New Muzio Flash Player

Gadgets, Mobile Tech, Digital Audio No Comments »

Korean MP3 manufacturer Muzio are introducing another new model next month to add to their range of flash-memory based MP3 players. The JM300 comes in 256/512 and 1GB sizes, three colors (black, red and silver), supports MP3, Ogg Vorbis and WMA and weighs 45.5g with dimensions of 70 x 44.5 x 19mm.
the new JM 300 flash player from Muzio in Korea is due January 2005
The device has a 180 degrees swivelling USB connector, two headphone outs, FM radio and recording, a watch function, 3D sound support, voice recording and direct encoding feature. No news on USA prices or availability as yet. Muzio have also started to branch out into the increasingly popular HDD player market with the JMH 1000 a 1 inch HDD 4GB model, the companies biggest capacity model so far, though already surpassed by the new breed of 5GB mid range players appearing elsewhere.

Related Links

AVing Korea [Aving.co.kr] Google Translation
South Korea Pushes Digital Music Ubiquity [DigitalMusicNews]
South Korea Leads the Way [CNet News]
MPIO Korea [Mpio.com]
iRiver Korea [iRiver.com]

Bit Torrent Meets Kazaa? Exeem P2P Arrival Imminent.

Internet, Software, MP3, File Sharing, Downloads No Comments »

The P2P underground is buzzing this week with further news on the imminent appearance of Exeem, the new file sharing app from the people behind the popular outlawed Bit Torrent site Suprnova.org. Suprnova.org, deemed a Universal BitTorrent source, was a web site which distributed descriptor files for various music and video files, computer programs and games. Many of these torrents described could potentially have been used for copyright infringement.

Exeem Beta screenshot. From the people behind popular (defunct) BitTorrent tracker site Suprnova.org

Although the Slovenian based site didn’t actually host any illegal files, but links to Torrents, the owners pulled the plug on the site December 19th 2004 after various legal threats from, in particular the MPAA after a protracted worldwide clampdown on movie file sharing from the film industry body and various copyright and legal bodies.

In an interview conducted by net radio station NovaStream.org yesterday (December 30th) spokesman Sloncek explained that eXeem is “like Kazaa and BitTorrent,” though unlike the Bit Torrent tracker sites Exeem is decentralized. The software is being developed by an anonymous (so far) company called Swarm Systems Inc., registered on the Caribbean islands of Saint Kitts and Nevis an ‘offshore ruse’ used to good effect more recently by the under fire Kazaa.

Cynics and critics have already expressed disappointment in the much hyped file sharing application with its proposed use of adware to finance development and the possibility of it being just another decentralised P2P network like Kazaa. There’s an early Beta test review here and latest screenshots here and you can download the Beta software for Exeem here.

Related Reading

Sloncek Announces Upcoming Arrival of eXeem [Slyck.com]
Is Suprnova Exeem For Real? [P2PNet.net]
Novastream Radio Sloncek Interview [Novastream.org]
Decentralizing Bit Torrent [Slashdot.org]
TorrentBits.org and Suprnova.org Go Dark [Slashdot.org]
Suprnova.org Wikipedia [Wikipedia.org]
BitTorrent Operator Bites Back at MPAA [InternetNews.com]
The Bit Torrent Effect [WiredMag.com]
BitTorrent Plus Kazaa Equals… Exeem? [ExtremeTech.com]
Interview with Sloncek of SuprNova [Slyck.com]
The BitTorrent P2P File-sharing System [the Register]

BenQ’s First HDD MP3 Player

Gadgets, Mobile Tech, Digital Audio No Comments »

BenQ are Taiwan’s market leading flash-based MP3 player manufacturer with around 20% of local market share and are cashing in on the increased demand for larger capacity players with the release this month of the Joybee 720, which was originally unveiled in prototype form at Japans Createc back in October.
Taiwan manufacturer BenQ release the companies first hard drive based MP3 player, the 5GB Joybee 720
The 99 x 58.4 x 14.7mm, 114gram sized player looks like it’ll be aimed at the UK and Australia outside of the local market where its list price is $9900Taiwan ($311 equiv.). The 5gb player uses a Seagate 1 inch drive and has a slot for SD/MMC cards.It has the standards like WMA and MP3 compatibility, FM radio, 1.8 inch color display, USB 2.0 and 10 hour battery life.

Oddly there is no voice recording facility, something which usually comes as standard on these things. Again, a nice looking, full featured player in the increasingly busy mid sized market, but it’ll take something more to dislodge the iPod mini which is expected to increase capacity early 2005 from 4 to 5GB (using the same Seagate hard drive).

Related Reading

Apple Begins Manufacturing New iPod Mini Player [AppleInsider.com]
Apple Readies 5GB iPod [theRegister.com]
Creative Zen Micro [Creative]
Zen Micro Review [PCMag.com]
5GB MP3 Players [i4u.com]
Micro Hard Drive MP3 Players [CNet Reviews]

New Safa MP3 Player

Gadgets, Mobile Tech, Digital Audio No Comments »

Some nice looking compact MP3 players on the way from Korean manufacturer Safa next month. The SR range has four models, the 128mb M800F , 256mb M820F , 512mb M850F and the 1GB capacity M890F . The players are available in four colours, blue, red, black and silver. Safa's new SR range of MP3 players from Korea. 128, 256, 512mb and 1GB capacity

On the up side they will play Ogg Vorbis, WMA and MP3 formats have a 1.5inch color screen, FM tuner and are a compact 41mm x 76.2mm x 17mm, on the downside they only come with USB 1.1. The units also come with built in stereo speakers. The models will be available in the UK next month with the 1GB coming in at a hefty $365 (189 UK pounds) . Hard to see where their market is aiming at with the 20gb Apple iPod retailing in the UK for just another 30 pounds. More details will be announced at the Las Vegas CES 2005 in January.

More Exotic MP3 Players From The Far East

Gadgets, Mobile Tech, Digital Audio No Comments »

If we tried to feature just three Far Eastern MP3 manufacturers here a day, it would take over a year to squeeze all of them in. Recent reports suggest that including smaller low volume operators there could be as many as 1000 manufacturers in China alone. We decided to look at a few of the more unusual, ugly or just plain odd MP3 players being churned out in mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Korea, some of them you’ll never find in the West some of them will find their way to mainland Europe, the UK and USA eventually.
Far Eastern MP3 players. Clockwise L to R : The Zarva MM 1gb, iBead/TMode 1000, ANA FM 7000, Zarva ZPod 20gb, EZ MP4000
The Zarva MM comes in four sizes of 128/256/512 and 1GB of flash memory, supports the usual MP3, WMA, Wav and ASF, has a recordable FM tuner, USB 2.0, voice recorder and a choice of three body colors, silver, blue and red. Its ‘big brother’, the Z-Pod M200 has a 20gb HDD, FM radio, voice recorder support for MP3/WMA/WAV and OGG Vorbis. It clocks in at 186grams, 66.5�99.5�22mm dimensions and has a 160 x 105 LCD display.

