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The RIAA Hit List - A Pattern Emerges?

Posted by Hemos on Wed Jul 30, 2003 09:45 PM
from the checking-whatcha-got dept.
Desus writes "Slyck News seems to have found a pattern in just what files the RIAA is searching on to find offenders. It seems the RIAA is targeting a wide reach of music, including Hip Hop, R&B, Rap, Rock, Pop and Country songs. Artists such as Ludacris, Michael Jackson, NAS, Busta Rhymes, Keith Sweat and Musiq were very common throughout the subpoenas. They've even created a helpful chart showing exactly what artists and songs seem to get one flagged." Update: 07/31 13:12 GMT by H : Here's another source for the chart.
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  • silver lining (Score:5, Funny)

    by Sad Loser (625938) * on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:45PM (#6576673)
    (http://www.meditute.org/)

    So the message I am getting is
    'Listen to good music, and the RIAA will leave you alone'.
    I don't have a problem with that.

    Legal action is justified and actually desirable if it stops someone listening to 'Destiny's Child'.
    I rest my case, M'lud
    • Re:silver lining by lewiz (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:50PM
      • Re:silver lining by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:52PM
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • sense of humour failure by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:56PM
      • Re:silver lining (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Marc2k (221814) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:59PM (#6576794)
        (http://www.emopirates.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday July 16 2003, @10:46AM)
        "Not everybody has to like the same stuff you like."

        Very true, however, the original poster is *quite* correct here.

        Have you seen the list?
        Wham?

        I'm beginning to think they really *are* herding us towards greener pastures.
        [ Parent ]
        • Re:silver lining (Score:5, Funny)

          by The Dobber (576407) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:10PM (#6576855)

          Wham? Fucking "Wham" is on the list. Christ almighty, why not the Partridge Family.

          [ Parent ]
        • chasing the bigger flock by alib001 (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:05PM
        • Re:silver lining (Score:4, Insightful)

          by rnturn (11092) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:56PM (#6577384)
          ``Have you seen the list? Wham?''

          Yah. And why no mention of Metallica? Heck, weren't they one of the RIAA's prime examples of artists (Metallica artists... I crack myself up.) who were being harmed by all this music trading.

          [ Parent ]
          • Re:silver lining (Score:4, Insightful)

            by simong_oz (321118) on Thursday July 31 2003, @03:36AM (#6578091)
            (Last Journal: Friday April 25 2003, @05:13AM)
            Metallica artists... I crack myself up

            Metallica stopped being artists the moment they made Load (should have added "of Absolute Shite" to the title), possibly even the black album, and started seeing too many dollar signs. It's amazing how many people I've spoken to who were long time fans of the band from the Kill 'Em All days hate them with a passion now because they sold out. Talk about alienating your original fanbase.

            Yeh, offtopic I know but it was a necessary rant.
            [ Parent ]
          • Re:silver lining (Score:4, Informative)

            by Stuart Gibson (544632) on Thursday July 31 2003, @04:17AM (#6578176)
            (http://www.abovetheinternet.co.uk/)
            There is a problem with Metallica now (I'm not talking about music quality, you can argue that amongst yourselves). Since the realease of St Anger there are legal Metallica MP3s available to anyone who bought the album at www.metallicavault.com [metallicavault.com] with the encouragement, from the band, to download, burn and share (Oh, and "kick ass" too, aparently). I think in some ways the band may be trying to atone for their heavy handedness over Napster (or at least win back a few hearts and minds). SInce these are live versions of their album songs, it could be trickier to prove that people sharing were doing something illegal.

            The acoustic versions of Four Horsemen and Motorbreath are well worth getting ;)

            Goblin
            [ Parent ]
            • Now I feel old by gad_zuki! (Score:3) Thursday July 31 2003, @05:34AM
            • Re:silver lining by ichimunki (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @07:17AM
            • Re:silver lining (Score:4, Insightful)

              by hankaholic (32239) on Thursday July 31 2003, @08:01AM (#6578993)
              Metalliwho? They still make music?

              Seriously, I think that by pissing off so many with the high-and-mighty act in regards to Napster and music sharing in general they've managed to cut themselves off from a large audience.

              Had they not been jackasses about the whole situation I'd be inclined to fire up WinMX and give their new stuff a listen, just to see what the bad-boys-gone-pop have been up to lately. There are a lot of people I know that have not heard the new Metallica stuff, but might give it a listen if somebody mentioned having heard it and liked it.

              Peer-to-peer file sharing is a great marketing tool, although one that's hard to control. Metallica cut themselves off from a lot of word-of-mouth, and since I don't hear their music on any of the radio stations I listen to while in the car, they're in practically the same position as other bands who can't get played on the radio: their work is unheard of, and a little word of mouth would go a long way.

              Metallica took a moral stand against the free advertising P2P provided. I'm letting them have their moral stand, and I'm sure they'd be interested to know that it's that very moral stand which is preventing them from getting the advertising they might have gotten when people shared mix tapes in the '80s*, or when they swapped files in the late '90s forward.

