Shawn Fanning's New Venture 165
prostoalex writes "We've read about Justin Frankel, but what are the other heroes of the MP3 revolution up to? News.com.com.com tells the story of Shawn Fanning's new company. SnoCap (which changed its name from Open Copyright Database) is currently developing file-sharing mechanisms that would allow the music industry to earn money."
OGG vs SnoCap (Score:5, Interesting)
This kid just has an idea for a peer-to-peer system and he already has a large angel investor... the same angel investor that poured large amounts of money into napster. And the system doesn't even exist yet.
On the otherhand, take OGG -- a kickass music format that we all love and cherish. A few advertising wizards could turn it into the standard music format on the internet. Where are the VCs and angel investors for OGG?
OGG is a proven product that rocks. SnoCap is little more than white text on a blue background.
SnoCap will make money because non-tech people remember that napster exploded with potential. SnoCap will make money because investors see that I-Tunes is working.
OGG will struggle because the non-tech investing community doesn't understand the power of a new and better music format.
The world is twisted.
AC
Re:OGG vs SnoCap (Score:1)
OGG will struggle because the non-tech investing community doesn't understand the power of a new and better music format.
No, Ogg will struggle because it has no commercial benefit over existing alternatives. It has no "power".
It's that simple. From the consumer perspective MP3, WMA, and AAC do all that Ogg does. There's no benefit to anyone sinking money into Ogg since the consumers simply don't care.
Re:OGG vs SnoCap (Score:4, Insightful)
To put it in perspective:
I know the readers of
Frankly, unlike many of the
Sean's riches have allowed him to move out of his parents' basement and get a haircut; You should worship him.
As for Ogg, audio CODECs are a dime a dozen. Listening to you geeks argue that Ogg is better than, say WMA, is like listening to audiophiles argue about which DAC sounds better in their hi-fi. Who cares?
Why invest in OGG? (Score:2)
Re:OGG vs SnoCap (Score:1)
OGG will never succeed commericially becuase it has no DRM (at least i think dont think it does). these new commercial projects are funded because they have DRM. why support a project thats good for the people when businesses can support a project thats good for themselves.
Re:OGG vs SnoCap (Score:2)
So where would the angel investor get his money back from if he invested in OGG?
Re:OGG vs SnoCap (Score:2)
That's a very risky bet but at least it's a chance. OGG is right there in front of them and ready to go but they don't see any money in it. That should tell you something.
Mp3 made somebody money because it came first. From that point forw
Re:The next Revolution: (Score:1)
Re:The next Revolution: (Score:1)
Re:The next Revolution: (Score:1)
Hero? Give me a break (Score:2, Troll)
Re:Hero? Give me a break (OT) (Score:1)
Re:Hero? Give me a break (Score:3, Insightful)
If they had just said "he's a hero" and left it at that, I would agree. But they qualified the statement by saying "heroes of the MP3 revolution". Which I agree with. Within that small, contained area, they have certainly attained hero status. Without WinAmp or Napster, what would be the state of portable music today? (Assuming no on else had come along and achieved a similar status. But if that were the case, you would be arguing that [Some Guy] wasn't a he
Re:Hero? Give me a break (Score:1)
Not well thought out if you need everyone to agree (Score:4, Insightful)
Sounds like all those well thought-out ideas to stop spam, that simply need everyone to agree on something new.
--
In London? Need a Physics Tutor? [colingregorypalmer.net]
American Weblog in London [colingregorypalmer.net]
Re:Not well thought out if you need everyone to ag (Score:5, Insightful)
Might as well complete the quote...
The focus here is getting the peer-to-peer companies to participate. The user is going to take the path of least resistance (and money.) As long as there are free and easy to use peer-to-peer systems, projects like this do not stand a chance.
However, projects like this could easily take over... if and only if they include one vital key. The makers of the peer-to-peer software will make more money. Kazza, emule, and all the others will lay down their arms and gladly go to a pay-type system if they can make more money that way.
The problem with that is... there is not enough money to go around. For peer-to-peer to make more that means the music companies are going to have to take less. (They can't rape the artists any more than they already are.)
