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Internet & Computerization
Temporary injunction granted against Napster
By Mike Ingram
28 July 2000
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A federal judge in San Francisco granted a temporary injunction
Wednesday against the Internet music company Napster. US District
Judge Marilyn Hall Patel issued the order at the request of the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). Napster has
been given until midnight on Friday, July 29 to shut down the
computers that allow millions of users to share music on the Internet.
The ruling is the latest stage in a battle between the Internet
upstart and recording giants such as Universal Music, Sony, Bertelsmann
and Time Warner. Napster also faces separate lawsuits by the rock
band Metallica and rap artist Dr. Dre.
Those taking action against Napster claim that the company
is guilty of copyright infringement because it makes software
available that allows users to exchange copyright-protected music.
In response, Napster argues that since the Audio Home Recording
Act of 1992 permits users to make recordings for personal use,
Napster users are protected. The company further maintains that
there is no way to isolate the downloading of copyrighted recordings
from others, such as those by independent artists.
The injunction is to remain in place until the conclusion of
a trial, although Napster has said it will immediately appeal
the order and ask for a stay of execution. Judge Patel said the
evidence indicated Napster's estimated 20 million users used software
provided by the company to download copyrighted music. When
the infringing is of such a wholesale magnitude, the plaintiffs
are entitled to enforce their copyrights, she said.
The judge requested a $5 million bond against any financial
losses Napster should suffer from being shut down pending a trial,
which the recording association has agreed to post.
The Napster case has provoked widespread debate among artists,
music fans, Internet experts and copyright lawyers as to the legitimacy
of the services provided by the Internet firm and a number of
similar companies. Legitimate concerns are raised regarding compensation
to songwriters and performers and the protection of intellectual
property.
However the shutdown of Napster has far more to do with defending
the revenues of multibillion-dollar recording and entertainment
conglomerates than protecting the interests of artists. There
is no reason, in principle, why the democratic possibilities of
the Internet, the hunger of music fans for recordings, the financial
needs of established artists and composers, and the desire of
new creators to find an audience cannot be reconciled in a manner
that encourages the development of Internet technology and its
utilisation by masses of people. In a fundamental sense, what
brings these various factors into collision with one another is
the corporate structure of the music and entertainment industries
and their subordination to private profit and the capitalist market.
Choking off the Internet as an independent distribution channel
will certainly have a detrimental impact on new artists and those
seeking an outlet for their music outside the control of the major
studios.
Much of the current debate takes the form of for or against
Napster, but far broader questions are raised by the emergence
of the Internet and related technology. An article in the Los
Angeles Times entitled No Matter Napster's Fate, the
Software is Out There noted that whatever the outcome of
the trial, it will do nothing to stop the download of hundreds
of thousands of recordings contained within Napster's central
directory.
Indeed, the names and locations of those music files
have already been duplicated and stored on a network of computers
worldwide. Thanks to a community of programmers who are members
of a loose-knit project called Open Source Napster Server, or
OpenNap, sources say a new service is set to take over the moment
Napster is shut down, says the Times.
This is not the first time that the recording industry has
confronted a technology that threatened its established business
model. From the emergence of the very first tape recording machines,
through to the latest in CD writers and digital video (DVD), the
industry has opposed any technology that challenged its control
of recordings. With previous technologies however, the potential
losses to the recording industry were minuscule by comparison.
The ability of an individual to make a tape recording and even
exchange it with friends was not likely to have a massive impact
on the revenues of the likes of Universal or Sony. The big corporations
were quickly able to come to an agreement with the manufacturers
of new devices, in some cases gaining compensation in the form
of a tax on consumables such as video cassettes, or getting the
agreement of manufacturers to limit the scale of distribution,
as with regional formats for video and DVD media.
What is new in the Napster case is the emergence of the Internet
as a mass distribution network. It is now possible to exchange
recordings with millions of users simultaneously at little or
no cost. In the course of the recent hearing, both sides presented
surveys to show the impact, or lack thereof, of Napster on the
sales of compact disks. A study commissioned by Napster showed
that over 91 percent of Napster users buy as much or more
music than before they used Napster, with 28 percent purchasing
more. An opposing survey commissioned by the recording association
found that 22 percent of Napster users said that because of Napster,
they no longer bought CDs, or they bought fewer CDs. The RIAA
claims that Napster's existence has cost the industry more than
$300 million in lost sales.
Whatever the truth of these calculations, it is clear that
left to its own deviceswith a projected 70 million users
within six monthsNapster will have a significant impact
on the sale of CDs. Lawyers for the recording industry said 14,000
songs a minute are currently downloaded via the service.
This has led some commentators to proclaim a new era of free
music via the Internet, in much the same way as the open source
software development projects have provoked talk of free software
becoming the norm. What such speculation ignores, however, is
the nature of the society under which this technology emerges.
Objectively, the Internet and related technologies are already
coming into conflict with a system based on private profit and
the accumulation of wealth by the corporate elite. The emergence
of technologies such as Napster cuts across the traditional distribution
and marketing channels for popular music. The Internet offers
a superior method of distribution, rendering the conventional
channels less valuable.
But the recording industry does not sit back and watch this
happen. It intervenes, firstly with lawsuits, later with negotiations
aimed at bending the new technology to its own ends. This could
take the form of subscription-based access to music downloads.
While the cost of music to the consumer might be reduced, it would
not be abolished.
At the most fundamental level, the Napster ruling is another
step in the commercialisation of the Internet and the tightening
of big business' grip on the medium.
See Also:
A comment and clarification
on the Napster controversy
[28 June 2000]
Metallica joins recording
industry's attack on Napster
Rock band launches suit against Internet music downloads
[5 May 2000]
The Internet
& Computerization
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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