AfterDawn: Tech news

News archive (2 / 2001)

AfterDawn: News

Amazon launches free music downloads

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 28 Feb 2001 10:36

Amazon, Internet retail giant, has launched a service where users can download music tracks for free. Most of the tracks are encrypted with Liquid Audio format and their sole purpose is to promote the band's album sales in Amazon.

But interesting point is that Amazon also offers music from indie artists for free and users can tip artists via Amazon's payment system if they want to -- of course Amazon takes a slice, thirty per cent to be exact.




AfterDawn: News

Swedish hacker deleted data of 3,100 Indiana University students

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 28 Feb 2001 6:13

Swedish hacker got into unsecured server of Indiana University and deleted the data of 3100 graduate students in order to get more free space to store his MP3s and video files.

It looks like he didn't use the data (which included social security numbers, etc) in any way, but just simply needed space to store the audio and video files. University police is looking into the case.

Maybe someone should have mentioned something about FreeSpace.com, XDrive.com, etc to him...?




AfterDawn: News

Napster bidding war

Written by Jari Ketola @ 26 Feb 2001 2:16

After Napster had it's $1 billion offer to the record industry turned down, a small little-known dot-com company made its own $3 billion offer.

Of course the company, Minneapolis-based J. River, doesn't have a dime of the amount it's offering. The offer is based on the projection that millions of users are willing to sing-up and pay for a service like Napster. J. River assures that it should be able to pay the $3 billion over five years for rights to offer copyrighted music available through it's service.

Even though the bid probably isn't one to take seriously, it's clear that the recording industry can't hold back much longer. They have to start licensing their music for digital distribution. The only remaining questions are where and how.




AfterDawn: News

Universal and Sony to open a digital music service

Written by Jari Ketola @ 23 Feb 2001 3:06

Trying to take full advantage of the ongoing Napster / MP3 -hype, Universal and Sony (again) announced they will be launching a digital music service.

The service, currently known by a code name "Duet", will initially be streaming only, but downloads, encrypted in some rights management software, will be offered later. Also some peer-to-peer functionality will be implemented, such as the ability exchange... hold your breath everyone... play lists! *Gasp!*

Vivendi Universal and Sony are trying to license at least 50 percent of global record sales for the service. That might sound like a huge goal, but it's not - Universal Music Group and Sony alone account for close to 40 percent of global record sales.




AfterDawn: News

Record industry attacks Napster clones

Written by Jari Ketola @ 23 Feb 2001 2:45

Having fought against Napster for quite a while now, the record industry has turned it's focus to the numerous Napster clones that also offer free music - just on a much smaller scale.

Since Monday RIAA has sent about 60 notices to the Internet service providers hosting Open Napster servers. The client software, like the Napigator, which use the Open Napster servers are much more difficult to shut down than the centralized Napster.com -servers.

Although RIAA might be able to force most of the U.S. Open Napster servers down with little effort, there will most definitely be "renegade" servers running overseas. Even though they will never be as big as Napster, they will probably haunt RIAA and the major record labels for a very long time indeed.




AfterDawn: News

Studios reiterate arguments in DeCSS case

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 22 Feb 2001 3:42

MPAA sued 2600 website in last year for spreading DeCSS code and won the first round when NY court decided in August that 2600 had broken the DMCA law when posting the DeCSS code on its website.

After that EFF, Electronic Frontier Foundation, took the case to U.S. Court of Appeals. EFF filed its briefs in January. In Tuesday, movie industry reiterated its case arguments.

Case goes on..




AfterDawn: News

Napster offers $1 billion to record labels

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 21 Feb 2001 6:48

After the court order in last week, Napster is desperate to find a solution to get it out of the situation where its only possibility is to shut down the service.

Napster on Tuesday offered to pay record labels Sony, Warner, BMG, EMI and Universal $150 million annually for five years in exchange for dropping their copyright infringement lawsuit. An additional $50 million would go to independent labels in each of those five years.

The money would come at the cost of free music. Napster envisions paying the record companies by implementing monthly subscription fees ranging from $2.95 to $9.95, a structure company officials said could be in place by July.

But the offer is not very likely to get labels to drop their legal processes.

"I think it would take a small miracle to get all five labels to agree to this," said Gartner analyst P.J. McNealy. "Some of these companies have other issues than just distributing the music."