AC
Re:Not well thought out if you need everyone to ag (Score:3, Insightful)
-
Re:Not well thought out if you need everyone to ag (Score:2)
Re:Not well thought out if you need everyone to ag (Score:1)
original name (Score:3, Funny)
How good is this for the consumer? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:How good is this for the consumer? (Score:4, Interesting)
Having a bittorrent-type distribution system with the online music store always on might work, but there would probably be too many problems wrt DRM.
But what do I know? I've never run an unprofitable company with no business model before, Shawn has.
Re:How good is this for the consumer? (Score:1)
Re:How good is this for the consumer? (Score:1)
dead page (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:dead page (Score:1)
Re:dead page (Score:2)
Not everything is what its name sounds like. [quicksilver.com]
Re:dead page (Score:1)
If you haven't already got the hint.. well, Shawn isn't exactly a "hero", or a "luminary", or anything like that. He's some jock kid with mediocre programming skills that dreamed of "getting rich from computers somehow", and then set out to do just that.
New website? (Score:3, Funny)
Yes,
Re:New website? (Score:3, Flamebait)
Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:3, Interesting)
Napster was a lowest common denominator PTP system. It stole MP3's. Many people thought of simple systems like this that the masses could use but most knew better than to damage PTP credibility before this. Writing a Napster program in VB would take a few days at best. Not that his idea wasn't what counts, it is and simple is usually better. But in his case there was no way around it. Napster was made to steal music. At least with Hotline and similar technologies you could say it had other purposes and in some cases make other purposes for it.
Napster has caused so many problems with legit PTP systems. My problem with it was it was so flagrant. It was a dumb mans PTP system and it brought attention to other areas that otherwise didn't want it.
Now, I probably sound like I am hating on Napster because now it's harder for me to steal things. Well, it's not harder for to steal things so you can rule that out. But, I know systems are being monitored closely now and the general public knows what a PTP system is, well sort of. I download some music I don't own. I use free software so I don't need to pirate that. But now I can get a huge fine if I D/L a song from the wrong person. I blame Napster for this. Not for me D/Ling things, but for being so stupid, flagrant and blatantly illegal about it they fucked it up for everyone.
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't like the RIAA tactics, but you have to admit that P2P is forcing them to change their business model. Would iTunes Music Store exist if P2P wasn't so wildly popular? Furthermore would we have access to so many portable music devices if it weren't for the popularity of napster and hence the popularity of digitized music (aka MP3 files)?
Not to mention that P2P gives me hope that one day artists will be able to directly reach their audience without the RIAA.
Fanning was really the first to let the gennie out of the bottle so to speak. You may think Fanning was an idiot for putting out a program designed only to steal music. I think he was pretty smart for putting out a program that finally allowed us to have something to fight the media giants with, and changed the way many people obtain their music. No longer do you have to record crappy quality tracks off the radio, nor do you have to buy 15 songs of crap for $18 to get one song you like.
P2P is a force to be reckoned with and it's because of napster that this is true.
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:1)
That's the way most of us had found out about Google, ICQ/etc., ebay and hell, even Slashdot and Linux.
Word of mouth is the most important means of advertising on the internet. Everything else is just spam and therefore mostly ignored. But a word from a guy at the forum will get you almost instant hits. Because you almost ever know for sure, that a person with a not-too-different background (you're reading the same forum...) liked it so m
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:5, Insightful)
Shawn Fanning is an idiot. This is not a troll. He releases a PTP system that is so inherently unthought out and stupidly illegal and try to make a go of it. He wrote a program in VB that was what it was because he couldn't implement anything more complex. Sure, some of the beauty of Napster was its simplicity. But this is also the reason we are in a jam with PTP systems like we are today. Without Napster we would not have the RIAA court cases. We would have Gnutella systems, Bit Torrent etc free from lawyers and everyone would be happy.
The reason we have distributed systems in the first place is due to the destruction of Napster. If Napster had never existed, I'm inclined to believe P2P would be nowhere near as widespread as it is today, or that it would even exist at all.
That said, I see no need for any software that allows the recording industry to make money. We simply don't need the recording industry anymore. All we really need are artists, and fans. Woe be to the recording industry when the likes of iRate [sourceforge.net] and CDBaby [cdbaby.com] meet. It's clear that we've got the distribution thing covered with the internet. A system like iRate handles the task of getting the artist exposure with fans who will appreciate them, and a store like CDBaby handles the obvious financial needs of the artists. That's really all the current recording industry does now.
