All The Rave 310
All the Rave: The Rise and Fall of Shawn Fanning's Napster | |
author | Joseph Menn |
pages | 368 |
publisher | Crown Publishing Group |
rating | 7 |
reviewer | Libe Goad |
ISBN | 0609610937 |
summary | If you love to read about the dot-com bust -- over and over -- this meticulously researched tome is for you. Keep a drink handy, however, it gets dry in parts. |
One thing's certain: Menn, who covered Silicon Valley for the Los Angeles Times, meticulously researched his subject. The book is loaded with facts and figures, but more impressive is the level of National Enquirer-worthy details Menn milked from mountains of transcripts and one-on-one interviews.
Menn's discoveries can be described as nothing less than shocking, at least for anyone who hasn't followed the story blow-by-blow. We learn about Shawn's money-grubbing uncle, John Fanning, whose shady business practices cost the company numerous investors, but also the respect of his own family. Menn writes that at first Shawn Fanning was pleased when his uncle drew up papers incorporating Napster, Inc. Then the elder Fanning told Shawn he would be getting only 30 percent of the company. John Fanning would keep the rest. Shawn was stunned.
Menn also exposes Napster executives' ignorance of copyright laws, the company's pay-off to rapper Chuck D so he would publicly support file sharing and rockstress Courtney Love's flirtations with Shawn, whom she once introduced at an award show as her future husband.
With a boatload of rock stars and other curious characters, you'd think the spectacle of it all would overshadow the book's business patois. Menn attempts, valiantly, to do so, but it's still evident that All the Rave is a long-handed exercise in business reporting rather than a drama-filled account. There is little surprise in the overarching Napster story because most readers will know how the story ends before cracking open the front cover.
If you're still committed to All the Rave, the best reading takes place in two separate sections: the first on the peer-to-peer program's incubation, and the second on Napster's attempt to take on the well-muscled music industry.
In Chapters 1 and 2, Menn introduces Shawn Fanning, an unassuming high school kid who comes from humble beginnings. Though his life doesn't exactly make for a Horatio Alger story, it's interesting to see how Shawn stops pursuing a sports scholarship for college and instead focuses on computer programming.
After his uncle John gives Shawn his first computer, the aw-shucks kid from Massachusetts comes across a brilliant idea, peer-to-peer file sharing, which he develops with the help of friends in several online communities. The story is touching, and it's fascinating to take a behind-the-scenes look at how the program originated, first through Shawn and then as the product of a tight-knit online community.
Techies of all stripes will be amused as Menn attempts to make computer programming jargon edible to the mainstream reader. Just imagine explaining terms like IRC and warez to your grandma, and you'll have a good idea of the language in these beginning chapters. Despite a few cornball explanations, however, it's still refreshing to see past Napster's media hype and to see Napster for what it started as: a labor of love created by a kid who wanted nothing more than to take advantage of the online universe.
Following chapters barrel through the company's beginnings, dedicating much space to vilifying John Fanning, who seems to deserve every bit of consternation the reading public can muster. After the shock of the elder Fanning's behavior wears off, however, you'll find yourself dragging through painfully detailed accounts of acquiring executive and meetings with skeptical venture capitalists. Anyone who isn't utilizing All the Rave as a handbook on how not to run a business can skip to Chapter 7, in which Menn shifts the book's focus to Napster's delicate dance with the music industry. It's a Davey and Goliath tale for the 21st century. To accent the vastness of the undertaking, Menn dishes out a brief history of the music biz, offering such a compelling analysis of the Napster/music industry camps that it could easily be expanded to fill an entirely different book.
If you don't want to read at all, you can simply look at the pretty pictures midway through the book. Talk about a yearbook: there are pictures of Shawn's hacker pals, a photo of a wilting Lars Ullrich from Metallica, Jack Valenti and other corporate clowns, smiling like there was something to be happy about.
And maybe there was. In the end, Menn shows how Napster was, like other dot-coms, "little more than a publicly supported pyramid scheme, built on the long-true presumption that an even dumber investor was just down the road."
If you want a solid study on copyright law and running a business, Menn's read will not disappoint. If you're looking for a fluffy piece of literature that will keep you awake into the wee hours, try the one with the bespectacled boy on the cover. You probably know the one I'm talking about -- Harry something or other...
