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New Architect March 2002 Margaret Berry |
What I Want Developing user-friendly DRM... |
Macworld August 2000 Christopher Breen |
Steal This Song Will Napster Change The Way we Buy--or--Don't Buy Music Forever? |
PC World February 16, 2001 Cameron Crouch |
Will Subscription Service Kill Napster? After its courtroom loss, Napster announces a membership service that limits sharing. |
PC World March 2006 Dan Tynan |
Hollywood vs.Your PC: Round 2 Legal options in digital entertainment are growing. But they come with restrictions that can hobble your ability to enjoy the content you've paid for and even threaten your control over your system. |
PC World November 2002 Dylan F. Tweney |
Hollywood vs. Your PC Movie and music moguls are hopping mad over the new technologies that are transforming digital entertainment. Washington is listening. what's at risk? Your ability to enjoy DVDs and CDs you've bought, your privacy -- even your control over your PC. |
PC World January 18, 2002 Tom Spring |
Digital Music: Worth Buying Yet? Analysis: Official music sites debut, intended to nudge digital downloads to legitimacy--but they're more trouble than they're worth. |
PC World May 2, 2001 Michael Gowan |
Napster Alternatives If you're an MP3 junkie looking for a fix, we'll tell you which of the Napster alternatives works best... |
Reason May 2002 Mike Godwin |
Hollywood vs. the Internet Why entertainment companies want to hack your computer... |
Salon.com February 21, 2001 Janelle Brown |
Napster: Let's make a deal! Is the music-trading service increasingly desperate, or crazy like a fox? |
PC World January 2002 Frank Thorsberg & Tom Spring |
New Shackles on Your CD, Video Copying In an effort to stem piracy, entertainment companies are placing new copy restrictions into their products... |
Reason October 2000 Jesse Walker |
Music for Nothing Why Napster isn't the end of the world. Or even the music industry... |
Salon.com June 13, 2002 Damien Cave |
File sharing: Innocent until proven guilty An economist says music piracy should be hurting the recording industry, but it isn't -- and he doesn't know why. |
Salon.com July 28, 2000 Salon Technology Staff |
Showbiz reacts to Napster ruling As Napster fought an injunction that would shut down the MP3 file-swapping service Friday night, the stunned players on both sides of the issue sharpened their spins. |
Salon.com June 1, 2001 Janelle Brown |
The music revolution will not be digitized The dust is clearing from the online entertainment wars. Who won? The record labels. Who lost? Consumers... |
PC Magazine November 11, 2003 Cade Metz |
Let the Music Play We review all the tools you need to satisfy your digital music urges. |
PC World December 2003 Anne Kandra |
To Copy or Not to Copy? Here's what the law says you can -- and can't -- do with digital media files. |
Wired October 2001 Jeff Howe |
Licensed to Bill Big Media wants you to pay for what you read, watch, and hear - and keep paying. Digital rights management technology will make sure you do... |
Wired January 2004 Chris Anderson |
MEMO: To: The next head of the Motion Picture Association of America How Hollywood can avoid the fate of the music industry |
Salon.com March 13, 2002 Damien Cave |
Chained melodies Copyright-holding corporations are pushing new laws and computer-crippling technologies in their war on piracy. But can anything keep geeks from copying the music and movies they crave? |
Salon.com November 30, 2001 Richard Barbrook |
How the music industry blew it John Alderman's "Sonic Boom" recounts the history of Napster -- and the unstoppable rise of file trading. |
eCFO April 2001 Russ Banham |
The Terrors of Tinseltown Peer-to-peer file-sharing, which enables users to swap digital content, could cut the major studios out of the distribution loop. Here's a look at the CFOs behind the Napsterization of Hollywood... |
PC World August 2003 Frank Thorsberg |
Consumer Alert: Copy Controls Crackdown Multimedia lovers find themselves caught in a digital vise these days, as Hollywood tightens its copyright controls on movies, games, and music on DVDs and CDs -- most recently squeezing customers accused of copyright infringement in court. Technology is starting to offer some relief, though. |
PC World March 2002 Kevin McKean |
Up Front: Why Your CD-RW May Be Obsolete Restrictive new copyright protections could lock you out of your own music CDs... |
Searcher May 2003 Carol Ebbinghouse |
Big Brother Invades the Campus and Workplace: Infotainment and the Copyright Cops The leading entertainment organizations have now begun targeting colleges and universities, as well as corporate America. |
Salon.com February 12, 2001 |
Victory or defeat? Did the record industry's court triumph insure a future full of profits -- or seal its doom? Experts weigh in... |
BusinessWeek March 29, 2004 Larry Armstrong |
E-Tune Shopping With downloading now legit, online music stores have similar catalogs. It's the extras that set them apart. |
Salon.com July 20, 2001 Scott Rosenberg |
