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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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Standing firm in Kazaa uproar By John Borland, Special to ZDNet April 05, 2002 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/business/soa/Standing-firm-in-Kazaa-uproar/0,139023166,120264416,00.htm
Brilliant Digital Entertainment CEO Kevin Bermeister has become a household name in Internet circles almost overnight. He speaks out about his plan for Net downloads. Brilliant, a small, US-based software company, has sold 3D advertising and modelling software for several years. But Monday, the company revealed that it had entered a more ambitious business, called Altnet, aimed at distributing content online using peer-to-peer technology. The move proved instantly controversial--not so much because of the idea itself, but because of the way Brilliant set about carrying out its plan: Bermeister struck a deal to bundle bits of software along with the Kazaa file-swapping software, which is downloaded millions of times every week. Kazaa's owner recently spoke up to defend the company's actions. As that software finishes downloading, it gains the capacity to link ordinary computers into a massive new file-swapping network controlled by Brilliant. The company plans to use it for distributing secure content such as movies, music or advertising, or to perform complicated "distributed computing" functions. Some of this has already been spelled out in Brilliant's terms of service distributed with Kazaa. Bermeister says he will be scrupulously careful about notifying people of exactly what is happening from now on. After all, he can't build a peer-to-peer network using the computers of people who are angry at him, he says. Nevertheless, he's got a fair bit of bridge-building to do. People around the Internet have been bitterly critical, accusing Brilliant of installing software on their machines without their knowledge. CNET News.com talked to Bermeister about his plans for Altnet and the storm of criticism.
Q: What was the origin of Altnet? What do you see the network doing? We're an advertising company. We initially looked at the peer-to-peer technology as providing solutions to advertising, then looked beyond it as providing solutions for content. So Altnet was conceived in September or October of last year.
Did you bring the idea, or was it the programmers from FastTrack? So Brilliant decided to create a business that would utilize the technologies and create a secure peer-to-peer network. User-propagated peer-to-peer networks have some significant issues associated with them, primarily related to security issues, but more importantly, related to the progressive improvement of content that is being offered. Unless there are some centralised controls, content owners cannot really put their best content forward and at least maintain some semblance of control over the end-user experience.
So Altnet, as conceived now, is primarily a way to distribute secure content.
How does it work with Kazaa? What is its relationship to Kazaa?
But not the other direction?
The most controversial point so far has been how Altnet is being built, and how the software is being distributed. Describe your thinking there and how that will work. At the point those components are distributed, end users will be aware, in the interest of full disclosure, that those components are being distributed. More importantly, when those components are utilized on the end users' desktop to share resources to utilize the resources of their PC--either though file sharing or bandwidth sharing or distributed processing or distributed storage--the user will be notified of our intention to use those resources, and the user will opt in to the program.
The way Brilliant software has been distributed to this point is by being bundled with Kazaa, and to install Kazaa you have to install Brilliant. In the Kazaa terms of service, there's also a Brilliant component that describes the Brilliant software. As these future components are downloaded, how will people be notified?
When does the Altnet system become active, and what should people expect from it?
There is the potential of compensation for users. So the benefits to businesses that are making use of Altnet is being passed on to end users, through a program based around "Altnet resource dollars." Those resource dollars are essentially a reward mechanism for end users who have opted in to the program, to gain a continuous benefit from making their resources available. That benefit will manifest in inventory provided by Altnet marketing partners who are gaining bandwidth reduction costs and cost savings through the use of Altnet.
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