You can purchase All the Rave from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Wha??? (Score:5, Funny)
When the hell did Jon Katz start submitting slashdot articles again?
GMD
Re:Wha??? (Score:2, Insightful)
I for one loved Napster, and continue to love Kazaa and IMesh, though they suck compared to Napster. Napster is the one... true... lust... I must have it back!
Re:Wha??? (Score:3, Interesting)
while napster was great, I personally preferred audiogalaxy. I found that a lot easier to find more obscure music on, not to mention that it had an open source client and you could use it at work and come home to find the files waiting for you. not to mention the great community that was there, and the suggestions of other tracks to listen to
I don;t suppose any of the current file sharers work like the old AG did do they?
dave
Re:Wha??? (Score:4, Funny)
Let's see...User number over 600000 and no comments. Hey, it could be Jon Katz in disguise!
Re:Wha??? (Score:2)
Re:Wha??? (Score:5, Interesting)
But on to the topic at hand -- um... I really never used Napster. I tried once and found that it didn't really have much worth downloading. Napster was good if you only wanted the top-40 of the day and didn't care if you got a song that was mislabeled, corrupted, incomplete or otherwise not worth a normal person's time.
Really? I always thought it was pretty good at helping me find obscure stuff I never would have thought of. I remember being bored one time and doing a search for "Star Trek" audio files. It popped up with a song named "Futile (Star Trek mix)" by a band named "Velvet Acid Christ". The Star Trek reference was because the song contained numerous samples from the ST:TNG episode "Best of Both Worlds" dealing with Picard's abduction by the Borg. I listened to the song and thought it was pretty cool. So I started looking around for more info on this band.
Needless to say, I would have never even heard of Velvet Acid Christ if it wasn't for Napster and the ability to search for any keyword whatsoever.
GMD
Re:Wha??? (Score:5, Interesting)
No shit. livegoats just made it to my foes list. What a moron.
That opening blurb just reeked of the same amateurish journalistic style as Katz. I don't see why he felt it necessary to make such a sweeping, rediculous and borderline insulting statement to start his review. Is it to try to convince us that Napster was some kind of important historical phenomenon and, therefore, we should read this review of a book about it? And if we didn't use Napster we were infants in diapers? Please. That kind of nonsense is not the way to start off any kind of article. That's pretty much the same kind of statement as Katz' "We can all agree that Columbine has changed the way that every single human being on the planet thinks about public education."
Story submitters: it's not necessary to try to place your articles in a larger context. We can do that for ourselves.
GMD
Re:Wha??? (Score:2, Informative)
Sure it is. Part of the culture is the fact that we generally have to buy our material needs at a store. The clothes we wear, the way we interact with people, the fact that we drive cars instead of using sandled feet--all part of our culture. It may not be a part of our culture we like or feel a particular affinity towards, but it still is part of the culture.
But I'm only a trained anthropologist. W
Decent book review (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Decent book review (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Decent book review (Score:2)
Re:Decent book review (Score:2)
Shoplifting is theft. Napster was based on theft. If you took all the CD's you own, bought a CD duplicator, and gave away exact copies of CD's to a global audience of complete strangers, that would be theft,too, of the CD publisher's, maker's and retailers's money.
Or, it's rather like buying legitimate tickets to the Movie-of-the Week, printing perfect counterfeit tickets, and giving them away free out
Re:Decent book review (Score:2)
Re:Decent book review (Score:2)
Re:Decent book review (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Decent book review (Score:4, Funny)
I downloaded "All_The_Rave_-_Joseph Menn(OCR,PR.V.1.0).pdf" and all it was just 863K of the phrase "What the fuck do you think you're doing?" repeated again and again. Maybe someone OCR'd the wrong book.
Or it might have been Madonna's little known SEX2 book.
No no no (Score:2)
Re:Decent book review (Score:4, Insightful)
M.D. Inc
Re:Decent book review (Score:5, Funny)
I just got it off of Kazaa!
Culture maven (Score:3, Insightful)
1) The word maven is very irritating
2) I used Napster only a handful of times because I regard illegal filesharing as theft
3) I don't consider myself a culture "maven" but I am into music
4) Dancing with wolves? What on earth are you talking about?
