Kazaa Backs Plan To Bill P2P Music Transfers 388
Darth Coder writes "From this article at The Age:
Kazaa has thrown its weight behind a plan to start billing song swappers for their music downloads.
The idea is to phase in a billing mechanism for peer to peer networks, such as Kazaa and Morpheus.
Initially payments would be by credit card, but in the future downloads would be automatically detected and a charge added to the monthly internet service provider bill."
talk about shooting yourself in the foot. (Score:5, Insightful)
If they did that, how long would it be before another network popped up to replace them? Hours? I guess they forgot they aren't the ones who invented P2P...
I guess they also don't realize people use the network....because it's... free... Not free and it will go away.
Re:talk about shooting yourself in the foot. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:talk about shooting yourself in the foot. (Score:2)
They don't exactly have huge development costs there. All the pieces were there, they just stuck them together. Replicating it wouldn't take more than a day or two worth of effort considering all the truely hard / clever stuff is available for use free.
And since the network works off a SuperNode concept, there's
Re:talk about shooting yourself in the foot. (Score:2)
I remember Hotline - in fact, I believe it is still alive, although I haven't connected in a few months. It's still one of the best places to find rare stuff - along with FTP, but finding FTP sites and getting access is much harder than with Hotline.
A few years ago, I was heavily into Anime and could find pretty much any Anime on Hotline within weeks of it coming out - in Japan.
Then a few months ago I went back to it, this time to find Kung Fu movies - finding a good server was a bit harder, but once I go
What about Gnutella? (Score:2)
Re:talk about shooting yourself in the foot. (Score:2)
As for "replacements trying to justify their business plan" - some of the replacements don't have, want, or need a business plan. Just take a look at some of the open source p2p protocols and apps such as gift [sourceforge.net]. It surprises me that people are still using commercial p2p.
Re:talk about shooting yourself in the foot. (Score:2)
Are they really that stupid?
Re:talk about shooting yourself in the foot. (Score:2)
What guarentees will there be for things like this.
Will the guarentee that the song I download is good quality (technical quality, as we all know most music from the RIASS is what you get when you push a 16 year old through a PEPSI can).
PS is anyone else getting a lot of "500 internal server error" messages. (Slashdot is being slashdot
Re:talk about shooting yourself in the foot. (Score:3, Insightful)
That giant sucking sound... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:talk about shooting yourself in the foot. (Score:3, Interesting)
chris.
I couldn't tell you what kind of USENET servers my ISP has. Most people that are serious about USENET pay for premium service anyway. I pay $15 a month for airnews.net service at 256kb, and have for over 7 years. I may go a couple months without using USENET, or use it extensively for a week, but I pay for unlimited but throttled access for a reason.
As long as you have the smarts to filter it a bit,
Re:Why should we pay? Why do we need Kazaa? (Score:2)
You'd be better off taking that money and purchasing your own congresscritters to change the copyright law.
If you don't want to support the RIAA, then don't buy anything from their member companies [riaa.com]. Get all your
Who cares? (Score:3, Interesting)
Not feasible (Score:2)
It has to be server oriented to work, and is nothing more than a smoke screen for Kazaa, not that I am a record label sympathizer.
Re:Not feasible (Score:4, Interesting)
The ISP would also need a cut from Kazaa, since they're taking a portion of the bandwidth hit.
If there's anything that raises my hackles a bit, it's the concept of building a business model on illegal behavior as a means of doing legitimate business down the road. That's the opposite of the way things are done in this country.
Re:Not feasible (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Not feasible (Score:5, Informative)
No, it's exactly how things were done. In the 19th C the US didn't recognise foreign IP rights, to allow its industry to catch up with Europe. That included copyright, so authors like Charles Dickens were screwed by US publishers who just reprinted their books with no payment to him. Only when the US started to want to sell IP, that's when you got sanctimonious about "respecting" it.
Re:Not feasible (Score:4, Informative)
Fh
Re:Not feasible (Score:2)
With the position Kazaa is now taking, they are essentially wanting this model:
File trader 1: Obtain music conversion, invest time in learning how to do so and how to use the Kazaa application, make available on Kazaa, personally take all legal risk.