The Korean Woodi brand boast a big range of flash players including the funky looking 256mb Swing WD M400 model pictured here in white/grey (see also below). Still in Korea, iBead (or T Mode as its known for the Korean home market) have a number of smaller flash models and the larger iBead 1000 which has a 1.5gb HDD, support for MP3, WMA and Ogg, 128 x 128 pixel color screen, USB 2.0, FM radio and voice recorder which are standard features on even the smallest models in Korea and China.

Clockwise L to R: Woodi Swing, WeWa!! MP2000, EZ Maz MP3100 and the Gemei B9

Ann are another Korean manufacturer with a range of flash players including the 128mb FM 7000.Chinese manufacturer EZMax have a nice looking range of flash players including the EZMP 3100 model in a choice of red and silver and 128/256mb capacity. Hong Kong’s WeWa have a big range of models ranging from bog standard 128mb models to the king size 20gb HD 200. Gemei, Pisa, Koky and BeAll are just another handful of the army of firms popping up in China by the day it seems. In the flash player market ‘war’ things will be hotting up a tad in the new year should Apple announce their own entry in the flash player market as expected at Mac World Expo , something which will not only boost Apple’s own profile but also have a ripple effect on some of the more promising newcomers.

Related Reading
The Chinese MP3 Invasion [MusicbizNews24.com]
Whats Hot and Whats Not in the MP3 Market [Chosun Korea]
Sales of MP3 Mobile Phones to Break 5 Million at Home This Year [Chosun Korea]

Far EastTech Sites
Ez iT [Ezit.com.cn]
MPLove Korea
IMP3 [IMP3.net China]
MPNavi [MPNavi China]
PC Online Digital Audio [PC Online China]

The Matsunichi Micro Disc MP3

Gadgets, Mobile Tech, Digital Audio No Comments »

Hong Kong based Matsunichi are showing off the forthcoming 2.2GB MD289. There is a 5GB model to follow.
We’re not sure if there are any plans for its its availability in the West but Hong Kong based Matsunichi announced a mid range MP3 player last month with a 2.2 GB micro hard -drive. The MD289 comes with a 1 inch 2.2 GB hard drive, OLED screen, FM radio, the usual support for MP3, WMA and Wav and a choice of five colours, silver, pink, blue, white and light green. There’s a 5GB version on its way too. Matsunichi are better known for their wide range of Flash based memory players in China.

Meet The Beastles

MP3, Downloads, Music Downloads No Comments »

Boston, Mass. based spinner DJBC is the lastest Mash-up instigator to have a bash at the Beatles with his Beastles project. A mash-up of the Beastie Boys and the Beatles, unsurprisingly. There’s 9 tracks on the site and even downloadable cover art. Not sure if its on par with the much mentioned ‘trendsetting’ DJ Dangermouse ‘Grey Album’ Beatles mash-up but its a lot of fun and better than the Beatallica project.
Beatles meet the Beastie Boys. Its the Beastles !
Widespread publicity will probably mean a C&D somewhere along the line so grab the downloads while you can.

Related Links

Beastie Boys
The Beatles
Get Your Bootleg On [Gybo V3]
At Last the Mash-up Has Gone Mainstream [NewsDay.com]
Raiding the 20th Century, the History of the Cutup [MusicalBear.com]
Protest Music [Alternet.org]
BeatMixed [Beatmixed.com]
Boom Selection [BoomSelection.info]
Grey Tuesday, Online Cultural Activism and the Mash up of Music and Politics [FirstTuesday.org]

The Chinese MP3 Invasion

Gadgets, Mobile Tech, Digital Audio No Comments »

Such is the ferver and anticipation of the (still as yet unconfirmed by Apple) soon come Apple Flash-memory based audio portable, that impatient Mac addicts have taken it upon themselves to come up with a slew of predictive dummy prototypes of the much rumoured ‘iPod Flash.’

Clockwise L to R, Chinese Flash memory MP3 Portables- the Teclast G602, WeWa WMP-102, Degen 818, MSi MegaPlayer 516 and the TooFar M1199

The best examples of which you’ll find at the independent iPod user site iPod Lounge and Isamu Sanada’s accomplished Japanese Applele Mac fansite . One thing that is certain is that Apple’s ‘inevitable’ arrival into the smaller capacity portable market will undoubtedly have the same effect on the Flash player arena that it did on the hard disk drive player marketplace when the iPod was introduced in late 2001. This will quite possibly have the effect of putting a rocket under the profile of some of the (hundreds) of manufacturers in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan. A report by market research specialists IDC in September predicted that the worldwide market for MP3 players would hit $58 billion by 2008.

The report predicted that the biggest growth in MP3 players should come from portable flash players. The volume of flash players shipped will jump to 50 million units in 2008, up from 12.5 million in 2003. The competitive global MP3 player market is expected to more than double this year to 15.4 million units from last year’s 7.5 million units.

There is estimated to be over 400 MP3 manufacturers in mainland China and 2003 saw up to 4.5 million units shipped, half of which were for export markets . Export figures are projected to reach 6 million by the end of 2004. Recent statistics by the China Center for Information Industry Development show that 1.77 million MP3 players were sold in the country last year, a 235.8 percent growth compared with the previous year. It predicts that for this year, China will have domestic sales of over 4 million players, a projected 200 percent increase. In other studies, Taiwan based AT Chip Corp, a major designer of MP3 chips projects annual shipments of MP3 players in the Chinese mainland will reach 20 million units next year, and 50 million units in 2007.

Another mock up of the rumoured iPod Flash, from Japanese designer Isamu Sanada's impressive online portfolio of Apple concepts

The dramatic growth of the Chinese mainland’s MP3 player market has also been fuelled by the increasing penetration of broadband Internet, which accommodates faster downloads. The average price of an MP3 player fell from 1,100 yuan (US$133) last year to 700 yuan (US$84) in the first half of this year, indicates Beijing-based data tracking firm CCW Research. AT Chip Corp’s Micheal Chang told China Daily that more dramatic price drops are expected, given decreasing costs of chips, which will boost the MP3 player market. AT Chips unveiled a new semiconductor for MP3 players last month that the firm claim is the least expensive chip of its kind in the industry at much less than $5. “When the cost of a chip is lower than US$5, the MP3 player market will undergo snowballing growth,” said Chang.

The possibility of a Flash-based iPod surfaced in October this year, when Thomas Weisel analyst Jason Pfaum claimed, citing “numerous” Asian sources, that Apple will use MP3 chip maker SigmaTel’s controller chip in an upcoming music player.

