Napster Settles with Metallica/Dr. Dre 135
jeffy124 writes: "Metallica and Dr Dre have settled their lawsuits against Napster. Lars Ulrich says the terms of settlement allow Metallica to have final say over what songs of their's are permitted to be traded over the Napster service." It's pretty easy to settle when you're completely shut down anyway.
Re:Alternatives (Score:1)
Re:Is there a Dr. in the House? (Score:2)
It had no merit and would have stagnated the industry.
It would have been like Ford suing Chevy in 1927 because they copied the look and feel of the Model T by making their car black with 4 wheels.
It amazes me how ignorant people are sometimes, they just wish to attack Microsoft without really understanding the alternative.
Re:Why is it that... (Score:2)
Re:Why is it that... (Score:2)
Got that confused with 'Dancing in the Streets'.
Fire bad... (Score:1)
SPOON!!!
Lars interview on internet (Score:5)
and click on napster bad.
for a recorded interview with Lars on Napster and these events.
Re:Why is it that... (Score:1)
Re:Why is it that... (Score:2)
(Remember Vanilla Ice and Queen/Bowie over "Under Pressure" and "Ice Ice Baby." Ultimately Queen/Bowie got writing credits and therefore, royalties.)
Re:Filters... (Score:2)
Napster worked using a very simple algorythm:
unless(music eq $free){
die("No way, Dude!");
}
No other formula has been shown to be effective. None are likely to work until another variable comes into play and I just don't see it...
Of course, after a while, Forbes Magazine will declare that P2P is dead as a business model and people will go back to trading on IRC and Gnutella.
Cheers,
Jim in Tokyo
MMDC Mobile Media [mmdc.net]
In other news... (Score:3)
As is napster.
I mean, when was the last time anyone downloaded *anything* from Napster?
Sayonara, Napster, it was fun...Nothing to see here, move along...
MMDC Mobile Media [mmdc.net]
Re:Filters... (Score:4)
One has to wonder if the companies were keeping some searches unblocked, just to see how it affected their sales.
Personally, I don't think I'm alone in being some one who mainly used Napster for old, obscure songs that I doubted I'd be able to find at the local CD store. I can't help but wonder if that's the market that the RIAA really wanted to kill, while examining the viability of the peer-to-peer market for new releases.
I will miss Napster's feature of seeing what else a user has on their hard drive - If someone actually has Etta James' "Out of The Rain" or Gavin Bryars' "Jesus Blood Never Failed me Yet", I want to see what else they have. Probably stuff worth acquiring...
Cheers,
Jim in Tokyo
MMDC Mobile Media [mmdc.net]
Re:Alternatives (Score:2)
Re:Why is it that... (Score:1)
would consider those to be good.
So shut up.
Re:Why is it that... (Score:1)
to ask is why Dr. Dre is not averse to
promoting other criminality, eg
Gun violence,
whilst acting so righteous over other
people freely promoting his music.
Sampling is a different issue.
Ps I enjoy Dr.Dres music, but consider
Napster etc to be free advertising.
Not anything people should care
about. It just means the people who only
got tapes off their friends now get MP3s,
ie no change in market size.
Re:Why is it that... (Score:1)
Everyone who is satisfied with an mp3 would have been satisifed with a tape. Everyone who can nw get an mp3 could have gotten a tape in the past.
Remember public libraries? Remember "I got this as a gift and I already had it"? Dumbass.
No change in market size. Thery may get it quicker, but any business model based on lag is useless. Freeloaders are freeloaders, in this society that *is* acceptable. The upshot:
You are a dumbass and I claim my five pounds.
Re:Books in Libraries (Score:1)
Books in Libraries (Score:2)
If you don't want to steal from artists... (Score:2)
The problem I see is that plenty of people (I'm not singling you out, this is a general rant) spend a lot of time *saying* that they don't want to steal from artists, but folks don't seem to go out of their way -- even a little-bit -- to try to pay for the music that they get now for free, since they "haven't had to before." This is unfortunate (and it's a lousy excuse, IMO) but now there's no 'tipping culture' in online music. Obviously, I think that needs to change (preferably with a wide variety of payment choices). Perhaps someone more-eloquent than I can cause the change, I don't know.