File trader 2: Invest time in learning Kazaa application, pay for bandwith, act as server to other peers, person
This might actually be good .... (Score:3, Insightful)
If there was ever an incentive to get people to lock down their wireless networks, this is it.
ISPs will probably also like the idea that it provides an incentive for people to not share their broadband connections with their neighbors.
HAHAhahaha (Score:3, Interesting)
hahahha. Sorry, but am I the only one that just completely fell over laughing after reading that? Its NOT going to happen.
1. People wont allow this to happen. Never. Not in a million years. People wont accept an ISP that just charges them for certain things on the internet. People will have the service turned off if possible. Then what? Will the isp stop them from shari
Re:Don't laugh too hard... (Score:3, Interesting)
By the way, I work at an ISP. I saw the huge chaos caused by the blaster and welchia worms. Just think if all those computers started accessing something which automatically charged their account and then Kazaa had a huge bill for the ISP to pay. The ISP isnt going to like this either. They arent going to tell their customers 'oh by the way, were going to start cha
Re:This might actually be good .... (Score:2)
Look at this from the perspecitve of the customer getting this huge bill that is going to the RIAA and Kazaa. What does it say, it says your ISP wants $200. Who's going to have to send the collection agency after people who don't pay? The
Partial Payment (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Partial Payment (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Partial Payment (Score:2)
Re:Partial Payment (Score:2)
Re:Partial Payment (Score:2)
Why Share (Score:5, Insightful)
What is the reason to share if you are paying for downloads?
Re:Why Share (Score:2)
Take it one step further: how about compensating the sharer for providing a delivery mechanism? RIAA didn't have to pay for the bandwidth and delivery. Sharers should get a cut from the fees as well.
Re:MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
Heh. Not unless users sing the songs themselves
Music only? (Score:2)
Re:Music only? (Score:2)
Still can't beat free...but these guys are trying (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't think you'll ever get people to pay for what they can get for free. Why would I pay $1 for what I can get for free three clicks away?
There is an interesting experiment [yoo-play.com] going on where ex-members of Candlebox, (now KMHW) are giving away their next CD in return for label-like benefits ($$) by increased sales of their sponsors product. It's more like the sports model, where Shaq and Tiger make more money from Reebok and Buick than they do from their team/winnings.
Interesting alternative. But pay Kazaa though my ISP? Wouldn't that violate the "no internet taxes" law? Also, how would FTP, Usenet, and Freenet (among others) transfers be taxed?
It seems that what is happening is that labels are saying "hey this worked before, let's try it again!" Perhaps if more people considered new models [yoo-play.com] like the KMHW one, taxing bandwidth would be unnecessary.
Re:Still can't beat free...but these guys are tryi (Score:2)
There's very, very few atheletes that's true for. It's only really going to happen for the top 1 or 2 athletes in any given sport.
It's not a business model you try for; it just sometimes happens if you're the best at what you do.
Re:Still can't beat free...but these guys are tryi (Score:2)
Indeed true, but how difficult would it be to get at least the top 500 -1000 bands sponsored, lifting the subsidy off the labels' backs and maybe enabling them to do what they do well...find and market talent.
They havent had a chance to do that in ten years.
Hey I'm not saying it's perfect, but it's a pantload better than "we'll sue you motherfucker" don't you think?
Re:Still can't beat free...but these guys are tryi (Score:2)
Tell that to Apple's customers.
I'm sorry, but I've never been a big fan of this argument. People don't just pay for goods, they pay for services. Coffee is free where I work, but many of my coworkers still hike a couple of blocks to go to Starbucks. Why would they do that? They're engineers. They know that the coffee is free! So why do they do it? Because it tastes better! Starbucks is competing with free coffee where I work and wi
Re:Still can't beat free...but these guys are tryi (Score:2)
Like you seem to be, I always challenge the concept of "having" media, versus "consuming" media. My feeling is that the two will eventually will merge, and actual ownership of the bits will be irrelevant.