So why do we need to include the bastards who sue 12 year olds again?
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:1)
Napster being technically liable for prosecution by the RIAA (due to its centralized indexing servers) and hence its eventual downfall has nothing
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:3, Insightful)
Record lables/companies don't only create & distribute, but they MARKET the artists and artists' products. Every time you see an artist on tv, or hear them on the radio (which is how most artists are introduced to the MASS audience), or see their posters in stores or songs in movies, the labels spent a lot
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:1)
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:1)
And which is exactly the reason they should die a horrible death. Artists shouldn't have to be marketed like products. That only fosters the music culture we have today - MTV and the like where the actual music takes a back seat to a host of other things - the look, the video, the hype, the bullshit.
To enjoy music, I don't particularly need to know how the performers look like, where they shop, w
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:2)
even small underground labels promote their artists. you try to book concerts. you try to make people aware of your music. this isn't easy and cheap, even if it's just going around the internet spreading word without marking yourself as spam
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:1)
Just imagine if the word spread itself. That's what a system like iRate would do for artists. Upload your music, and the system spreads it around. Those who like a song rate it high. That song is then automatically referred to others who will probably like it based on their user profiles. Every band gets a fair shake and gets their music in front of those who are most likely to buy it. In contrast, the large record companies we have now would rather refer songs in order to maximize the strategic advan
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:2)
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning - DUPE (Score:2)
See Comment 7177426 [slashdot.org]
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning - DUPE (Score:1)
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:5, Informative)
The Napster client was written using C++ using win32 calls. It was never written in VB. Ever. Granted it was more C with classes than C++, but it certainly wasn't VB.
You have to pretty naive to think that without Napster the RIAA would have simply ignored other systems that enable copyright infringement. Especially a system like bittorrent that with a central server component. Remember that Scour (which predated Napster) was sued, Aimster was sued, etc. It is just Napster received far more press than anyone else.
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:1)
I still remember napster coming into #Winprog @ Efnet asking for help when he started napster p2p it was I believe his first win32 appliction he was pretty much a UNIX coder.
Re:Napster and Shawn Fanning (Score:1)
You stole my post (Score:2)
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=81764&cid=0
Scroll down a bit and you will find it. I'm flattered you liked my post enough to use it but you could have credited me with it. Thanx!
The contest (Score:1)
Is it too late anyway (Score:5, Insightful)
The fundamental problem is I want to copy the music once I've paid for it. The music industry doesn't want me to do this - because if I can easily move it around, I can move it to my friends house (for visits, you understand
All I can say is, Good Luck - you're going to need it...
Simon
OCD? (Score:3, Funny)
Jonah Hex
Please don't... (Score:3, Insightful)
If anyone here thinks the RIAA should get more money please raise your hands...
Yes, yes... I thought so...
Re:Please don't... (Score:2)
The purpose of the publishing industry is - get this - to publish and distribute. Guess what? Whith P2P every single user becomes a publisher and distributor. Once a file is in P2P we don't need the publishing companies to do jack. Why should publishers expect to collect money for sitting around doing nothing?
If they really want to suggest some sort of billing system for P2P then I say that money should go to the artist that actually created th
Why (Score:2, Insightful)
Why postpone the inevitable? Let the industry die.
Re:Why (Score:2, Informative)
A recording company will help the artists develop their style. I don't mean make overs, they'll hook them up with a producer who will make the band sound like they know how to play so they can ha
Re:Why (Score:1, Informative)
Getting into good venues? Probably still a market for a good agent, but that doesn't mean you have to sign your copyrights over to a monopolistic cartel.
And fi
Re:Why (Score:2)
If my opinion sounds like a troll, it's because you fail to see the big picture. The record industry and broadcast radio are obsolete for 2 reasons:
1. With this new fangled "Intarweb" thingy, anyone can distribute their own content, whether it be music, text, or software, via subscription or free.
2. Most people these days can decide for themselves what they like from the thousands, if not millions
Re:Why (Score:1)
The record industry and broadcast radio are obsolete for 2 reasons:
1. With this new fangled "Intarweb" thingy, anyone can distribute their own content, whether it be music, text, or software, via subscription or free.