Re:Culture maven (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Culture maven (Score:4, Insightful)
It's not theft, but it is stealing. Theft is removing property, so that every part of the property is removed from it's former position. Steal is to take without right or leave the property of another.
My grassroots campaign to try to get people to acknowledge they are, in fact, stealing when they download music without license to that media. Join my campaign
3) I don't consider myself a culture "maven" but I am into music
I consider myself a culture muppet, and I love music.
4) Dancing with wolves? What on earth are you talking about?
Jon Katz, describing hippies.
Re:Culture maven (Score:2)
I bet your mother is proud of you, son. From m-w.com: 1 a : the act of stealing; specifically : the felonious taking and removing of personal property with intent to deprive the rightful owner of it.
So, do you just like pasting parts of a definition while ignoring the rest of it? Definitions of stealing do not entail deprivation of property, just the unlawful taking. If you look up "take" it's easy to see it covers IP as
Re:Culture maven (Score:2)
No, what I am saying is that "theft" is not the right word. Theft entails depriving the rightful owner of the property. Stealing is unlawful taking of property, with no provisions for depriving the actual property.
The difference (from the dictionary) between theft and stealing is that theft deprives the owner of the property. Stealin
Re:Culture maven (Score:2)
2) I have never used napster(or any other P2P)
3) I like music, but can take it or leave it. Silence is often better.
4) Hehehe
Re:Culture maven (Score:5, Funny)
The other sick depraved bastards stealing music from the mouths of those poor music industry blue-collar types. Not us though, me and you are the last of our type.
Illegal versus unethical (Score:4, Insightful)
Although the law does not technically distinguish between the two cases, I would argue that my use of Napster was not unethical, because if everyone did it, it would not have a significantly negative impact on the production of music, and because the music industry has provided no legitimate alternative. Meanwhile, downloading thousands of songs to avoid paying for music at all is unethical, because the downloader benefits from musicians' work without giving them any possibility of compensation. If everyone did that, the availability of music would likely decrease as fewer people could afford to produce it, and everyone would suffer.
Your argument, that breaking a law is black-and-white regardless of intention or magnitude, is the sort of logic that puts petty thieves away for life under three-strikes laws. It also implies that legality is the same as morality, and sets up the government as the ultimate judge of correct social behaviour.
And I think those who download music should consider that because they can do something, it doesn't necessarily mean that they should.
Re:Illegal versus unethical (Score:2)
And I think those who download music should consider that because they can do something, it doesn't necessarily mean that they should.
Oh you mean people like you?
I used Napster a handful of times too, but only when I was looking for a specific song off a hard-to-find album.
It's funny that you think they are different. Since you like hyperbole s
Re:Illegal versus unethical (Score:2)
Re:Illegal versus unethical (Score:2)
I don't think the RIAA would care to be honest. They want you to purchase the 3-CD set. They want you to purchase the LP. They don't want you to download the song from napster and the states consider it illegal.
But I can see your point. That is exactly why record companies need to come up with a way to download all of the individual songs you want a
Re:Illegal versus unethical (Score:2)
It's easy to discount your standard of legal versus ethical as a self-serving copout. Your basic argument is that intent and scale should be taken
Re:Culture maven (Score:2, Interesting)
there's no implicit pardons for lack of volume copyright infringement, but typically them there law-yers are going to only prosicute those who will gi
Diapers? (Score:3, Insightful)
If you weren't spending your spare time in the years 99-00 downloading MP3s like a champ, it's likely you were still in diapers or dancing with wolves.
Or maybe you hadn't yet convinced your old-fashioned parents to buy a computer...
Re:Diapers? (Score:2)
wolves? (Score:5, Insightful)
Or using ftp, irc or usenet. Or not using them at all.
I prefer whole albums myself. Napster never made that easy.
Re:wolves? (Score:3, Insightful)
What abuot Scour? Or just burning the CD?
In 99-00 I was in college and Napster was blocked there, but Scour and iMesh weren't. I never did try Napster.
Of course, just coping the CD from someone will a helluva lot easier.
Ahh the good old days... (Score:4, Funny)
not me (Score:3, Funny)
Or on dialup. 28.8 dialup. On a 5 machine home LAN.
