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Music Media

Napster, Napster, Napster 242

michael.creasy was the first with the news: "After The Offspring started selling Napster merchandise, they are now being sued by Napster according to an article at Sonicnet.com." That should wake a few people up. Update: This is not a lawsuit, it's a cease-and-desist. On the lighter side (this means it's a joke, for the differently clued), Brian Briggs wrote in to share the bbspot news story about Metallica's 'Download This' album.
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Napster, Napster, Napster

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  • ...because just like Napster and unlike Gnutella, it categorizes the MP3s with their bitrate and length and such. OpenNAP [sourceforge.net]. I wonder if OpenNAP has the ability to deny MP3s of a certain bitrate conditional (i.e. less than X, greater than X, not equal to X, equal to X) so someone could run an OpenNAP server with all "no-suck" MP3s (i.e. min bitrate 160 Kbit/sec)...
  • Can somebody explain?

  • Napster doesn't give you music. Napster offers a service to come in contact with other human beings that may (or may not) have the music you are interested in. It doesn't censor, distribute or regulate any content. It also offers an ftp-like service, so that you can copy information that other person has stored on his/her harddrive, or offer some information on your own.

    Wether such a service should be banned is highly controversial. However, I don't think it should be since Napster Inc is NOT distributing any illegal music tracks at all. Free market and freedom should rule here, not draconian laws and enforcements.

    If you're going to ban companies that allow people to find eachother and share information, you'll have to shut down AOL.... Hey, wait a minute, that might be a good idea afterall, huh? ;-)

    - Steeltoe
  • I'm curious if an over-zealous legal department sent that C&D letter before Napster's administrative board could sit down and think about all this. We've all seen the frothing drool lawyers get into when it comes to potential copyright violations, and who's to say Napster's immune? Hell, they have an OBLIGATION to do so to protect their license. While everyone sits back n' chortles to themselves over the irony, they seem to be *deliberately* ignoring the truth of the matter so that they can have a good chuckle. Once again, point of note: NO LAWSUIT WAS FILED, it was JUST A CEASE & DESIST LETTER.
  • From In Motion Magazine [inmotionmagazine.com].

    Socioeconomic Hazards

    The patenting of genetically engineered foods and widespread biotech food production threatens to eliminate farming as it has been practiced for 12,000 years. GE patents such as the Terminator Technology will render seeds infertile and force hundreds of millions of farmers who now save and share their seeds to purchase evermore expensive GE seeds and chemical inputs from a handful of global biotech/seed monopolies. If the trend is not stopped, the patenting of transgenic plants and food-producing animals will soon lead to universal "bioserfdom" in which farmers will lease their plants and animals from biotech conglomerates such as Monsanto and pay royalties on seeds and offspring. Family and indigenous farmers will be driven off the land and consumers' food choices will be dictated by a cartel of transnational corporations. Rural communities will be devastated. Hundreds of millions of farmers and agricultural workers worldwide will lose their livelihoods.


    My italics. The technology behind how this works is explained here [indiana.edu]. Monsanto, the company that developed it, has decided not to market it [oneworld.org], although they will continue research into this technology [guardianunlimited.co.uk], to perhaps create an even more dangerous variant. The technology had the potential to create serious problems [oneworld.org] in places where farming is an important part of the economy. Enough information?
  • by SvnLyrBrto ( 62138 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @03:32PM (#1023872)
    >It's not that peer-to-peer file sharing is wrong.
    >It's that a multi million dollar VC-funded
    >corporation

    That's not saying very much thesedays, when a bunch of marketoids and a halfassed frontpage generated e-commerce site can get multi-million dollar VC.

    A couple of weeks ago, MTV ran a special on the Ten Spot entitled "Napster: Grand Theft Audio" (ironic eh? using a play on the title of a popular COMPUTER game as an expose on their smear job of computer geeks).

    Now, this being MTV, they did their best to slant the story against napster, protreying them as these evil pirates trying to murder innocent musicians (taking food off my baby's plate blah blah blah). And of course, metallica, and lars in particular, was the white knight that would slay the dragon, and save the damsel in distress.

    Everything went according to plan... until they interviewed lars... and later when they interviewed the two napster guys.

    And despite MTV's bias, everytime lars opened his ugly mouth he came off as the asshole that he is. He just couldn't help it, he sounded like a malicious SOB every time he spoke.

    Meanwhile, the napster authors came off as just what they are: a couple of nice, kinda introverted, computer geeks; kinda shy and embarassed to be in the spotlight so much.

    >Napster isn't a front corporation for a bunch of
    >innovative software engineers...

    Well, yeah it is actually. This isn't some destructive monstor like microsoft.

    What *IS* Napster? It's a nifty little program written by a couple of college kids. When they finished it, people told them it was really cool and that they could make some money off of it. So they started a company.

    Now, that may not adhere to the RMS/ESR/Slashdot ideal of "immediately open the source and give the copyright to the FSF", but that *IS* how a lot of innovative companies get their start.

    And guess what? They didn't sell out. Did you know that thet don't run their own company? They hired professional management and a CEO and returned to codeing. Think they are liveing the life of the ostantiously wealthy? Think again. They (if Newsweek is to be beleived) share a small apartment in San Mateo. No Feraris, Porches, or beamers either. Try a '94 Honda.

    Yeah... really evil guys.

    john
  • Napster could help lead the fight against IP facism by practicing what they preach and actually allow The Offspring to distribute Napster t-shirts, as long as they don't sell them. That way, Napster wouldn't look like hypocrites, and the Offspring would have to take a loss on the production costs if they feel strongly enough about using Napster's trademark.
  • The Offspring, like Limp Bizkit, are one of the bands that have come out in support of Napster - claiming that it helped musicians get their music to the public and that it was a Good Thing.

    So, why the sudden change of heart? Obviously, lawyers didn't make this decision. It's ballsy, and it's weird, and it's risky. Is it just a big joke?
  • Errr.... not quite. It appears the subtleties of the English language are lost on you. Quoted from Steven Pinker:

    "Consider an alleged atrocity committed by today's youth: the expression 'I could care less'. The teenagers are trying to express disdain, the adults note, in which case they should be saying 'I couldn't care less'. If they could care les then they do, that means that they really do care, the opposite of what they are trying to say. But if these dudes would stop ragging on teenagers and cope out the construction, they would see that their argument is bogus. Listen to how to the two versions are pronounced:

    [diagrom omitted]

    The melodies and stresses are completely different, and for a good reason. The second version is not illogical, it's sarcastic. The point of sarcasm is that by making an assertion that is manifestly false or accompanied by ostentatiously mannered intonation, one deliberately implies its opposite. A good paraphrase is, "Oh yeah, as if there was something in the world that I care less about."
  • The Offspring do irony really well - it's their thing - just listen to their music - once you realise that they're poking fun at the world

    • He may not have a clue, and he may not have style
    • But everything he lacks, he makes up in denial
    that was BillG they were talking about right? :-)
  • Oranges are tangible (not tangerinable) -- they cannot be replicated like an MP3 or photocopy can.