Let's see how this saga ends..




AfterDawn: News

MyPlay focuses on subscription services, cuts staff

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 20 Feb 2001 1:52

MyPlay, a company which was expected to be the major competitor for MP3.com in last year, has announced that it will cut 41% of its staff and will focus to subscription services only.

The refocus is a result of decreased advertising rates and the increased need for subscription services. "Creating subscription services or variations on them is where you'll see the most money flow into the music industry in the next five years," said Mark Mooradian, an analyst at market research company Jupiter Research.




AfterDawn: News

Negotiations to rescue Napster underway

Written by Jari Ketola @ 19 Feb 2001 12:44

Former federal judge Eugene Lynch, a mediator appointed by the judge in the Napster case, has been negotiating a deal between Napster and major record companies to allow the popular MP3-swapping service to survive.

As reported earlier Napster may already have a solution to keep the service available. On Friday Hank Barry, Napster's CEO, announced that they have been developing a membership-model along with Bertelsmann AG.




AfterDawn: News

Hi-end Rio MP3 player released

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 16 Feb 2001 4:57

Legendaric Rio MP3 player series goes on, the latest addition to this family is Rio 800 Extreme. Player's details sound really good -- finally some of the usual complains of MP3 players have been addressed and fixed.

Memory is the most important factor compared to other similiar (excludes CD-R based MP3 players) players -- Rio 800 Extreme has whopping 384MB of memory! Player supports WMA and MP3 formats, has extended playback time of 12hours and looks really good.

Only problem is the price -- $599. But if you have enough cash and really want to have this one, go for it -- on technological sense it sounds nice.

For more information, use this link.




AfterDawn: News

EU allows music and video downloads

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 15 Feb 2001 1:32

Parliament of European Union voted yesterday and decided to allow digital music and video downloads for personal use, even when the user doesn't have the original copy.

471 members voted for the law, 53 against it and 23 members didn't vote at all. Now the suggestion goes to next level in EU and if EU ministers agree on the suggestion as well, it will become as a law in all EU member countries.

This is a great day for common sense, I think -- distributing copyrighted files is illegal, but regular users who download those, are not breaking the law.




AfterDawn: News

Napster will go legal in mid 2001

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 14 Feb 2001 1:12

Bertelsmann spokesman told yesterday that Napster service will transform to a legal service by mid-2001, based on subscription fees and possible deals with major record labels.

Analysts guess that this sounds about right - possible labels to make a deal with Napster are EMI and AOL/TimeWarner, they say. EMI is the most likely one, because of its ongoing discussions to merge with Bertelsmann, the only label with a deal with Napster. And AOL/TW because AOL is about to launch their own subscription service in this year and having a two-way deal with BMG to distribute content through both channels would be a smart move.

But we'll see. And of course, there are still good file-sharing tools available -- eDonkey and Gnutella are excellent tools for file-swapping.




AfterDawn: News

Napster loses - digital music companies gain

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 13 Feb 2001 7:00

As news came in yesterday about Napster's ruling (see the news), stocks of digital music companies soared in Wall Street.

EMusic.com gained over 69% and MP3.com also gained over 8% when investors wanted to believe that now when Napster is (hopefully not) gone, there would be business opportunities in other forms of digital audio distribution.




AfterDawn: News

Federal court: Napster must stop

Written by Jari Ketola @ 12 Feb 2001 12:27

Federal appeals court ruled Monday that Napster must stop it's free music sharing service.

In the ruling the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Napster must lock out those users who exchange copyrighted music without permission. Napster officials, of course, see this could lead to a shutdown of the service.

"This is a clear victory. The court of appeals found that the injunction is not only warranted, but required," said the president and CEO of RIAA, Hilary Rosen. "It's time for Napster to stand down and build their service the old-fashioned way - with permissions."

Napster was obviously disappointed with the court's ruling. "We will pursue every avenue in the courts and the Congress to keep Napster operating," said Napster in their statement.

Napster can stay in business until U.S. District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel retools her injunction. The appeals court found the previous injunction "overly broad".

If Napster can not find a way out of this the focus of the song swapping community will turn to the likes of Gnutella and EDonkey. It remains to be seen if it'll boost their development even further.




