Thursday, January 31, 2008

Intellectual Property: The Current State of Digital Rights Management

The following are six articles from ars technica on the current state of digital rights management:

"Oops: MPAA admits college piracy numbers grossly inflated"

Yes, college students need to rein in the file-sharing. We get it. Artists need to eat. But while the MPAA has been busy lecturing universities about the way they run their IT operations, perhaps the universities have something to say to the motion picture business about how it buys and releases its research. Back to school, MPAA.

"A brave new world: the music biz at the dawn of 2008"
So, in conclusion:
  • Indies gaining market share
  • Digital downloads up 45 percent in one year
  • Well-known artists going indie
  • DRM-free downloads from all major labels
  • Major label revenues declining
  • CD sales in a death spiral

Those don't suggest that the music business is dying so much as changing, and the center of gravity is shifting to individual artists and to smaller, more focused operations. There will always be a role for what are still called the "major labels"; who would put out all those American Idol and Hannah Montana albums, for instance?


"Why Last.fm's free music won't replace your music collection"
Can music companies compete against "free"? Sure they can; it's an issue I addressed in yesterday's feature on the changing nature of the music business, and confirmation came today from the oldest of old-guard sources, CBS. The company, which owns Last.fm, announced today that Last.fm will now offer on-demand streaming of millions of tracks from all four major labels and a huge host of indies. For free.

"Long-time DRM foe Yahoo Music planning DRM-free MP3 store"
When it comes to opening new online music stores, DRM-free is the name of the game. Now that all of the Big Four music labels have either completely dropped or are in the process of dropping copy protection requirements from their music, online retailers are rushing to sell the newly-freed songs faster than a Mac user gravitates to an iPhone. Although Amazon has now made a name for itself as the first (and currently, the only) MP3 store to offer DRM-free tracks from all of the Big Four labels, Yahoo now plans to throw its hat into the ring later this year.

"P2P defendant: RIAA identified an IP address, not a person"
Of course, once it is in possession of an IP address, the RIAA files a John Doe lawsuit and then obtains an ex parte subpoena to discover the name and address of the person who was assigned that IP address. (And sometimes, that person played no role whatsoever in the alleged infringement.) But the complaints used by the RIAA don't reflect that. The RIAA's investigators didn't identify an individual in Atlantic v. Njuguna, as the complaint says, merely the IP address of a piece of Internet-facing hardware like a cable or DSL modem. They may also be able to get the IP address of the device directly connected to the hardware, which could be a PC, laptop, wireless router, or something else. Either way, it's not an individual, and the RIAA's lack of precision in its complaints is troubling.

"IFPI fantasy: 2008 the year ISP filtering "becomes reality""

In fact, the IFPI's own numbers show that in the US, for instance, 17.6 percent of all Internet users regularly share files. If 30 percent of those users buy less music, that means that file-swapping only leads 5.9 percent of all US Internet users to buy less music. The number is even lower if we take the US population as a whole.

Forgive us if we're skeptical here, but implementing a draconian solution like deep packet inspection of all Internet traffic in order to get a few percent of the population to buy more music doesn't sound much like progress, or even rationality.


Top Five Sites of the Week for 1/28/08

  1. Kayak - A travel search engine started by "founders of Orbitz, Travelocity and Expedia who believed in a better online travel experience". The founders definitely give the site a world of credibility. For more on Kayak, read this page from their site.

  2. Garlik - A company specializing in internet security, they offer a service called DataPatrol, which is an online identity protection service, and, additionally, they offer free advice relating to internet security.

  3. 23andMe - A modern genetics company that will analzye your DNA and "discover your genome". Find out about your ancestors, family inheritance, and much more. Find out how the process works on this page from their website. Also, see Wired's take on the new, revolutionary genetics service.

  4. Snap - A company that targets blogs and websitesEssentially, by putting your cursor over a link, Snap lets you visually preview the target of the link, whether it is a video, website, or etc.This is too complex of an idea to explain in one or two sentences. So, to fully comprehend the idea, try it out and read more about it at Snap's FAQ section:
    Snap Shots makes it easier for site owners to empower their readers with enhanced hyperlinks that display previews, text summaries, videos, stock charts, MP3s, product info, and much, much more. Just roll your cursor over this link to see how it works."

  5. Deyey - A company that lets people create and design business cards for free. They also have an online application for file management. Their goal is to help small businesses. More on them as quoted from their website:
    Deyey.com aims to help small company and individuals to save their cost to run and promote a business. We provide two FREE online applications now. One is for designing a Name Card, another one is for File Mangament. Besides, our web platforms can share your name cards and files with other people. It lets more people in the world to know more about you and your business. We know that they are not enough to help in your businesses, so it is just our starting point. We have plenty of ideas want to do and we will try our best to get it done!

The Next Web 2.0 Phenomenon: Tumblr

If anybody has a chance to be the next big sensation in Web 2.0, Tumblr has a chance. What is Tumblr, you may ask? I'll let Tumblr tell you, per Tumblr's website:

To make a simple analogy: If blogs are journals, tumblelogs are scrapbooks.

You can also look at tumblelogs as slightly more structured blogs that make it easier, faster, and more fun to post and share stuff you find or create.
This is the response Tumblr has in their FAQ section in response to the question "What is a tumblelog?". For more on Tumblr, check out the page on their site called "Why you'll love Tumblr".

If you still want to know more about Tumblr, you're in luck. Here are four articles about Tumblr, in chronological order, that will fill all your curiosities:

October 26, 2007 from Silicon Alley Insider
"Tumblr's Million Dollar Man"

November 1, 2007 from Mashable
"A First Look at Tumblr 3.0"

January 15, 2008 from The New York Observer
"Would You Take a Tumblr With This Man?"

January 30, 2008 from Silicon Alley Insider
"Tumblr Growing: 180K Users, 720K Daily Pageviews"