JMR
(speaking only for myself, as always)
Re:Recording industry claims belief in flat earth (Score:1)
They have traded the enemy they know for the 20 or 30 that they don't.
Re:Why is it that... (Score:2)
The other posts I've seen answer the royalty question well. Sampled music is paid for. Many of rap music's background "melody" lines are done by people like George Clinton or whomever and they get royalties, or percentages.
Re:Why is it that... (Score:2)
-- Pure FTP server [pureftpd.org] - Upgrade your FTP server to something simple and secure.
Re:Why is it that... (Score:2)
Not sure if you're being sarcastic, but in the specific case of George Clinton, he doesn't make much in royalties [google.com] because of mismanagement.
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Re:who cares? (Score:1)
Re:Alternatives (Score:1)
Alternatives (Score:4)
Hey, in my day we used mp3 search engines and FTP,like Oth.net [oth.net]
Obligatory "Napster is dying" post (Score:1)
Re:It's not the kind of settlment you think... (Score:2)
Re:What search is there? (Score:1)
Re:Why is it that... (Score:2)
Where's the beef? (Score:1)
NOT the real link... go to Camp Chaos (Score:1)
Napster: BAD! (The original)
MetalliCOPS (Pretty decent)
Metallica Millionaire (Better yet)
MP3: Good or Goblin? (Ft. Nutty McShithead of the RIAA)
Sue All The World (w/ Elton John, Dr. Dre, Eminem, Sheryl Crow, & more)
Napster Dead? (HYSTERICAL!)
Bizarro Napster Bad (The Final Episode to date)
And the following "Special Features":
Special Fucking Edition (featuring "Monkey Notes")
Fire Bad! (video game)
I recommend you watch them in series... they make more sense that way, and it adds to the comical flavor. The series exists at:
http://www.campchaos.com/cartoons/napsterbad/inde
Re:Whats this Napster fetish all about here at /. (Score:1)
Re:Books in Libraries (Score:1)
By downloading an MP3 you know longer have to pay for the song, yet you can listen to it anytime and anywhere (with a portable mp3 player) that you want to.
So I repeat, there is a huge difference between borrowing something and copying it. Lars doesn't want people COPYING is copyrighted work without his consent. He has shown no problem with lending or borrowing.
Re:every time i hear metallica on the radio.. (Score:1)
What you are saying might take place on Top40 stations, but what about Oldies stations, or Classic Rock stations, do you think that many, possibly defunct, record companies are still paying to promote "Hey Jude" or "Stairway to Heaven"?
What some companies do for promotion of some songs is completely irrelevant to whether or not there is in fact a royalty paid on music aired on the radio.
Re:Books in Libraries (Score:2)
Just like Metallica can not say that you cannot BORROW a Metallica CD from a friend, nor have they tried to say that.
There is a world of difference between BORROWING and COPYING, as is there a difference between BORROWING and STEALING.
There was just a story in our local paper a few days ago about a small record store that was ran out of business, because after the big chains came in, it's main customers were students at the local college (William and Mary), after Napster was released most of the students got their music off of it, and quit buyng CD's. So in the name of "sticking it to the evil record companies", you've ran a mom and pop store out of business and made it's owner unemployed.
Re:every time i hear metallica on the radio.. (Score:2)
And just so you know, HBO doesn't just grab a DVD of the latest movies and broadcast them, the also pay the studios for the broadcast rights.
Re:Why is it that... (Score:1)
Someone should remind Dr. Dre of that ...
Of course, Dre may not be the patron saint of music ethics, either. He's just been sued for copyright infringement by George Lucas' Lucasfilm Ltd., which claims the rapper stole its "THX Deep Note" sound for the opening of his quadruple-platinum album, 2001. http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/0,1,6363,00.html [eonline.com]
If I'm reading this right... (Score:4)
Re:FTP is a perfect "alternative" (Score:2)
Music sharing's going underground again.
Re:FTP is a perfect "alternative" (Score:2)
I understand that there was and has been many people (myself included) who are well acquainted with FTP. The lack of Napster is not going to stop these bunch.