2. Most people these days can decide for themselves wh
Heroes of the MP3 revolution? (Score:1)
Please don't compare the two. (Score:4, Flamebait)
Re:Please don't compare the two. (Score:2)
Re:Please don't compare the two. (Score:2, Interesting)
On the other hand, Frankel's work is consistently excellent. He writes creative applications that are small, elegant, and fast. The two people really are in different leagues.
Re:Please don't compare the two. (Score:2, Redundant)
Where in heck did this written in VB thing start?
Re:Please don't compare the two. (Score:1)
Yes, I've cleaned a lot of it up, and fixed a few of the most annoying problems.
Re:Please don't compare the two. (Score:1)
Did you read the article about how Frankel stuck it to the man at AOL? That's heroic in my book.
What a bizarre plan (Score:3, Insightful)
The big elephant in the room, however, is Sean himself. It sounds like SnoCap is trying to sell a "Secure" model to the entertainment industry, from someone the industry does not trust: Sean. This doesn't bode well for the industry. This is someone the industry claims contributed to the decline of CD sales, and yet then they will turn around and work with him to prevent it? Doesn't add up. Further, if well healed security and DRM companies have not suceeded with the industry, why should SnoCap where others have failed? SnoCap doesn't even appear to have any security people on its staff, so where does it get its expertise? Can anyone say "implementation flaw"? It just doesn't add up. DRM from a company and people that don't have any experience with DRM, security or working with the entertainment industry. Yeah, they're gonna get alot of cooperation from the RIAA.
Let us not forget the fact that Sean is not well liked in the entertainement industry, nor are the former investors in Napster. These people have little hope of getting the RIAA onboard. Even if they do manage to gain some ground with the industry, its a steep climb for SnoCap to anything close to sucess.
BTW, why would you want to use a P2P client that has DRM, when you can use something like eMule, Kazaa, GNUNet or any other P2P client that doesn't? Yeah, this will do about as well as Napster would have if they had implemented DRM. Dead in the water.
Love Your Enemy (Score:5, Interesting)
If I were this group of record companies... I would kill myself and do the world a favor.
Wait...
If I were this group of record companies, I would hire a kid like this in a heartbeat. He is likely to understand the peer-to-peer community much more than the record executives. He's help people do it the free and easy way... and maybe he can transition everybody into a more "legit" method of music transfer.
I don't think the record execs are scared of this guy... I think they are having wet dreams about his re-securing their monolopy on music.
What is this kid likely to do? We'll just have to wait and see. He's probably smart enough that he could sweet talk his way into a lot of vaporware dollars...
AC
Re:Love Your Enemy (Score:2)
Re:Love Your Enemy (Score:2)
However, in business people fail... often multiple times before they have a financially successful project or company.
In some ways he has already succeeded in this project--he has a large angel investor. As my accountant and lawyer both recently told me, most investors avoid internet-anything as they are still hurting from the dotcom flop.
Getting money from investors for internet/tech related projects is tough right now. He has gotten money...
He is already ahead of the game.
Ac
Re:Love Your Enemy (Score:2)
Re:What a bizarre plan (Score:2)
If I was him, given the crap he's been given by record companies in the past, I'd try to scam them too : it looks like they'd buy buy any goofy computer solution [latext.com] to save their doomed business model these days.
Re:What a bizarre plan (Score:2)
Re:What a bizarre plan (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, for starters I'd pick a P2P client that doesn't include spyware, which lets out Kazaa, at least the original. Not that DRM doesn't contain its own nasty potential for privacy violations, but I'd pick it over Gator.
Then I'd look for the biggest network, because the more people use it, the more stuff you can actually get your hands on. If this guy can make a lot of stuff available, many people might go for it, because dealing with DRM may well be less bad than 200-hour failed downloads from an illegal system. That's why people pay a buck to Apple: "free" but unavailable isn't free.
Still, in the end I dunno what this guy thinks he's going to get. P2P works only because it's free. When you pay for music, you get the privilege of a dedicated fast server with a support staff. Pay music on P2P would be trying to get other people to do the storage and network space. I'm not participating in that.
