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IFPI annual report praises label for being forced to ditch DRM
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The following comments relate to this news article:

IFPI annual report praises labels for being forced to ditch DRM

article published on 24 January, 2008

According to the IFPI's annual report on the music industry, released today, it was innovative labels, rather than frustrated consumers or knowledgable online store management who came up with the DRM-free music model that's taking over online music sales. It's an apparent bid to rewrite history, in which they were actually dragged kicking and screaming into the DRM-free marketplace. In ... [ read the full article ]

Please read the original article before posting your comments.
Posted Message
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25. January 2008 @ 00:04 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
As I read this article I happened to look over and see my dog chasing his tail.....
My ribs now hurt too much to continue typing!
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maryjayne
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25. January 2008 @ 08:22 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
My dog eventually learned if you sit down after spinning a few times, then you can actually catch your tail. Now I get my kicks from watching the carpet butt drag scratch. Sometimes I join him with a good scratch :-)

Back to the article:
DRM sux.
Apple sux.
ISPs forced into babysitting their customers will drop their customer base and cause more private ISPs to emerge.
The US has a business model of let another company develop the ideas that you want and then when they start to become successful then buy them out. Less work than trying to develop the concepts yourself!
nobrainer
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25. January 2008 @ 12:14 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
And the record industry rhetoric continues as per usual!

RE: forcing internet isp's to monitor for copywrited material.
this will last for about 30 seconds until all bittorrent clients use encryption, failing the you could always use an encrypted tunnel or a vpn and it even stops all that crappy traffic shaping!

Optimize BitTorrent To Outwit Traffic Shaping ISPs

Originally posted by hyperlink:
How To Encrypt to Your BitTorrent Transfers:
The RC4 encryption offered by many popular BitTorrent clients today will obfuscate not only the header but the entire stream, which makes it considerably more difficult for an ISP to detect that you're using BitTorrent. Even if your ISP does not force you to enable encryption, you may be connecting to peers with ISPs that do.

Encryption began appearing on clients in late 2005. By the end of 2006, most actively-developed clients were updated with encryption. While not all torrent clients in a swarm will support encryption, most of them will. As a result, this small percentage of non-encryption capable peers may be a reason not to force encryption on a full-time basis, but there is no reason not to enable encryption that allows the falling back to a non-encrypted connection when needed.

If your favorite client is not listed below, check your documentation.


How To Hide BitTorrent within an Encrypted Tunnel:

With the advent of Application-Layer Inspection, some ISPs may recognize and control BitTorrent traffic despite your best efforts.

You may be able to hide the BitTorrent traffic in an encrypted tunnel -- a transport path within the normal transport paths provided by TCP and IP. You can tunnel your traffic through cooperatives such as The Onion Router (TOR)* or I2P. Commercial Virtual Private Network (VPN) providers such as Relakks or SecureIX will also help keep your ISP from detecting exactly what you're doing. If you are familiar with SSH and SSH Tunneling, this is also a possibility. However, some ISPs even throttle or inhibit these encrypted tunnels.

Azureus provides in-client support for TOR and I2P. Other clients will have to set up the software as recommend on the TOR or I2P site.

*Note: TOR has been updated to allow peer-to-peer download data, despite any information to the contrary (it used to be prohibited).


and how easy is it to set up uTorrent tunnel you ask? well its this easy!




http://wiki.noreply.org/noreply/TheOnion...OWTO/BitTorrent


banned4Lf
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25. January 2008 @ 12:34 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
HUH?!.?!.?!.?!.?!.?!.

"Praising DRM-free music"?????????? They were all about that before and now they aren't?

Now they're pissy at the ISPs?

Can you say "Hyp-o-cras-y"?
AfterDawn Addict

6 product reviews
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19. February 2008 @ 02:28 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
At one stage they were for drm and now they are not make up your minds people :P
Member
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12. May 2008 @ 17:49 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Once again, big record labels want someone to subsidize their business model. Instead of offering compelling content in the forms the consumer is looking for, at a reasonable price, they want the ISPs to police their networks, thereby assisting them in keeping alive their mediocrity. Only when the companies are in sync with their consumer base, can they succeed in their endeavors.
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