Oh, I get it. (Score:2)
Seriously, this sounds like the best compromise to the situation. I feel kinda bad that it had to go as far as it did the way it did but, as we all know, part of this is anger caused by a lack of understanding, and part of this is because like it or not, copyright infringement (I won't say illegal) is a little on the "hinky" side.
Re:Recording industry claims belief in flat earth (Score:2)
Re:Whats this Napster fetish all about here at /. (Score:1)
This is not theft. Theft is taking something from someone, so that they no longer posses it. This is copyright infringement. There is a difference. Also, you don't seem to realize that when you buy a CD in a store, you're paying for the distribution costs of the CD. Why should I pay the same price when I download it myself, using bandwidth I've already payed for? To support the bands? Hah! Read Courtney Love's article on the music industry.
If you think any money from CDs goes towards a band, think again. The RAIA is not about making music, it's about distributing it. It should be called "The Distribution Industry"
c.
What search is there? (Score:1)
Actually, I still use FTP exclusively, and find it to be far superior to any type of peer-to-peer program that has been written thus far.
How do you search thousands of FTP sites? Peer-to-peer media exchange apps have a decentralized search function.
Re:What search is there? (Score:1)
regarding your .sig: have you used OS X?
I've never even had an opportunity to touch a Macintosh computer with anything past OS 8.5. My own Mac runs 8.1 because that's what runs best on a 75 MHz PPC 603 based machine with only 16 MB of RAM.
Re:Whats this Napster fetish all about here at /. (Score:1)
You mean, like listening to music in the radio?
Re:This sure is a load of crap (Score:1)
My question is about how napster is responsible. I kind of think of them as a service provider, like the phone companies. They provide the service that allows their clients to share mp3 files.
How are they responsible for content on their service? I would think that the individuals sharing & d/ling would be responsible, not the service. In the case of the phone company, they're not liable if I make prank calls.
I know this has been asked before, but in my modest (not all encompassing) reading on the topic, I've yet to find an answer I'm happy with. I'm just hoping someone can help shed some light.
garc
Re:Why is it that... (Score:1)
---
Re:Why is it that... (Score:1)
I would mod this up.
Re:Joke or what? (Score:1)
Re:Whats this Napster fetish all about here at /. (Score:2)
____
Re:Whats this Napster fetish all about here at /. (Score:1)
It's pretty easy to settle when you're completely shut down anyway.
He says that its completely shut down anyway, yet he still posts the article. Not quite awake, yet, michael?
You know the really bad part, michael has a tendency to mod down people that make fun of him. I guess you all can still see my posts after this if you browse -1...
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Re:Metallica's reaction (Score:1)
Here is the problem with everyone here: THe GNU/GPL license. It serves the same purpose as the copyright, to protect rights. But....coming from a hypocritical group of zealouts, im not surprised to say the least.
One quick question... (Score:2)
-----
Re:This sure is a load of crap (Score:2)
Personally, I agree with you. However, legally, I seems like it could theoretically help protect Napster. A ways back, Slashdot had a really nice, detailed legal article discussing contributory and vicarious liability (I believe those were the terms) and how they related to the P2P situation. I may be misremembering, but "showing harm" may have been on the laundry list of criteria necessary for the appropriate liability to be invoked. If that's the case, then it is something that could help Napster's legal standing. Of course there's still the issue of proving that it helps CD sales.
Re:FTP is a perfect "alternative" (Score:2)
ftp ftp.freemusic.com
cd
get Creeping_Death.mp3
is considered "obscure" and "hard to use". If you can't use FTP you don't deserve free music. Which is exactly your point, music goes back underground.
Re:FTP is a perfect "alternative" (Score:2)
That said, what makes FTP so hard to use that wasn't just as much work with Napster? What it did great was peer-to-peer indexing with search capabilities, not file sharing.
This same function is performed by Google for web sites (which could include links to files)-- except that no one wants to put up a web page of mp3s because they know it's illegal.
Re:I Am (Score:1)
BTW I have not used gnutella for awhile in linux and was wonderin' if anyone has had any luck with anything besides limewire (java is the devil on my linux box) ...