              * Ahh, mix tapes. The seek time sucked, but how nice is it to fit media in your pocket? I wonder about the utility of a mini-disc drive for the PC...
              [ Parent ]
          • Re:silver lining by turgid (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @07:30AM
          • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:silver lining by Victa (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:05PM
      • Re:silver lining by southpolesammy (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:20PM
      • Re:silver lining by LoRdTAW (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:35PM
      • Re:silver lining by los furtive (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @06:41AM
      • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:silver lining (Score:5, Funny)

      by josh crawley (537561) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:51PM (#6576721)
      They'll get around to you eventually. John Tesh and David Hasselhoff remixes are just rather low on their hit-list right now.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:silver lining (Score:5, Funny)

      by gloth (180149) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:52PM (#6576725)
      Legal action is justified and actually desirable if it stops someone listening to 'Destiny's Child'.

      Yeah, don't listen. But damn, those girls are hot, at least let me watch their videos ;)

      [ Parent ]
    • Re:silver lining (Score:5, Interesting)

      by duck 'o death (597155) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:56PM (#6576773)

      Amen, brother.

      I've got a couple of friends running a couple of (very) small labels, and quite a few more in bands ... and their basic feeling about the whole thing is that sooner or later people might eventually clue in, realise they're risking jail time to listen to music that's worse than white noise on the cheap ...

      Basically, they think the shittier it is to listen to shitty music, all the better for them. They don't think that they'll be getting any of the money or the fame, but it'll bring a lot of actual spirit and dynamism back to the currently-small indie crowd.

      Maybe more than 1% of the N. Am. population will start to care about music again.

      [ Parent ]
    • Isn't it obvious? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by itistoday (602304) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:07PM (#6576837)
      I realized the second they told the public they were going to sue. So what I did was I decreased the amount of shared files I have by making copies of songs that are uncommon, and whos artists probably are not good friends of the RIAA. I share these songs only now, so if you want some good ol' Final Fantasy 7 theme music, just run a quick search! ;-)

      What the RIAA is accomplishing, is simply seriously decreasing the amount of shares on P2P networks, leaving only pr0n and unknown artists.

      Me, I'm set with my Russian servers.... Good ol' Mother Russia, land of the oppressed hackers ;-)
      [ Parent ]
    • Why did everyone miss this? (Score:5, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:12PM (#6576871)
      Ludacris, Michael Jackson, Busta Rhymes, Keith Sweat

      This is obviously a plot my whitey trying to put down the black man. Fuck you cracker*!!!

      *cracker refering to person of white color, not someone who breaks into systems or defeats software copy protection
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:silver lining by whatch durrin (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @01:06AM
      • Re:silver lining by oceanclub (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @03:35AM
      • Re:silver lining (Score:4, Insightful)

        by AtariKee (455870) on Thursday July 31 2003, @06:41AM (#6578591)
        (http://www.briandeuel.com/)
        Elitist? Because people don't listen to the same regurgitated, marketed-to-death CRAP? That makes them elitist? Am I an "elitist" because I spurn Linkin Park and Slipknot for bands like Napalm Death and Morbid Angel? Bands that were playing EXACTLY what these bands play, oh... TEN YEARS AGO?!?!

        Because one doesn't buy into the marketing, has different tastes than you, and refuses to follow/live/emulate the "stars" of today does NOT make them elitist. That's like saying I'm elitist because I would rather drive a Camry than an Excursion or some other SUV (and to be clear, I could care less what people drive).

        Not everyone can handle the fluff and pap that gets shoveled down our throats on a daily basis. Not all bands and artists follow the same path that you outlined in your last paragraph. Not everything is as black and white and you make it out to be.

        You don't happen to go around calling people who disagree with you "liberals", do you? :)
        [ Parent ]
      • Re:silver lining by Warlover (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @02:34PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • by Martin Marvinski (581860) on Thursday July 31 2003, @01:17AM (#6577689)
      From the article:

      After looking at 50 or so subpoenas, the suspicion of a pattern grew more confident. While an individual wouldn't necessarily get subpoenaed for just having a Busta Rhymes song, it was the combination of Busta and additional artists that triggered the bot. Slyck hopes to obtain the entire database to more conclusively examine and reveal this potential pattern.

      This is exactly how the Joker killed people in Batman part 1!. If you used a combinatin of cosmetics THAT would kill you, e.g. lipstick with eye liner. I guess these hollywood guys use stuff from the scripts in real life!
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:silver lining (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Publicus (415536) on Thursday July 31 2003, @01:25AM (#6577719)
      (http://www.28thavenue.net/)

      My thoughts were, these are the kinds of songs that people download because they aren't going to buy a crappy CD just for one song. Too bad the RIAA doesn't get the drift.

      [ Parent ]
      • Re:silver lining (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Hatta (162192) on Thursday July 31 2003, @01:37AM (#6577755)
        (Last Journal: Monday November 28 2005, @12:21PM)
        More people would buy the album if they couldn't download the one good song on it. This is what the RIAA wants. They don't want to sell you an album you are going to treasure and listen to 1000 times. They want to sell you an album you listen to twice and forget about when the next candy ass pop star releases more junk.
        [ Parent ]
    • Clarification by Bons8 (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @01:30AM
    • Re:silver lining by MMaestro (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @08:12AM
    • Re:silver lining by macdaddy357 (Score:3) Thursday July 31 2003, @09:28PM
    • Re:silver lining by FunkSoulBrother (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:52PM
    • Re:silver lining by arkane1234 (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @09:36AM
    • 3 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • I don't get it. by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:49PM
  • excel sucks (Score:5, Informative)

    by tedtimmons (97599) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:49PM (#6576697)
    (http://perljam.net/?ref=slashdot)
    I have the lists on my site:

    http://perljam.net/misc/p2p/ [perljam.net]

    Most popular:

    Busta Rhymes Pass the Courvoisier (12)
    Avril Lavigne Losing Grip (8)
    Avril Lavigne Complicated (6)
    Incubus Nice to Know You (6)
    Marvin Gaye Lets Get It On (6)
    Musiq Halfcrazy (6)
    Tracy Chapman Fast Car (6)

    -ted

    • Re:excel sucks (Score:5, Funny)

      by TechnoGrl (322690) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:56PM (#6576774)
      OK so I guess I'm safe with my William Shatner Sings The Blues collection, right?
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:excel sucks (Score:5, Funny)

      by FunWithHeadlines (644929) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:08PM (#6576846)
      (http://www.funwithheadlines.net/)
      "Busta Rhymes Pass the Courvoisier (12)
      Avril Lavigne Losing Grip (8)
      Avril Lavigne Complicated (6)
      Incubus Nice to Know You (6)
      Marvin Gaye Lets Get It On (6)
      Musiq Halfcrazy (6)
      Tracy Chapman Fast Car (6)"

      I'm sure it's just me, but seeing that list made me laugh. It looks like a fairly complete description of a computer-generated attempt at coming up with dialogue for a lame pick-up artist and his drunken prey who is losing her grip on reality and having a hard time focusing:

      She: "Pass the Courvoisier."
      He: "Nice to know you."
      She: "Complicated."
      He: "Fast car."
      She: "Losing grip."
      He: "Let's get it on."
      She: "Halfcrazy."

      [ Parent ]
    • Most interesting song by mrvis (Score:3) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:09PM
    • that's it? by twitter (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:16PM
    • Re:excel sucks by eddie can read (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:17PM
    • Re:excel sucks by NotQuiteReal (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:59PM
    • Re:excel sucks by EinarH (Score:3) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:03PM
    • OpenOffice on the other hand is just fine by Pac (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:37PM
    • Re:excel sucks by Kris_J (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @01:00AM
    • Re:excel sucks by whatch durrin (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @01:15AM
    • Re:excel sucks by CrazyWingman (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @03:13AM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:excel sucks by echucker (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @05:33AM
    • hmmm by xa0s (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:14PM
      • Re:hmmm by crossconnects (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @06:59PM
  • I'm glad that most of those bands are millionares. by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:49PM
  • Aaaaaaah! :-) by writermike (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:50PM
    • Haaaa! by twitter (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:21PM
  • xls? by revmoo (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:50PM
    • Re:xls? (Score:5, Informative)

      by jeffkjo1 (663413) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:52PM (#6576729)
      (http://www.astroreverb.com/)
      KSpread will open it just fine.... I don't know what you're trying to use.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:xls? by Winterblink (Score:3) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:53PM
    • Re:xls? (Score:5, Insightful)

      Ah, you just want to use the labor of someone who you consider to be a whore, so you can keep your pristine innocence. That's very noble.

      Cheers
      -b
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:xls? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by 1010011010 (53039) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:58PM (#6576787)
        (http://google.com/)

        Linking directly to an Excel spreadsheet *is* kind of lame.
        [ Parent ]
        • Re:xls? (Score:5, Informative)

          by 1010011010 (53039) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:22PM (#6576927)
          (http://google.com/)
          The spreadsheet and linking to it are both lame, as it turns out. Someone get that guy an Excel class.
          1. Why didn't he use a third column for the count?
          2. Does the absence of "(X)" mean "one appearance" or "zero appearances?"
          3. Why use Excel for something so trivial, rather than HTML, RTF, or even ASCII?
          4. Is you insist on delivering the data in Excel format, why not deliver it organized in a useful manner?
          On a side note, opening it in OpenOffice and saving it right back out to OpenOffice format results in a file 1/3 the size of the excel file.
          [ Parent ]
          • Re:xls? by anagama (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @02:22AM
          • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:xls? by CanSpice (Score:3) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:58PM
    • Re:xls? by trentfoley (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:53PM
    • Re:xls? by AsparagusChallenge (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:58AM
  • Whoa by zaffir (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:50PM
  • by ShieldW0lf (601553) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:50PM (#6576711)
    Shove CDs down my underpants.

  • crazy biznatches by DumbWhiteGuy777 (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:51PM
  • Music by Luigi30 (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:51PM
    • Re:Music by The Vulture (Score:3) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:39PM
      • Re:Music by Steeplerot (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @01:48AM
      • Re:Music by fatboyslack (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @02:01AM
  • Hint: put only one type of data in each cell. When you mix data in a single cell, it makes it very hard to sort or analyze. For instance, this spreadsheet has two colums: "Artist" and "Song title (times appearing)".

    Would it have been that hard to break out time appearing into another column, so interested people could actually *use* the data for something? No. In fact, it would have been *less* work.

    Sorry to bitch and moan, but spreadsheet abuse is one of my pet peeves.

    Cheers
    -b
    • So you break it into text, then use sed and grep. What's the problem? :-)

      The real spreadsheet abuse was loading it into a spreadsheet in the first place. What's wrong with a text file, or a pretty HTML tabled version, considering it was posted to a website? I blame that on the webmasters of Slyck News, whoever they are.

      Text versions on my site: http://perljam.net/misc/p2p/ [perljam.net]

      -ted

      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Too bad they don't know how to use spreadsheets by sporty (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:08PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Only on slashdot... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Frac (27516) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:11PM (#6576863)
      Only on slashdot will you see people complaining about *anything*.

