Similar Articles |
|
Salon.com October 3, 2000 Janelle Brown |
Is the SDMI boycott backfiring? Programmers don't want to help the recording industry test its new security "solution." But the technology insiders behind the system say hackers could kill it once and for all by participating... |
Salon.com November 2, 2000 Eric Boehlert |
In defense of (Napster) collusion Music consumers will benefit if Bertelsmann can convince the major record labels to conspire. |
Salon.com June 1, 2001 Janelle Brown |
The music revolution will not be digitized The dust is clearing from the online entertainment wars. Who won? The record labels. Who lost? Consumers... |
Salon.com October 31, 2000 Damien Cave & Janelle Brown |
Napster finally cuts a deal It's either a sellout or a savvy survival move: The beleaguered music trading service is getting into bed with Bertelsmann.... |
Salon.com May 17, 2002 Janelle Brown |
Napster's wake The company that launched a thousand rips may be dead, but the movement it launched continues to thrive -- and to make a mockery of the music industry's pathetic online offerings. |
Salon.com July 31, 2000 Damien Cave |
Watermarks in music? Talal Shamoon, a key technologist for the Secure Digital Music Initiative, says that he's found the key to protecting copyrighted tunes. |
PC World February 16, 2001 Cameron Crouch |
Will Subscription Service Kill Napster? After its courtroom loss, Napster announces a membership service that limits sharing. |
Salon.com July 30, 2002 Farhad Manjoo |
Sour notes The legal crackdown hasn't squelched MP3 trading -- it's just made it more of a pain. But the music industry would still rather fight than give its online customers what they want. |
PC World November 2000 Scott Spanbauer |
That's (Digital) Entertainment! Digital movies, books, and music are coming direct to your home by way of your PC. Soon, always-on entertainment will be just a mouse-click away... |
Salon.com February 21, 2001 Janelle Brown |
Napster: Let's make a deal! Is the music-trading service increasingly desperate, or crazy like a fox? |
Macworld August 2000 Christopher Breen |
Steal This Song Will Napster Change The Way we Buy--or--Don't Buy Music Forever? |
PC Magazine October 29, 2003 |
Online Music Stores: Music to Your Ears? As Apple iTunes Music Store for the Mac showed, users wanted to download as much or as little as they liked and pay only for what they bought. Now that the winning formula has been hit upon, it's rapidly being improved. |
Knowledge@Wharton July 2, 2003 |
Online Music Wings its Way to the Celestial Jukebox In a celestial jukebox, instead of downloading songs to a computer hard drive or burning them onto a CD, listeners log onto a site that streams the music directly to their computers for immediate listening. It's like having your own all-request FM channel. |
Salon.com June 6, 2001 Charles C. Mann |
Napster's long haul The legally hounded music-sharing service has struck a deal with the record labels, but the "celestial jukebox" is still a long way off... |
Salon.com December 18, 2001 Paul Boutin |
Don't steal music, pretty please Record companies will make big, big money online. They just need to learn to let go... |
PC World November 5, 2001 Tom Spring |
Music Labels Target CD Ripping Claiming to fight piracy, labels test copy protection to keep audio CDs from going digital... |
BusinessWeek March 29, 2004 Larry Armstrong |
E-Tune Shopping With downloading now legit, online music stores have similar catalogs. It's the extras that set them apart. |
Salon.com September 14, 2000 Janelle Brown |
Crack SDMI? No thanks! Hackers turn up their noses at a "challenge" proposed by the recording and electronics industries. |
Salon.com July 17, 2000 Janelle Brown |
A Napster lawsuit laid to rest Rob Reid shelved Listen.com's legal action, but he says it'll take an act of Congress to resolve the digital music tug of war. |
New Architect March 2002 Margaret Berry |
What I Want Developing user-friendly DRM... |
Salon.com July 27, 2000 Scott Rosenberg |
Why the music industry has nothing to celebrate Napster's shutdown will only cause a thousand alternatives to bloom. |
Reason October 2000 Jesse Walker |
Music for Nothing Why Napster isn't the end of the world. Or even the music industry... |
Salon.com February 9, 2001 Janelle Brown |
The Napster parasites Online marketers are snooping around in your hard drive, taking notes on every MP3 file you download... |
PC World February 20, 2001 Martyn Williams |
Napster Apparently Angling to Settle Embattled music-sharing site, preparing to change its ways, offers $1 billion to record companies... |
Entrepreneur December 2002 Geoff Williams |
Now You Hear It Now that Napster's gone, we're left wondering how Listen.com not only survives but thrives. |
PC World January 2002 Frank Thorsberg & Tom Spring |
New Shackles on Your CD, Video Copying In an effort to stem piracy, entertainment companies are placing new copy restrictions into their products... |