    Oranges can be replicated. You just take out the seeds and plant them, add water and sunlight, and BOOM! Orange heaven.

  • Napster wouldn't have a penny of their funding if no one traded illegal mp3s, and you know it.

    Napster wouldn't have a single user if music was offered at a fair price, and you know it.

    :^)

    --
  • I'd say that Napster has every right to not want it's logos used unauthorized. Having "Napster Ware" would be a very, very good way to generate revenue for a company that gives stuff away for free.

    And that's the fun of it, innit? Here's Napster saying "please don't give away copies of our intellectual property, because if it's freely available we won't have any way of generating revenue"--and in the background you can hear Lars laughing his head off...

  • I agree about the not paying bit..Artists have to eat, pay rent or mortgage, and get crazy bills like all of us. But I'd love to know how much of this money we shell out for those 18-buck cd's actually gets to the artist...I am guilty as well, of using Napster. I have a decent collection...And, unlike most people, I do sincerely plan to buy what I can from the artists I've heard. They deserve the money.

    No, Napster is no more a good guy than Metallica (ugh) or anyone else that's suing them, but they are bringing many valid questions up that no one really truly thought about til now. If no stink had been made over this stuff, then we'd never have had a second thought.


  • I just finished a group final for a Stanford class called Computers, Ethics, and Social Responsibility, and our project focused on the ethical issues surrounding Napster. We cloned the Napster design for our ethics website [stanford.edu], which is apparently allowable under Napster's Terms of Use [napster.com] agreement, as long as we don't mock them or cause brand confusion. Anyway, if any of you have a particularly strong opinion about Napster, MP3s, the RIAA, or artists' and listeners' rights, please consider posting it on our Outside Opinions [stanford.edu] page. Thanks a lot!
  • Exactly what IS Napster's business model?

    They aren't making any money off of me, if and/or when I use the Napster software.

    Why DOES the company exist?

    So far, this is the one element to the entire saga I've not yet seen clearly explained.

    Of course, if the site wasn't either down, swamped, or blocked (who can tell, anymore?), I'd just go to their website [napster.com] and find out for myself.
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @01:36PM (#1023883)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • But that requires land, time, effort and expense at the same level as the farmer (or the bugs and birds get 'em, or they're low quality). You've earned the right to redistribute.

    Try it some time -- after a couple of seasons you'll be ready to charge too (or at least you'll be losing money).

    You can write and perform your own music too...

  • But to go through the process of planting, cultivating, pruning, picking etc, its more economical to just buy your oranges than to grow them yourself

    You cannot compare virtual content, such as digital media, and physical products like oranges.

    Like it or not, if you download a copyrighted song from napster (or anywhere else) and you DON'T have permission from the copyright owner, you are stealing, and you have NO right to complain if they legal owners get upset. As they say... sew the wind, reap the whirlwind.

  • The real irony in the Napster/Offspring suit is that if there is an ideology behind Napster, it's that modern intellectual property laws and ethics need rethinking, yet they find that their only real product is their own IP, which they must defend to the death or lose their hold on.

    Which begs the question: is the idea that the digital era damages notions of IP seriously flawed, or is there a better approach to intellectual property that can coexist with global fat pipes and perfect data transmission?

    There was a poster some time ago on a seperate topic that made allusions to Renaissance artists being commissioned and sponsered. Is there a way we could return to that model of art and distribution. For instance, what if Metallica's fans put up $20 a piece for them to produce an hour's worth of music to be publicly distributed? Or there's a trend to using advertizing to pay for services (the FreePC company, Eudora's sponsored mode, Geocities), that might be somehow applied (and evaded...) to music.

    The conclusion I seem to be more and more driven to is that unless the movement away from outdated ways of thinking is somehow legitimized, then the situation will become ossified much the way the United States relies on oil for transport in the face of ecologic damage and better alternatives. Big business backs it's current stance and drives others into the ground.

    Of course the flip side is, if a new intellectual economy doesn't come into existence, is that indication of the might of Corporate Media et al, or the wrongness of ideas like "Information Wants to be Free"?

    Ushers will eat latecomers.

  • Yeah, Download This should have been a vinyl-only release. You know, 33-1/3 RPM LP format. Of course, no one could play it.
  • "Just because 99.44% of its users are shuttling crappy, copyrighted material around doesn't remove the usefulness of the program. "

    That is just silly. That is *exactly* like saying a nuclear bomb may kill 99.44% of the people within a certain vicinity of detonation, however one person on the fringe was cured of cancer due to "free" chemotherapy.

  • Your first two comments assume that a huge mass of people can evaluate everything collectively. It's nice on paper, but doesn't work so well in a world run by Governments, TimeWarner/AOL and RIAA controlling the media. Big governments and corporations DON'T want people to think for themselves, since they would then lose control and power. Hence we have created our "mass-mentality" which lulls us into _safe_ and _boring_ lives. Ever been in the military? If you have, then you know what I'm talking about..

    You're talking about "justification" as if it's something else than an illusion we have about what we do to eachother. As if anybody _naturally_ need your "approval" to do what they do?

    Civil disobidience can involve ANYTHING. Ever heard about revolutions? That's just an extreme case of civil disobidience.

    You talk about selfish people. Well, look at yourself. Are you any better? We're all selfish, and we're going to continue hurting eachother until we "get it". A monopoly seems pretty "selfish" to me too, so what? It's just an expression of greed and violence, which is what our entire society is based on. Intellect can't easily solve this one..

    Besides, I personally don't think you can compare _sharing information, knowledge and ideas_ to _stealing_..

    - Steeltoe
  • Napster had to sue Offspring or Metallica would have have sued Napster for negligence, hurting the revenue they get in settlement.

  • Noone is to be trusted my dear friend, trust me *slick smile* :->

    - Steeltoe
  • IF everyone decided they did not agree with the tax and thus did not buy a TV THEN the govt would lose all TV tax revenue

    Well I live in a country where there is a $150/year tax on owning a TV. (It pays for the BBC) Support for this tax is well under 50% according to opinion polls. However most people pay it rather than go without a telly. The few who go without a telly in protest will find their voice doesn't count.


    OTOH, in the 60s, a small minority of Welsh-speakers in Wales *refused* to pay the BBC tax because they objected to not getting bills in Welsh. Some went to prison. Enough public outrage ensued at this injustice that the TV license people caved in. If these people had just binned their tellies, that would never have happened.


    Does "civil disobedience" only work when YOU favour it?

    No. But the examples you cite infringe on *basic human rights* : the right to life and the right to own property. The right to "intellectual property" is not a basic human right (according to the US constitution or European convention on human rights or the UN or etc.)
  • Most people would think a TV would be worth the price, and not overpriced, since they paid the price.

    By that argument the original American settlers would have accepted the British consumption taxes on them and not revolted.

