gull
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response 1 of 104:
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Jun 24 13:08 UTC 2002 |
Two news blurbs:
A lot of web broadcasters are shutting down now, citing RIAA royalties that,
even after being cut in half by the Librarian of Congress, are too high.
http://www.theregus.com/content/6/25338.html
Apparently the issue isn't just the current royalties, it's that they're
*retroactive* for the last four years. So places that have been
broadcasting for a while, especially the larger ones, suddenly have a
massive tab due.
---
Microsoft seems to be spinning their DRM OS to make it more palatable. This
is the "Secure PC" operating system with built-in support for copy
protection. Microsoft, perhaps realizing this isn't very marketable to
anyone except Hollywood and record companies, is now referring to it as an
OS meant to protect your security and privacy, instead of one meant to
protect intellectual property.
http://www.theregus.com/content/4/25344.html
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krj
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response 10 of 104:
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Jul 10 03:31 UTC 2002 |
Heh, beat me to it. Janis Ian is an entertaining writer.
(And an entertaining performer, and an all-round fun person: we
got to see her last year at both the Philadelphia Folk Festival
and the World SF Convention, the events one week apart.)
Wired reports that Gene Kan, the developer of Gnutella, is dead.
Suicide, age 25 I think.
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,53704,00.html
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tsty
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response 11 of 104:
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Jul 15 14:37 UTC 2002 |
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,53704,00.html
Quiet, Sad Death of Net Pioneer
2:00 a.m. July 9, 2002 PST
It's horribly ironic that the news of Gene Kan's death has trav-
eled so slowly -- no tributes posted on Usenet, no mention of his
passing at any of the usual geek news sites.
Perhaps the story of how a 25-year-old genius took his own life
is simply something that is just too difficult for folks to talk
about.
Kan, peer-to-peer file-sharing programmer extraordinaire, died on
June 29. His professional life revolved around developing new
ways to share information easily and quickly. Thousands of people
use Gnutella to swap files, a program Kan was instrumental in
developing and promoting.
Kan's suicide was not completely unexpected, according to some of
his friends. They had hoped Kan was winning his hard-fought bat-
tle against depression exacerbated by personal problems.
"We did all the things you're supposed to do," said Cody Oliver,
Gene's business partner in peer-to-peer search technology
gonesilent.com. "We got him on Prozac; we connected him to the
suicide hotlines. He promised he wouldn't do anything drastic.
But now he's gone. It's a really rough time."
The signs of impending awfulness were there, Oliver said. Very
recently, Gene had changed his resume, which was stored on the
University of California at Berkeley's server, to read: "Summary:
Sad example of a human being. Specializing in failure."
The university has removed Kan's pages.
Whatever was going on in his personal life, friends, colleagues
and industry observers all agree that Gene Kan was not a failure
-- either as a professional or as a human being.
Kan was among the first programmers to produce an open-source
version of the file-sharing application Gnutella, which enables
users to search for and transfer files from computer to computer.
His ability to translate complicated technology into easily
understandable terms quickly led to his becoming the unofficial
spokesman for Gnutella in particular, and for file-sharing appli-
cations in general.
"Gene was one of the first people to make hay with the idea that
peer-to-peer file sharing wasn't just about music, but about a
powerful approach to problems in computer networking," Tim
O'Reilly, of O'Reilly Publishing, said.
"It was Gnutella and Freenet, more than Napster, that got the at-
tention of the technical elite and made us think more deeply
about the way the Internet was evolving," O'Reilly added.
"And years from now, when we have an Internet-scale operating
system, and don't think of a computer as something on our desk
but as something pervasive that we interact with through hundreds
or thousands of different points of contact, we'll look back at
pioneers like Gene and see the soil in which the future took
root."
Kan was always careful to point up all the good things that could
be done with peer-to-peer applications, while never mincing words
about the problems the music industry perceived with file-sharing
technologies that also allow users to swap music and other media
files.
He testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee last June,
advising the recording industry that "the toothpaste is already
out of the tube," and it would be best to adjust their businesses
to the new reality of file sharing, as opposed to trying to ban
it.
"I had the privilege of sitting next to Gene when we both testi-
fied before the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on file shar-
ing -- his cool and calm, and centrality of purpose set my ner-
vous mind at ease," recalled Jim Griffin, CEO of Cherry Lane Di-
gital, a music-publishing firm.
"Gene's mind and talents were sharp and always in service to
mankind and the bigger picture, and it is truly ironic that he
sped the sharing of information but word of his death has trav-
eled so very slowly."
(page 2)
Kan's most recent project, InfraSearch, is based on Gnutella's
technology. InfraSearch allows any connected device on a network
-- from cell phones and wireless PDAs to PCs and servers -- to
communicate, collaborate and share information.
Sun Microsystems bought Kan's company, then known as GoneSilent,
last March for a reported $10 million, and until his death Kan
worked for Sun as a consultant on the connected search project,
now known as Project JXTA.
"He was happy with the work. It was going well and he was getting
paid," Oliver said. "Sun wanted him to do some things that he
wasn't thrilled about, but he knew that was part of the deal when
you work for a big corporation."
Oliver said when he thinks of Kan, he doesn't dwell on his
friend's brilliant mind or advanced technical skills, but on the
"damn good fun we had together before this whole mess."
In his private life, Kan loved racing cars and writing strange
haikus. He also collected license plates with technology-related
expressions but refused to have the oft-suggested "MP3" plate
made, believing it would cause hassles he didn't want to deal
with.
"It is hard to imagine any good coming from his death," Griffin
said. "But I'm guessing the peer-to-peer network will soon extend
to the great beyond."
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