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Sunday, May 4, 2003

The Record Industry Gets Aggressive

The record companies are exploring some rather questionable means to stop music downloads:

New York Times: Software Bullet Is Sought to Kill Musical Piracy

The record companies are exploring options on new countermeasures, which some experts say have varying degrees of legality, to deter online theft: from attacking personal Internet connections so as to slow or halt downloads of pirated music to overwhelming the distribution networks with potentially malicious programs that masquerade as music files.

The covert campaign, parts of which may never be carried out because they could be illegal under state and federal wiretap laws, is being developed and tested by a cadre of small technology companies, the executives said. [...]

Among the more benign approaches being developed is one program, considered a Trojan horse rather than a virus, that simply redirects users to Web sites where they can legitimately buy the song they tried to download.

A more malicious program, dubbed "freeze," locks up a computer system for a certain duration — minutes or possibly even hours — risking the loss of data that was unsaved if the computer is restarted. It also displays a warning about downloading pirated music. Another program under development, called "silence," scans a computer's hard drive for pirated music files and attempts to delete them. One of the executives briefed on the silence program said that it did not work properly and was being reworked because it was deleting legitimate music files, too.

Other approaches that are being tested include launching an attack on personal Internet connections, often called "interdiction," to prevent a person from using a network while attempting to download pirated music or offer it to others. [...]

"Some of this stuff is going to be illegal," said Lawrence Lessig, a professor at Stanford Law School who specializes in Internet copyright issues. "It depends on if they are doing a sufficient amount of damage. The law has ways to deal with copyright infringement. Freezing people's computers is not within the scope of the copyright laws."

Okay, I know I said this before, but I'm going to say it again -- if only the record companies would put all this effort into innovating and embracing music downloads instead of coming up with all these invasive schemes to stop downloads. Most of these approaches will never be used because they are just plain illegal. And any that are used are only going to make the consumer even angrier.

Incidentally, I've been reading a lot of good things about Apple's new music download store. Now, if they'd just let us PC users in on the fun...




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