not work, as clients cannot be trusted in a secure situation (e.g. Quake cheating). Fifty bucks says there will, within two days of the release, be either a patch that disables DRM encoding in the client or a clone client that doesn't even do DRM.
All your hallucinogen [pineight.com] are belong to us.
Music isn't that expensive to make (Score:2)
Dude ... music is enormously expensive to record
Bull. All you need to record techno are a computer, a tracker [modplug.com], a sample set (start with GM.dls that comes with recent Windows), a player that writes wav (Winamp), and a Vorbis [vorbis.com] encoder.
modify the last few bars of Beethoven's Ninth to include the Coca-Cola jingle
This is already happening. Witness "Summer Girls" by LFO (the "Abercrombie and Fitch" song). But jingles don't even have to mention the product name anymore; witness licensing of popular songs in commercials such as "Da Da Da" by Trio (used in a VW commercial) and various golden oldies used in Burger King commercials.
Why don't you just pay the artists so it doesn't have to come to this?
Because the labels don't provide an efficient way to buy the two good songs on the album without buying the ten filler songs.
All your hallucinogen [pineight.com] are belong to us.
Intermediate device drivers will not work. (Score:4)
if the idea is to keep people from burning MP3s to CDs, there's nothing to keep them from writing dummy device drivers as an intermediate step.
SBLive already has this (What-U-Hear); I'd think InterTrust (contracted by Napster to provide restrictions management) would have thought of this already. Anyway, Windows ME and Windows XP contain a Secure Audio Path that only drivers signed by Microsoft can use. And to be signed, a driver must disable all digital outputs (spdif, what-u-hear, write to .wav) when the Secure Audio Path is open.
All your hallucinogen [pineight.com] are belong to us.
playing these new "mp3" files (Score:2)
* Not be MP3 files anymore therefore you'll need special players to listen to the files, in which case people will just use a tool to remove the extra layer and convert them back to regular MP3 format
or
* Be playable with any regular player, therefore making this protection layer useless anyway.
And don't forget, once a file is burned on a CD as a regular audio track, it can be ripped again as a good old MP3.
yeah, and.. (Score:2)
Next!
(When will they learn?)
A cute little poem from the future. (Score:4)
When a few actually wanted to pay
And Napster gave in
To Big Brother's whim
That day Napster could no longer stay.
__________________________________________
The people that are willing to pay for napster are the people that don't know how to download MP3s from other sources. The reason for this is probably that they aren't exactly computer junkies. They probably don't spend much time on their computers and therefore don't get mp3s to play them on their computer. They get them to put them on CDs and play them in their car or whatever. Napster will kill themselves by becoming a slave to the music industry. Why would anyone pay for napster to get stupid songs that they can't play anywhere but their computer? After the first few months of their subscription service, subscribers will probably die down once they realize how stupid it is with a small user pool and altered songs.
I don't know how many costs they would have, but I don't see them making a huge amount of profit with this plan. They could even go bankrupt. They really only have two logical options: Close now or keep up the legal battles. It's obvious their only reasoning behind this move is to please the music industry, their enemy. Yes, Napster is a business, but this move doesn't look very businesslike - Napster is basically letting the music industry control them. Whatever they do, the music industry will be watching them. If napster doesn't go bankrupt, it will just turn into a place like cdnow.com, except you can't even get CDs from it. It's the napster self-destruction.
/whois John Galt
New, and...? (Score:4)
the new Napster
Oh, so it'll be pretty much like the old Napster, except now nobody will like it.
Re:Intermediate device drivers will not work. (Score:3)
1. Hack the code in either the client, the driver or the kernel. Or hack the hardware. Only needs to be done once, then the means to do so could be distributed. Illegal under the DMCA in the US. DMCA might be unconstitutional - but that often doesn't stop them.
2. Just get 2 sound cards and the best darn audio cable (high quality and shielded! Preferably with gold plated connecters, and as small as possible) you can get and feed the audio out of the secure card into the audio in of a non-secure card (which could be on another PC). And record that.
Digital to analog to digital conversion does far less harm to the signal than MP3 encoding does. Of source, re-encoding back into MP3 might hurt (if I take an MP3, turn it to wav and back again, do I lose info that survived the initial encoding into MP3?)