Related Links

Shenzen Hosts up to 500 MP3 Player Manufacturers [GlobalSources.com]
China to Lead Global MP3 Market Growth [MacWorld UK]
Apple to Sell 22m Flash-iPod Within Two Years - Analyst [Yahoo News]
iPod Share Slips 5% on Strong Flash Sales [Mac Observer]
MP3 Player Market at Full Volume [China Economic Net]
The ABoss iPocket Says, Apple Please Sue Us! [Engadget]
iPod Competitors are Going After a Slice of Apple’s Pie [Seattle Post Intelligencer]
MP3 Player Market Set to Explode [CNetNews]
Korea Loses Out in MP3 Player Market [Korea Times]

iPod, Say Hello To The iPocket

iPod, Gadgets, Mobile Tech, Digital Audio No Comments »

They say that imitation is the highest form of flattery, though we’re not sure if Apple will be so amused when they see the latest digital music portable from Taiwan’s ABoss.
The ABoss iPocket MP3 portable.

ABoss were up to now renown for their entry level priced DVD players but have now jumped into the exploding market for portable MP3 players with the most outrageous iPod rip off so far. The closest copy that we have encountered up to now has been the German Medion MD 95200 pictured here.

The ABoss iPocket is as near as you can get to being a complete copy of Apple’s iPod Mini, even down to the same choice of five colors as the iPod Mini. They sling in the same four-button set-up from the third generation iPod just for good measure. Not many technical details available right now (try as we might no info found on memory capacity) bar for the devices built in memory card slot for removable Memory Sticks, MMC and SD cards and an OLED screen.

Thanks to the wonderful Engadget

BitTorrent Gets Some Competition

Software, File Sharing, Downloads, Music Downloads No Comments »

Everybody who knows a little about P2P file applications will be aware of BitTorrent, the fact that it has long been the most popular P2P measured by the amount of data transferred between users and that it was created three years ago in the Python programming language by Bram Cohen.

More importantly, BitTorrent uses a file sharing system known as ’swarming’ . It works by breaking a file into lots of little packets, distributing those packets around to computers that have downloaded the file, and randomly requesting those packets from whoever has them. Most notably, the system allows many people to download the same file without slowing down everyone else’s download effectively making more efficient useage of bandwidth.

SwarmStream, the latest P2P application to use 'swarming technology'

Though BitTorrent is the P2P app gaining all the column inches in the worldwide press due to recent litigation from the MPAA the first peer-to-peer content delivery system to use the term “Swarming Downloads” was Swarmcast, invented by Justin Chapweske and bought by open source P2P developer OpenCola back in 2001.

Chapweske’s latest project from his Onion Networks outfit, SwarmStream –software algorithms that will let users stream video and audio data more rapidly– was unveiled this week . “If people are impressed by Bittorrent, they’re going to be absolutely blown away by swarmstreaming and how far we’ve taken swarming since its humble beginnings five years ago,” promises the software author.

This third generation swarming technology greatly enhances swarming by allowing streaming or progressive playback of media files. This means that users can watch videos while they are still being downloaded. “Swarming is mathematically provable as the fastest way to download data,” says Chapweske, founder and CEO of Onion Networks. “Whether it’s a web page, a pdf or a video file, computers are now going to be able to stream it.”

“The technology improves swarming by ensuring that the bytes that the user wants next are scheduled to be received next. So if they’re playing back a video file, the bytes from the front of the file will be received first. If the user (or application) skips forward to the middle of the file, the bytes at the middle of the file will be prioritized. Thus, unlike first generation swarming systems like Swarmcast or Bittorrent, you don’t have to wait for the entire file to download to do something useful with it!.”

The technique of downloading a single file in pieces from multiple sources is also used in peer-to-peer systems
derived from Gnutella such as BearShare and LimeWire.

Related Reading

Data Swarms to Speed Net Streaming [NewScientist.com]
Swarmblog [Chapweske.com]
Brian’s BitTorrent FAQ and Guide [Dessent.net]
Has Hollywood Met its Napster? [Wired.com]
P2P Makes its Business Case [InternetNews.com]
Open Cola:Swarming Folders [OpenP2P.com]
OpenCola Creates Collaborative Computing Solutions for Content Communities [EContentMag.com]
Dissecting BitTorrent: Five Months in a Torrent’s Lifetime [Pam2004.org] 12pg PDF

iRiver Take Aim At iPod Mini

Gadgets, Mobile Tech, Digital Audio No Comments »

ReignCom, Korea’s leading digital music device manufacturer, said it will release its first hard-disk model next week in Korea in a direct stab at the popularity of Apple’s iPod . The new iRiver H10 is built around a 5-gigabyte hard disk that is capable of holding more than 1,200 songs (ripped at 128kpbs) and has several features and functions not available on the iPod mini. With colour 1.5-inch LCD, an extra GB of storage, FM radio, voice recording, digital photo album display and a text viewer program viewer that supports more than 40 languages.
New from Korean company Reigncom, the  iRiver H-10 5GB digital music player, due early 2005
The player features a vertical touch-scroll controller and a rechargeable battery that allows 12 hours of playing time and is set to appear in the USA in January. At 363, 000 Won in local money that converts to around $342. It will come in four colors, Neo Silver, Deep Red, Midnight Blue and Slate Grey.

Speaking to the Korea Herald a ReignCom spokesman said : “The release of our hard-disk-type model doesn’t mean that our focus will shift away from our flash-memory-based products. It’s more of a counter against Apple’s rising popularity in the market,” adding that the company is planning to release 20-gigabyte and 40-gigabyte models next year.

More than 90 percent of Korea’s digital-music players use flash memory for storage with some models offering up to a gigabyte of capacity, according to industry analyst groups. However, the world market for hard-disk music players is increasing by 45 percent annually and is expected to over take flash-memory products by the end of 2005. Flash-memory MP3 players accounted for 60 percent of the world market in 2003.

Related Reading

Reigncom Unveils Hard-Disc MP3 Player [Korea Herald]
For iRiver Enthusiasts [MisticRiver.net]
Reigncom Challenges Apple’s iPod [Korea Times]
iRiver H10 is Out ! [DapReview.net]
iRiver May Finally Have an iPod Challenger [AudioGoGo.com]
iRiver H320 [CNet Reviews]

RIAA Fire Another Round Of Lawsuits At File-Sharers

Internet, Music Industry, File Sharing, Music Downloads No Comments »

The Record Industry Association of America unleashed another barrage of lawsuits at file-sharers illegally trading in music using P2P software this afternoon. The 754 new lawsuits were filed in federal district courts across the USA, including 20 alleged file-traders using university computer networks.
RIAA Sue 754 More Music Fans

With the latest round of legal action, the RIAA has now sued more than 7,700 alleged file-traders since September 2003, including more than 3,000 lawsuits since Oct. 1 of this year.

As in previous cases, the new lawsuits were filed against “John Doe” defendants identified only by their numeric Internet protocol addresses. Music company lawyers must obtain the identity of defendants by issuing subpoenas to Internet access providers. Last month the recording industry body issued suits against 761 alleged illegal file sharers.

RIAA President Cary Sherman, said in a statement that: “With legal online retailers still forced to compete against illegal free networks, the playing field remains decidedly unbalanced, That’s why continued enforcement against individuals stealing and distributing music illegally is essential, as is holding accountable the businesses that intentionally promote and profit from this theft.”