  • you will support my right to kill you because I disagree with the laws on murder then, I assume.

    You misunderstand. I *wasn't* supporting people's right to illegally protest in any way. I was merely saying that it might be *effective*. Wheras "IF you don't like it don't buy it" is a fairly ineffective philosophy in cases like this.

  • I read the MTV thing which says Napster and Offspring have come to an agreement, but this whole thing bugs me.

    First, I am a huge fan of Offspring, and I am sticking behind Napster, even though I don't use their program (I like gnutella). But both Offspring and Napster were being a bit dumb, imho.

    First, Napster should have contacted them and worked something out instead of getting the lawyers into this. They just ended up looking really stupid in my book - much like Dr. Dre looks like an idiot for going after Napster when he himself is getting blasted by Lucasfilm for the THX sound.

    But what the hell are Dexter and Noodles thinking when they start bootlegging stuff and selling it? These guys are not a bunch of uneducated boneheads [greenday.com]. I gotta admit though, that did take some balls!

    On second thought, I am starting to get the joke now... :) Heh!

  • by Valdrax ( 32670 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @01:49PM (#1023908)
    Trade-mark. Not copy-right.

    Po-tay-to, Po-tah-to. To-may-to, to-mah-to. <singing>Let's call the whole thing off.</singing>

    Seriously, though. Copyright is ownership of the right to copy the material in a product such as a book, a song, or a video game. Trademark is ownership of the right to copy a product name or logo. The core issue is use of someone else's idea.

    You're wrong. Napster is, in its purest form, a distributed filesystem that doesn't even know it. Napster is a very useful tool for sharing legal songs as well.

    Hey, that's right, and a thermonuclear device is at it's purest form a recreation of the live-giving energy of the sun. It's a very useful tool for clearing land for canals and hydroelectric dams.

    Just because 99.44% of its users are shuttling crappy, copyrighted material around doesn't remove the usefulness of the program. Napster is a good tool for the job of shuttling around mp3s, whether crappy or copyrighted or both or neither.

    So, you're saying that Napster would've gotten all this media attention and accompanying venture capital with only 0.56% of it's current user base? Face the (pirated) music. Napster is only making money due to the large pirated user base and has no financial interest in stopping it.
  • Well, as someone whose club has gone out and had shirts produced for them before, I can safely say that it isn't a helluva lot of profit. Consider what Offspring shirts sell for at their concerts. This is nickels and dimes compared to that.
  • by Signal 1| ( 196903 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:19PM (#1023913)
    After all, Napster is a legitimate business organization, and other entities have no right to make profits off of their hard work. As we know, Napster would never, ever make money off of anyone else's work, not even indirectly.
  • by Jeremi ( 14640 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @01:54PM (#1023915) Homepage
    If it became okay to steal superstars' music, people wouldn't think twice about ripping off the little guys. And when you're a working musician, (that is, living off your craft), losing album sales is a big deal.

    Look at it this way: Up until the Internet, distribution inefficiencies made buying music similar to paying the cover fee to go into a club. If you didn't pay, you didn't get to hear the music, and that's why they could get $15 out of you.

    Now the Internet comes along like a hurricane, and all of a sudden the nightclub walls have been knocked down. So now all the bands have to give concerts outdoors, and people can hear them whether they buy a ticket or not. Street musicians exist in the real world as well, and if they're good they can still make money by soliciting donations.

    Admittedly, they don't make as much money as behind-closed-doors musicians do, but that's the way the cookie crumbles... the walls are gone, and telling people to pretend they're still up isn't going to work forever.

    (note: above analogy probably stolen from here [counterpane.com], please don't sue)

  • They are pretty much forced into a corner here. If they don't sue, then they might lose their trademark (since they aren't trying to protect it from dilution). If they do sue, then they take the risk of looking like hypocrites.

    I don't think they had a choice but to sue here.
  • by divec ( 48748 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @01:55PM (#1023919) Homepage
    If you don't like the fact that you have to pay so much for it [...] then protest by not buying it.

    ``The government is slapping a $1000 tax on all TV sales and resales. If you don't like paying the extra $1000 then protest by not having a TV.''


    Is that a sensible argument? No. Most people really want a TV enough that they'll buy one anyway. It would be an ineffective protest.


    "Copyright" is a tax on copying, which you may believe to be good or bad. Maybe I object to the amount of market power that ends up in the hands of a few huge corporations as a result of this tax. Simply abstaining from buying CDs would be an ineffective protest. If these corporations also fund politicians' election campaigns, I may not have much strength to fight it politically either.


    However, a campaign of mass civil disobedience can work. If enough people support unauthorised copying it will be impossible to stop and the authorities might think about changing the law.


    I'm not supporting such a protest here [or rejecting it]. I'm just saying that the view which says "boycott it if you don't like it" doesn't address the problem. If someone really believes that the law is unjust (and isn't just acting selfishly) then they may be justified in performing unauthorised copying.

  • After being on the cover of Newsweek, Napster must have the idea that lawsuits are the best form of publicity. 50 bucks and you get your name on all the online news sights. Sounds like a helluva deal. Fire the PR and Marketing departments and just invest in lawyers.
  • Of course. Can you imagine what it would do to their punk band image if they went whining to their lawyers like a bunch of schoolyard crybabies? Can't do that. They'd look like a bunch of over the hill headbangers.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Already not an issue!
    http://www.mtv.com/news/headlines/000605/story2.ht ml
  • by NYC ( 10100 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:40PM (#1023929)
    First of all, Offspring were presented with a "Cease and Desist" order and not a lawsuit. They are NOT being sued at this point.

    However, Napster and the Offspring have already come to an agreement. Read the MTV News story Offspring, Napster Reach T-Shirt Accord . [mtv.com] Napster is now allowing Offspring to sell merchadies and is even giving them more stuff to sell.

    --weenie NT4 user: bite me!

  • "Actually, your analogy is flawed. A better analogy would be Offspring fans selling or giving away Napster T-shirts to other Offspring fans at an Offspring concert."

    I really wasn't shooting for an analogy, just providing a little Napsterish spin....

    carlos

  • I would wager that The Offspring had this in mind all along.
    Imagine this:
    1. The members of the Offspring realize this whole free sharing of music without their control is a Very Bad Idea.
    2. They publicly announce that they support Napster by allowing any user to download their songs.
    3. In a very smart attempt to make the Napster folks look like asses, they start bootlegging T-Shirts, hats, and stickers.
    Currently, the only way Napster can directly make any money is by selling merchandise(there's a lot of investor support, but no actual means of profiting as of yet). Therefore, by bootlegging the only actual physical product (however minor) Napster has, the Offspring give them a taste of their own medicine.
    Not only does this succeed in making Napster look pretty stupid, it also does it without alienating their fans. Good Job!
  • They say they are all for it, but they don't have any MP3's on their site, they have crummy real audio. And now they start selling Napster merchandise that Napster can't ignore, and will look stupid as hell if they do take legal action. I think they wanted this to happen personally. Its harsh, as I love The Offspring.
  • Aside from the obvious reaction ("moo-ha!" and/or "told you Napster was a bunch of punk-ass bizznatches"), this news has me wondering:

    In standard copyright cases, any reasonably with-it "artistic infringer" can weasel out from under his accuser by claiming "parody"; is a similar defense available in trademark cases?

