Merry Christmas
December 25th, 2007Merry Christmas everyone. Have a great holiday season and a happy new year.
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Merry Christmas everyone. Have a great holiday season and a happy new year.
It had to happen sooner or later, the litigation happy group known as the RIAA has sued Usenet.com
Attached is a PDF of the complaint where all the lastyness is laid out for us to see. Of course the complaint takes some liberal uses of available text and content.
Shall usenet prevail? Usenet has been around longer than the world wide web, and way longer than any lame file sharing company has even though of being a business model.
So why should the attempt fail? At first glace it seems like the RIAA is blaming usenet.com for the way usenet works. They claim that they (usenet.com) have organized usenet into categories that are “open and notorious about their purpose”. And yet we all know any joe schmoe can create a usenet group. In fact I have those instructions right here on this blog.
The RIAA also states that “Defendant selects the newsgroups to offer to its subscribers” and the last I knew, which I’ll admit has been a while, usenet.com carries every live group available and has not “chosen” any group, but rather has chosen to carry the a full newsfeed of all available groups.
The suit also claims “Defendant has the right and ability to supervise and control the infringing activities” which usenet.com does not do. By “moderating” usenet groups they would open themselves up to further issues if any infringing materials were not removed. By not moderating they can (and do) act upon complaints when they are received. To moderate would put them in the position of checking copyright for each and every article posted which would be a mammoth task considering usenet, on Oct 17 2007, has a daily feed of ten million articles daily.
There is a lot more that I could write about, but the beginnings of the RIAA complaint are fraught with misconceptions about usenet and how a usenet provider operates.
So what about Common Carrier status? A common carrier is described as “company that holds itself out to the public for hire to provide communications transmission service”. Now “Common carriers have an obligation to provide service to any and all comers, except where service is clearly being used for illegal purposes.” but since Usenet.com does not police their network they are not aware if their network is used for illegal purposes. I’m sure they have received thousands of notices to remove infringing works and I’m sure they do remove them.
That is how Usenet.com and the rest of the usenet world have set their business models to help protect themselves. By being a common carrier they receive protections from certain laws.
Whether the RIAA sees things this way or not is a different matter.
One thing that does come to mind however from being in the usenet business for a number of years is the extreme lack of good companies that police usenet and send off take down notices.
Sure there’s a few around that overcharge their clients like Universal and Sony BMG but they are so ineffective it hurts. I won’t get into those details here but the main point is that these companies charge tens of thousands ofdollars a month and never make a dent in usenet piracy.
I think that’s what this claim may be about. The RIAA has been ineffective due to their partners lack of usenet knowledge and experience that they decided to after the provider itself.
Good luck Jerry, if you need anything just give me a call.
The complaint can be download here
Somewhat related to usenet, this is a rant that just needs to come out.
I sure have seen a lot of Windows Vista on usenet. Home edition, premium edition, useless features edition.
Well I just got a computer today that has Vista on it. What a piece of crap! Nice looking Toshiba laptop, beautiful wide screen, supposedly lots of features and Windows Vista installed.
Fire up the machine and it take 45 minutes of start, restart and enter in a few tidbits of information here and there and it’s finally ready for use.
The desktop open up and I’m given windows warnings already. Then the camera software crashes.
Think you’re familiar with windows? If so then Vista has a curve to throw you because while everything might still be there, it is presented differently. Just differently enough that it may cause confusion.
I’ve heard about the issues with high definition media not working properly in Vista due to DRM requirements. This will simply piss my customer off and cause issues for her customers.
So what is this? A laptop or a toilet? I have already instructed my customer to format the device and install a licensed copy of Windows 2000 Professional.
So why is Vista being pirated? It’s a piece of crap. Of course maybe that’s one of the reasons why it’s being pirated. Because no one wants to pay for crap.
/rant
The Giganews Accelerator is a Windows based application which enables Giganews account holders to download compressed newsgroup headers and utilize Giganews’ encrypted Usenet access services.
In addition to supporting 256-bit SSL encrypted Usenet for Giganews account holders with SSL enabled, the Giganews Accelerator encrypts all authentication and NNTP commands for every customer, regardless of account level. Encrypted authentication solves a long standing security concern with Usenet access accounts, and encrypted NNTP commands will help some customers avoid traffic limitations on networks between Giganews and their computer.
The header compression function of the Giganews Accelerator will allow for header download speeds up to 10 times faster than with uncompressed headers, a feature particularly helpful to Giganews users who utilize news reader software which downloads all new headers in a newsgroup every time a newsgroup is accessed (Example: Newsbin).
I must have been asleep at the keyboard, as Giganews recently announced they will now have 200 days of binary retention by the end of summer!
That’s one heck of a lot of data. With a newsfeed currently pushing 3.5TB per day that works out to around 700TB and is high enough to now count in Petabytes at .7PB. That’s unheard of in all of usenet history.
In addition they are currently not expiring any text articles and are currently at 1400+ days of text retention.
Kudo’s go out to Giganews for kicking some butt in the retention wars.