Alternative to napster... (Score:1)
I can recommend Kazaa [kazaa.com] which, apart from having an awful name and being windows only has a LOT of files, including movies/audio etc - it also has the killer feature in that if you find (e.g) 5 people who have the file you want you can d/l it from all 5 simultaneously, like some "download accelerator" programs do, it means you can use all your bandwidth more effectively. It also resumes so when someone shuts down just as you get to 99% of a 800MB file you dont pull your hair out.
One thing to watch out for, I think they have a search function on the web page - it doesnt have the features of the client software (and its lame downloading but not sharing!) so get the client software instead.
--
Re:Filters... (Score:1)
BTW, I consider I don't require anyone's permission to listen to whatever I want.
--
Filters... (Score:4)
No result.
I then mis-typed his name "Dave Lee Roth" and, hey ! Almost all...
If this is only what these so called filters consist of, then I guess some r3b3lZ L4ngu4g3 might do the trick?
Of course, we will have to change the way we write names whenever a new "adapted" Napster version will occur, but... well, ain't this a typical example of Darwinian Evolution, where the predators are the Majors?
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Re:Whats this Napster fetish all about here at /. (Score:2)
Re:If you don't want to steal from artists... (Score:2)
I'm sure 'e-gold' is a great idea, best of luck and all that (have you been reading Neal Stephenson books alot?), but in the end a 'tipping culture' is not whats needed. Its just a little responsibility for your own actions thats needed.
o2k
Re:Whats this Napster fetish all about here at /. (Score:2)
Because (Score:2)
That's why, bee-otch.
Bryguy:)
Re:who cares? (Score:1)
It's not the kind of settlment you think... (Score:2)
If it weren't for Napster, they might have to do some soul searching. Maybe people just aren't as interested in my music as they once were.
My guess is that the secret agreement is that the two artists drop their suits in exchange for a small sum of money and a promise to take the blame for their poor sales figures. [ridiculopathy.com]
Re:Does this make my server redundant? - Yes! (Score:1)
NO. I'm suprised he and ICANN haven't come looking for the domain name.
bm :)-~
Re:Does this make my server redundant? - Yes! (Score:1)
bm :)-~
Re:FTP is a perfect "alternative" (Score:1)
ftp ftp.freemusic.com 4711 /UPLOAD
/boot/kernel Metallica.mp3
/pub/metallica
anonymous
x@y.com
pass
bin
cd
put
cd
get Creeping_Death.mp3
get "Metallica - Creeping Death.mp3"
quit
Napsters new filter (Score:4)
From now on, any file that falls under the wildcard "*.mp3" will be blocked.
Napster was unavailable for comment.
Which songs of "their's" do they want to protect? (Score:1)
there's - contraction for "there is"
their's - not really a word
mike (http://www.angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif)
Re:Recording industry claims belief in flat earth (Score:2)
What do you mean there are no holes ? There is at least one post here today already documenting how easy it is to circumvent Napster's lame filtering (the example given was searching for 'Dave Lee Roth' instead of 'David Lee Roth'). And though it may prove impossible to close every last hole, why should the artists and the recording industry care ? If they want some of the holes, they should want all of them closed.
And please, no more of the 'try-before-you buy' and 'people buy more CDs with Napster than without'. Even if true, this is a marketing decision that only the copyright holders should be entitled to make - NOT you or I. What if I decided that maybe people would use and contribute more Free Software if I began distributing binaries of modified pieces of Free Software without making the source available ? How would people here feel if there were networks (say, run by Microsoft), whose obvious main raison d'etre was to traffic GPL-violating binaries ?
Re:This sure is a load of crap (Score:2)
So you can tell by this that Napster is not hurting their sales ? Did you also consider the fact that there are now more people of CD-buying age now than 2 years ago, that there are more people with CD-players now than 2 years ago and that CD players are now more prevalent (Discmans, cars, etc.) than 2 years ago ?
Did it occur to you that maybe those factors explain why CD sales may not have decreased in the face of rising Napster use ?
And besides, even if Napster did increase CD sales, what relevance does that have ? It's the copyright holders' right to enforce their copyright however they choose. If you are correct, then the artists and recording industry might be foolish to oppose Napster, but that is their choice. Maybe GPL'ed software would become more prominent if Microsoft starting selling MS-Emacs or MS-Linux without making source available. Should this fact by itself be enough to allow then to do so, if their violations of copyright ultimately helped the FSF's cause ?