It is painful living in a rural area, there's still no broadband.
Napster will be remembered as brilliant (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Napster will be remembered as brilliant (Score:2)
And yet the music industry thrives on this very concept...
Re:Exactly (Score:2)
Re:Exactly (Score:2)
Shawn's computer pals (Score:5, Interesting)
After his uncle John gives Shawn his first computer, the aw-shucks kid from Massachusetts comes across a brilliant idea, peer-to-peer file sharing, which he develops with the help of friends in several online communities. The story is touching, and it's fascinating to take a behind-the-scenes look at how the program originated, first through Shawn and then as the product of a tight-knit online community.
Did the members of this "tight-knit online community" become employees of Napster Inc. or did Shawn just ditch them once he realized just how big a thing p2p could be? I'm not trolling, I'm asking. I don't recall Shawn giving a lot of public thanks to his computer buddies during Napster's hayday.
GMD
Re:Shawn's computer pals (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Shawn's computer pals (Score:2)
jordan rocks. go ngrep.
Napster changed my life (Score:3, Interesting)
Now I have a 20gig mp3 that I quite literally carry around with me *everywhere* and I have a much more diverse music tastes (can listen to rap-rock, baroque, ska, and big-beat sequentially without batting an eye) than I could ever have gotten through normal music-discovering means (radio, MTV).
Thank you Napster.
Bring on the MPAA / RIAA discussions.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Probably redundant... (Score:2)
A buddy of mine told me about it back then, "Hey you gotta check this out! All the songs you could ever want!"
I found out that he registered the software and created the account using his real name. Makes it easy for the RIAA and the FBI... I wonder how many other knuckleheads have done that?
I really hate it when ... (Score:2, Interesting)
Otherwise Napster Shnapster. Somehow, all the people I know are *still* getting buttloads of free music, and, somehow, I think they will continue to
Spare time waste (Score:2)
If you were spending your spare time downloading MP3s from Napster you were in total need of a situation which we humans refer to as a live.
Nerds will be nerds (Score:2)
Sounds familiar?
Napster is long dead, Opennap lives on. (Score:4, Interesting)
As someone already mentioned (fairly cluelessly however) that WinMX is "napster like", it's connecting to Opennap servers and they likely don't even realize it.
Lopster [sf.net] and Lopster for windows [sf.net] are two clients I suggest, given your preferred OS (not sure what to suggest for Mac honestly..)
Sure, irc trading has gone on for years, BitTorrent recently, but at least on Opennap you can also chat and have some sort of knit community outside of a Forum.
Actually, I never liked Napster. (Score:5, Insightful)
I hated napster.
I spent the entire Napster period downloading mp3s, just as i had for a very very long time before Napster was ever invented-- from search.oth.net and other FTP-search based sources. Yeah, Ratio was a bitch, but at least you KNEW the server was going to stay up for a few hours at least, and you knew nobody was going to put an mp3 in their main collection if it was an incomplete.
Also, there was this convenient thing in that basically, the majority of ftp servers had a 1:5 U/D ratio set; the vast majority of ftp servers had exactly one file that i wanted to download of about 6 or 7 megabytes; and i had an mp3 of cookie monster singing "C is for Cookie, that's good enough for me" that was 1.5 megabytes. So i could zap up cookie monster, grab what i wanted, and get out quick. What was wierd, though, was that i think i started something; once i started doing this, the cookie monster mp3 started spreading quite a bit. I would sign onto mp3 servers i'd never been on before and find my cookie monster mp3 already there-- and not in the upload folder either, in the actual sorted mp3 collection. Hmmmm.. ^_^
Uh, and since i see to be admitting to illegal acts above: i downloaded mp3s solely to sample music which i was considering buying or which was not available in america, i was too young to be legally tried as an adult when the events described above happened, i never downloaded mp3s, this post is fiction posted for humorous purposes, i don't even know what an "mp3" is, and i don't own or know how to use a computer.
Oh, and slashdot claims that this is my 700th post posted with my account, though i notice a lot of my earlier ones aren't in the archive.
Re:Actually, I never liked Napster. (Score:2)
Re:Actually, I never liked Napster. (Score:2)
It's a Davey and Goliath tale for the 21st century (Score:5, Funny)
Okay, it's half right.