    If not, that's a precedent I'd love to see set with this case.

  • Hmm, I'm gonna open up a channel for people to share music that may or may not be legit. I'm gonna form a company to make money off my actions and software, which indirectly makes money off possibly pirated music. Then I'm going to wonder why all these musicians are suing me. But here's one group that has given me express permission to let people copy and share music. Cool. But, those bastards - they're making money off my logo! I'll get them, how dare they take something of mine and make money from it.... sound familiar? While Napster has a right to protect it's trademarks, they should tread lightly in the areas hypocrytes fear to tread. They knowingly allow pirated music to flow through their network without the permission of the musicians - hell, they even promote it, and business is good and money flows. Now the shoes on the other foot. A band that has freely given permission is <gasp> selling products advertising Napster. They should have asked, but then so should Napster. This is why it's important to obtain permission - it's respectfull and it prevents miscommunication and lawsuits - but then we can't have all those hard working lawyers living on the streets, can we... :)
  • The Offspring have succeeded in making Napster look like pricks where all of Metallica's rhetoric couldn't. From a Yahoo! news story the other day (before the lawsuit):

    "[The money] will go in their pockets," a source close to the band said. "It isn't about making money. In typical Offspring fashion, they think it's funny to fuck with people. They think Napster's cool and want to see how cool they [really] are."

    Generally, filing these kinds of lawsuits makes the plaintiff look like an asshole. Sure, they may be in the right, but it's just not a very "rock 'n' roll" thing to do. People who have been supporting Napster because it lets you give the finger to the record companies now get to see that Napster is just another player in the corporate system.

  • I'm reasonably sure our esteemed /. has mistaken the joke. Please, someone back me up on this. While Metallica has shown themselves to be stupid enough to pull a stunt like that, Napster...

    Wait.. There are lawyers in this.. Goddamnit, you think people who went to school for a bajillion years would need at least half a brain.. But nooo.. Once you bring in the Armani-wearing sharks, everybody has to flush their brain cells and their common sense..
  • This is exactly right, there is a huge difference between (perhaps unethically) offering a service that can easily be used to commit illegal activities and actually committing those activities.

    No matter how cool napster wants to be, they do need to actively defend their trademark in order to preserve their rights.


  • by Golias ( 176380 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:47PM (#1023958)
    Walter Hill, director of the cult classic film "The Warriors" has filed a lawsuit against Offspring, a neo-punk band, for their late-90's radio hit "Come Out and Play", claiming theft of IP.

    :)

  • <i>yet your version of satirical interjectivity comes at a point where the realisticly interpreted nature of the piece is no longer at question and thus should not be recognized as satirical literature, but alas, merely a bad joke.</i>

    Point taken, so allow me to rephrase:

    Bad jokes. Live them. Love them. Learn to recognize them.

    SOOOOOP.
  • since submachineguns were designed specifically to kill

    Erm ... actually, you've got that precisely backwards. Submachineguns were designed specifically NOT to kill, but to wound.

    The function of a submachinegun is suppressive fire, aka "bullet hose" -- the barrel is too short and the cyclic rate of fire too high to have any real pretensions to accuracy. And suppressive fire is far more effective when it leaves casualties behind its line of fire thrashing, screaming for mommy, bleeding, voiding bowels, etc. than when it simply leaves them dead. This is why submachineguns use comparatively underpowered rounds -- to produce disabling wounds while leaving the victim alive.

    a weapon the NRA claims to be "recreational" it's clear that the weapon has a singular purpose of putting people in the ground

    Wrong again! We'll shoot off three or four thousand rounds in a fun day out with my SMGs, and we've never put a person in the ground yet. Sent some old refrigerators, microwaves, TVs etc. to the next world, yes -- but last time I checked "people" did not include "household appliances", and man, blowing them to bits is INCREDIBLY recreational. Oh YEAH baby!
  • Good point. I have abso-freakin'-lutely no idea how they're supposed to be making money -- that is unless their entire business plan is to grab VC until the final version of 2.0 comes out and then skip country with it. Maybe they're waiting until they get a large enough user base and then start to integrate ads into the clients.

    (BTW, the venture capital was what I was referring to as "making money." Of course, I realize that they're not really making money that way since they're supposed to pay it back -- hence the skip country interpretation.)
  • Actually, it wouldn't be justified anyway. You partially depend on food. Is it fair if I give you some food, then take some of your stuff without asking?

    The unfairness comes from the idea that one party can conjure up an agreement out of whole cloth. Agreements require that both parties, well, agree.

    (And no, I'm not a troll. I just happen to think copyright law is probably not intrinsically totally wrong.)
  • ...with the proceeds to benefit a charity chosen by Shawn Fanning and Dexter Holland.

    Yeah. I read that part and was once again puzzled by how Napster is planning to make money. I mean, that's just tossing away a possible revenue stream. I'm glad they're giving it to charity, but I just can't figure out the motivation behind Napster, Inc. This is getting more mysterious than Transmeta was.
  • i know for every trademark dispute, someone says this...but here we go again

    in order for napster to keep its trademars in place..they have to do shit like this. If they don't, the trademarks go bye bye. I don't think napster is really evil in this respect. But they *ARE* a company looking to make money, whether or not what you think they're doing is good.

    anonymous ftp, the latest in mp3 sharing technology!


    FluX
    After 16 years, MTV has finally completed its deevolution into the shiny things network
  • At some point, yes, Napster will probably mature into another "corp" with all the greed and FUD and everything that goes with it. But that's a long way off...

    In this case, they were just protecting their trademark - they have to issue an order or else they lose their own rights to the trademark.

    The Offspring don't have to obey the order, however... All Napster has to do is show that they made a reasonable effort to protect their Mark. (I agree with the earlier comment that the smartest thing they could have done, though, would be to send them a license agreement.)

    And if the Offspring claim this is a case of "tit for tat," then they're confusing trademarks with copyrights, and aren't as smart as they first appear. It reminds me of playground argument tactics. (Of course, that fits right in with The Offspring's image.)

  • by Seumas ( 6865 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:48PM (#1023982)
    Napster, this really is *not* the way to win people over to your side. OffSpring -- what can I say but "heheheheheh".

    For a group whose music I can only half-heartedly tolerate, they sure are a bunch of whacky guys. If I ever have a daughter and she insists on dating a real creep, I hope it's one of the OffSpring-type creeps.

    After all, just like freely distributing pirated music supposedly generates great publicity for artists, distributing clothing with Napster logos and such should only further Napster's cause, right? . . . Right?