Despite increasingly high profile suits from both the RIAA and the film industry association the MPAA, recent studies measuring the effect of the legal action suggest that it has had little or no deterrent in stemming the actions of file sharers using P2P networks.

Latest figures from P2P monitor Big Champagne reveal that in November, the average number of people simultaneously logged on to the P2P file sharing networks at any given moment increased significantly from 6,255,986 in October to 7,452,184. The number of users on P2P networks in the US went up from 4,435,395 in October to 5,445,275 in November.

“While these increases are consistent with the trend we’ve observed in Q4 in previous years, strong growth in the USA in particular has yielded an active (logged-on) P2P user base that’s more than one-third greater than it was in the fourth quarter of last year,” Big Champagne CEO Eric Garland told news site P2PNet earlier this month.

Related Reading

Record Industry Sues 754 for Internet Song Swaps [Reuters.com]
Computer Users Sued for Swopping Music [SiliconValley.com]
Chilling Effects Clearinghouse [ChillingEffects.org]
File Share Top 10 [P2PNet.net]
New Survey Indicates Musicians Split On File Sharing [MusicbizNews24.com]
Big Music P2P Stats Dont Tally [P2PNet.net]
How File Sharing Works [HowStuffWorks.com]
Big Champagne’s Burst Bubble [bIPlog]
New P2P File Sharing Stats [P2PNet.net]

Yahoo And Blinkx Launch New Video Search Options

Internet, Search Engines, Desktop, Video No Comments »

Not one but two new search options for video content on the web were unveiled today only hours apart of each other. First out of the blocks was a “test phase” version of the previously hinted at Yahoo video search. The site went up on Wednesday and competes against pioneers like the AOL owned Singing Fish which was recently upgraded.

Yahoo unveiled their new video search option today

The Yahoo video search service lets users narrow their query results by file formats, such as AVI, MPEG, QuickTime, Windows Media and Real, by size and by duration (less or more than a minute). Users can also choose to filter results based on Internet top-level domains, so only results from .com Web sites would be listed, for example. Users can also choose to filter content unsuitable for minors from the search results.

Yahoo search executive Jeremy Zawodny had more to say on the company weblog. Why video? “The costs of producing video content have been steadily decreasing in recent years. Between the adoption of broadband Internet connections, and easier to use video editing software, it’s no surprise that we’re seeing a lot more video content make its way on to the Internet. And what’s out there today is just the tip of the iceberg.”

He continues to explain: “It’s often not easy for a web crawler to find downloadable and streaming video content. Unlike web images and most audio files, videos aren’t always easy to discover. When we started thinking about how to make it easier for anyone to expose video and other rich media content, one of the first things we thought of was podcasting and RSS. Podcasting uses RSS Enclosures to provide an audio file along with a news item or blog posting in an RSS feed. At the most basic level, this (new search option) is just a matter of pointing to a video instead of an MP3 file.”

Search results show a thumbnail of the video, the name of the file, screen size, length in seconds, and size in MB with 20 results per page by default (though this is customizable from 10-100).

Video search is nothing new, the Yahoo owned Alta Vista and All The Web search engines have offered a video search option for years though the technology has improved. Yahoo are now deploying a method called “Media RSS”.

Media RSS is a new RSS module that supplements the enclosure capabilities of RSS 2.0. Enclosures in RSS are already being used to syndicate audio files (Podcasting) and images. Media RSS extends enclosures to handle other media types, such as short films or TV, in addition to providing additional metadata with the media.

Only hours later Blinkx released the Beta version of Blinkx TV, which allows you to search the web for video and audio clips. Blinkx had previously been known for its downloadable desktop search app which actually beat Google’s similar offering to market in the summer. According to media sources search giant Google is courting broadcasters and cable networks with a new technology that would do for television what it has already done for the Internet: sort through and reveal needles of video clips from within the haystack archives of major network TV shows. Microsoft is also developing a search engine for video.

Blog search engine Blogdigger recently revealed a media search option on their site, enabling users to specify media files in five different classes: audio:, video:, image:, torrent: and text ( a catch all including things like PDF, ZIP or Microsoft Word documents) that Blogdigger indexes from the RSS feeds used on blogs like us here at MBN24. Both Compaq and IBM have been working low key on multimedia search options for a while now too.

Related Reading

Yahoo Launches Video Search, New RSS Format [ResearchBuzz.com]
Blinkx Unveils Video Search Engine [CNet News]
Striking up Digital Video Search [CNet News]
At Yahoo, Signs Point to a Bigger Media Move [CNet News]
Search Meets TV [SearchEngineWatch.com]
TV and Search Merge [BattelleMedia.com]
AOL Revamps SingingFish Audio Video Search [MusicbizNews24.com]
Google Audio Search [Oristus.com]

MP3 Player Demand Booms

iPod, Gadgets, Mobile Tech, Digital Audio No Comments »

Portable MP3 player chip manufacturer SigmaTel, released a consumer survey this week that shows up to 20 percent of Americans (13.5 million according to 2000 U.S. census data) between the ages of 18 and 35 are considering an MP3 player purchase within the next six months. The nationwide survey found that 59 percent of would-be buyers plan to give MP3 players as gifts. The survey was fielded by independent research firm StrategyOne on behalf of SigmaTel.

Hard drive digital music players gain traction. Clockwise from L-R, the Archos AV480, Olympus MR100, custom iPod from Colorwarepc.com, Sony NW-HD3, Samsung YH920 + the pink Toshiba Gigabeat

“In the U.S., the portable MP3 player category has expanded far beyond early adopters. A compelling selection of device form factors, storage capacities, price points and compatible online music services has driven this expansion,” said Susan Kevorkian, senior analyst with IDC. “Younger consumers have been on the cutting edge of this trend, which is only gaining momentum during this holiday season.”

“If consumer intentions are any indication, the MP3 market has moved beyond its infancy stage and is poised for significant growth,” said Ron Edgerton, president and chief executive officer of SigmaTel.

When asked why they would consider buying an MP3 player, 63 percent of would-be buyers cited new music download services and 69 percent cited audio quality. “This survey clearly shows us that consumers have embraced this technology and the wide range of MP3 players available to suit every budget and lifestyle,” noted Edgerton

In another report, “Today’s Handheld Electronics: What do Consumers Think About Current and Future Devices?” released this week by In-Stat/MDR they found that 90% of MP3 player owners are over the aged of 35. 31% of people have downloaded music (mainly over a broadband connection) and there is a 20% increase in those paying to download from last year. 30% of the respondents indicated they were familiar or very familiar with handheld audio/video players.

In a recent survey of buying preferences among U.S. teenagers, analysts at Piper Jaffray found a strong preference for the iPod over competing products. Of the 600 teens surveyed, 16 percent already owned an iPod, and 24 percent planned to get one within the next year. Only 8 percent planned to acquire another brand of music player in that time.