Re:Still can't beat free...but these guys are tryi (Score:2, Insightful)
Go ahead and be a 'consumer' if that's what you're into. I'm glad somebody in the past 'had' all these records. Some of it is damn fine music to listen to, and it wouldn't have made it's way
Re:Still can't beat free...but these guys are tryi (Score:2)
No more than paying your ISP for access is a "tax." Or paying for things you buy from Amazon is a "tax."
This isn't a tax or "use fee" type plan. It's a straight purchase.
You can very simply avoid the "tax" by using other means to obtain your music, just as you can swap books and CDs with friends instead of buying them new from stores.
KFG
Re:Still can't beat free...but these guys are tryi (Score:2)
Funny, but not a bad analogy. Pretend you're in Amsterdam and see two beautiful women in the window. One is free, one is $250 an hour, and she is slightly better than the free one. I know which one I'd pick. B)
If you're saying "why pay if your wife or gf gives it free" I would suggest that if you have a steady wife/gf you probably would make less use of professional resources.. heh.
Re:Still can't beat free...but these guys are tryi (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Still can't beat free...but these guys are tryi (Score:2)
ROFLMAO.
Proof that currency can be ephemeral, but the accounting software sucks.
P2P, P2D (Score:2, Funny)
Right on. (Score:2, Interesting)
As a bonus, hopefully this could see a standard p2p system developed and maybe ported to Linux - then I could get rid of my Windows partition completely.
Newbie (Score:2)
Kazza Lite on the other hand has lots of users for finding files from and the downloads almost always complete successfully.
Just my Windows experience however, I just repartitioned and installed SuSE 8.2 on my machine today so I still have a lot to learn about Linux.
Thank you (Score:2)
Thank you for the link I'm going to bookmark it and come back to that link once I understand Linux a bit more.
Uh right (Score:3, Insightful)
Frankly, I don't see why they should make people pay for a service they're not providing, especially when they don't know why somebody is downloading an MP3.
Re:Uh right (Score:2)
They're going to be mp3 pimps. The people that use their service will be the whores.
Re:Uh right (Score:2)
Especially if now they'll have user's credit card, info, etc., which could be subject to fall into the hands of the RIAA in future legal battles.
Re:Uh right (Score:2)
As to charging for files that are flagged freely redistributable by the copyright owner, that's not much different from a BBS charging for systemwide access, which inci
all well and good...... (Score:2)
Then again MP3s don't contain any fancy packaging, and they take songs out of context, reducing an album to a bunch of singles.....Buying the full package will always contain a certain magic for me
Yeah, this'll work (Score:2, Insightful)
Once you give something to the public, taking it away isn't very practical, especially when the technical ability to 'give back' s
Re:Yeah, this'll work (Score:3, Funny)
Lower quality? I didn't think it was possible for popular music to suck even worse, but maybe I'm wrong. Music that sucks [thespeciousreport.com] is a big reason people don't buy CDs. [dontbuycds.org]
Hmm.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Why should I pay Kazaa when their service plays only a small part in the P2P network?
Re:Hmm.. (Score:2)
Time for Freenet? (almost) (Score:2)
the Freenet [freenetproject.org] developers are currently working through some teething pains of the new Freenet routing protocol. When this settles (and this seems to be happening quicker than expected), Freenet should be ready for the really big time, especially with all the new Freenet client programs coming up for release.
With KaZaa 'phasing in' this billing, there's every chance that Freenet will be ready in time for the millions of KaZaa refugees.
Let's just see the RIAA/MPAA/BSA tr
Be patient (Score:2)
Within 1-5 weeks, it'll be kicking it better than ever.
When will p2p networks realize... (Score:2)
oh well (Score:2)
Re:oh well (Score:2)
why would they get a share of the moneypie? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:why would they get a share of the moneypie? (Score:2)
I imagine that would be worth it for you... unless YOU want to administrate a P2P yourself and bare the responsibility. I mean most of the software is OSS and you could do it yourself, if you've got the guts to negotiate contracts with the RIAA, etc.