AfterDawn: News

Judgement day for Napster

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 12 Feb 2001 12:58

Ok, we've seen this before. Important court date is coming up for Napster, Inc. -- users flood to the service and trade as there's no tomorrow.

Today Napster will be in front of 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The court was set to rule on an injunction issued last year by a lower court, but it was put on hold and taken under submission by a three-judge panel. Today's ruling could ultimately shut down the service immediately.

Last night, peak hours showed over 2.2 million files being shared through Napster - almost 13,000 users logged in. In just one server..

Today's decision might ultimately be one of those written in the books of digital history and to be remembered years from now. But ah well, we'll see what happens.




AfterDawn: News

Sony still doesn't get it

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 09 Feb 2001 1:40

Sony Music put a legal pressure to Napster to get the Manic Street Preacher's new album away from the Napster "distribution". Sony also requested Napster to remove all users spreading this album, and yesterday Napster finished this action.

Sony seems to be protective even now when all the signs show that this war should end -- spreading MP3s increases music sales. And another funny fact about this case was the fact that this time Napster removed users and files from their system much faster than in Metallica's case -- influence of Bertelsmann is here..




AfterDawn: News

MP3.com to produce wireless music applications

Written by Jari Ketola @ 08 Feb 2001 12:01

MP3.com announced Wednesday that it will be developing music applications for cell phones based on Qualcomm's wireless software standard BREW (Binary Runtime Environment for Wireless).

BREW is a cross platform standard that allows developers to write a single version of any application and then run it on any cellphone using Qualcomm's CDMA technology.

MP3.com's application will allow the delivery of digital music to wireless devices. It remains to be seen if the quality of the service, and more importantly the sound, will satisfy the potential customers.

Source:
Yahoo! Daily News




AfterDawn: News

MP3 connector ...

Written by Jari Ketola @ 06 Feb 2001 2:29

... or 'Hooray for the marketing department'.

Quote:
The MP3-Connector is a revolutionary new patent-pending device which allows you to listen to all of your computer audio through your home stereo while also maintaining the ability to listen through your computer speakers.
This simple to install "all-in-one" device is a must have for anyone with an MP3 collection who wants to enjoy the full sound of their songs the way they were meant to be heard through a true home stereo.

In addition, you can use the MP3-Connector to make MP3 copies of all your favorite albums and cassettes.


Sounds nice, doesn't it? And it only costs $19.99 - an "incredibly low price".

An incredibly low price for a lenght of wire, three connectors and an extension cord? Hardly. Take a look at the device at www.MP3connector.com and spend a moment of silence for the passing of common sense.

Nevertheless they do present the product incredibly well.

See the device in it's full glory at www.MP3connector.com.




AfterDawn: News

MP3.com launches its Asian division

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 06 Feb 2001 8:08

MP3.com announced yesterday the launch of its Asian division. The new division is expected to combine local language sites with digital music content and services specific to Asian markets.

The MP3.com Asia division will focus on providing locally relevant services through technology, content and marketing partnerships throughout Asian countries.

MP3.com




AfterDawn: News

Anonymous file storage

Written by Petteri Pyyny @ 06 Feb 2001 2:03

EarthRamp.Com today announced the launch of Silentfiles.com, an anonymous file transfer and file sharing system that enables web surfers to download virtually any type of file anonymously from shared servers.

Launch of the service is scheduled weirdly, because we remember that FreeDiskSpace had to shut down their public folder feature couple of weeks ago -- various groups and authorities were suggesting that those folders were used for spreading child porn and illegal MP3s.




AfterDawn: News

AOL Time Warner sceptical about Napster-BMG

Written by Jari Ketola @ 01 Feb 2001 1:04

While Bertelsmann feels that turning the Napster into a subscriber service will be profitable, AOL Time Warner doesn't see it the same way.

"We have had discussions with Bertelsmann, but we haven't seen a business model that puts the reality around that dream," Richard Parsons, AOL Time Warner's co-chief operating officer, said during a luncheon with reporters. AOL Time Warner owns Warner Music Group, one of the Big Five record labels.

Much of the negative attitude comes from the fact that the copyright lawsuit against Napster is yet to be settled. Should Napster be found quilty of copyright violation the big five music companies will be all over them like vultures.

Source:
The Register





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