      Those guys rummaged through the 911 subpoenas to compile a list on a spreadsheet, they let you download it for FREE, and not only did you show a token of appreciation, but you bitched about the formatting?

      Would it have been that hard to break out time appearing into another column, so interested people could actually *use* the data for something? No. In fact, it would have been *less* work.

      Interested people can compile their own list if they want.

      Next thing you know, they'll have a version with actually splits that column into two, and we're gonna see people say stuff like "Why the FUCK would these idiots use a Sans Serif font? Everybody knows that a Serif font looks better on the monitor! Those insensitive CLODS!"

      Yes it's mashed in the same column. Yes they used Arial. Yes they used a proprietary format by Big Bad Microsoft. Yes they weren't thoughtful enough to put in plain text so I can run your Perl scripts on it. Yes it's not encoded in ogg vorbis. Yes it won't play on your iPod or microwave. Yes they deserve to burn in hell for not making 2 million different versions catered for each person that downloads it.

      No they don't! Thank them for spending the time to sift through all the subpoenas!
      [ Parent ]
    • ha ha. by twitter (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:12PM
    • Re:Too bad they don't know how to use spreadsheets by simong_oz (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @06:19AM
    • Re:Too bad they don't know how to use spreadsheets by MicroBerto (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @07:29AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • funny ....... by 1lus10n (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:52PM
  • That's not that interesting... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Frac (27516) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:52PM (#6576728)
    Once those songs are less populated, they'll go after other ones.

    What would be more interesting is the percentage of subpoenas there are for each ISP. I've heard rumors of how AOL users are more immune, simply because of their Time Warner affiliation.

    While I have no sympathy for those that choose to distributed copyrighted works on P2P networks without the copyright owner's permission, I don't understand why customers not using an ISP owned by the same holding company as the record companies should get in trouble first.

    On the other hand, maybe AOL can leverage this to attract more subscribers. It's no longer "823451 hours for free", it's "music and movies for free"! Heh.

    Of course, if the scare tactic doesn't pan out, eventually AOL users won't be safe either.

    "You've got jail!"
  • Sweet! by destiney (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:53PM
  • The other method? (Score:4, Funny)

    by pfleming (683342) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:53PM (#6576732)
    (http://www.rwcinc.net/ | Last Journal: Sunday March 21 2004, @02:34PM)
    Reading the RIAA hit list... your ip has been logged, don't move the police are on their way.
  • Margin of Error (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mgcsinc (681597) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:53PM (#6576733)
    THe article claims that from 50 total subpoenas being checked, they can deduce overall proportions of artist representation in the subpoenas, which is, frankly, a load of crock; with a sample size that small, margin of error would be enormous. Oh, and by the way, it's not like the RIAA needs to limit itself to these artists of these songs, they just happen to be what they were searching for to trigger some results, and with the huge body of work protected by the RIAA, I imagine that if it were not for simple lack of motivation, they could easily cycle through an enormous number of searches to perform... Perhaps they'll do exactly this each time someone tries to analyze their "pattern"...
    • Re:Margin of Error (Score:5, Informative)

      by Jerf (17166) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:14PM (#6576887)
      (Last Journal: Saturday August 18 2001, @11:04AM)
      THe article claims that from 50 total subpoenas being checked, they can deduce overall proportions of artist representation in the subpoenas, which is, frankly, a load of crock; with a sample size that small, margin of error would be enormous.

      Ah, one of the great statistical fallacies... "sample sizes must be large to be valid". Not entirely correct.

      Assuming a distribution, and reasonably random sampling, a sample of 50 would be plenty for single-digit accuracy, by my BOTE calculation. The problem is, what distribution shall we choose? Song preferences are clearly not Gaussian; personally, I'd guess Zipf.

      But that's only a guess; not knowing the distribution is a complete stopper, and it can only be answered with extensive surveying of lots of data, which isn't about to happen for this study. It's not the sample size preventing good statistics, though, it's lack of knowledge of the distribution, which is a completely different matter. (Actually, it's a bigger problem, requiring much more data to be collected to answer the question, well beyond merely scanning the sued people.)
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Margin of Error by BarakMich (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:18PM
    • Re:Margin of Error by gaspyy (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:23PM
    • what if you own the song? by evilty (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @01:41AM
  • Rap and R&B top the list... (Score:4, Funny)

    by Remik (412425) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:53PM (#6576736)
    I guess it won't be long before Jesse Jackson is accusing the RIAA of racism.

    -R
  • duh by August_zero (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:53PM
    • Re:duh by August_zero (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @02:17AM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Bah, Excel (Score:5, Informative)

    by Mitchell Mebane (594797) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:53PM (#6576742)
    (http://whattheboat.com/ | Last Journal: Monday January 03 2005, @09:14PM)
    If you don't like Excel, you can grab the files in HTML format (25.2 KB) [ev1.net] or in OpenOffice.org Spreadsheet format (10.4 KB) [ev1.net].
  • A pattern emerging? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by BalaClavaChord (686030) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:53PM (#6576743)

    The one pattern I see is that the overwhelming number of the artists seem to be those that appeal to under 25's. Obviously the RIAA have decided to go for those who can least afford to offer legal resistance (school kids and college students).

    Come on RIAA, dare you to pick on us Lou Reed fans!

  • statistically irrelevent (Score:4, Insightful)

    by pavon (30274) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:54PM (#6576748)
    hmm, out of a miniscule sample size of 50, we found that a wide variety of types of music were being shared. Many popular songs were shared by many people, while some songs where only shared by a few. This roughly fits a bell curve distribution as would nomally be found in a random sample of shared files.

