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Judge orders Napster to stay offline
By Evan Hansen and Lisa M. Bowman, ZDNN
July 12, 2001 5:30 AM PT
URL: http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,5094039,00.html
A federal judge on Wednesday ordered Napster to remain offline until it can show that 
it is able to effectively block access to copyrighted works on its file-swapping 
network, according to both parties involved in the suit.

The order by U.S. District Judge Marilyn Hall Patel came in a closed door session, 
according to a RIAA spokesman. The order was not immediately available, he added.

RIAA chief executive Hilary Rosen in a statement said that the court ordered Napster 
not to resume operations until the company can show that it can comply with an earlier 
court order to ban trades of major label songs.

A Napster spokesman confirmed the court had issued a ruling and that the site would 
remain closed until further notice.

"While we are disappointed by this ruling, we will work with the technical expert to 
enable file transfers as soon as possible and we are continuing full steam ahead 
toward the launch of our new service later this summer," said Hank Barry, CEO of 
Napster.

The order comes more than a week after Napster began a self-imposed blackout as it 
seeks to install new audio fingerprint technology aimed at filtering unauthorized 
works from its service.

At an April 10 hearing, Patel called Napster's filtering efforts up to that point 
"disgraceful," saying that if a song could be found by people on the service, Napster 
ought to be able to block it.

"You find a way to filter out (those songs) for which you can search," she told the 
file-swapping service at that time, adding that if it couldn't block copyrighted 
songs, "maybe the system needs to be closed down."

At that hearing she also appointed A.J. "Nick" Nichols as a court mediator to handle 
technical issues related to proposed filtering solutions.

Patel had ordered Napster to begin blocking songs in early March, after the 9th U.S. 
Circuit Court of Appeals asked her to revise an earlier injunction that gave the 
company room to continue its swapping service as long as it took all "reasonable" 
steps toward blocking copyrighted songs identified by the record companies.


Napster's blackout woes

Wednesday's decision may help shed light on a nearly 2-week-old blackout that Napster 
executives imposed on the company. Napster has repeatedly cited database "upgrades" as 
the source of its blackout.

Even before the most recent blackout, Napster wasn't functioning normally. In late 
June, Napster disabled old versions of its software and forced members to a new 
version that rendered the service unusable. The new software blocked even the most 
obscure, uncopyrighted works from being traded.

If Napster interprets the ruling as a complete blackout on all trading, the company's 
ability to test new business strategies and comply with copyright law could be 
seriously undermined.

The company unveiled a technique two weeks ago that allows it to identify songs by 
their audio "fingerprint"--literally matching the sound of musical tracks to a list of 
copyrighted tunes banned from the service. The technique avoids the pitfalls of 
filters that block songs based on file names, which can be easily changed. But it 
carries its own uncertainties, including significant logistical barriers in building a 
database of banned songs.

If Napster is allowed to continue its fingerprinting experiments, it's unlikely to 
help boost the number of recordings available to online consumers.

Napster claims fingerprint filtering will reverse the decline of music being traded. 
But it has had the opposite effect in its initial use.

Almost all the music that remained on the service vanished. According to Webnoize, the 
average number of files shared by people online dropped to just one. But a few days 
later, the company pulled the plug altogether, saying some copyrighted songs were 
still getting through and an "upgrade" to the database was necessary to make the new 
filtering technology work perfectly.

Between 100,000 and 150,000 people have remained logged into the service throughout 
the outage--a far cry from the 18.7 million people who were using Napster in October. 
According to market-research company PC Data, nearly one-fifth of the total online 
population downloaded free music from Napster.

The voluntary blackout, consumer defection and technical delays highlight the 
extraordinary logistical hurdles Napster and any other company must go through if it 
implements audio fingerprinting, which has been touted as one of the most surefire 
ways of blocking unauthorized trades of songs.

In theory, the fingerprinting technology takes a snapshot of the actual audio 
characteristics of a given song and sends this to Napster's central servers. This is 
compared against a master list of fingerprints and either given the go-ahead or 
blocked.

But this master list does not exist and has never existed. A company called Loudeye 
Technologies has rights to much of the music created by major and other North American 
music labels and is creating "fingerprints" from these files for Napster. These files 
must then be independently matched to the lists of song titles and artists that have 
been identified by the record companies.

Napster itself has said that the file-identification technology works and that just a 
few details are holding up the decision to restart the service.



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