PC World March 2002 Kevin McKean |
Up Front: Why Your CD-RW May Be Obsolete Restrictive new copyright protections could lock you out of your own music CDs... |
Salon.com March 27, 2001 Janelle Brown |
Who is spying on your downloads? The recording industry would love to keep tabs on every Napster trader or Gnutella user, but even the sneakiest software won't stop music piracy... |
Salon.com October 12, 2000 Janelle Brown |
SDMI cracked! Hackers break the recording industry's vaunted music protection system... |
Knowledge@Wharton |
Which Online Music Service Will Have the Longest Playing Time? Since May 2003, when Apple's online music service, iTunes, opened its digital doors, the drums announcing other online music services -- new enterprises as well as existing music services spruced up and recharged -- have been steadily beating. Which ones will have longevity? |
Salon.com June 14, 2000 Janelle Brown |
RIAA tries to shut down Napster By moving for an injunction against the file-swapping service, the recording industry shows just how little it gets the Net. |
PC Magazine February 25, 2004 John C. Dvorak |
Ode to Napster, Music's Last Hope Protection schemes, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, and lawsuits against file sharers are not going to save the music business. The Recording Industry Association of America is announcing another 532 John Doe lawsuits against peer-to-peer file sharers. |
PC World March 2005 Eric Hellweg |
Music Unlimited Subscription services give you legal access to the largest digital music collections through the Internet. And new options are making them more tempting. |
Salon.com August 1, 2000 Eric Boehlert |
The great MP3 love fest Has the press given Napster a free ride? |
Salon.com November 8, 2000 Janelle Brown |
SDMI: We're not hacked yet An industry group says its watermarking scheme for digital music has withstood the assault... |
Salon.com February 12, 2001 |
Victory or defeat? Did the record industry's court triumph insure a future full of profits -- or seal its doom? Experts weigh in... |
Home Theater August 17, 2007 |
Sympathy for the Devil: 10 Questions for the RIAA Cary Sherman, President of the Recording Industry Association of America answers questions about peer-to-peer file sharing and more. |
PC Magazine November 11, 2003 Cade Metz |
Let the Music Play We review all the tools you need to satisfy your digital music urges. |
The Motley Fool February 11, 2005 Kelvin Taylor |
Napster Nips at iTunes' Heels The music download service plans to battle Apple with an unlimited-tune subscription deal. |
Salon.com August 7, 2000 Eric Boehlert |
Napster vs. the record stores Is the file-sharing craze bruising retailers? |
The Motley Fool June 8, 2006 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Digital Music's Dirty Little Secret When will the labels embrace the inevitable? Digital music, in both legal and illegal forms, has stimulated consumers' music-listening appetites. Digital music means fewer CDs to press, package, and ship out to retailers. |
Salon.com September 14, 2000 Janelle Brown |
Revenge of the Pumpkins Beware, record labels -- treat your bands better, or you'll get Napstered. |
Wired February 2003 Charles C. Mann |
The Year The Music Dies Record labels are under attack from all sides -- file sharers and performers, even equipment manufacturers and good old-fashioned customers -- and it's killing them. A moment of silence, please. |
Popular Mechanics September 5, 2007 Glenn Derene |
The iTunes Store... With Subscriptions? Buzzword As Steve Jobs unveiled the new Apple iPod Touch and iTunes Wi-Fi Music Store, we wonder what it would take for a DRM-free, flat-rate music store to go from record-label nightmare to user-friendly dream come true? |
Salon.com July 20, 2001 Scott Rosenberg |
Revenge of the file-sharing masses! By smashing Napster, the music industry has pushed its customers to seek alternatives that won't be so easy to shut down... |
The Motley Fool June 21, 2005 Alyce Lomax |
Play It, Don't Burn It, Sam The controversy over music and copyright continue with word of a new copyright protection technology that severely limits what CD buyers can do with their music. Is the record industry going too far, and hurting its prospects in the process? |
PC World April 11, 2002 Tom Spring |
Face the Music: Suits Pending Over Copy Controls Class action suits may spring from consumer complaints of surreptitious CD copy protection... |
Salon.com December 19, 2001 Eric Boehlert |
Music industry in the pits! Record sales are down, no one's seeing concerts, no one's advertising on radio and the stars are revolting... |
Salon.com August 22, 2000 Damien Cave |
Why Scour is not the new Napster Dan Rodrigues defends his multimedia search engine, even as it faces a nasty lawsuit. |
Salon.com July 21, 2000 Kaitlin Quistgaard |
With friends like these ... Napster redux: Another online media-swapper gets sued by the entertainment industry, even as it is taking meetings with Hollywood giants. |