    Therefore we conclude that the RIAA is targetting people with specific music sharring patterns.

    yeah.
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Aww.. by PhilipChapman (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:55PM
    • Re:Aww.. by archen (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:54PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • Not a surprise by djk29a (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:55PM
  • 'Pattern'? Right... by rimu guy (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:55PM
    • Civil by kannibal_klown (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:12PM
      • Re:Civil by rimu guy (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:23PM
    • Re:'Pattern'? Right... by kannibal_klown (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:17PM
  • So basically..... by Lord_Dweomer (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:55PM
  • I just have to say (Score:5, Insightful)

    by CanSpice (300894) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:56PM (#6576769)
    (http://www.canspice.org/)
    What a stupid chart. If you're going to go through all the trouble of making an Excel spreadsheet why not create a proper spreadsheet and put the number of times a song was mentioned in its own column? See, now it's even more useful because I can sort by the number of times a song was mentioned to see what the most popular one was instead of having to scan the whole list manually. Simple, no?

    And then you don't have to figure out if the number in brackets is actually the number of times it was mentioned or maybe makes up part of the title. If I was being pedantic and took the "Title (Times song appears)" column header to be gospel, then the Jay-Z song "I Just Wanna Love U" has been mentioned "Give It 2 Me" times, and the Ludacris song "Cry Babies" has been mentioned "Oh No" times. What is this? How many is "Oh No"?
  • Bad choice of targets by lavalyn (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:56PM
  • Pirates with Good Taste in Music Avoid Prosecution by Schlemphfer (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:57PM
  • slashdottery by dema (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:57PM
  • Getting the numbers to be sortable (Score:3, Informative)

    by =weezer= (180393) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:59PM (#6576792)
    A few people complaining about the fact that the person put the numbers in the same column as the Song Title, here's an easy way to fix if you have a word processor that can do find/replace:

    1. Get a plaintext [perljam.net] version.
    2. Replace all instances of " (" (thats a space and open parantheses) with a Tab.
    3. Replace all instances of ")" with nothing.
    4. Import into a spreadsheet program (practically every single one will do tab-delimeted fields).

    Annoying to have to do it but dead simple.
  • Thank God... by soundnfury (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:00PM
  • by MoThugz (560556) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:00PM (#6576802)
    (http://www.heritage-tech.net/)
    There's no Metallica on it!
  • helpful? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by thanjee (263266) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:02PM (#6576807)
    (Last Journal: Sunday April 27 2003, @09:51PM)
    They've even created a helpful chart

    And please tell me what is helpful about a chart written for a product I do not own? This is the internet people! What is so hard about creating a simple table using um....tables? You can view them for free!
  • Change in direction? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonvmous Coward (589068) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:02PM (#6576814)
    I think we all feel like we need to fight back, right? Unfortunately, I can't really see how we can convince the gov't (or the RIAA for that matter) to agree to a business model built on P2P. So how bout we start a little smaller? How about we demand that the "open CDs cannot be returned" policy gets permanently lifted?

    Think about the ramifications of this for a sec. You can go to a store, buy an Album, and return it if it sucks. It's not as cool as P2P, but at least the RIAA will suddenly have a fire lit under them to produce more of what people want. If they want to avoid returns, then they'll HAVE to consider selling singles and custom mixes. Heck, take it to an extreme, and they may develop a decent On-line service.

    You all should think about that. I think the return policy would be an easier goal to attain than P2P. It's in the consumers' best interests anyway. I mean, how can an oligopoly legally use the "open your mouth and close your eyes" business model?
  • To summarize ... by Rosco P. Coltrane (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:03PM
    • come on, Flash by KnightStalker (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:33PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Why all this old shit? by boomgopher (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:04PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • wheew by chunkwhite86 (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:05PM
  • Best way for RIAA to stop music downloads... by DakotaSandstone (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:08PM
  • no metal? by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:09PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • by southpolesammy (150094) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:09PM (#6576850)
    (http://www.comprank.com/ | Last Journal: Thursday July 05, @10:59AM)
    Given the songs they're scanning for, then I'm all for their current methodology. The fewer people that listen to that garbage, the better.

  • In the last five years or so, the Internet has gone from being fairly calm and safe, to more and more of a virtual reality war zone. Viruses and worms are one front, security holes and exploits are another, intellectual property "theft" and counter-tactics... and counter-counter-tactics are another, spam and filters and anti-spam are yet another. Those early books by William Gibson aren't too far off the mark anymore!

    It is interesting that the Internet was viewed as a kind of egalitarian utopia not too long ago. Some people still hold this view, but in reality, it is becoming a constant war zone.

    I wonder if all this could have been avoided if the internet was not commercialized? Is all this conflict going to destroy the Internet's potential fertility?

    I think that there is no policy, no law, no technology which can create peace on the Internet. I personally think that the Internet is rather a microcosm of what is happening at a slower pace in the "real" world. And that can only be fixed by a fundamental change in the way that people (everyone in the whole world) think. It's like the cold war's arms race. At some point, everyone is going to have to realize that it is getting ridiculous and everyone is losing out because of that.