According to a market research study in September from researchers at the NPD Group Apple’s iPod maintained its strong hold on the market with a 87.3% share among hard drive-based players, down from 92.0%, followed by HP in second with its iPod made by Apple at 3.6%. Combining the HP and Apple percentages, Apple controlled 90.9% of the market share. Finishing out the top five of hard drive-based players was Rio with a 2.8% share, Creative in fourth with 2.6% and iRiver at 1.5%.

Related News

Digital Music a Prime Opportunity for Music Industry, But Challenges Remain [NPD Group]
Its All About the iPod [CNet News]
Creative, Apple Battle For MP3 Player Market [Slashdot.org]
The iPod Economy [Forbes.com]
iPod: How Long Will It Reign? [BusinessWeek.com]
iPod Share Slips 5% on Strong Flash Sales, HP Second [MacObserver.com]
MP3 Player Market Set to Explode [CNet News]

MP3 Audio Resources

MP3 Player Buying Guide [CNet Reviews]
MP3 and Digital Music Players [PCMag.com]
Flash Mp3 Players [Gizmopedia.com]
Everything iPod [Everythingipod.com]
HDD MP3 Players [Gizmopedia.com]
Tech Gift Guide [MP3.com]
Portable Audio [Engadget.com]
Audio GoGo [Audiogogo.com]
Digital Audio Player Review [DAPReview.net]

Hollywood Launches BitTorrent Assault

Internet, Copyright, File Sharing No Comments »

Major Hollywood studios, through the US. film trade industry body the MPAA ( a conglomerate of Universal Studios, Disney, Sony Pictures, Warner Bros, MGM, 20th CenturyFox and Paramount ) stepped up their anti piracy action against online distributors of illegally copied feature films today with the announcement that 100 individuals had been targetted in a new international campaign targeting the BitTorrent, Direct Connect and eDonkey file-swapping networks, technologies widely used to trade movies online and designed specifically to speed downloads of very large files.

Latest legal action from the MPAA targets P2P apps like BitTorrent

The MPAA said that people who download copyrighted movie files were not the targets of its latest legal actions. Instead, the group is working with law enforcement agencies in the United States and Europe to target and arrest individuals who provide key roles in the functioning of each type of network. The BitTorrent and eDonkey P2P programs differ from traditional file-sharing programs like Kazaa and Grokster in that they use what has been called a “swarming, scatter and gather” file transfer protocol in which files such as movies and songs aren’t transferred in one piece from one person’s hard drive to another. Rather, small bits of a file are pulled from many user’s hard drives and reassembled by the program on the requester’s computer. The Direct Connect network is widely used across the high speed i2Hub college P2P network in the USA.

“The operators of these servers exercise total control over which files are included on their servers and even determine if some kinds of files aren’t allowed,” said John Malcolm, the MPAA’s Senior Vice President and Director of Worldwide Anti-Piracy Operations.

“For instance, some operators won’t post pornography on their systems, but they have no compunction allowing illegal files of copyrighted movies and TV shows to flow through their servers. We are moving to stop that. The message today is clear: if you illegally trade movies online, we can find you and we will hold you accountable.”

“These kinds of P2P networks rely on servers to index and efficiently deliver files of all kinds. The operators being targeted by these actions have helped online pirates steal hundreds of millions of illegal copies of movies and TV programs.” The MPAA and local rights-holder organizations are also sending cease-and-desist letters
to Internet service providers worldwide that host eDonkey servers and DirectConnect hubs.

According to Net monitoring firm BayTSP, eDonkey recently passed up Kazaa as the most popular file-swapping network in the world, measured by number of users. Other network monitors have said that BitTorrent has long been the most popular measured by the amount of data transferred between users. BitTorrent is distributed freely under an open source license and was created three years ago in the Python programming language by Bram Cohen who came up with the idea while working on an open source content-distribution project called Mojo Nation.

Since September 2003, recording industry lawyers have sued more than 6,100 people suspected of stealing copyrighted music. The film industry held off on suing individual downloaders until last month, when the MPAA announced that the major Hollywood studios would sue about 200 people as the first wave of a legal blitz modeled on the music industry campaign.

Official MPAA press release (PDF)

Related Reading

Studios Step up Fight Against Online Piracy [Washington Post]
MPAA to Serve Lawsuits on BitTorrent Servers [the Register]
Hollywood Fights Illegal Downloads by Targeting Servers [Reuters.com]
MPAA Targets Core BitTorrent, eDonkey Users [ZDNet.com]
Hollywood Wants BitTorrent Dead [Wired.com]
BitTorrent Gives Hollywood a Headache [Newsday.com]
MPAA Eyes Internet2 P2P Traffic [MusicbizNews24.com]
Music Downloads Overtaken by Movies [MusicbizNews24.com]
MPAA Enters P2P Wars; Is BitTorrent In Trouble? [Copyfutures]
How-To: BroadCatching using RSS + BitTorrent to Automatically Download TV Shows [Engadget.com]
File Sharing Thrives Under Radar [Wired.com]
P2P Traffic Analysis [Cachelogic.com]
BitTorrent Accounts for 35% of Traffic [Slashdot.org]
Bram Cohen on BitTorrent [NWFusion.com]
A Comparison with BitTorrent [Konspire2B]
Is BayTSP a Cyber Trespasser? [Freedom-to-Tinker.com]
MPAA:Meet BitTorrent, the File-sharing Network that makes Trading Movies a Breeze [MSN-Slate]

Portable Internet Radio Start-up Lands $10million

Internet, Digital Audio, Downloads No Comments »

AudioFeast, a subscription radio service that offers downloadable radio shows for portable players–the first of its kind, the company said has raised $10 million in funding through venture capital firms Mayfield who led the investment round, and were joined by Worldview Technology Partners and previous company investors.

Audiofeast.com Portable Net Radio Start up Grabs $10 million Funding

AudioFeast said the additional funds will be used to further advance its product and business development opportunities and enhance its sales efforts. AudioFeast is currently compatible with iRiver, Rio, iRock, Creative Labs, Dell and RCA MP3 players and is available via several subscription plans beginning at $2.99. AudioFeast also offers a free service with eight, 60-minute channels of popular music, news sports and entertainment and other programs.

“In deciding to invest in AudioFeast, we were especially impressed with the company’s strategy of being the premier portable Internet radio provider,” said Irwin Gross of Worldview Technology Partners. “There is a tremendous potential for AudioFeast’s service to grow with emerging MP3 market, and Worldview is committed to being part of this growing personalized entertainment space.”

The subscription based web radio service debuted at the DemoMobile conference in September. The service delivers over 400 channels of programming and acts like a sort of TiVO for radio, letting you capture and listen to favorite radio programming at leisure somewhat like Podcasting in essence in that you subscribe to the programmes you want, sync and plug in your compatible portable audio player and then listen while you’re on the move or at your PC.

