This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2001/00467616.html
'Net
Insider
Squeezing a
balloon
By Scott Bradner
Network World, 03/12/01
As
I write this (March 4), Napster is trying to stay oblivion by adding a filter
to its server to render invisible the names of songs that the recording
industry does not want freely shared. Napster is responding to an appeals court
ruling that it has been knowingly involved in an activity that violated copyright
protections on tens of thousands, or hundreds of thousands, of songs. But in
spite of the high profile of this case, it is unlikely that the death or
survival of Napster will have much effect on the future of music-sharing on the
Internet.
One of the most predictable effects of the long-running
"Perils of Napster" series has been the redoubling of the many
efforts to develop alternative file-sharing mechanisms. In particular, these
mechanisms do not share what has turned out, from legal and practical points of
view, to be a key weakness in the design of Napster: centralized servers.
Napster is able to add the file name filtering capability because it uses a
central server to collect and display names of the files its users want to
share.
Napster tried to use a previous copyright infringement case,
the 1984 case between Sony and Universal Studios over the legality of VCRs, to
justify its service. Napster claimed it had, in the words of the U.S. Supreme
Court decision in that previous case, "substantial noninfringing
uses" in that many artists were happy to let their songs be distributed by
Napster.
But in the current case, the appeals court said the Sony
criteria did not apply because unlike Sony shipping VCRs to customers and not
knowing what customers did with them, Napster had direct knowledge of what was
going on because it ran the server listing the names of the copyrighted
songs.
This reasoning may offer some legal protection to major Napster
alternatives such as Gnutella, BearShare, LimeWire and ToadNode. The
architecture of these systems is distributed, with no central servers holding
lists of songs.
But even if that legal logic were faulty, it might not
make much difference in the immediate future. Napster alternatives have been
given a big boost by Napster's legal problems. Lots of programmers from around
the world have been working to make the alternatives more stable and easier to
use.
At this point, even if Napster survives, the alternatives will
prosper. The recording industry is trying to squeeze a balloon thinking it will
pop, when instead the balloon will expand where the attackers least expect it.
As
a writer, I am quite worried about copyright protections. But using the blunt
legal hammers of old will not lead the way to resolving the copyright issues of
tomorrow.
Disclaimer: Some of Harvard's neighbors think it's a
self-inflating balloon. In any case, the above is my own opinion.
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