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Wired February 2003 Todd Woody |
The Race to Kill Kazaa The servers are in Denmark. The software is in Estonia. The domain is registered Down Under, the corporation on a tiny island in the Pacific. The 60 million users are everywhere around the world. The next Napster? Think bigger. And pity the poor copyright cops trying to pull the plug. |
PC World April 4, 2002 George A. Chidi Jr. |
Kazaa Download Offers Unexpected Feature Users may be surprised to learn that application includes software that turns your PC into part of a distributed supercomputer... |
InternetNews September 6, 2005 Roy Mark |
Kazaa to Continue Court Fight Down Under The peer to peer file-swapping service Kazaa loses a major round in legality of business model in Australia. |
Salon.com August 2, 2001 Damien Cave |
The parasite economy There's a new software business model in town -- symbiotic plug-ins that pay for the privilege of piggybacking on the hot download of the moment... |
InternetNews July 27, 2006 Roy Mark |
Kazaa Settles Up Kazaa agreed to pay a reported $100 million to the trade organizations representing the international music industry. |
Entrepreneur September 2002 Mike Hogan |
Wreck-Ware P2P exposes you to attack from hackers looking to filch files. Here's how to avoid a swap-and-run. |
PC World July 2002 Kevin McKean |
Who Really Controls Your PC? Increasingly, a phantom army of marketers, hackers, and virus writers does... |
InternetNews March 28, 2006 Ed Sutherland |
Skype, Kazaa Named in $4B Lawsuit StreamCast Networks, maker of the Morpheus file-swapping software, filed charges against the founders of Skype and developers of Kazaa, alleging the defendants engaged in numerous violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act. |
Salon.com April 26, 2002 Chris Wenham |
A law to protect spyware Sen. Fritz Hollings is pushing a bill that supposedly safeguards online privacy -- but actually gives intrusive marketers a green light... |
PC World October 3, 2001 Scarlet Pruitt |
File-Sharing Services Sued RIAA and the MPAA file suit to stop file-sharing services like KaZaA and Morpheus that popped up on the Internet after Napster's demise... |
InternetNews February 18, 2004 Susan Kuchinskas |
Microsoft's Do Not Open Letter The world's largest software company moves to defend its copyright on leaked Windows code. |
New Architect June 2002 Lincoln D. Stein |
The Morpheus Incident How corporate squabbles could stifle the Web... |
The Motley Fool December 23, 2003 Dave Marino-Nachison |
Hoping "Swap" Doesn't Flop File-swapping services must fight to stay relevant as electronic media distribution gains legitimacy. |
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. |
CIO March 1, 2004 Julie Hanson |
Wall of No Sound - Reality Bytes The recording industry is trying to stop people from listening to, talking about and sharing music. Yeah. That makes a lot of sense. |
PC Magazine February 25, 2004 Cade Metz |
Havoc From MyDoom A fast-spreading computer virus teaches lessons. |
BusinessWeek October 6, 2003 Ewing & Green |
Global Downloading, Local Lawsuits Hauling U.S. file-sharers to court won't stop the flow of free tunes from overseas. |
PC Magazine March 2, 2004 Sebastian Rupley |
P2P Problems Peer-to-peer (P2P) file-sharing networks are having more problems than just dramatic declines in download numbers. |
PC World January 3, 2002 Joris Evers |
Peer-to-Peer Apps Shared Trojan Horse Popular file-swapping programs installed spyware software even if users opted out, companies admit... |
BusinessWeek November 1, 2004 |
Skype Is "What Evolution Is All About" Niklas Zennstrom, co-founder of the VoIP company, explains the technology behind peer-to-peer networks and their market implications. |