    I'm really tired of this Napster deal. You know what? If you want commercialized music (ie, not free), then go BUY it. If you don't like the fact that you have to pay so much for it ($20 is a lot!) then protest by not buying it. Or set yourself on fire like the Tibetan monks or something. Just, for god's sake, quit whining about information wanting to be free and how evil the RIAA is and so forth. I agree, to a point, with all the points made by the pro-Napster side, but eventually it all get's so rediculous that you just can't support it anymore.

    Sure, maybe you feel art should not be restricted or available only for a fee -- but it is. Art is a commodity and that is what keeps artists producing it. As much heart as a creative person may have, they need to eat, too. And if they are so successful that they can afford a gold Ferrari with sex slaves and a mexican house-boy, then cool -- I'm glad they could have such an impact on so many people and they deserve their cash.

    The point being that two wrong's rarely make a right, and just ripping off music that someone else created -- when they have made it plainly obvious that they do not want their music distributed in such a way, is WRONG. Many people have posted before claiming "well, it's only wrong if you inject morality". No -- it's wrong if you inject common-sense, too. How many of you who are so steadfastly against the record industry ("They steal from the artists and don't pay them a dime!") have ever actually sent any money directly to an artist because you appreciated the great material they produced -- that you pirated? Never? That's what I thought.

    The biggest problem our world seems to be facing in this arena is that when you sell oranges -- you have a set number of oranges to sell -- thus a limit to how many can be purchased. Someone can't buy an orange from you and then make ten more oranges out of that and give them to friends (who will then not buy oranges from you -- because they get them free from their friend). Oranges are tangible (not tangerinable) -- they cannot be replicated like an MP3 or photocopy can. With intellectual property, it almost feels like we're breaking a fundamental law of nature by not allowing it to be completely free -- only because a thought, video, song, game can be so quickly and easily reproduced for anyone who wants it -- at no cost. Still, as we've deemed art to be a commodity, whether or not something is easily replicable doesn't really impact on whether or not you are purchasing that unit and the rights to do what you will with it in entirety, but the rights to experience and own that copy of that information and share it with those you are able to -- so long as it is bound by that single existing copy. In other words, treat it like the oranges -- if you want all of your friends to see what an orange is like, let them taste yours -- but if they want their own oranges, they have to go buy them.

    What it comes right down to is that you did not create this material. Someone else did. Who the fuck are you to decide how their work should be distributed? Don't rape the artist anymore than their record company already is, for christ's sake.

    Just for the record, yes I have used Napster. I find it to be a pretty unreliable service with a poor selection (unless you're looking for hip-hop) that belches up half-recorded MP3's most of the time. So I'm not wholly innocent here. But I also do not have a single MP3 of a group that I have not purchased the album of. If I like a group well enough to keep their MP3's around, I usually decide to go drop the $20 or so for each of their albums (as my large collection will attest to). But there are a lot of people who will grab every MP3 they can from an artist and never think twice -- or ever purchase any of the group's releases, let alone ever consider paying the group for the tunes.
    ---
    icq:2057699
    seumas.com

  • by chainsaw1 ( 89967 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:49PM (#1023984)
    Offspring is not chalk full of lower IQ people as some of the more stereotypical bands are. In fact, the lead singer (Dexter, I think) was working his way toward a PhD in biology in Decatur Georiga (Emory, I believe).

    I'll bet this was the intent all along. Napster is currently in heat regarding trademark allegations, etc. as Miou pointed out. However, by sending a cease and desist they shot themselves in the foot from a logical point of view. This is why (though IANAL):

    Napster deals in giving out (essentially) copyrighted materials. Napster is now in litigation over these issues and is pleading that it is not the entity that is actually stealing the music. This is (sorta) true, they are the transport by which it happens.

    So what Offspring did that is so clever is to hit Napster with their own medicine. They take the napster name and logo and offer a means for it to be distributed. I bet they personally don't manufacture a single thing for sale on their site. However those items probably don't come directly from Napster either. This means they are mearly offering a means to distribute them. This is very similar to exactly what napster is doing to everyone else. The best part is how much it costs Offspring to do this. And the answer is not much... a hell of a lot less than a lawyer, that's for sure. They get the added bonus of ego points for blatently outsmarting the Napster board of trustees. Proving with intellegence instead of finance that the RIAA is actually doing a Good thing, because Napster just dropped their trow to show the world it's just another FUD corp betting on IPO.

    And to think I just liked them for their music...
  • Obviously if Napster lets them continue selling Napster gear they can lose rights to their own trademark. To avoid looking hypocritical, not to mention a legal mess, they should have offered to write up a contract with Offspring's people to sell the shirts at no cost. People who are fond of wearing corporate trademarks on T-shirts win and Napster keeps its "hands-off" image.

    Who know this might still happen as the lawsuit hasn't been issued yet.
  • So, by the same reasoning the Offspring are using, I can send someone at Microsoft source to a "hello, world" program. Then, because I *GAVE* them some source, they have *NO RIGHT TO COMPLAIN* if I take their source, right?

    Neat!
  • Ah, the joys of Marketing with a dash of hypocracy. Napster is a Corporation...nothing more.

    Napster deals in Digital files. Digital files cost nothing to duplicate in digital form, which obviously isn't the case with T-Shirts. This produces a hole in Offspring's argument.

    However...

    Offspring could simply say "You're just paying for a plain black/white T-Shirt/hat/sticker, and you get a Free Napster logo with it!"

    Or to extend on that idea, they should make some sort of mechanism on the shirts/hats/stickers that allows the logo to be interchanged with OTHER Napster logos that you can trade free of charge! (Or, you can make your OWN Napster logo, and 'Upload' it to your friend's hat.)

    -- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?

  • If you don't like the fact that you have to pay so much for it [...] then protest by not buying it.

    ``The government is slapping a $1000 tax on all TV sales and resales. If you don't like paying the extra $1000 then protest by not having a TV.''

    Is that a sensible argument? No. Most people really want a TV enough that they'll buy one anyway. It would be an ineffective protest.


    Actually, all that means is most people don't agree with you. Any protest without enough people means not enough people support your cause for you to make a change. Obviously, in this case, most people would think a TV would be worth the price, and not be overpriced, since they paid the price.


    "Copyright" is a tax on copying, which you may believe to be good or bad. Maybe I object to the amount of market power that ends up in the hands of a few huge corporations as a result of this tax. Simply abstaining from buying CDs would be an ineffective protest. If these corporations also fund politicians' election campaigns, I may not have much strength to fight it politically either.


    Abstaining from buying CDs is an effective protest if people support you. What that means is the majority of people have to think CDs are not worth the price they are paying for them, and think that enough that they are willing to not buy them. Everyone thinks everything is overpriced, but if you are willing to keep paying that price for it, then it's not overpriced. Imagine if 50% of the CD buying population agreed that CDs were overpriced, and thought this enough that they were willing to stop buying CDs. That would be an effecitive protest, and I would bet money that it would work.


