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| Author |
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| 25 new of 219 responses total. |
krj
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response 28 of 219:
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Jan 17 14:42 UTC 2002 |
The New York Times has a story on "Napster culture" now moving on to
downloading and trading TV shows and movies, as bandwidth and
disk sizes increase.
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/01/17/technology/circuits/17VIDE.html
"Black Hawk Download: Pirated Videos Thrive Online"
The store includes a visit with an Internet video collector
in Ann Arbor. :)
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krj
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response 29 of 219:
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Jan 17 22:55 UTC 2002 |
Lots of stuff today...
KaZaa has stopped offering their filesharing client for download at
http://www.kazaa.com. This does not appear to affect the operation of
clients already downloaded, though there are rumors that the KaZaa
company may be able to shut off its clients operating on the FastTrack
network. http://mp3newswire.net has more. Also Cnet at:
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-8513895.html?tag=mn_hd
-----
Another Cnet story reports on an attempt to get everyone to agree
on a no-copy flag for the digitial TV bitstream. Theoretically this
flag is to be turned into a standard, and then into hardware, in time
for the Federal deadline for all TV to be broadcast digitally in
May. Um, right.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-8516912.html?tag=mn_hd
-----
Finally, Slashdot publicizes and rips to shreds a website put up by
Universal Music Group to try to explain and justify their CD-copy-
prevention scheme. UMG CDs now contain a software license which appears
to forbid loaning the disc, and which certainly brings consumers under
crypto export controls. Slashdot's story and rude comments are at
http://slashdot.org/articles/02/01/17/1335204.shtml
Universal's own site is at http://www.musichelponline.com
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krj
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response 30 of 219:
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Jan 18 18:36 UTC 2002 |
Somewhere back up there someone was looking for a roundup of current
file sharing stuff. Slashdot today had a response pointing to
http://www.afternapster.com which reviews 101 such systems.
Also, I haven't got a link, but I've seen news stories about the
Soundscan weekly sales charts, and they are still trending downwards.
One analyst in one story somewhere is projecting a 3% decline for
the CD business in 2002.
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aruba
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response 31 of 219:
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Jan 18 23:58 UTC 2002 |
Thanks Ken.
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gull
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response 32 of 219:
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Jan 21 14:01 UTC 2002 |
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/23736.html
Summary: Philips is continuing to insist that CDs using the current
copy protection schemes can't bear the official Compact Disc logo.
(Though since the logo is usually inside, on the disc, this still might
not provide a good way to identify them before buying.) Philips'
general manager has also said that the company will be building CD
burners that can read and burn copies of the copy-protected CDs. He
argues this won't be illegal under the DMCA because the "copy-
protection" scheme isn't a protection system, it's a method of
preventing the playback of music.
It should be a very interesting legal battle if they actually go
through with this.
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krj
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response 33 of 219:
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Jan 21 18:07 UTC 2002 |
More on the classical music crash from andante.com:
http://www.andante.com/magazine/article.cfm?id=15643
From 1999 to 2001, the classical music CD business lost 20%
of its sales in the USA. USA sales lag far below Europe;
classical is down to about 1.8% of the market in the US, but
8% (and on an upward trend) in Britain, 7% in France (but trending
downwards from 10% earlier in the decade), 11% and rising in the
Netherlands.
Harmonia Mundi, one of the classical independent label/distributors
hit hard by financial troubles at Tower Records, has responded
by slashing the number of CD titles they distribute in half.
To take the optimistic view, they should now be a stronger
company.
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other
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response 34 of 219:
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Jan 21 18:30 UTC 2002 |
The CD logo often appears on the back of liner notes inserts or on the
back of the CD package, but not consistently enough to be able to tell
anything by it.
What does the logo signify? Compliance with the red book encoding
standard?
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gull
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response 35 of 219:
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Jan 21 19:07 UTC 2002 |
Specifically, it indicates the CD is licensed by Philips, which holds
the CD-DA patents (at least for another year or two.) I think
complying with the red book standard is part of the rules for making a
licensed CD.
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tpryan
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response 36 of 219:
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Jan 21 23:29 UTC 2002 |
re 33: Must be all those classical fans downloading on the internet!
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krj
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response 37 of 219:
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Jan 22 14:43 UTC 2002 |
resp:29 :: Slashdot collects/points to a bunch of stuff about Kazaa.
It appears the operation has been sold to a company in Australia which
intends to charge for its use; however, there are also rumors that
the company buying Kazaa can't be found in directories of Australian
firms. The Kazaa file trading client is once again available for
download, the articles say.
Weird.
http://slashdot.org/articles/02/01/21/1621223.shtml
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krj
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response 38 of 219:
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Jan 23 04:38 UTC 2002 |
mp3newswire.net assembles a coherent story about the Kazaa purchase,
though I'm still not sure I grasp what is going on. Australia is
developing a reputation as one of the least Internet-friendly
nations so it seems a poor choice to host a file-trading operation.
http://www.mp3newswire.net/stories/2002/kazaasold.html
-----
mp3.com/news points to a Houston Chronicle essay from early
this month:
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/story.hts/tech/weekly/1208692
On the disconnect between consumers and the music business,
heavily redacted:
> Here's the point that the music industry just can't seem to
> comprehend: Consumers will not flock to any pay service that
> constrains what they do with the music they download...
>
> The industry talks about "educating" consumers about intellectual
> property rights and the fact that artists and license holders need to
> be compensated for their work....
>
> But consumers are also resistant to the notion that art is something
> they've "licensed," like software, even though legally that's the
> case. Instead, their mindset is this: "Hey, I paid for this music. It's
> mine now. If I want to save some songs to my hard drive, burn a
> compilation CD, listen to them in an MP3 player, I should be able
> to."