4 years late. (Score:2, Insightful)
Yea, but iTunes for PC launches next Thursday. Thus ends the MP3 "war". After that anyone who wants to pay can, and anyone who doesn't can go elsewhere. I don't see a crappy P2P service anywhere in the $ picture.
Re:4 years late. (Score:2)
Re:4 years late. (Score:2)
One of the big reasons many people use peer to peer services is that there is quite a lot of content that you just can't get at your local music store, or from some of the large online music stores. iTunes music store is a great example of this. The itms selection is pitiful. I signed up for an itms account and looked up a handful of not-so-mainstream ar
Thus ends the age of Kazaa (Score:2)
Then Napster got shut down and Kazaa rose like a brilliant phoenix from its ashes and all was good once more.
Then Kazaa decided to start charging its users, and the future became very bleak indeed.
Until a new savior approached, destined to bring free content to the masses without any spyware.
You see, I hope Kazaa realizes that while people may be using them because they are the easiest to use now....that the convenience is certainly NOT worth paying for.
ISP payments (Score:2)
Dream on, sphincter boys. Many people have tried to solve the problem of micro payments on the internet. The ISP is NOT going to handle this for you, and they shouldn't.
Never mind the 'automagical' detection of what you have to pay. No way that will ever fly.
btw (OT): what the hell is going on with the really low amount of replies to arti
Credit Card required? (Score:3, Insightful)
"Initially payments would be by credit card, but in the future downloads would be automatically detected and a charge added to the monthly internet service provider bill."
Those idiots over at Sharman realize that the majority of their userbase doesn't have credit cards don't they? Also, this is not something parents are likely to just hand over their card for. "Sure Jimmy, you can download all you want and charge it to my card, AND open us up to potential lawsuits!" Nope, I can't picture that one happening any time soon.
The one thing I would be interested in seeing is if by paying....if you were to download a copywrited file illegally, and then get busted...would they indemnify you?
Would they be held responsible because they would be profiting from the distribution of copywrited material?
Kazaa is now dead (Score:2, Insightful)
Sherman Networks seems to think that users will just stick with Kazaa because they know its name and they don't want to switch because Kazaa is nice and familiar. Their buisness plan just isn't viable. For example if I wanted to download a song on Kazaa I would get more than 100 matches.
uh-huh. (Score:2)
Do ya know when every single ISP will have the infrastructure to invite online services to tack on categorized fees?
Teh Nehvar.
If it sounds like bullshit, and quacks like bullshit...
Perhaps it's all a ploy??? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Perhaps it's all a ploy??? (Score:2)
Re:Perhaps it's all a ploy??? (Score:2)
Stay Away From My ISP Bill (Score:5, Insightful)
Ummm... someone gets a virus on my box, then convinces my ISP that I dowloaded a whole bunch of crap, then I get a huge bill, then I have to prove I didn't download?
No Thanks.
If that's going to work, the ISP had d*** well better be sure they are filtering packets on a per user basis, so that I can't download anything through the Kazaa port unless I really am a registered Kazaa user, and they had better make sure that if "I" try to do that they flag it as a virus and not a new signup or something. No other way.
Look.
The ISP billing right now is "pure". I get billed for connectivity and that's it. The last thing I need is for my connection to turn into something like the POTS line, where kids in the house could "dial" the equivalent of a 900 number.
WTF (Score:2)
Hmm... (Score:2)
Hurray for new enemies (Score:2)
"Hey, Joe, how come there are suddenly so many more lawyers at the defendants' table?"
Watch for this one to go down in flames.
From each according to their abilities . . . (Score:5, Interesting)
Time for a few RFCs.
Everybody should do one thing well. Music licensing companies do one thing well -- collect money and offer licenses. P2P services do one thing well, facilitate distribution of content and sharing of information.
I can conceive of a few things we could do to facilitate it.
