Sir Mix-A-Lot Using Weed To Distribute Music

Found on Slashdot on Saturday, 10 January 2004
Browse Filesharing

Hip-hop musician Sir Mix-A-Lot has made his new CD Daddy's Home available for download using Weed technology. Weed is a relatively new file sharing system based principles of shareware and referrals. You download the DRM WMA weed file and can listen to it 3 times on any computer before deciding to purchase it or not. If you do purchase it (at a price set by the artist), you will receive referral fees (20%, 10%, 5%) for the next 3 generations of people that purchase your copy. The artist always receives 50% of the price. Certainly an interesting approach to distributing music in a world of p2p and iTunes.

I don't understand why anybody would use DRM at all. One could play the file once and record it at the same time (what most audio editors can), or burn it on CD and rip it afterwards (as far as I know, WMP9 burns DRM files).

Forget the spin, taping is not killing music

Found on Sydney Morning Herald on Saturday, 03 January 2004
Browse Filesharing

Despite its usual song and dance over CD burning, the record industry is in rude health, says Peter Martin.

The recording industry survey was carried out by Quantum Market Research using a sample of about 1000 people. It suggests that 31 million homemade CDs are given away as gifts each year (about four for each of the eight million Australians it says receive them). If, as seems reasonable, 31 million homemade CDs are kept rather than given away, the total number created each year would top 62 million.

A dent of 62 million in CD sales in stores each year should be easy to spot. Except for this problem. CD sales in Australian stores have hardly ever been that high.

At various times we have been told that the pianola was going to kill sales of sheet music, that radio was going to kill sales of records, that photocopying would kill sales of books, that the VCR would stop people going to movies, and that cheaper imported records would stop people buying Australian music.

Oh wonder! How can music piracy affect the US, but not Australia? Might it be that, despite all statements of the US industry, the true reasons are the high prices and the bad albums?

Kazaa shuts down Kazaa Lite

Found on The Register on Thursday, 25 December 2003
Browse Filesharing

This weekend users of Kazaa Lite K++ learned that almost every download site of the popular peer-to-peer file-sharing application had disappeared, including the links on its own home page.

Sharman Networks, the company behind the original Kazaa, approached the ISP of every website that hosted the program and ordered its removal on grounds of copyright infringement.

Now isn't that stunning? A company, accused to be responsible for causing immense copyright infringements, goes after a clone because of copyright infringement. Wasn't there something about a glass-house and stones? I hope they don't really think people will pay for Kazaa if they can use other free (and better) clients instead.

MUTE: Simple, Private File Sharing

Found on Slashdot on Friday, 19 December 2003
Browse Filesharing

MUTE is a new file sharing network that provides easy search and download functionality while protecting your privacy. It does this by routing all messages through a network of neighbour connections, using virtual addresses and encrypting all the traffic (using RSA for public/private keys and AES for the actual encryption). MUTE's routing mechanism is inspired by ant behaviour. The program is available for Linux, Windows and Mac OS X.

After all that sueing, this is the next step. Let's see what happens when the majority of sharers use programs like this one.