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mcnally
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response 39 of 219:
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Jan 23 05:10 UTC 2002 |
If only there was some sort of Pulitzer Prize for stating the obvious..
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gull
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response 40 of 219:
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Jan 23 14:13 UTC 2002 |
I think a lot of people feel that way about software, too. I know to
me it seems distinctly unfair that if I buy a machine with a pre-
installed copy of Windows, I can't later sell it with that same copy of
Windows installed.
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mcnally
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response 41 of 219:
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Jan 23 18:52 UTC 2002 |
an issue which is made only more confusing by the fact that if you
buy a boxed copy of Windows, you *can* transfer the license with the
machine.
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krj
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response 42 of 219:
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Jan 24 15:58 UTC 2002 |
Napster news, widely reported: Trial court judge Marilyn Patel agreed
to a 30-day delay in issuing her ruling on the labels' request for a
summary judgement against Napster. It is believed the labels and Napster
are close to a settlement which would clear the way for the for-pay
Napster model to open for business.
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jmsaul
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response 43 of 219:
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Jan 24 17:44 UTC 2002 |
(But won't get them customers.)
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krj
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response 44 of 219:
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Jan 24 18:14 UTC 2002 |
The NYTimes reports further: the Register had some of this but
frankly it sounded like wishful thinking in their article so I didn't
include it in the earlier response.
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/01/24/technology/ebusiness/24NAPS.html
> Several people close to the case said,
> however, that the record companies' real
> motivation in asking for a suspension was
> that Judge Patel had threatened to
> issue an order that would have hurt their
> own case. Specifically, these people
> said, Judge Patel may have been planning
> to look more closely at whether the
> labels had negotiated in good faith in
> their licensing discussions with Napster.
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krj
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response 45 of 219:
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Feb 1 19:18 UTC 2002 |
resp:42 and subsequently :: lots of stories are breaking about the release
of the hearing transcripts from January 16 in the Napster case, and some
of the press coverage is getting more and more breathless.
I'll just cite this one, from the "Newsbytes" imprint of The Washington Post:
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/174154.html
"Napster Case: Is Judge Turning Tables on Labels?"
Quotes:
> A judge's decision allowing Napster to pursue copyright misuse claims
> against major record labels seems to signal a sea change in the music
> industry's lawsuit against the peer-to-peer song-swapping service,
> according to a trio of legal experts.
...
> If she were to rule that labels have
> misused their rights, one expert told
> Newsbytes, at the extreme it could mean
> the labels could not enforce their
> copyrights. Such a decision, conceivably,
> could kill the labels' case against Napster ...
> The 10 pages of transcript following Patel's statement about copyright
> misuse remain under seal by order of the judge, so any discussion that
> followed Patel's statement remains secret. But what is present in the
> document was described by one lawyer as "a bombshell."
----------
IANAL, but I went Googling in search of the terms "copyright misuse."
This seems to be a fairly specific legal term specifying a defense
against copyright infringement, in a situation where the copyright holder
has used copyright licenses to enforce unfair or illegal trade practices.
The case law I found, from early 1990s, involved a software firm which forced
its customers to sign a 99-year non-compete agreement before it would license
the software to them. It's unclear to me if a finding of "copyright misuse"
merely ends the litigation in question in favor of the accused infringer, or
if it terminates the copyright.
The Register (http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/23906.html) laments
that Napster seems to have neither the resources nor the inclination to pursue
this lead much farther, possibly leading to the smashing of the major record
companies. I tend to agree; Napster is now controlled by Bertelsmann, one of
the major music companies, and so it would not want to endanger the record
company copyrights. My guess is that Napster is likely to just use its
leverage to wipe the slate clean on anything it might have owed on past
infringements, and to get the licenses it wants to launch the new for-pay
Napster.
However, an analyst in the Newsbytes piece points out that the copyright
misuse issue will be lying around waiting for use by the other P2P file sharing
operations which the music industry either is suing, or plans to sue.
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twill
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response 46 of 219:
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Feb 6 00:03 UTC 2002 |
Hi, I'm Twill!
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krj
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response 47 of 219:
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Feb 12 04:14 UTC 2002 |
Here's an odd story. CD sales went down globally in 2001, but in the
UK and France they are up. UK sales up 5%, French sales up 12%.
Go figure.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/entertainment/music/newsid_1814000/1814160
.stm
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krj
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response 48 of 219:
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Feb 18 23:09 UTC 2002 |
Wired pointed to this think piece from MIT's Technology Review:
http://www.techreview.com/articles/shulman0302.asp
on "Intellectual Property Ecology."
The argument is that the current shifts towards giving all rights to the
IP owners and none to the public is likely to have bad effects on
future creativity. Those clashing against the current trends are
starting to apply an ecological metaphor in their organizing attempts.
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mcnally
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response 49 of 219:
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Feb 18 23:41 UTC 2002 |
And we all know how successful ecologists have been at influencing
public policy..
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jmsaul
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response 50 of 219:
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Feb 19 00:11 UTC 2002 |
From context, that's obviously intended as sarcasm, but ecologists actually
*have* influenced public policy in the US and Europe a hell of a lot in the
last 30-some years.
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mcnally
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response 51 of 219:
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Feb 19 01:03 UTC 2002 |
I know.. But I'm not particuarly hopeful for the effort Ken alludes to.
I'd argue that ecologists have largely been successful because they've
managed to convince a large enough segment of the populace, not because
they've influenced legislators directly. However, it's a complicated
issue and I have no desire to hijack the Napster item..
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jmsaul
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response 52 of 219:
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Feb 19 02:57 UTC 2002 |
Agreed on both counts.
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