    • Re:I'm really quite amazed by Strudelkugel (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:43PM
    • Re:I'm really quite amazed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by PhreakOfTime (588141) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:05PM (#6577144)
      (http://www.demystify.info/)

      Your not amazed, your just making a mistake. See, the internet as you know it consisting of a bunch of www adresses and p2p apps is just the result of what has been going on on networks long before your parents screwed to pop you out. Its called free exchange of thought.

      Yes, I do agree with your point of it being a utopia of sorts, and thats exactly the point! When all those people you consider geeks and nerds were telling you this was going to change the world, they were right. The world is now changing, take a step back 20 years and think about how people would react if you told them that in 20 years most media(books,court records, music, etc) would be available to anyone, anywhere for FREE! This does have the potential to change the world, and it already has in many ways.

      Dont fall for newsspeak so easily...example...it was called the .com bust, not the .org, .edu, .gov, bust. why? because commercialism is in reality(whatever that is) .com is a very small subset of the useful information available to you, unless your just replacing one phosphorous tube for another(TV -> PC)

      War zone? hardly, just because your ignorance gets you in trouble doesnt mean it needs to be changed for everyone to satisfy your need for security. Networks were a lot more 'dangerous' as you like to call it, years ago than they are now. Cops and robbers, cat and mouse, call it what you will...but the more things change the more they stay the same. Most NOCenters were lucky to have one person to maintain and police their subnets...now every jackass that can write a C+ script gets a job to watch over the traffic on subnets. that to me is more dangerous than whatever it is you think is so threatening about the internet.

      At some point you are going to have to realize that nobody cares what you think everyone needs to realize.

      [ Parent ]
    • Re:I'm really quite amazed by 0x0d0a (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:17AM
    • Re:I'm really quite amazed by Datasage (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:20AM
    • Re:I'm really quite amazed by cfish (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @01:15AM
    • Re:I'm really quite amazed by MightyDrake (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @01:16AM
    • Re:I'm really quite amazed by AKnightCowboy (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @08:12AM
    • 3 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • Tr8der Boy (Score:5, Funny)

    by borkus (179118) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:10PM (#6576859)
    (http://www.noprizes.net/)

    He was a tr8der boy
    RIAA hater boy
    Downloaded his music off of Kazaa
    He had "Complicated"
    Up on his supernode
    Now he gotta subpoena from Silberberg & Knupp

    • Re:Tr8der Boy by PorkCharSui (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:30PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • History repeats itself, with a twist by guacamolefoo (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:11PM
  • Cool... by inertia@yahoo.com (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:12PM
  • Good Thing... (Score:4, Funny)

    by Shant3030 (414048) * on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:14PM (#6576888)
    I'm happy they are targeting Keith Sweat listeners. He is a menace.
  • Simple moral to the tale by Henry V .009 (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:22PM
  • Mirror by nolife (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:22PM
    • Re:Mirror by tarius8105 (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @09:23AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Honeypot the RIAA (Score:4, Insightful)

    by KevMar (471257) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:25PM (#6576942)
    (http://kevinmarquette.blogspot.com/ | Last Journal: Sunday November 18, @12:44PM)
    Why dont we setup fake servers serving files with names that match the file.

    or setup p2p clients that will respond to all requests for these files with a spoofed address.

    If we flood the network with false positives, when it comes to the lawsuit it comes out that some people accused were not actualy shareing any files, they would have to prove that they verified each and every one of their victims.

    we could easily create blank files with the same time and size as the "real" files
  • Hah by michaeltoe (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:28PM
  • Good thing by Jebediah21 (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:31PM
  • RIAA will not stop (Score:5, Informative)

    by snopes (27370) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:38PM (#6577011)
    (Last Journal: Thursday March 28 2002, @02:56PM)
    Just chatted with my investigator friend at the RIAA again. He told me they've got this whole operation outsourced to online investigators (not sure exactly what that means) and law firms. They're budgeting the effort as a simple cost of doing business. They do in fact have patterns, schedules, etc. This is just going to keep going until a group finds a common defense and can start making this more costly for them. Otherwise he said that internally it's clear they're following this road as long as they can.

    He also mentioned that they're now paying for staff at ISP's. Basically with the Verizon case everyone is ready to roll and RIAA finishes them off by offering to pay for the staff increases needed to fullfil the subpeonas.

    Personally I haven't bothered downloading music since shortly after the Napster demise, but this stuff is bullshit. I really hope the folks getting targeted can band together with some sort of tenable defense and start making this more expensive for them. During the Napster case I was told by this same guy that RIAA was getting short on funding and the labels weren't willing to cough up extra cash for the case. It sounds crazy, but maybe enough individuals could eventually team up, get all cases into a single jurisdiction, and try to start bleeding them again. They're big, but there funds are not limited. Certainly a long shot, though, and expensive for everyone involved.
  • awesome! by john_smith_45678 (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:41PM
  • Bottom Line by sandbenders (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:54PM
    • Re:Bottom Line by The Master Control P (Score:3) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:32PM
  • Kudos to the slashdot readers! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:57PM (#6577097)


    Slashdot readers are fantastic.

    Most interesting stories are mirrored in the comments. Which is great, especially when it concerns a story at NYT (which there should be less of), due to the registration requirements, I don't go to the site anymore.

    But the thing that really hit me with this riaa story is that someone who provided information in excel format was good enough to share the info, but not everyone uses excel, or any microsoft products, myself included. So what do some of the slashdot readers do? They adapt, and provide a service to other readers. The excel format document was changed to html, and even OpenOffice.org format, and made available on alternate sites. Both of the formats work for me. And I haven't even read all the comments yet. It may be available in additional formats.