Maybe fair use, may be legal or illegal under the DMCA, but it is not really circumventing because the conversion from a protected format was done by authorized software - so the actual protection mechanism wasn't circumvented or bypassed - it was used as designed. You are intercepting a non-protected signal, and you might get off on that. Or might not. See a lawyer for advice. we all know of one judge would be convict you no matter how good of a case you make.
Re:HaHa! (Score:2)
kill(connection);
}
or, something like that
Rate me on Picture-rate.com [picture-rate.com]
Re:Oh my lord (Score:3)
Check out BearShare [bearshare.com], it's one of the most powerful Gnutella clients around and works nicely here. Other than that, see infoAnarchy (sig) for news & updates on Napster alternatives, as well as a comprehensive list of them.
--
Re:Practice - MP3 bits (Score:2)
The private key have to be on the client to play the file. So, reverse engineering of
Napster doing something like that is like putting a huge blinking neon, reading "hack me" on each napster copy.
Software copy protection is futile.
Cheers,
--fred
Protection Layer vs. Bitrate (Score:2)
People could still trade files freely, and if they really liked a song, they would want to go buy the CD for the better quality. It would be good business for the record companies - people would still get exposed to artists they would otherwise not take the time to seek out. It would also be good for Napster assuming the RIAA went for it. Napster would retain a significant amount of it's appeal and "customer" base, and might get out of the hotseat in the process.
Any ideas on this? What bitrate? Why wouldn't this work, or how could it work?
Re:Intermediate device drivers will not work. (Score:2)
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Re:The "layer" (Score:2)
What if I owned the copyright to this hypothetical song, and forbade modifications to the file, would they be allowed to add this "protection layer?"
Just a couple more thoughts, other than the ease of getting past it.
Something like those "Beware of dog" signs? (Score:2)
This is all a bunch of fooey, for the benefit of the RIAA and the stupid users they hope will believe their smoke and mirrors.
"Beware of dog" signs might work for the casual criminal, but are they really going to stop someone who wants to break into your house? (By the way, DeCSS is the tool used to break into your house [mpaa.org], did you know that?). They're going to realize real fast that the Beware of Dog sign is a fake, and that if you have a dog, it's been dead a long long time.
Good luck implementing this, Napster. Why don't you bring out your poster child and have him explain how a poor company like Napster is forced to do these horrible things by the RIAA.
Re:InterTrust (Score:2)
I'm rather looking forward to it - when they fail! No reason to expect them to succeed where others haven't - for all the reasons that copy protection / DRM don't work. (i.e. people will always find some way to circumvent it.)
main problem... (Score:3)
I agree completely.
Here's the grammar nazi summary:
1. Napster is increasing the cost of their service (from $0 to ???).
2. Napster is removing 'value' from it's service by restricting the files that can be shared.
This is never a wise business model. Increasing price needs to accompany increasing 'percieved value'. The only way that I would pay for Napster's service is if they increased the value of their service. For free I have access to a lot of music. Why the hell would I pay to have access to less music.
I desperately hope that Gnutella or Freenet are ready by the time Napster decides to implement there new flawed business model.
This only goes for future downloads (Score:2)
I also think this is the same with most people, so, statistically, who can say that:
Now, I just wonder whether somebody actually tracked a Napster song in order to evaluates how many times it is actually downloaded? Maybe this information would just show the Napster people how useless (or useful ?) this is going to be...
Or maybe their forthcoming "tagging" will be a way for them to perform such statistics as their model is centralized.
Until then, I'll switch to GNUtella.
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Oh, that's wonderful (Score:5)
DMCA worries (Score:3)
When does it end??? (Score:2)
1) Someone will reverse-engineer the client as soon as they download it. Illegal in the US, possibly, (not that will stop some people) but there's always overseas users.
2) The decrypted contents of the watermark have to exist in memory. Big problem. If nothing else, an awful lot of sound cards produce digital output. Feed the output back in, endgame.
Why not just give up? Or move to the Cayman Islands? This is a silly game, they should stop now.
It's the bandwidth, stupid. (Score:2)
Don't they know that mp3's aren't web pages? This is big data, lots of it. I would say that I hope they realize this, but since their encryption idea sucks (for the consumer), I really couldn't care less. They'll go down either way.
HaHa! (Score:3)
Is that a real MP3, or a Sears MP3??? (Score:2)
Sure whatever it is can be cracked... (Score:2)
All they need to do is use that legal equivalent of a spiked basball bat, called DMCA, and sue anyone who publishes the crack, at least in the U.S.