Revenge of the file-sharing masses! By smashing Napster, the music industry has pushed its customers to seek alternatives that won't be so easy to shut down... |
PC Magazine March 14, 2007 Dan Costa |
DRM Is Dead Sure, the RIAA can sue a handful of students each year and shut down a P2P network every six months, but this is just legal Whac-A-Mole. It doesn't solve the problem. |
PC Magazine February 25, 2004 John C. Dvorak |
Ode to Napster, Music's Last Hope Protection schemes, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, and lawsuits against file sharers are not going to save the music business. The Recording Industry Association of America is announcing another 532 John Doe lawsuits against peer-to-peer file sharers. |
Search Engine Watch June 2, 2000 |
More Than Just Music Search Describes how to find MP3 files with tools like Napster and how these same tools may be used for other types of searching in the future. |
Salon.com July 27, 2000 Scott Rosenberg |
Why the music industry has nothing to celebrate Napster's shutdown will only cause a thousand alternatives to bloom. |
Salon.com May 17, 2002 Janelle Brown |
Napster's wake The company that launched a thousand rips may be dead, but the movement it launched continues to thrive -- and to make a mockery of the music industry's pathetic online offerings. |
Salon.com March 27, 2001 Janelle Brown |
Who is spying on your downloads? The recording industry would love to keep tabs on every Napster trader or Gnutella user, but even the sneakiest software won't stop music piracy... |
Salon.com August 22, 2000 Damien Cave |
Why Scour is not the new Napster Dan Rodrigues defends his multimedia search engine, even as it faces a nasty lawsuit. |
Searcher October 2001 Dave Rensberger |
Swinging the Big Bat: Power Versus Technology Digital content is endlessly flexible and slippery. Providers all up and down the line wake up to the fact that content itself may not be the cash cow they thought it was. The real profits are in the control of the delivery systems... |
PC Magazine November 15, 2011 Dan Costa |
iTunes Match Ends Piracy As We Know It Apple iTunes Match and streaming music services are putting an end to the MP3 generation?and the piracy that came with it. |
Salon.com August 7, 2000 Scott Rosenberg |
But isn't it against the law? How Napster turns otherwise upstanding citizens into recidivist outlaws -- and what the music industry can do to save itself. |
Salon.com August 7, 2000 Damien Cave |
A hacker crackdown? As the long arm of the law reaches Napster and its lookalikes, programmers could be held responsible for what others do with their code. |
Salon.com May 30, 2000 Damien Cave |
Napster at law Attorney-turned-interim CEO Hank Barry promises to make money, not war, for the beleaguered music-swapping service. |
Wired October 2000 John Heilemann |
David Boies: The Wired Interview Wired and Boies talked for several hours about the lawyer's defense strategy for the Napster case, the future of intellectual property and free speech in a networked world, and how it feels for this David to be taking on yet another Goliath... |
InternetNews August 20, 2004 Roy Mark |
P2P War Takes Bad Turn for Hollywood Court rules P2P technology is legal even if the software itself is used for illegal purposes. |
Wired October 2000 |
P2P Pages Wired's Guide to Global File-Sharing |
Salon.com June 14, 2000 Janelle Brown |
RIAA tries to shut down Napster By moving for an injunction against the file-swapping service, the recording industry shows just how little it gets the Net. |
PC Magazine October 29, 2003 |
Online Music Stores: Music to Your Ears? As Apple iTunes Music Store for the Mac showed, users wanted to download as much or as little as they liked and pay only for what they bought. Now that the winning formula has been hit upon, it's rapidly being improved. |
Salon.com July 7, 2000 Eric Boehlert |
Napster death match, Round 3 Fending off a life-threatening court injunction, file-swapping phenom Napster insists it has done nothing wrong. |
PC World February 20, 2001 Martyn Williams |
Napster Apparently Angling to Settle Embattled music-sharing site, preparing to change its ways, offers $1 billion to record companies... |
The Motley Fool February 11, 2005 Kelvin Taylor |
Napster Nips at iTunes' Heels The music download service plans to battle Apple with an unlimited-tune subscription deal. |
Salon.com July 27, 2000 Damien Cave & Kaitlin Quistgaard |
Court to Napster: You're going down The judge vents her wrath on the Napster "monster" and closes the music-swapping service -- for now. |
InternetNews February 27, 2004 Roy Mark |
RIAA v. P2P: Same Old Song The music industry and P2P networks meet face-to-face, but a forumula to satisfy consumers and copyright holders remains elusive. |
The Motley Fool June 21, 2005 Alyce Lomax |
Play It, Don't Burn It, Sam The controversy over music and copyright continue with word of a new copyright protection technology that severely limits what CD buyers can do with their music. Is the record industry going too far, and hurting its prospects in the process? |