    I had to stop and write this comment because of the greatness of the slashdot readers. I tip my hat to each of you who help make slashdot better for all of us.

    Thank you.

    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • by levk (692264) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:58PM (#6577107)
    (Last Journal: Tuesday December 16 2003, @01:14PM)

    I am baffled as to why i have yet to see this mentioned (maybe I have not looked around enough).

    The only way to be able to say in court that a given user actually was making a certain file available to the public is for the RIAA to have downloaded the file themselves. (unless of course they were sniffing the traffic, but that would be illegal as well)

    If they used kazaa to download from users to find out that they had an "illegal" file they would violate kazaa licence terms [kazaa.com]

    "2 What You Can't Do Under This Licence" sub sections:
    "2.11 Monitor traffic or make search requests in order to accumulate information about individual users;",
    "2.12 "Stalk" or otherwise harass another;" and
    "2.14 Collect or store personal data about other users."

    If they somehow reverse engineered kazaa to make their own client and avoid the above licence stipulations they would have run afoul of:
    "3.2 Except as expressly permitted in this Licence, you agree not to reverse engineer, de-compile, disassemble, alter, duplicate, modify, rent, lease, loan, sublicense, make copies, create derivative works from, distribute or provide others with the Software in whole or part, transmit or communicate the application over a network."

  • SHIT by mcp33p4n75 (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:00PM
  • There is no Electronic music by mzkhadir (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:02PM
  • I know what I'm going to do now... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by RPI Geek (640282) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:08PM (#6577161)
    (Last Journal: Thursday July 29 2004, @07:56AM)
    I'm going to start downloading all sorts of music that I already own on CD, not share it, and hope they catch me. Then I can say, "but I already own that song and I wasn't sharing it with anyone! What was I doing wrong!?"
  • I wonder why? by phorm (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:14PM
  • by John Murdoch (102085) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:22PM (#6577226)
    (http://www.windgap.com/ | Last Journal: Saturday November 03 2001, @06:14PM)

    Hi!

    One of the reasons the RIAA is targeting a specific group of files (in addition to target market, etc.) is that the RIAA is acting, legally, as the agent of the copyright owner. The RIAA doesn't own the copyrights to the music--generally, neither do the record labels. The "artists" (using the term very broadly in a few cases) own the copyrights, and the RIAA is acting on their behalf. They're looking for U2 files because U2 has given them permission to haul kids into court on a trumped-up infringement action.

    Which might give you pause, next time you're in the record store looking to buy a CD.

    Which brings me to an interesting idea:
    If you see the name of an artist you admire--and perhaps support with your hard-earned dollar--why not drop an email to the artist asking why he or she is supporting the draconian actions of the RIAA? As always, it pays to be polite--screamers just get ignored (or reinforce the "they're all crooks" attitudes). But a few hundred polite, irenic notes might just change a few attitudes.

    And a few hundred thousand polite irenic notes might just drum some sense into the musicians.

  • A good start, but... by fname (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:24PM
  • Interesting list! by unsung (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:54PM
  • I guess I'm safe by bubkus_jones (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:56PM
  • U2 by BrainsVolpe (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @11:59PM
  • MP3s had tags by ratfynk (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:03AM
  • Pattern? by Angry Pixie (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:05AM
  • Looks like a boycott list by Openstandards.net (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:06AM
    • Can't Get Enough - Depeche Mode
    • Money For Nothing - Dire Straits
    • Hungry Like A Wolf - Duran Duran
    • Love Don't Cost A Thing - Jennifer Lopez
    • I'll Trade A Million Bucks - Keith Sweat
    • 2 Legit 2 Quit - MC Hammer
    • Money Is My Bitch - NAS
    • Another One Bites the Dust - Queen
    • Is It A Crime - Sade
    • I'm a Thug - Trick Daddy
    • Paging Dr Freud...

  • Well... I'm safe... by AceCaseOR (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:15AM
  • Is it time to stop sharing RIAA-protected music? by tehdely (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:42AM
  • Guess I'm safe by kalmite (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @01:19AM
  • DMB? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by cei (107343) on Thursday July 31 2003, @01:22AM (#6577706)
    (http://www.chuckivy.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday February 19 2003, @04:30AM)
    I'm surprised that Dave Matthews Band shows up on the list. Sure, they have the right to protect their studio recordings as much as the next guy, but if the data being pulled is based on song title, the number of legally taped live performances is going to throw a false positive more times than not.
  • A better chart for you all. (Score:5, Informative)

    by davesag (140186) on Thursday July 31 2003, @01:37AM (#6577753)
    (http://www.davesag.com/)
    Having read the comments above I took a good look at the chart and decided to fix it. Sure - blatant karma whoring perhaps, but read on. I have moved the hit count into its own column, saved it as CSV and (here's where it gets silly) I decided to look up each song in Gnutella and chart the guntella hit count against the RIAA hit count.

    I am happy to present my results [davesag.com] in the form of a new spreadsheet, a CSV file and a GIF formatted graph. I am too hungover, and too rotten a statistician, to draw any conclusions. Enjoy.