Hell, it will be DeCSS all over again (Score:2)
We get a monopoly on the file format. If Napster is determined to prevent its users from using their files elsewhere, then it won't give out the encryption to decode it and remove the protection. The only truly secure choice is to use a DVD style monopoly on media players. So much for quality. Heck, if they wanted to charge to use the files anywhere else besides the Napster client, money will flow to them one way or the other.
Just as in DeCSS, somebody will probably want their own DVD/mp3 player, and thus crack the encryption. All we're getting into here is the same old debate on whether it is legitimate to modify the files because it was distributed to you accordingly.
could it work? (Score:5)
the answer to 2. is less clear. Obviously they couldn't change the way you access older napster files on your computer. They could encrypt them, which isn't terribly feasible in terms of having to be decrypted for every playback unless the encryption is weak (maybe I am wrong on this). What about having a funky scrambled format that changed regularly? then anyone cracking it would again have to distribute updates through illegal means, which is slow, whereas their software could remember the old formats and descramble based on the date of the file.
I guess my point is that they don't have make it impossible to decrypt mp3 files to win. They just have to make it impractical for users to do it on a wide scale.
InterTrust (Score:2)
Napster doesn't have the resources to do it right, but InterTrust does. If they're the ones hired to do this, it'll be their biggest project ever. Make-or-break. Of course it'll probably still get hacked, but if a Digital Right Management solution can work, they're the ones who'll do it.
I'd hate to imagine what happens to their stock if they fail.
Re:HaHa! (Score:2)
Also important (Score:2)
Easy solution... (Score:2)
Protection Layer? (Score:2)
Seriously, though, this is what Napster needs to legitimize its service. For years, Napster has been the equivalent of a smuggler's hideout, filled with law-breaking malcontents. However, with the advent of content tracking and protection, Naspter can ally itself with the music industry instead of being perpetually at odds with it.
I want the convenience of downloadable music as much as anyone, but I am not willing to steal from artists just for my own convenience. I welcome any legitimacy and legality that Napster can bring to online music trading.
- qpt
Napster is gasping for breath (Score:5)
I agree with many of the posters that it's likely this copy protection will be easy to hack. I doubt that it will be on purpose, but napster just doesn't have the kind of resources or time it takes to play this kind of game. But I do think that it's a legitimate attempt. Napster investors and board members aren't looking to play cute tricks and sly wink-wink kind of routines with all the visibility this has in the country and on the hill. This is all about making their authorized subscription service, which seems like it at this point will have only one major contributor, Bertelsmann (and if other label showings are any indications, maybe only with a few hundred selected traffic)
The main issue is really the injunction. Once a reasonable rewrite is made, napster will be compelled to turn off file sharing. The injunction has nothing to do with appropriate copy protection. It will still be illegal to swap songs, even if you can't burn them.
So that leaves the high profile 1 billion dollar deal [cnet.com] that is nothing more than a political stance, an effort to show good faith that napster wants to pay. Can you imagine as a record label taking $30 million a year to give a license to piracy?? Do you think any of the labels would take that deal from off-shore pirates? And a little honesty... Where does the $200 million a year that napster would have to produce come from? How much revenue did they book in '00 ? Probably no more than 10-20 million, and if they did that would put them at the top of the heap in private online music ventures.
The real truth of the matter is that no one, NO ONE, is doing well with online music. No one can beg borrow or steal licenses to deliver digital as the primary medium. What you're left with is a bunch of marginal online radio apps and places that offer a horrible cross-section of downloadables (emusic). Or deals where the right to stream is gotten buy buying in the correct brick and mortar store. It makes no difference, look around at the online music industry and everyone is laying off. It's simply a game of how much money you have left before you go under.
Napster is no different. The $50 million they got from Bertelsmann had heavy contingencies. If you had made an investment in napster, wouldn't you have been looking at the appeal results as to how you felt about following through with the investments.
They even hinted at doing napster for movies and games. Apparently they saw scour's unqualified success as a reason to run down that road. What on earth makes them think they can be successful against the MPAA when the RIAA has been so effective?
Napster's management has cracked like everyone else's, and they are desperately grasping at any business plan that hits their desks. It's quite interesting to watch, you can be sure it will continue to be entertaining.