Imagine a license server protocols for license servers, which are capable of tranmitting a license, song-by-song, that permits the licensee to receive from ANY party a file representing that song. Presumably, the licensee can be given a token and authentication means that a prospective filesharer can check, perhaps by interaction with the license server, which then permits the file-sharer to transmit that song at will.
Now, conceive of various ways to engage in lawful commerce of great tunes:
1) enhance p2p services to perform license checks, so that when a person seeks to receive a tune, it will first have to authenticate the right to receive it. now, p2p can operate completely legally and in the clear -- and evolve to provide whatever value it can; and
2) vendor servers, either on the web, or through applications like iTunes, can provide super-duper interactions with users, combining and putting together tunes and samples, and then sell the tune to a customer (if unlicensed, sell the license -- if licensed, perhaps charge a bit because of special quality encoding or whatever).
Thus, we can always check to see if all of our tunes are licensed, and we can always check to see if the recipient can get our license.
Clearly kinks should be worked out, but I would WAY prefer to see the internet community get together to figure out the right way to do this -- rather than see yet another distribution infrastucture built up to protect yet another ridiculous hunk of turf.
This approach should be VERY attractive to music sources, making it possible to collect real revenues almost immediately, and from a kazillion purchase sources, without worrying too much about technology or distribution, and without having to negotiate with each and every individual prospective vendor -- by making it possible to create lightweight music servers that comply with the law, we make it easy for everybody to get legal.
This would be a good thing.
Re:From each according to their abilities . . . (Score:2)
3: Music companies want $1 a song, then $2 a song, then they want exclusive access to the network, then they want $5 a song since they have a monopoly, then we get the listeners lisence coming in (www.talesoftheafternow.com), and so on and so on and so on. Nice in principle, but it completly needs for reality to be thrown out the window to work.
This is just that guy at Sharman dreaming again (Score:2)
"File sharing" networks are unnecessary for paid downloads, after all. The record industry has no need for Kazaa, except for, maybe, the brand. And the record industry is already dealing with "the new Napster".
Since they will charge (Score:2)
ha ha (Score:2)
Charge per bit. (Score:2)
Oh yeah, and since most people cannot afford to pay $100
Freenet (Score:2)
Kazaa is feeling the burn from the RIAA. As P2P networks wake up to the realities, and problems, of non-anonymous transfers better anonymous P2P clients will take their place.
One such client is Freenet [sourceforge.net] and is starting to get to the point where I think it is useful, especially the new 'unstable [sourceforge.net]' build that has many new routing features that make it faster. (After installing, stop freenet, and save the unstable jar file over freenet.jar and restart to use the unstable (often better) build.)
Another benefi
Paying for peer-to-peer (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, it is possible they're just stupid.
How is this any better...? (Score:5, Insightful)
Anonymous P2P file swapping cannot support a pay model unless there's some way to trust the people you're swapping with. I can think of two ways to do that: 1) something like PGP's web of trust concept; 2) some sort of centralized system for rating users the way eBay does. But PGP's web of trust doesn't really seem to have taken off in any big way, and a centralized authority negates a lot of the advantages of P2P in the first place.
Frankly, I don't think that the record companies will go for this either, since there's no mention of DRM, and they have no assurace that you'll actually get what they produce instead of some modified version which they can't control and which might make them look bad.
Fair answer --too late. (Score:4, Insightful)
Leave my ISP billing alone. I know what my Internet access costs each month and that is the way it should stay. As soon as one charge hits the bill, everybody is going to want in and Internet ISP billing begins to look like the mess that is our phone bill today. --No thanks.
Mp3 music is crap at all but the highest quality. Most of the encodes you find on Kazaa are poor. Downloads are iffy as well. Add this up and what do we find? Millions of people downloading bunches of crap music.
Go back a few years ago. FM is crap, unless you take the time to really make the most of it. This is a lot like spending tons of time on Kazaa looking for only the best encodes. People all have tape decks. Add it up and you have millions of people making crappy copies of music.
Didn't hurt things then, does not now.
Just for the record, I no longer use P2P for music. (I will still get other things however.) Got tired of the crap. Funny, I got tired of the crap taping FM as well.