Re:What a bizarre plan (Score:4, Informative)
For most people, the old school P2P model works because they already paid for the bandwidth (ISP fees), they own the computer and, they don't mind waiting for the content. It didn't "cost" them anything, so let it ride. Sean is apparently not as smart as everyone thinks. This makes no sense. Napster worked because it was "free" and it was the only option at the time. Now there are many many other options, and they are vastly superior to napster, they offer other content as well (video, boosk, software, etc.), and lets be honest, Napster was a trivially simple setup: client -> server. This is a real P2P system like gnutella, kazaa, etc.. Sean invented the mainframe, someone else invented the PC of the P2P world. His ideas are ancient history and he hasn't had a new idea since then. Frankly, all he did was create a central directory for DCC IRC transfers. Neat, useful, revolutionary, but its ancient history now. There are much better options and he seems stuck in the past.
Regardless, SnoCap appears to lack the key ingredient that is needed: value. People have to see that there is a point to using it, more content, faster D/ls, quality, time not wasted, money, etc. Given the unlikeliness that Sean can convince an industry made up of technophobes with petty beefs towards him, long memories, and a history of not caring about either the artist or the consumer, SnoCaps chances of working out a good deal for all parties are slim. These are not people that play well with others, let alone their enemies: Napster founders and executives. The whole P2P revolution the recording industry believes cost them a ton of money, and is continuing to hurt them. Why on Earth would the recording industry trust someone that they believe cost them billions?
This SnoCap thing is ridiculous. You couldn't ask for a bigger joke. The users won't trust Sean because he's "sold out", he wants to build DRM on top of P2P, and the entertainment industry can't stand him or the people involved with him. Its absurd. If I didn't know any better, I would wonder if this was some big fake story for what the company is really doing. But seeing who invesnted in it, I'm not suprised. These are the same people that thought poring money into Napster, without anything close to a business model was going to net them billions. Yeah, so how is that working out for them now? Thought so.
Move along folks. This is ysterdays news. This is the the sad story of a dot-bomb crew trying to relive their glory days in the most absurd and attention grabing way possible. The industry might throw them a bone, but they have nothing to add to the current mix. iTunes and others are already doing this, and without all the mess. Its cheap, its easy, and if you don't want to even pay a few cents for your tunes, you can still get them from Kazaa, eMule and so on. Nothing to see here at all, except a sad sad attempt to try and re-invent Napster.
Re:What a bizarre plan (Score:2)
Re:What a bizarre plan (Score:2)
Re:What a bizarre plan (Score:2)
Justin quit. (Score:1, Informative)
Hmmm....
I have a log of the program's debug output! (Score:5, Funny)
shawn $ fingerprint_id_test test_files.txt
LOADING INPUT TEST FILE: beethoven.mp3
Identifying
100% Match: Beethoven, Ludwig Van, classical
LOADING INPUT TEST FILE: coltrane.mp3
Identifying
100% Match: Coltrane, John, Jazz
LOADING INPUT TEST FILE: chembros.mp3
Identifying
100% Match: Chemical Brothers, electronic
77% Match: Daft Punk, electronic
75% Match: Noise, industrial-moise-recording
LOADING INPUT TEST FILE: britspears.mp3
Identifying
100% Match: Spice girls, teenage pop
100% Match: N'Sync, teenage pop
100% Match: Backstreet Boys, teenage pop
100% Match: Hilary Duff, teenage pop
100% Match: Maris Willson, teenage pop
100% Match: Holly Valance, teenage pop
100% Match: Mandy Moore, teenage pop
100% Match: Vitamin C, teenage pop
100% Match: Christina Aguilera, teenage pop
100% Match: Five, teenage pop
100% Match: Jennifer Lopez, teenage pop
100% Match: Aaliyah, teenage pop
100% Match: Rachel Stevens, teenage pop
100% Match: Pink, teenage pop
*** Endless recursion error. Core dumped ***
Justin Resigned AOL/Nullsoft (Score:5, Informative)
Trying landoleet.org
Attempting to finger justin@landoleet.org -
Login: justin - - - - - - - - - - Name: Justin
Directory:
Never logged in.
New mail received Thu Oct 9 15:07 2003 (PDT)
- - Unread since Mon Mar 10 12:28 2003 (PST)
Mail forwarded to: justin@blorp.com
Plan:
Jan 22, 2004
Well, it took a bit longer than I (or likely anybody else expected), but after four and a half years, I've resigned from my position at AOL. Yay/sigh/etc.