I never liked Napster (Score:2)
I saw Napster (and the rest of them) as being for lamers. The fun was the hunt of the file...like a big game hunter in Africa. It was all about anonymous FTP for me. And when Napster was shut down, there were people moaning about not getting their MP3 fi
puh-lease (Score:5, Insightful)
No self respecting geek would use Napster EVER, no one I know ever touched it, and we all downloaded MP3's *like a champ*.
It's called usenet...premium servers please. All of us *in the know* knew that once Napster went under, and it most definitely would, that all the kids hyped up on *free* would be flocking to usenet, flooding the groups with crap posts, begging for instructions and calling everyone *fag*. Sure enough, they did.
Napster single handedly brought piracy to the masses, made it a household word and brought the ire of RIAA etc. upon us all.
I cant believe that this story was intro'd like this. Napster is, was and always will be a blight and a bad bad period in mine and others opinions.
"...in diapers..." man, gimma a freekin break.
Re:puh-lease (Score:2)
1. No self respecting geek would use Napster EVER, no one I know ever touched it, and we all downloaded MP3's *like a champ*.
2. Napster single handedly brought piracy to the masses
Apparently, you don't know anyone in the 'masses'. I happen to be a self-respecting geek and I *did* use Napster, in college, when it first came out. I still use Kazaa and Limewire, depending on what I'm looking for.
I cant
Humbug (Score:2, Funny)
Or maybe you were just a conscientious person who instead of ripping off your favorite artists (yes, they do get SOME of that money, just not much) were buying their discs and ripping them from legitimately purchased media and thereby also helping make sure that the labels saw how much they were selling.
Now porn on the other hand ...
Re:Humbug (Score:2)
Now porn on the other hand
How the hell is that any different? I work for an adult company, and I'd say about 25% of my job is keeping people from stealing our content. There's a daily barrage of peo
Looking back... (Score:3, Interesting)
A few months ago, there was an interview with Shawn Fanning linked here, where he was asked to marvel at how he's not a billionaire. I was marveling that there was a time when it seemed perfectly reasonable that a company with no source of revenue and whose only activity was facilitating massive violation of the copyrights of enormous companies should, of course, be making a fortune for its founders.
Although the same interview had Fanning talking about growing up on Cape Cod in Hull, MA -- apparently unaware that his home town is nowhere near Cape Cod.
Menn also exposes...rockstress Courtney Love's flirtations with Shawn, whom she once introduced at an award show as her future husband.
This might make sense, if you're one of the people always mentioning Courtney Love as a supporter of Napster, except that Love's plagiarized essay actually denounced Napster and supported Lars Ulrich. I suppose that's her being her.
WTF? (Score:3, Funny)
The word you wanted was condemnation, Mr. Livegoat. Consternation is the rough equivalent of confusion, which doesn't fit the context of your sentence at all.
Techies of all stripes will be amused as Menn attempts to make computer programming jargon edible to the mainstream reader.
Edible? Try intelligible.
With a boatload of rock stars and other curious characters, you'd think the spectacle of it all would overshadow the book's business patois.
Patois, which means roughly the same thing as jargon or lingo, is nonsensical in this sentence. The spectacle of rock stars overshadows jargon? Really?
An informative review, if one can overlook these bloopers.
Re:WTF? (Score:3, Funny)
Atchly, looks like "Libe Goad" is a real person, according to their site, and helped make kozmo.com the success that it is today. And she has degrees in Journalis
Worst. Opening. Sentences. Ever. (Score:2)
Does Slashdot have the equivalent of the Bulwer-Lytton Awards [bulwer-lytton.com]? Maybe we should.
Let's see... what was I doing at the cusp of the millenium? Oh, yeah, that's right... I was working, not figuring out ways to waste my employer's bandwidth downloading old A
Rating? (Score:2)
Where does that fit on the usual 1-10 scale?
I propose a memorial... (Score:2)
The Server of the Unknown File-Sharer
I'm thinking a sculpture of a nice server, with space for extra hard drives, and A cable modem or ISDN line beside it. Instead of an Eternal Torch, we can have orange LED modkit lights, and instead of a changing of the guard, we can have a rebooting of the system every 24 hours.