    However, a campaign of mass civil disobedience can work. If enough people support unauthorised copying it will be impossible to stop and the authorities might think about changing the law.
    I'm not supporting such a protest here [or rejecting it]. I'm just saying that the view which says "boycott it if you don't like it" doesn't address the problem. If someone really believes that the law is unjust (and isn't just acting selfishly) then they may be justified in performing unauthorised copying.


    To use your own example, people would be justified in stealing TVs then, since that would be simple civil disobidience. Civil disobidience is not taking something that doesn't belong to you. Copying CDs isn't fighting a law, it's fighting a price. And I find it hard to believe anyone is copying music for unselfish reasons. They don't want to pay the price for the music (for whatever reason they give) yet they still feel they are entitled to the music without paying for it. That seems pretty selfish to me.

  • I don't know about you, but the last I checked, I haven't seen any free music with an open license for copying out of all the countless thousands of titles available, so their product was designed from the beginning specifically to transport pirated music.

    Huh. Imagine that. Not one? What about live concert recordings, obscure techno songs, independent label music, free song giveaways? Hell, go to epitonic.com [epitonic.com] or riffage.com [riffage.com] and you will find hundreds of songs that are available for free, and freely distributable. ANd these are not unsigned artists like on mp3.com, they are mostly signed bands on smaller labels.

    There are plenty of bands that are willing to give there music away for free (or at least a few songs) in the hopes of finding fans. Most people seem to forget that.

    And what their doing isn't anything new- Hotline, FTP servers, IRC and even AOL have facilitated the sharing of copywritten material for years. The only difference is that Napster is much better at it, and easier to use. (I know someone's going to point out that ftp and aol have other uses, too, and it's true. But Hotline is basically the same as Napster or Gnutella, just not as easy to use).

    The problem I have with Napster (and the one area that I agree with Lars) is this: Napster is using their popularity to try and go public and make lots of money, and their popularity is because of the copywritten songs on their network. That sucks. I don't really have problems with Gnutella, because no one is making any money off of it. I think Gnutella?Napster programs are much more like new radio than anything else, for me at least. The kind of music that I listen to, the artists don't generally mind if their songs are on the net because it's all DIY anyway, with no record labels involved. They make all their money from touring and t-shirts, and kids listening to MP3s brings more kids to the shows. I can see how people in one-hit-wonder boy bands might have a problem with Napster, though...

    Josh Sisk
  • Napster has been banned here at my work - not sure if it is an infrastructure ban (port blocking), or in word only...

    All I know is that they "blamed" me for helping in a DOS via Napster preventing clients from getting in - which is far from the truth. Last time I used Napster was several weeks ago - I don't keep the thing running, and I don't keep the system I am on here at work running all the time, either.

    At any rate, there goes Napster for me - not that it is a big deal - @Home (bleh) is coming to me this weekend, and there is always gnutella if I feel a real urge for filling up my drive with more pap. Or FTP. Or Usenet. Or maybe my own fucking service I'll write.

    <end of rant>
  • Last I heard radio stations were a very successful industry making money directly off of the attention that broadcast music gathered.

    You are right, profiting off of the music directly is an enormous difference. In that light, Napster is not like radio. Perhaps someday it will be. (and hence my belief that a "Napster"-like service built on Free Software is a fine solution)

    Besides if all major acts put the big tracks up on thier sites, they too, could profit in (deep scary voice)"music piracy."(/DSV) And Napster would be left going "but we've got indy music, too!" j/k

    Comparing services like Napster and the radio is like comparing cars and star destroyers. They provide the service of tranportation. Napster gives you music.

    --
  • FWIW, I feel this is superb value

    Yes, in case it's not clear from my earlier posts, so do I. I think it would be worth it if only for the finest news service in the world. BTW their online news magazine [bbc.co.uk] is excellent.


    [Minor point: the dosh doesn't pay for the world service, that's funded separately]

  • Either you support civil disobedience, or you don't.

    Nah, it's not that simple at all. I'd've supported Gandhi's peaceful non-cooperation. I'd've supported breaking US segregation laws in the 60s. That doesn't mean I support anyone who assassinates gays "on principle".


    The whole point about a "basic human right" is that it's *unalienable*. It comes above anything else (except infringing another basic human right). Of course, you might not agree that such rights exist. But most people would consider the right not to be murdered to be such a right. I conjecture that few people would consider intellectual property "rights" to be this basic. (After all, they last for an arbitrary limited time and are legally intended as a means to an end: encouraging people to create valuable information).

  • From the same article:

    "T-shirts... good," Holland then quipped in the announcement.

    :)

  • I was sure this article was a joke, and I had to read it, and these comments, several times to convince myself otherwise. Here's the thing though - if Napster went after Offspring for this, they are COMPLETE idiots.

    By all logic, they ought to be happy that more merchandise with their logo on it is going out to the public, and that a band is saying good things about them. Where are they losing money? They can sell their own merchandise too if they want. They had a chance to REALLY make a point by not doing anything about Offspring (even though under current law Offspring is in the wrong). That would've been great!

    --
    grappler
  • Napster can't make money. They talk about making money in the distant future by charging membership fees, but they've already been cloned. They're in the same situation as ICQ: everybody uses them, because they were the first, but nobody will pay them, because anyone willing to open a free service could replace them.

    Now, Napster sees that merchandising might produce income, but they're not the ones doing it. If they could only monopolize the merchandising, they just might make a buck.

    Really, they're just another IPO raider, out to get in the news so they can fill their pockets with retirement funds and the life savings of naive day traders. That doesn't mean they won't take a real profit if they can.

    Personally, I've never believed that IP law should protect merchandising. It only encourages entertainment companies to make shows for children with the sole purpose of making the children want the toys. If just anyone could churn out 10000 Jarjar dolls, would the character have been in the movie?
  • Nice idea, but I think the real point is that the Offspring aren't really in support of Napster. I'm pretty uninformed about this, but I think it's just a nice sort of publicity/public service plot.

    I seem to remember Napster saying things like "We support Artists (getting paid)" and the such. So Offspring comes along and says "tit-for-tat": "We think napster is great, now let's profit off their IP" Their words of "support" are just parody, not sincerity.

  • I disagree that the RIAA is doing anything good. As far as what the Offspring is doing, I think it's way cool though. Instead of attacking their fans and freedom on the Net they are quite cleverly giving Napster a hard time.

    I could care less about Napster (the company), it's the software and the right to use it that is important. Go Offspring!

    numb
  • Yeah, but in the spirit of things, The Offspring is doing the same thing. Music has been traded off of newsgroups, IRC and webpages for a lot longer than Napster. The main difference is that Napster, as a company, has a really smug attitude. "Oh...we would never dream of encouraging music piracy." The legal grounds may be more grey, but Napster is attempting to make money through the theft of other people's hard work.