How to trade? With friends via SSH. Nice and private, not too much distribution. In fact, this form of distribution is not too much different from people trading discs.
I would be more inclined to encourage this, but I am not sure we can put a centralized payment scheme on a decentralized service in a fair manner. These jokers should have taken the first Napster deal. They would be making a lot of money right now and would own a popular name. It's too late now.
So will all mp3 downloads be taxed? How? What if the creator wants to provide the content? Do I still need to pay for it? If I am paying for one kind of download, why not others? If downloads begin to be charged according to their type at the ISP, what exactly am I paying for? Will general Internet access get cheaper? Who pays for the new ISP billing systems? Me --you?
This is not the answer. At this point, the answer is marketing. Clean honest marketing of music with added value services and content attached.
Basically, these folks need to earn their keep. Since we all know distribution is cheap, why do they need to make the money they do? Hell, it was cheap with CD media. As far as I am concerned, they have been making far too much already.
They could link music downloads with all sorts of things to make plenty of money. They could make the downloads worth downloading as Apple clearly shows.
What to do with Kazaa? Not sure, but I don't want to pay for something I do not use.
Kazaa (Score:3, Interesting)
What the Sharman execs don't get. (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides the obvious user reaction about this, I think it should be pointed out that they do not understand the record industry's position at all. The execs at Sharman Networks believe that the RIAA and their contributors only want to legitimize music distribution on the Internet.
They could not be more wrong. The record industry does not care if the artists get paid. It cares if it occupies the lucrative middle-man position in music distribution. If they were to do this deal with Kazaa, they would be sharing their monopoly rents with another greedy group of execs whould could completely usurp their power over their golden egg laying hen. The music industry wants to be the only distributor of music on and offline and in any alternate universe that remains to be discovered.
Therefore, this plan, however wicked and evil to any reasonable person concerned with freedom, is twice as unpalatable to the monopolists working in the offices of the RIAA or any organization that actively contributes money to it.
Obviously, this also means that the execs at Sharman Networks are an untrustworthy ally in the struggle for freedom against the tyranny of ignorance created by copyright law. While that should not have been a surprise, it sounds like more alternative and easy to use clients for serverless P2P networks need to be created (and fast) as insurance from the potential loss of such an important information distribution system.
Pay P2P? (Score:3, Insightful)
If I download a file, say 'Pulsedriver - Galaxy.mp3' and it turned out to be 3 and a half minutes of static would I still get charged? Probably.
If I make my own music and people download it from the service, will I get a share of the profits? Can you see it? Nah, didn't think so.
This idea is DOA. Plus the fact that hosting a 4Mb MP3 these days costs very little, and the provider gets much better control over the downloads. What's the point?
Agoric is essential (Score:3, Interesting)
Ultimately this leads to the classic "Tragedy of the Commons" in which a few are exploited by the many.
The only cure it to come up with some sort of compensation system that rewards those willing to share. The MoJo Nation project was an attempt at this.
Obviously the answer is ..... (Score:4, Insightful)
Only fair if... (Score:3, Informative)
To be truly effective, this system would also have to keep track of which files you've already downloaded, so that users don't just download and "preview" songs whenever they want to hear them. It would also mean that the Kazaa folks would have to work to make sure that only one "official" copy (preferably high quality) of a song exists, because otherwise it would be easy for a user to just keep grabbing different rips of the same song and "previewing" them.
Re:In Other news... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:In Other news... (Score:3, Informative)
It's got a modular architecture - it's got different frontends (I prefer the ncurses frontent, it's very fast); and various backend modules (one for the Gnutella network, and even one for FastTrack, the Kazaa protocol).
Even if Naptser was still around the way it was originally, I would still prefer gift.
Re:In Other news... (Score:2)
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
Re:In Other news... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:In Other news... (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd like to purchase some Frog Brigade or moe. CDs, but not if a single cent is going to the RIAA.
Re:Article got slashdotted, here's a mirror (Score:2)