Napster's height coincided with my immersion into the internet, and I have fond memories of downloading 3.5 MB son
Napster--Quintessentially Dot-bomb? (Score:5, Funny)
Pitchman: I have a 19-year old programmer who wants to promote a system that distributes other people's copyrighted works and will probably give rise to all kinds of troublesome legal issues, but he does it on the Internet so it's really cutting edge.
VC: Here's a truckload of money.
Guess I'm not self respecting... (Score:2)
Guess I'm square.
Forshadowing? (Score:2)
Wait! You mean the rest of the dot-com world is going to unravel? I thought it was a secure place to be. I mean, it's now mid-2003 and Napster is still the only dot-com to bust, right?
foreshadowing? (Score:2)
Not sure which 2001 you lived through . . . the dot-com world's "unraveling" was well underway by then.
What? Who cares? (Score:2)
Napster and it's ilk were never and are still not anything but mass distribution of culture of the lowest common denominator.
I seriously don't get why people are so thrilled to download Britney Spears, Puff Daddy or REM. Music you can get at your local supermarket for a fiver anyway.
If people were using it to get hold of that 100 copies Aphex record, the latest Tom Jenkinson smasher months before it's released, or even hard to get classical/contemporary music like Ligeti or Ruyichi Sakamoto, then I would
I used it constantly (Score:2)
Bite me, livegoats (Score:2)
the book lies! (Score:2)
You cannot defeat the real Napster!
ps The Italian Job is a fun movie. Go see it before it's gone! C is for Charlize (Theron), and that's good enough for me...
Re:Napster? Feh. (Score:5, Insightful)
I consider wandering off with a CD I haven't paid for to be theft. I consider downloading songs I haven't paid for and don't have permission to download copyright infringement, because that's what it is. I don't consider either to be acceptable, but neither to I consider both of them to be identical.
Re:Napster? Feh. (Score:2)
Just waiting for this to get modded -1:Troll, while this [slashdot.org]
gets modded +1:Insightful
--
HAHA! (Score:2)
And we all know that the wholesale copying of material you do not have a legal right to, and for which you have not paid for is, at best, rampaging selfishness.
You have the gall to call their actions "greed" when you are committing the exact same sin (for lack of a better word).
Whatever, Beavis.
Re:you know it's true (Score:2, Informative)
Excerpt from Merriam Webster:
steal, v:
1 : to take the property of another wrongfully and especially as an habitual or regular practice
1 a : to take or appropriate without right or leave and with intent to keep or make use of wrongfully
Sounds like stealing to me. Of course, next you're going to argue that the first definition doesn't apply, because music isn't "property". Thankfully, I've got that covered too.
property, n
A lot of folks are missing the point completely - (Score:2, Interesting)
It's not the same as walking out with stolen cds but it is the same as ruining some farmers crops or giving them away when the family isn't home. The hard work pays off with return that feeds the kids and that's what you steal when you napster/gnutella/morpheus/kazaa music. QED.
Re:A lot of folks are missing the point completely (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, it's the potential income that is stolen.
The problem is that it's very difficult to prove that had a user not been able to download the song, that they would have gone out and bought it.
Re:you know it's true (Score:2)
Um, because its not a natural right?
"If you don't want to pay for it, feel free to not listen to it."
And if you don't want to get upset that others are listening to your works without paying you, feel free to keep them to yourself.
I face exactly _zero_ legal liability if I go
Re:you know it's true (Score:2)
But that's not what you did. You went to the furniture store, grabbed a copy of the design plans for the piece of furniture, scanned them into a computer, and distributed them to everyone in the world.
Flawed analogies are the cornerstone of human rationalization.
Re:you know it's true (Score:2)
This is so fraught with potential liability that I can't even get into it. What I am saying is, if you hand me a shiny little disk with a certain pattern of pits on it which cause it to produce a certain "music" when placed in a CD player, then theoretically I can reproduce the object.
If music is a license and not a product then that is a different story entirely. Then the INFO
Re:You're making the furniture, (Score:2)
Nope. I am recreating a PHYSICAL item. In all but the rarest instances those who manufacture the objects recreated (CD's) didn't make the music either. That's why its called _COPY_right.