This will likely be the last time I update this
peace out.
eof
-
End of finger session
Fortunately, this won't really result in a loss of quality with future Winamp versions. their two main coders, "Francis and Christophe," Will be taking over most of the development. From what I've heard, they did most of the work with Winamp 5. And as most of those who've taken the time to really check out Winamp 5... It really whips the llama's ass.
Winamp 5 is a hog (Score:1, Insightful)
Winamp 5 really bogs the llama down.
Re:Winamp 5 is a hog (Score:3, Interesting)
Have you actually tried winamp 5 or are you talking out of your ass?
Seriously, winamp 5 is winamp 2 with winamp3 skin support (which is where most of the hogging comes from, and you can even disable it by uninstalling the "modern skins support" plugin) plus ripping and burning support (depending on who you ask -- it was added in an unofficial 2.x version)
On my athlon 2100+ system, winamp5 takes up 2.5 megs of ram while playing with a classic skin
Re:Justin Resigned AOL/Nullsoft (Score:1)
OW!
"allow the music industry to earn money" (Score:3, Funny)
Next, we'll be teaching fish to swim, birds to fly, and rabbits to reproduce....
Common MIsconceptions..... (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, at the start of 2002 I ended up out of a job and managed to get a position in Napster, long past the days when they were running the full service. There was the Beta test for the pay service running as well as a few potentially groundbreaking court cases. Turns out I was the last engineer Napster hired.
Anyway, I'd studied the napster setup in great detail and I pretty much had the same opinions - I figured that Shawn was an average geek who had got lucky. I didn't expect he'd much from him, hey, I'd spent 10 years in academia, I'd spent years 'saving the world from killer asteroids' (http://szyzyg.arm.ac.uk/~spm), and....
I'd wrote and released the first mp3 radio software and then watched Justin Frankel and winamp get all the credit for 'inventing' it a year and a half later. I went to napster expecting that Shawn wasn't anything special.
Boy was I wrong, he is a genuinely smart guy, yes he was also lucky - just like I'm a smart guy who wasn't so lucky. I think a lot of technical people underestimate him and sometimes this is working to his advantage.
So, lay off the assumption that luck == stupid - smart people get lucky all the time too.
Re:Common MIsconceptions..... (Score:4, Interesting)
So lets review, Sean was smart enough to let his Uncle own over 70% of the company before they had even hired one employee, smart enough to never construct a model that would generate one cent of revenue, and smart enough to let his VCs and lawyers run Napster into the ground and he's working with them again? Wow, what a plan, anyone wondering whats going to happen again?
Just to be clear, how much did you, or anyone else net from Napster? Aside from all the lawyers of course? Nothing? This is sad. Sean is a clever opportunistic programmer, but he's not a sharp businessman. He's in league with the same people that ran Napster into the ground. He's a dupe. He's being taken advantage of, at best, and he's shortsighted at worst. I for one hope he cuts the bounds, turns his back on these idiots that ruined Napster and truly does his own thing.
Don't be so quick to hand him all the credit for the implosion of Napster though. Afterall, he was surrounded by geniuses. Brilliant people that blew the chance of a lifetime and netted nothing, and convinced him it was a great idea. No doubt how they have strung him along with this one.
A sad story. Pity the man.
Re:Common MIsconceptions..... (Score:2)
I'm sure there exists in the world a successful businessman who has never had an original idea in his life. There exists a talented programmer who wouldn't have the slightest idea of how to make the money from his art.
Shawn Fanning may be neither of these two. But don't judge his intelligence purely on the basis of his ability to make money with it.
Re:Common MIsconceptions..... (Score:2)
It makes me feel... (Score:3, Interesting)
There are many cold, calculating and ruthless people in the music business. Shawn Fanning is one of them. Please don't ever think for one single second that he was "one of us".
Re:It makes me feel... (Score:1)
Yeah I'm sure he would have done some things differently given the chance to go back, but hindsight is a wonderful thing..
He's not the real Napster (Score:4, Funny)
Re:He's not the real Napster (Score:1)
At least it wasn't... (Score:1)
Re:At least it wasn't... (Score:1)
Shaun Fanning's role in development (Score:1)
This one will get tons of press because of Shaun's presence, but I wouldn't say that his role gives the company any more of a chance at succeeding.
Everyone has a publicist. (Score:1)
Please give it some consideration.
-- L.
They are going into the router business? (Score:1)
Flamebait? My ass. (Score:1)