Related Reading

Audiofeast Raises $10 Million in Funding [DesignTechnica]
Podcasting [Wikipedia.org]
Audiofeast [SlimDevices.com]
AudioFeast: Radio Streams for Digital Portables [MP3Newswire.net]
Almost Retro? It’s Radio for MP3 Players [CNet News]
AudioFeast Launches Internet Radio Service [NewsFactor.com]
Podcasting Directory [Podcasting.net]

More P2P TV On the Way

File Sharing, Downloads, Video No Comments »

A German television development company is planning to launch free viewing on the internet with the help of a revolutionary Web service that aims to give viewers access to any programme they want from almost anywhere in the world. Viewers will need little more than a television connected to a computer. The computer will be set up to upload a chosen television programme on to the internet, where other viewers will be able to download and broadcast it on their own sets almost instantaneously.
Cybersky hope to bring P2P TV to the masses in the new year

Cybersky hopes to do for live television programming what Napster and Kazaa did for music and movies. Television software engineer Guido Ciburski teamed up with Petra Bauersachs, his partner at their small TV technology company in the southern German town of Koblenz and has been developing the service for three years. At the end of January, the company, TC Unterhaltungselektronic, will unveil the service which will, says Ciburski, enable broadband users to distribute video programmes free, and exchange them with others on a platform similar to the peer-to-peer file sharing of Grokster and Kazaa.

Cybersky could shake up the television industry in the same way Kazaa and Grokster shook up the music and film industry. The legal departments of German broadcasters are already monitoring the software’s progress and legal analysts say Cybersky’s potential for trading licensed programming could open up another front line in the court battles that have dogged file-sharing software since the days of Napster.

In an interview with the Independent newspaper in the UK Mr. Ciburski refused to divulge how he developed the technology: “That would be giving away the vital secret,” he said. “All I can say is that without broadband it would have been difficult.” In practice, cyberspace should allow fans of programmes such as The Office to go on holiday in Hawaii and still get the show fed live into their hotel bedside laptop with only a five-to 10-second delay.

Mr Ciburski says he circumvented the overload problems that have affected video-streaming applications by developing software that relies on what is called “peer-to-peer networking” technology. He adds: “Instead of using our own servers to distribute programmes, we will be giving the job to the computers of Cybersky’s subscribers.”

After downloading Cybersky software, users, with the help of a TV card or Webcam, a DSL connection and a connector between their television and computer, will be able to upload the programming they are watching onto a sharing platform. It sounds like a cross between Tivo and BitTorrent and the prospect of anybody with a PC being able to redistribute “The Simpsons” and “Sex in the City” is going to give television executives nightmares, certainly in the light of recent MPAA activity.

Related Reading
P2P Television? [We-Make-Money-Not-Art.com]
Global TV Shakes up Industry [DW-World.de]
Coming to Your Home Soon: Free Television Shows via the Internet [the Independent]
Peoples Television [MSNBC]
CyberSky FAQ [TVToon.de]
P2P Internet Television or Bit Torrent Copycat? [Unmediated.org]
Atzio P2P Television [Atzio.com]
P2P+RSS Are the Future of TV Broadcasting [MasterNewMedia.org]
P2P TV [PortlandPhoenix.com]
Anybody Can Be TV: How P2P Home Video will Challenge The Network News [Planetwork Journal]

Audio Lunchbox Million Track Boost

MP3, Downloads, Music Downloads No Comments »

Edmonds, Washington headquartered digital media company Netmusic.com today announced the acquisition of Los Angeles based independent music distributor and download platform Audio Lunchbox. The combination of both companies catalogs creates the largest online collection of independent music in the world — a licensed catalog of over one million tracks, incorporating 4000 plus labels.
Audiolunchbox catalog up to 1 million with acquisition by Netmusic.com
Downloads from the Audio Lunchbox website are unrestricted by digital rights and geographical limitations making the catalog available worldwide in the popular MP3 format encoded at 192 kbps variable bit rate (VBR) and in the emerging open source compression codec Ogg Vorbis. Vorbis files (which have an .ogg extension) compress to a smaller size than MP3 files and are said to be of better quality though the format has limited support from current portable digital audio players.

“We are thrilled to join forces with Audio Lunchbox,” said NetMusic Entertainment CEO Glen Starchman. “The acquisition of Audio Lunchbox makes NetMusic the largest independent music community on the Internet.”

“We now have the firepower to achieve our vision of bringing great independent bands to the masses,” said Morgan Harris, CEO of Audio Lunchbox. “The deal gives Audio Lunchbox a tremendous boost. The acquisition is a win-win-win for the artists, our users and the Company.”

AudioLunchbox’s nearest rival is industry ‘veteran’ EMusic who have been offering unrestricted downloads since 1998 and boast a catalog of over 500 000 tracks.

Related Links

Indie Only Audio Lunchbox Serves Music With no DRM [MacWorld.com]
the Orchard Independent Distribution [theOrchard.com]
Ogg Vorbis Tutorial [AngryCoffee.com]
About EMusic [EMusic.com]

iPod Flash Player Revealed?

iPod, Gadgets, Digital Audio, Apple No Comments »

We’re not sure where the rumors of a smaller, Flash based memory iPod emerged, though it was quite probably here last month on the Apple Insider website:

Apple Computer in December will begin manufacturing a third variant of its flagship iPod music player, which will be based on solid-state flash memory, AppleInsider has confirmed through well placed and extremely reliable sources.

Isamu Sanada's stunning hiPod Flash player mock up

Unofficial sources predict that the player will be officially revealed at next months MacWorld Expo in San Francisco, come in at under $200 retail and feature a storage capacity in the range of 256 MB to 1 Gig. No official confirmation from Apple itself and although they dominate the market for hard drive based players with something around 90% share, that share drops to 65% when flash models are included in the tally.

Last night MacMind were showing off ‘exclusive’ mock ups from insider information they’d gleamed from a reliable “anonymous tipster” and their site went into meltdown after it got ‘SlashDotted’ this morning. Its said to have no display and set to retail at $99. Anyway, we’re not convinced by the 3D mockups, the player actually looks more like a mouse.

We much prefer the classy looking mock up from Japanese designer and Mac addict Isamu Sanada on his Applele site. Thanks to the Cult of Mac blog for that lead.

Related Links

Rumored iPod Flash Leaked [Slashdot.org]
the Cult of Mac Blog [WiredBlogs]
Apple iPod Flash Said to Ship January [the Register]
Flash Gordon [Daring Fireball]
Bronfman Likes Telcos in iPod Race [theStreet.com]
the iPod Year in Review 2004 [iPodLounge.com]

Napster Most Recognised Download Brand In US.

Internet, File Sharing, Music Downloads No Comments »

New findings from Tempo, research firm Ipsos-Insight’s quarterly study of digital music behaviors reveal that in summer 2004, American downloaders aged 12 and older were equally as likely to be aware of Napster and Apple’s iTunes on a top-of-mind basis (20% each) amongst American fee-based digital music stores. However, when prompted with brand names, more than four out of five (79%) downloaders recognize the Napster brand, while only half (46%) are aware of iTunes.