"No one would have a problem if you listened to a song and then sang it in the shower at home."
Wasn't there some sort of lawsuit about royalties for campfire songs sung by the Girlscouts or something like that? So I would have to beg to differ.
"By your logic, there is nothing wrong if
Flogging the dead horse... (Score:2)
It's like arguing that pickpocketing and armed robbery is the same because the same money is stolen. Both are illegal, but under different laws. Likewise with stealing and copyright violations. The result is pretty much the same (someone has an illegally obtained CD), but the *process matters*.
I don't disagree with your moral argument. But your legal one seems t
Bread Copier (Score:2)
This device would obviously be a great boon to society, making food virtually free. Certainly this technology would have a big effect on society, and society would need to adjust. Farmers would be less useful, highly creative chefs would be more useful.
Sadly, that adjustment would probably be to pass laws against the use of the device, saying
Gee, I can use online dictionaries too (Score:2)
1-5 deal with taking pills, or capture, hunting, etc.
6 : to transfer into one's own keeping:
a : APPROPRIATE
b : to obtain or secure for use (as by lease, subscription, or purchase)
So then we look at appropriate:
1 : to take exclusive possession of : ANNEX
2 : to set apart for or assign to a particular purpose or use
3 : to take or make use of without authority or right
In general, we can see that it is indicating a exclusive transfer of ownership and possession. That is, when you take somethin
Re:you know it's true (Score:3, Insightful)
ALL COPYRIGHT = GREED
Really? So the GPL == GREED too? After all. the power of the GPL comes from Copyright Law, even though it's used to grant freedoms instead of restrict them.
and copying music is NOT stealing in any sense of the word "stealing"
PERIOD
Here nor there - it's still not legal. You're either on a crusade to "stick it to da man" or you yourself are GREEDY.
Kids. Sheesh.
Soko
Re:you know it's true (Score:2, Insightful)
Copyrights and patents are not inherently evil, but like many things they can be abused and used for ill purposes. For example- by extending them in perpetuity.
Re:you know it's true (Score:2)
I'm not saying they should all be poor. But they can cry me a river as they live the life.
Re:Interesting.. (Score:2)
Re:Interesting.. (Score:3, Insightful)
And that was a similar situation, interesting comparison. Bonnie & Clyde, Dillinger, etc. were all worshiped as heros, because the banks of the period appeared to have screwed over the common man, both through the events of the dust bowl (evicting people from their homes), and at the start of the depression, with the stock market collapse. Gangsters were viewed as fighting back for the common man.
Maybe people doing the same thing for groups such as Napster implies that a similar sentiment exists towa
Re:Napster (Score:2)
You forgot Usenet...alt.binaries.sounds.mp3* 0wnz j00.
Re:Napster (Score:2)
Clueless Windoz people were not the only people who used Napster.
Re:What's the appeal (Score:4, Interesting)
This is why I love bittorrent. It's not one large searchable network but the signal to noise ratio is extremely good. I have never gotten anything that was mislabelled and the actual quality of what you download is really high. And if you go to one of the 'torrent sites' you can search a large number of back-archives of old torrents, effectively creating a lot of searchable mini-torrent networks. Different sites specialise in different thigns: Apps, Movies, Music, Anime, Pr0n, etc. And no, I will not overload my favourite sites by providing links here. Go an google for them.
The other great thing about bittorrent is that there is a lot more 'sharing ethics' in the community. People seed files using their own bandwidth just for the heck of it, they don't just download and disconnect. One 2 GB Anime chunk I finished downloading 10 hours ago is still seeding on my machine because I want to help other people get it. I would have have shared something like that on Napster or Kazaa.
Re:Apples and Oranges. (Score:2)
I'm not saying that bittorrent is the same as kazaa, so apples and oranges is right. For example, the best anime release sites have a real community where everyone helps by seeding. It's a give and take relationship and that's what makes it work. They give you what you
Re:You strike me as.... (Score:2)
Davey, not David. (Score:2)
Though, I'm not really sure how Napster vs the RIAA is a Davey and Goliath story of the 21st Century.
http://www.daveyandgoliath.org/ [daveyandgoliath.org]
You never used Napster (Score:2)