    The Offspring is doing the same thing (although they aren't seeking millions of dollars in venture capital for the 'Napster T-Shirt Project'). I think band was trying to test and see it Napster really has the same, "It's all about sharing and community" attitude that many of its users do.

    Dana
  • Trent Reznor was once a Computer Engineering major, although I don't remember where. Check out the newest issue of Incite [incite.com] Video Gaming for the info.
  • by Miou ( 115025 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:22PM (#1024040)
    Napster is going to have a hard time not looking like a hypocrite with all of this.

    Yes, trademarks are a differant thing from copyrights. Yes, Napster is not directly (or so they claim) performing copyright violations anyway. Yes, this is potentially a bigger deal, since as opposed to simply providing a service that allows illegal trading to occur (the same can be said of the telcos), The Offspring are directly ripping off Napster's trademark.

    However, public opinion is rarely based on facts, and is more often based on perception. And as far as the public's perception of this will run, we've got a really fantastic case of the Pot and the Kettle going on here.

    Not to mention the necessity of striking at a the group that stood up in their defence. That's going to look pretty bad too.

    Napster would have been better of simply mailing them a merchandising agreement, and then striking at anyone else who started selling products with their name attached. But then, it's a little late now...

  • Offspring says that they allow napster to use their product so offspring should be able to use theirs. The difference is the offspring is selling merchandise - if they were trading or giving it away their argument might hold. But I just tried to trade them a metallica shirt for a napster shirt and they wouldnt take it. punks.
  • I'm so tired of this. Napster _is_ a useful tool for exchanging legal data... It reminds me of other things: FTP, the world wide web, the internet... Oh, wait, "sex" is the most searched for word on the internet, right? The only reason the internet exists must be to transport smut.

    Granted, nobody is arguing that Napster would have very little money and not much attention would be paid to it if people didn't use it to trade things illegally. The real question is whether Napster is responsible for how people use their service. I doubt many people would argue so fiercly against an ISP with a user who distributed questionable content. Should they be sued? Perhaps Metallica should file suit against the internet. They could start by suing every major network service provider and work their way down to local ISPs. After all, all of these must be responsible for the data they carry, correct?

    People need to think about what kind of a precedent will be set by these Napster dealings. Would we rather set a standard of freedom of information, or hold everyone who provides modes of communication responsible for all of the information they carry?
  • Though I'm sure the courts would disagree.. selling napster t-shirts is not really dilution. They are note not in any way diluting napster's right to call it's product napster, or to refer to it as napster, or have it know by napster.

    Offspring are clearly selling shirts with logos that refer TO napster, they do not pretend napster is theirs or anything.
    The real issue is copyright.. the napster logo is not theirs to sell on shirts.

    Personally, napster losers should be honored.
  • Well despite the fact that napster is not "selling" copyrighted material, this is probably as close to a real world example of the murky waters that napster inhabits. However since napster to my mind is not really trading on it's reputation for being a morally upright business. I really don't think the loss of public respect for them (because they are suing the offspring for copyright violation) is going to affect their operation. (maybe alot of people consider napster to be like o'reilly or one of the other "cool" companies, but I have never spoken to them)
  • They are. for $15, they will make and send you a T-shirt (not a napstser product) with the Napster(tm) logo on it.

    They are in no way infringing on napster's trademark. Napster does not own a trademark in the shirt making industry.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by TrevorB ( 57780 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @03:06PM (#1024059) Homepage
    Anyone wondering about the potential cleverness of The Offspring:

    Last I heard, Dexter Holland, the lead singer, was very close to finishing his Ph.D. dissertation in molecular biology. This was even once a question on Jeopardy (and no, not the Rock&Roll version)

    From a band whose music just oozes sarcasm and irony, I wouldn't be surprised if this was panned and intentional.

    Then again, their music also helped inspire me to quit one of the crappiest jobs I ever had, so I may be a bit biased... :)
  • by janelle ( 196968 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:57PM (#1024061)
    Here's the official word from Napster, now: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE JOINT STATEMENT FROM NAPSTER AND THE OFFSPRING SAN MATEO, CA and LAGUNA BEACH, CA - Napster and The Offspring have agreed to work together to offer a more complete line of Napster products. Profits from the line will go to a charitable organization agreed to by Dexter Holland and Shawn Fanning. "The Offspring have been great supporters of Napster," said Fanning, Napster's Founder. "We are looking forward to working with them." Dexter Holland stated, "T-shirts...good."
  • so that only leaves one choice - make it licensed Napster materials.

    And apparently that's what they did... since it seems the whole thing is over with now and Offspring is legally allowed to distribute Napster-branded merchandise, with the proceeds to benefit a charity chosen by Shawn Fanning and Dexter Holland.

  • by FreshView ( 139455 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @01:02PM (#1024068) Homepage
    You're wrong. Napster is, in its purest form, a distributed filesystem that doesn't even know it. Napster is a very useful tool for sharing legal songs as well. Just because 99.44% of its users are shuttling crappy, copyrighted material around doesn't remove the usefulness of the program. Napster is a good tool for the job of shuttling around mp3s, whether crappy or copyrighted or both or neither.

    Do you actually believe this drivel?

    Napster wouldn't have a penny of their funding if no one traded illegal mp3s, and you know it.

    You're right about the first part, though, I did have trademark and copyright confused, and I didn't realize that if Napster didn't defend their trademark that they would lose it.
  • by carlos_benj ( 140796 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @01:21PM (#1024071) Journal
    "I think that you need to separate what they are actually making money off of and what is being traded with their software. Napster is *not* stealing copyrighted material; the users of napster (well, atleast some of them) are stealing the music. Napster is making money off the use of their software..."

    And these guys are just selling T-Shirts. Sure, some of them happen to have Napster logos on them, but it's not their fault if the concertgoers choose to buy those. After all, they haven't taken anything from Napster. Napster still has their logo. Napster didn't pay anything to produce the shirts.

    Now I'm certain that these gents are issuing a disclaimer of some sort at the merchandise tables, but there's too few of them to regulate what the crowds at these concerts are going to buy. They just make it available and hope their fans choose wisely.

    What a riot. This is how Metallica, et. al. should have responded.

    carlos

  • by cancrman ( 24472 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:25PM (#1024074) Homepage
    To an already insane situation. You have to admit that the Offspring have either A) a good sense of humor or b) someone really clever (or stupid depending on how you want to look at it working for them to pull off a stunt like that. The problem lies in the fact that while Napster may not be guilty of any wrong doing (echoes of "common carrier" and IANAL go through my head) the Offspring definitely are. Selling unlicensed merchandise is clearly a crime, unfortunately the case is not so clear cut with what Napseter is doing. I wish I had some sort of clear cut answer on the whole Napster good/bad thing. It's clearly illegal under current laws but use of Napster has opened me to worlds of music that I would have never have listened too. I even spent $60 at Amazon (I know, I know) during lunch today on CDs.

