-------- Original Message -------- Subject: Entertainment industry doesn't like new privacy-friendly p2p program Grouper Date: Tue, 12 Apr 2005 10:31:04 -0700 From: Joseph Lorenzo Hall <joehall@private> Reply-To: joehall@private To: Dave Farber <dave@private>, Declan McCullagh <declan@private> Grouper allows groups of 30 or less to share files over an encrypted p2p "network"... and that's too much for the entertainment industry. -Joe ---- http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-grouper12apr12,0,1076225.story Testing Copyright Limits Grouper's creators say it's not like other file-sharing programs. The entertainment industry isn't so sure. By Jon Healey Times Staff Writer April 12, 2005 Jennifer Urban, a law professor at USC, wanted to watch home movies of her 7-month-old nephew Peter in England, but nothing seemed to work. The videotapes and DVDs were in the wrong format, and the digital movie files were too big to e-mail. Then Urban hit on a software program called Grouper. And in addition to movies of her nephew, Grouper offers Urban, who specializes in copyright law, insight into how technology is testing the boundaries of copyright in a digital age. Like Kazaa and other popular file-sharing programs, Grouper allows Urban to copy movies and pictures of young Peter directly from her brother and sister-in-law's computer without worrying about formats or oversized e-mail attachments. Unlike those global networks with millions of users, though, Grouper also lets Urban pick and choose with whom she shares online — and sets a strict limit of 30 people per group. "I'm very attracted to the privacy afforded by having a private group protected by encryption, particularly for sharing letters, family photos, movies, etc.," Urban said. "This isn't the case with other peer-to-peer networks." What makes Grouper troubling to some entertainment industry executives are the other things people can do with it. For example, the program lets people copy bootlegged Hollywood movies and listen to songs on one another's computers, all without paying a dime to the studios, artists or songwriters. Grouper Network Inc.'s founders, Josh Felser and Dave Samuel, say the built-in limits of their peer-to-peer software make it a poor substitute for more controversial file-sharing programs such as Kazaa and Grokster, which are hotbeds for piracy. In addition to limiting the size and accessibility of groups, they say, their program requires songs to be streamed — that is, played through the Internet — not downloaded. Those limits may not add up to a legal service, argues Nicolas Firth, chairman of BMG Music Publishing Worldwide. [...] (In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.) -- Joseph Lorenzo Hall UC Berkeley, SIMS PhD Student <http://pobox.com/~joehall/> blog: <http://pobox.com/~joehall/nqb2/> This email is written in [markdown][]; an easily-readable and parseable text format. [markdown]: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/ _______________________________________________ Politech mailing list Archived at http://www.politechbot.com/ Moderated by Declan McCullagh (http://www.mccullagh.org/)
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.3 : Wed Apr 13 2005 - 02:39:44 PDT