Ipsos study puts Napster as most recognised download service

“Over the course of the past year, we’ve witnessed the high profile introductions of numerous legitimate online music services. This data indicates that while consumers may be well aware of many of these services,
iTunes and Napster have emerged as top-of-mind brand leaders. It’s particularly interesting to note that Apple’s iTunes MusicStore, although introduced only 18 months ago, demonstrates consumer top-of-mind awareness equal to that of the Napster brand, which was established in the late ’90s.” said Matt Kleinschmit, author of the Tempo research study.

The report goes on to say that those who have downloaded music are most likely to place importance on good sound quality, low prices, a broad music selection, and perceptions of a good value. Less importance is placed on perceptions of a hip or cool site. Brand awareness for the other ‘major players’ in the US. download market, RealPlayer, WalMart, MusicMatch and MTV stores was less than half that of Napster, which although now a well established paid outlet (though trailing in the wake of iTunes in terms of market share) gained notoriety in the late 90s when teenager Shawn Fanning wrote the original mass popularity P2P app, before it was shuttered under a mountain of music industry litigation and brought back to life last year by Roxio after an aborted takeover by BMG.

Related Links

Napster And iTunes Most Recognized Brands…[Ipsos-NA.com]
Apple iTunes Remains Dominant in Paid Digital Music Downloads [NPD.com]
Apple Launches iTunes in Canada [NewsFactor.com]
Lowdown on Downloads: Load up on Pros, Cons of Music Services [Earthlink.net]
Real in Online Music Price War [BBC News]
Downloads Fuel Music Recovery [BBC News]
Rival Targets Apple’s iTune Customers [Forbes.com]
iTunes5 Napster1 1st Week Sales Figures [Mp3Newswire.net]
iTunes is Bogus Napster Sucks Edition [DownhillBattle.org]

New Survey Indicates Musicians Split On File Sharing

Copyright, Music Industry, File Sharing, Digital Audio, Music Downloads No Comments »

Musicians believe the internet is an essential tool to help create and market their work, but at the same time more than half of artists say file sharing of unauthorized copies of music should be illegal, according to a new report. The study titled, “Artists, Musicians and the Internet,” by US. researchers suggests that musicians do not wholeheartedly agree with the tactics adopted by the music industry against file-sharing, artists are divided on the issue but not deeply concerned. 60% said they did not think the lawsuits against song swappers would benefit musicians and songwriters.

Musicians Proposed Solutions to P2P Downloading. Frrom the Pew  Internet Survey,  'Artists, Musicians & the Internet'

In Spring of this year, the not-for-profit Future of Music Coalition and the nonprofit, non-partisan think tank the Pew Internet & American Life Project worked with an array of other musician and songwriter organizations including Just Plain Folks, the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, CD Baby, the Nashville Songwriters Association, Garageband.com, and the American Federation of Musicians. to conduct an online survey to gauge musicians’ opinions of copyright and the internet in general. Over 2700 musicians completed the survey, the results of which were revealed yesterday.

“Even successful artists don’t think the lawsuits will benefit musicians.” “We looked at more of the independent musicians, rather than the rockstars of this industry but that reflects more accurately the state of the music industry,” research specialist and author of the report Mary Madden told the BBC News website.

52% of all artists and 55% of Paid Artists believe it should be illegal for internet users to share unauthorized copies of music and movies over file-sharing networks, compared to 37% of all artists and 35% of Paid Artists who say it should be legal.

Songwriters Eric Lowen & Dan Navarro, who wrote the Pat Benatar hit “We Belong” said free file sharing can have tremendous promotional value, but artists should be able to decide if they want to give away their music. “I want the ability to choose whether it goes out there for free or not,” Navarro told Wired. “When people start taking (the music for free), it takes the control away from us. I don’t think that’s fair.”

Makers of file-sharing software like Kazaa and Grokster may be unnerved to learn that nearly two-thirds said such services should be held responsible for illegal file-swapping; only 15 percent held individual users responsible.

The report continues to say that 87% of the musician respondents say they promote, advertise or display their music online, and 83% provide free samples or previews of their music on the internet. 69% of the respondents say they sell their music online. 63% say that they sell their music online someplace other than their own Web site.

56% sell CDs through online stores like Amazon.com or CDBaby, 28% sell downloadable files through digital stores like iTunes, and 18% sell their music someplace else online.

“Some in the policy community and in media companies have feared that the internet would bring financial Armageddon to musicians and other artists,” said report author Madden, “What we hear from a wide spectrum of artists is that, despite the real challenges of protecting work online, the internet has opened up new ways for them to exercise their imaginations and sell their creations. To many, this feels like a new Digital Renaissance rather than the end of the world.”

For independent musicians, in particular, this newfound ability to bypass traditional distribution outlets and geographic boundaries has been a watershed. One musician explained that having the ability to sell music online was the most significant impact of the internet.

“A huge positive benefit is being able to have my music available for sale to anyone in the world who wants it. Ten years ago there was absolutely no way to sell your CD except through major distribution deals or at your own shows.”

The survey found that musicians were overwhelmingly positive about the internet, rather than seeing it as a threat to their livelihood. Almost all of them used the net for ideas and inspiration, with nine out of 10 going online to promote, advertise and post their music on the web.

The survey is the first large-scale snapshot of what the people who actually produce the music that downloaders seek (and that the industry jealously guards) think about the Internet and file-sharing. The Recording Industry Association of America, the trade group for the major music labels, declined to comment on the study.

Download the 61page PDF. report.
‘Artists, Musicians & the Internet’

Related Reading

Study:Musicians Dig the Net [Wired.com]
Musicians ‘Upbeat’ About the Net [BBC News]
Pew File Sharing Survey Gives a Voice to Artists [NYTimes.com-reg. req.]
How do Musicians Feel About File Sharing? [USAToday.com]

Further Reading

The WIRED CD: Rip. Sample. Mash. Share.[CreativeCommons.org]
File-Sharing Getting Bad Rap? [Rolling Stone] April 2004
Download This! Chuck D Interview [CBCNews.ca] March 2004
Grey Album Fans Protest Clampdown [Wired.com]
Killing the Music [CommonDreams.org] Feb. 2004
An Eagle Almost Gets it [A Networked World blog]
Musicians United for Strong Internet Copyright [MusicUnited.net]
RIAA Radar [Magnetbox.com]
Downhill Battle-Music Activism
[DownhillBattle.org]
Feeding the Mouth that Bites [ChrisVreeland.com]
Let the Music Play [EFF.org]
Recording Industry Association of America [Wikipedia.org]
Model & History of File Sharing [InfoAnarchy.org]
Tracking the Downloading Revolution [BigChampagne.com] PDF
Privacy & Piracy: The Paradox of Illegal File Sharing on Peer-to-Peer Networks and the Impact of Technology on the Entertainment Industry [US.Senate Study] 169pg PDF
Rappers in Disharmony on P2P [Wired.com] Oct. 2003
Changing Industry:Moby [Moby.com] Sept. 2003
Moby on File Sharing [Moby.com] Aug. 2003
the Internet Debacle-An Alternative View [JanisIan.com] May 2002
Lars Ulrich’s Death Wish: Metallica v their Fans [Disinfo.com] Oct 2000
Chuck D: Gotta Share the Tunes [Wired.com] Oct 1999
Downloading the Future. The MP3 Revolution & the End of the Industry as We Know It [LAWeekly] March 1999
Negativland and the RIAA
[Negativland.com] 1998