    Bite me RIAA

    Pete
  • In a little screwing around with Gnutella [wego.com] I found six different artists' renditions of Louie, Louie and fifteen of The Lion Sleeps Tonight.

    Now, I feel it is important to support the artists and I like to have the very best audio fidelity. But if it were not for Gnutella [wego.com] I would have never known that I enjoyed the music of Ladysmith Black Mambazo - particularly not her rendition of the Lion Sleeps Tonight, one of my favorites from my childhood.

    Does anyone know of an MP3 to WAV or AIFF decoder for Linux? I don't mean a player, rather one that saves to files. I'd like to make an all-Lion and all-Louie-Louie CD for the amazement and torment of my friends.

  • It's sortof lame to just put up a "good move, guys" post, but I'm so impressed, I feel compelled. I don't know who thought of this from the Offspring "camp", but it's just beautiful. Now if Offspring decides to sue/say bad things about/throw rotten tomatoes at Napster, really, who is going to blame them?

    "Napster's all about freedom from greed through IP restrictions." Yeah. Right. I can hear the sound of any remaining illusions collapsing right now.
  • by mwalker ( 66677 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:27PM (#1024083) Homepage
    "A day earlier, another source in the Offspring camp said that if Napster issued a cease and desist order, it would "expose a huge hypocrisy.""

    I'm beginning to think Metallica has a point. It's not that peer-to-peer file sharing is wrong. It's that a multi million dollar VC-funded corporation designed to create proprietary peer-to-peer file sharing software is wrong. Napster isn't a front corporation for a bunch of innovative software engineers... it's just a company trying to sell other people's music for free. if we're going to smack the recording industry in the face hard enough to get their attention, we need a truly distributed system, with proxying, encryption, and random port selection, so you can't profile it. So rather than sitting around on slashdot bitching about it, let's go write some code for gnutella!

    just a thought,
    -mwalker

  • by Platinum Dragon ( 34829 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:27PM (#1024084) Journal
    "It's all fair," an Offspring source said on Thursday. "We've already said you guys [can use] our stuff - we're gonna do yours, too. You shouldn't have any problem with that, should you?"

    I'm not sure whether Holland's trying to make a point, or is dead serious, or both.

    I understand Holland's actually kinda cool with Offspring music being traded/pirated/whatever over the Internet...and it wouldn't surprise me if he's trying to make a point while meaning every word. "It's good enough for you, it's good enough for me" type thing. Of course, Napster could be playing "do as I say, not as I do"...but that would be hypocritical, now wouldn't it?:)

    Plat
    Now with nearly 100% legal mp3s! (except for the four Body Count mp3s - sorry Ice T.)
  • No, but it's worth it to author one.
  • I am beginning to agree with you more and more, day by day.

    Laws and technicalities are one thing, but every damned employee of Napster knows that his company is successful right now because everybody uses it to get free music. Yes, it broadens people's tastes. God yes, free, available music is very healthy for the spread of culture and such. But napster is still exploiting a very questionable legal loophole.

    I'm starting to think that Napster is doing nothing more than using the mp3 idealism in all of our hearts as a cash cow. Shame on them!

  • You're all missing the point. Napster never violated any copyrights or trademarks. The USERS of Napster did. In this case, the Offspring ARE actively violating a trademark. There is no hypocracy in Napster suing the Offspring over this. For those who are counting, my comments alone violated 5 trademarks.
  • by SoupIsGood Food ( 1179 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @01:24PM (#1024092)
    Esteemed sirs:

    I could not help but notice that you are endorsing the dissemination of culture over the internet by selling Napster merchandise!

    My brother, scrawny code-geek he is, would desparately like to wear apparel celebrating the technology behind sharing of files over the internet. To my mind, this would make an ideal birthday gift. The problem is, we both loathe Napster. It's slow, inefficient, and tied to a central database that Metallica and their legal eagles can subpeona. Thus, he downloads all of your songs using Gnutella, a peer-based network based around public domain software rather than a central service based around proprietary code. If you would be so kind as to design a decent "Gnutella" t-shirt, I would be ecstatic! Since there is no trademark, and no-one to sue or be sued, you can promote Gnutella -and- turn a tidy profit! A shirt in "L" size would be ideal.

    As for myself, I find an IP-based file sharing scheme to be too invasive of my privacy, which is why I endorse FreeNet, a system that offers technological guarantees of anonymity. Like Gnutella, it is a "free software" project with no enforced trademark. I'd be delighted if you could design a snazzy FreeNet hat I could purchase from you.

    While you are at it, "NFS", "FTP", and "IRC" T-shirts commemorationg the death of the music industry and the overpaid hacks and lapdogs churning out artless product for it would be spiff-a-riffic.

    SoupIsGood Food
  • by dougman ( 908 )
    Not to sound obnoxious, but the last 5 Napster stories posted on Slashdot had already been posted on The Swindle, in most cases days earlier. Regrettably, noone seems to have noticed. Owell.

  • by ZetaPotential ( 186121 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:29PM (#1024099)
    There is a big difference between what Napster is doing and what The Offspring is doing. The Offspring are making money directly off of Napster's trademark, which is specifically illegal. (Sort of like if Microsoft started selling Slashdot.org merchandise from their website.) But Napster only provides a file sharing service; they don't make money directly from the Offspring's trademarks, or any other band. The legality of this is being sorted out in court, but providing a service that allows individiuals to share files definitely has not been decreed to be illegal yet. Selling merchandise with somebody else's tradmarks definitely is illegal.

  • Though I am not a fan of The Offspring's music, I think this is a hilariously ironic look at the true forces hard at work at Napster. Napster isn't "the good guys", they're trying to make money like every other corporation, and they're not afriad to sue, just like every other corporation *cough* RIAA *cough*.

    Napster lives and dies on trafficking illegal music. If Napster didn't traffic illegal music, there would be no demand for it at all. The offpsring basically just pointed this out, after "supporting" Napster.

    This is altogether too funny, someone needs to moderate the story up (+1, Funny)
  • by Ben Pflaum ( 160274 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:31PM (#1024106)
    Napster should collect the names of everyone who is buying napster stuff from The Offspring then The Offspring can stop selling napster stuff to those people.
  • by Miou ( 115025 ) on Monday June 05, 2000 @12:31PM (#1024107)
    Actually, they did have another option, albeit it a strange one...

    They can't let people produce non-licensed Napster materials... It's a really bad PR idea to sue... so that only leaves one choice - make it licensed Napster materials.

    Mail The Offspring a marketing agreement.

    Good for 1 month, no requirements on The Offsprings part. Thus, the merchandise becomes legally licensed, and it gives them a month to try to talk The Offspring into being a little more cooperative.

    A bit unorthodox, but it would have solved their problem.
  • Yessir, uh-huh, best damn irony ah've et all week.

    Next, someone has to steal their source code and publish it. Not just some clone (there are enough of those around already), but stuff they have copyright on.

    Ah'm gonna be laughin fer hours.

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