Re:Filters... (Score:2)
--CTH
--
A sugestion to OSDN... (Score:1)
If
It'll certainly help to fill napster's vacuum much quicker and it'll look better in
--
Re:Why is it that... (Score:1)
Puff Daddy - I'll be missing you
Puff Daddy - Kashmir
Vanilla Ice - Ice Ice Baby (well, stretching things a little on that one)
Ahh damnit! There are so many more, but I just (for some unknown reason *cough*) don't remember the names to rap songs.
-Nano.
Re:Lars Roolz! (Score:1)
Re:Alternatives (Score:1)
----------
Re:Alternatives (Score:1)
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Re:Filters... (Score:1)
I will miss Napster's feature of seeing what else a user has on their hard drive - If someone actually has Etta James' "Out of The Rain" or Gavin Bryars' "Jesus Blood Never Failed me Yet", I want to see what else they have. Probably stuff worth acquiring...
Try WinMx. [winmx.com] Yeah, it only works on Windows, but it has all the features you wished Napster had ... hotlist, enqueueing in Winamp, etc. Plus, it has this really neat feature that auto-displays your speed as "14.4k" when two or more people are downloading from you. The UI is way too complicated, IMHO, but they have enough MP3s on their network for me not to care.
Re:Whats this Napster fetish all about here at /. (Score:2)
Seriously now, there have been media changes in the past and there will be media changes in the future driven by technology. While I agree to an extent that it shouldn't all be 100% free, there must be an amicable solution to these problems or big business will yet again stifle technology and maintain control over what you listen to and how you listen to it. I do believe I should be allowed to rip every damn cd I own for my own personal use at least. So in the next trial we'll let you cast the first stone. Calling people "idiotic theiving scum who have the morals and self-worth of a sewer rat" dosent exactly solve any problems or even acomplish anything now does it?
Dead but not useless (Score:1)
And with 'potential of the internet' I don't mean 'copyright infringment at large', but the indication that the distribution costs for digitally reproducible material is near-zero, which will definitely help in bringing back the market to a more sane state (well.....I hope :).
Also, it exposed a lot of people to copyright law, and how it can be abused (in particular by the recording industry), something which was not really known by many before the Napster debate started.
Even if now sharing will move on to different means/protocols/etc. I think that Napster will/should not be forgotten as it'was a landmark in the early "digital era".
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Is there a Dr. in the House? (Score:2)
I re-read what I wrote, and don't see how you are justified in your inference that I was expressing my opinion concerning the merits of Apple's case. Frankly, I'm not all that familiar with the case. I know only that it had to do with MS implementing reasonable facsimiles of Apple's design elements (Trash Can/Recycle Bin, etc..).
The gist of my analogy was that by the time the case had been settled, it's outcome was not terribly important. It's not an altogether good analogy. I wanted something with the Pony Express, but I'm not that clever.
Regardless, I was not attacking MS at all. Not in the least. Take a breath. Remember to exhale. ;)
Is there a Dr. in the House? (Score:3)
This is just like MS settling with Apple on it's win95 ripoff cases three years after MS gained %90 of the market. It's moot [dictionary.com].
FTP is a perfect "alternative" (Score:1)
Re:What search is there? (Score:1)
bio updated (Score:1)
Hey, come one people, this is funny! (Score:2)
Quite alive, though membership is down. (Score:2)
Lars Roolz! (Score:1)
Re:Not stealing.... (Score:1)
btw what's shocking to me there is that there's a huge gap between that vacuum that is Puff Daddy and Led Zep, that basically invented heavy metal rock (some say it's Hendrix, but i'm not that convinced about that..)
Stick that fork deep (Score:1)
Re:Metallica's reaction (Score:1)
Re:Who cares? (Score:2)
Joke or what? (Score:2)
I have reverted to the old way of getting music (Score:4)
Why is it that... (Score:4)
...When somebody downloads Dr. Dre music from Napster it's stealing. But when Dr. Dre steals others music, it's called sampling?