KazaaGate Copyright Trial Trundles On

MP3, File Sharing, Music Downloads No Comments »

The expected three week long trial of Kazaa continued in Sydney, Australia with the music industry seemingly holding the upper hand by the end of the week. Major record labels, Universal Music Australia, EMI, Sony/BMG, Warner, Festival Mushroom and 25 additional applicants are suing Sharman Networks and associated parties–including Altnet, which delivers so-called “piggyback” technology with Kazaa, Altnet associated Brilliant Digital Entertainment, Sharman CEO Nikki Hemming and Altnet chief executive officer Kevin Bermeister and two technology directors–over alleged music copyright infringement made using the Kazaa software.

Kazaa's Copyright Trial Update

The labels hope to stop illegal P2P file sharing and to recover compensation for past infringements, says Michael Speck, general manager of the Music Industry Piracy Investigations unit of the Australian Record Industry Association.

The best coverage of the trial has come from Garth Montgomery’s lighthearted daily blog at Australia Personal Computer Mag where complete transcripts of the days proceeding are made available as PDF downloads as well as the writers rants and what he calls “anti-journalism’ pokes at applicants and respondants alike. He also deserves the credit for coining the term Kazaagate .

Music industry attorney Tony Bannon told Australian Justice Murray Wilcox that ownership of Sharman, which has been kept secret through its registration on the tax haven island of Vanuatu, is in fact controlled by Kevin Bermeister, CEO of Kazaa partner Altnet. Bannon said there is “ready inference that Kevin Bermeister is in fact the ultimate controller of Sharman,” ZDNet reported.

The music industry presented a number of key witnesses in effort to prove that Kazaa could indeed filter out copyrighted material despite denials to the contrary. Nigel Carson, a computer forensics investigator from KPMG, testified that it is possible to locate the physical computer and user of the machine by tracing the IP address. Carson said that if a company like Sharman Networks wants to trace a specific user who shared unlicensed music files, it would need to store the date and time that the transaction was done.

More potentially damning was the evidence given by Tom Mizzone, vice president of data services at New York-based MediaSentry who had been hired by the RIAA in March 2003 to search Kazaa for users located in Australia and download evidence they were swapping copyrighted material. Up to 600 scanners were turned to the task, and the internet addresses of the users recorded and checked against a database of internet service providers in Australia.

The court also heard that the major record labels were engaged in a program of actively disrupting the file-sharing network by bombarding it with billions of decoys and spoofs that pose as song files. The success of the spoof war meant as few as 7 per cent of a given artist’s tracks found on the network were usable, according to record industry memos.

Mizzone said that MediaSentry is also able to detect the copyright-infringing music files made available for download in the Kazaa system’s shared folders. He told the court that his company is doing what any ordinary user of the Kazaa system is able to do. Aside from detecting files, he said, they can also communicate with the users via the applications built in instant messaging.

Kazaa’a main defence inevitably seemed to rest on the previous legal precedent set in the 1980s. The much used Sony Corp. vs. Universal City Studios ‘Betamax case’ ruling in 1984 which said electronics giant Sony wasn’t liable when people used its Betamax videocassette recorder to copy movies illegally because the technology had significant uses that did not violate copyrights.

Federal Court Justice Murray Wilcox dumped 12 of the 14 of the respondents’ affidavits for the civil trial, saying they were not relevant to the case about copyright infringement. The rejected affidavits contained details of how Kazaa could be used to exchange legitimate materials. Wilcox said he agreed that Kazaa could be used for the sharing of licensed materials and that court time should not be wasted discussing the issue.

Judge Wilcox set aside Sharmans objections on Friday against more potentially damaging alegations in an affidavit containing a report from Dr. George Barker, director of the Australian National University’s Center for Law and Economics, Intellectual Property and Copyright.

According to the report, the Kazaa system is a “marketplace” that brings together people who have copyrighted works and people who want to make unauthorized copies of those works. The report adds that Kazaa “designs the rules, facilitates the ‘market’ for exchange of copyright works, and enforces or has the capacity to enforce the rules of that market.”

US. technical experts were due in Sydney over the weekend to debate whether its song files could be filtered to restrict the illegal flow of music on Kazaa’s “peer-to-peer” network on the Internet, the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper said on Saturday. The trial continues on Tuesday.

Further Coverage

Daily Despatch-KazaaGate [APCMag.com]
ZDNet Australia:Hot Topic, Sharman [ZDNet.com.au]
Report Asserts Kazaa Makes the Rules [CNet News]
Sharman Counter Attacks [MacWorld.co.uk]
US. Experts to Examine Filtering Web Songs [SignOnSanDiego.com]
Trial to Unmask Kazaa Owners [Wired.com]
Kazaa Faces Allegations in Copyright Trial [NewsFactor.com]
Witness Assaults Kazaa Filter Claims [CNet Asia]

Related Reading

Appeals Court Holds Grokster Not Liable [PCWorld Australia] August 2004
Digital Piracy - Definitive P2P Piracy Figures for Year 2003 [ITIC.ca]
RIAA, MPAA Appeal Against ‘Grokster is Legal’ Ruling [the Register] August 2003
Judge:File Swopping Tools Are Legal [CNet News] April 2003
File Swapper Eluding Pursuers [Washington Post] Dec 2002
Napster vs. the Music Industry [HK-Lawyer.com] June 2001
RIAA v. Diamond Multimedia Systems Inc. [Gigalaw.com] June 1999
RIAA, Diamond Sweep Away Suit [Wired.com]
Enforcement Bots-Who Does the Dirty Work? [No-ip.org]
CBS Songs Ltd. v. Amstrad Consumer Electronics 1988 [Xenoclast.org]

Napster Guru Fanning Breaks Snocap Silence

Music Industry, File Sharing, Digital Audio, Downloads, Music Downloads No Comments »

After months of quiet background development and some (mainly) unsubstantiated stories more recently, ex-Napster founder and P2P poster boy Shawn Fanning finally broke the veil of silent mystery surrounding his new P2P start-up Snocap today with the official launch of the company with a press release and the unveiling of the company website which filled in some of the blanks about their proposed plans for the much talked about new venture.

Snocap officially announced their launch today and deal with Universal Music

Fanning and major record labels are hoping t