  • by orbital3 (153855) on Thursday July 31 2003, @01:48AM (#6577789)
    Granted, I don't make my money selling my music, but I can't help but imagine that if I did, I'd be trying to opt out of having my songs used as bait for prosecution. Of course I'd want my fans to actually buy my CDs, but I can't imagine I'd be very comfortable knowing some 14 year old kids's life was being ruined because he wanted to hear my music and didn't want to or couldn't pay for it. If I'd have to end up having a day job because of it, then tough shit for me. At least I'd be able to sleep at night. I'm really kinda surprised at least a couple artists haven't come out against this draconian nonsense. I know a million other comments have brought up the point that you're better off shoplifting CDs than downloading them nowadays, but seriously... that's just not right. I'm totally for artists rights, but I'm sure even some of their stomachs are turning at these recent events.
  • Ludacris, Busta Rhymes, Musiq, Keith Sweat by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @02:01AM
  • Didn't Michael Jackson just say he was against the RIAA filing these lawsuits? Seems like the RIAA isn't listening to him, 'cause 8 songs of his are on the list...

    They sure as hell care about the artists, don't they?

  • Pop by Icephreak1 (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @02:17AM
  • Onion by NilObject (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @02:35AM
  • todo: download them all by ANTI (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @02:44AM
  • Radiohead by thundercleese800 (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @03:10AM
    • Re:Radiohead by Ambient Sheep (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:00PM
  • Mirror of the chart by coldcity (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @04:04AM
  • How convenient by pascalb3 (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @05:39AM
  • Hrm (Score:4, Insightful)

    by lewp (95638) on Thursday July 31 2003, @06:20AM (#6578492)
    (Last Journal: Monday February 27 2006, @09:54PM)
    Maybe they figured the rather unique words/spellings of the titles and/or artists of a lot of these songs would present the lowest possibility of tripping on another embarrassing false positive [slashdot.org] while still being popular enough to net plenty of "examples."

    Just a thought.
  • Guess I'm safe .... by scharkalvin (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @06:51AM
  • How long by MImeKillEr (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @06:54AM
    • Re:How long by Acidic_Diarrhea (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @07:39AM
  • The pattern is clear.... by Anita Coney (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @06:54AM
  • Meaningless by ucblockhead (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @07:30AM
  • Can't graph this - lousy taste by jpellino (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @07:48AM
  • It's a joke... by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @08:01AM
  • REO Speedwagon not on the list! Cool! by jbarr (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @08:12AM
  • That will change the pattern by nurb432 (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @08:13AM
  • some good music... by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @08:24AM
  • Thank God We're Safe by hafidhahullah (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @08:46AM
  • No Weird Al on the list by DFossmeister (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @08:58AM
  • First they came... by Just Some Guy (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @09:11AM
  • Has anyone here thought of _security_? by krital (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @09:14AM
  • USENET! by stevedc2000 (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @09:15AM
  • What if you own the CD's? by ChozSun (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @09:38AM
  • Dave Mathews Band by blahbooboo2 (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @09:44AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Question for the group by Xrkun (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @10:04AM
  • Follow the money by El (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @10:14AM
  • Maybe they realised... by nomel (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @11:08AM
  • (Don't Fear) The RIAA by Ambient Sheep (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:02PM
  • Chart in HTML Now (Score:3, Informative)

    by SlyckTom (633365) on Thursday July 31 2003, @02:44PM (#6582528)
    Hey all.. I'm the news writer for Slyck.com The excel spreadsheet was just temporary and what I was working with at the time, never expected to be Slash-dotted!... Anyway, you've been heard loud and clear, and the list is available in an HTML format. Hope this make some people happy ;) http://www.slyck.com/misc/songlist.html
  • Thanks RIAA!!! by dvk (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @05:04PM
  • Now in HTML by SlyckTom (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @05:35PM
  • Can anyone else verify this? by Funksaw (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @08:44PM
  • Not worried by pixelatedcrap (Score:1) Friday August 01 2003, @02:09AM
  • A Pattern Emerges All Right by MacWiz (Score:1) Friday August 01 2003, @04:09AM
  • So the real question is... by Zleeper (Score:1) Friday August 01 2003, @08:01AM
  • Avril tops the count by spike it (Score:1) Friday August 01 2003, @11:14PM
  • by VP (32928) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:50PM (#6576703)
    An even bigger surprise was that when I clicked it, Gnumeric started up and opened it without complaints...
    [ Parent ]
  • Re:Chart link is an excel document (Score:5, Insightful)

    by elmegil (12001) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @09:51PM (#6576720)
    (http://slashdot.org/ | Last Journal: Wednesday March 07 2007, @09:12PM)
    What's your point? OpenOffice and StarOffice open the doc just fine.

    What I find irritating is that the "number of times" field ought to be it's own column in the spreadsheet so you can actually sort the frigging list.

    [ Parent ]
  • I protest by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:04PM
  • by eddie can read (631836) on Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:13PM (#6576885)
    I'll need a moment to download Excel from Kazaa.

    [ Parent ]
  • Re:RIAA's on crack by Rosco P. Coltrane (Score:2) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:25PM
  • Re:XLS Encryption Cracked by HermanAB (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:33PM
  • Re:Fuck it, I give up. by michaeltoe (Score:1) Wednesday July 30 2003, @10:37PM
  • Re:Can be opened with kspread... by mirko (Score:1) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:03AM
  • Re:Fuck it, I give up. by Angry Pixie (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @12:16AM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Re:Chart link is an excel document by hkmwbz (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @08:16AM
  • Re:Chart link is an excel document by toddestan (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @09:09AM
  • HOW IS THIS A TROLL? by shaitand (Score:2) Thursday July 31 2003, @06:23PM
  • 40 replies beneath your current threshold.
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