Kazaa variants beef up privacy as copyright war intensifies

Peer-to-peer file-sharing software developers say user privacy protection concerns are behind the introduction of features designed to foil scanning by organisations representing owners of copyright-protected material.

The claims come as the music industry in the U.S. ploughs ahead with moves to file a raft of civil lawsuits against people allegedly involved in online file-sharing. Some reports indicate more than 800 federal subpoenas have already been issued.

The developers of one variant of Sharman Networks' popular Kazaa file-sharing software, Kazaa K++, say their latest version -- 2.4.0 -- blocks the Recording Industry Association of America from "connecting, downloading and uploading to you," as well as changing its default options "to protect your privacy". The developers of another variant -- Kazaa Lite -- also tout the benefits in their latest release of a "built-in IP blocker" in keeping out "organisations such as the RIAA," as well as "improved privacy protection".

The Kazaa Lite developers claim version 2.10 build 3 and newer of their variant are ideal for users who are "afraid of the entertainment industry," whose countries have "stupid" copyright laws and who don't share because they "are afraid of doing so". The two developers have merged their products into Kazaa Lite K++.

The developers' move intensifies the battle between the p2p community and the RIAA, who last month said it would start to gather evidence against individuals who trade songs on peer-to-peer networks.

Both Kazaa Lite version 2.4.0 and Kazaa K++ -- neither of which are affiliated with Sharman Networks -- utilise the PeerGuardian database of IP addresses that are believed to be associated with "p2p-enemies" such as RIAA. These IP addresses are blocked to prevent the organisations from connecting, downloading and uploading to the individual to gather information about the activities of the p2p user.

The programs also allow users to disable the function that allows remote users to see what files are on the computer. Hence, when someone searches for a song and finds it on the users' computer, they cannot then create a list of all files available to be shared. Although this may give other users the impression the individual is not sharing files, "for some people privacy is what counts," reads the Kazaa Lite Web site.

However, the music industry has already demonstrated they're willing to take users to court for one example of copyright infringement, with three Australian universities being ordered to hand over files that may contain evidence of copyright infringement to the music industry. One of the Web sites targeted in the action contained only one song for download. It would also be a relatively simple matter for the music industry to change the IP address it was scanning the p2p networks from.

Last week the Australian Record Industry Association released figures from a survey it claimed show that illegal file-sharing is hurting the Australian music industry. Critics of the survey claim it included legal CD-burning in its statistics, and that the numbers returned were inconsistent.

Advertisement

Talkback 2 comments

  1. So the RIAA is planning to sue all people using Kazaa - well that should give them something to do! I read somewhere that they will demand 20.000 for each copyrighted song that they find on someones computer and according to sharman networks it has been d Anonymous -- 25/07/03

    So the RIAA is planning to sue all people using Kazaa - well that should give them something to do! I read somewhere that they will demand 20.000 for each copyrighted song that they find on someones computer and according to sharman networks it has been downloaded well over 230 million times. (It makes a heck of a lot of money if everybody using it has even ONE song!) And there are some other p2p programs out there as well.
    Now is it likely they will get around to do this during our lifetime?
    And what about the music industry, are they on the verge of poverty? The film industry? The software industry?
    Punishment has never been the best way to teach someone, showing the right way has always been more effective.
    So oh yeah, I´m shaking with fear!

  2. i just want to get kazaa but my friend said that it can be unsafe and that you can get a virus from it and that kazaa lite is better so im trying to get it but it says that it costs money but i used to have kazaa and then it didnt. basicly i just wan Anonymous -- 13/11/03

    i just want to get kazaa but my friend said that it can be unsafe and that you can get a virus from it and that kazaa lite is better so im trying to get it but it says that it costs money but i used to have kazaa and then it didnt.
    basicly i just want to download songs in the safest way with it being free.
    can you please help me with my problem?

    Georgia

Add your opinion


ZDNet's CIO Vision Series

Customs | Murray Harrison, CIO

Australian Customs CIO Murray Harrison dislikes SLAs and runs away if a vendor talks to him about innovation. In this interview, he also explains why getting excited about gadgets can be dangerous and talks about how Customs' outsourcing strategy has evolved.

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Munir Kotadia iPhone suckers test our patience
    So how many of you have bought a 3G iPhone? Do you feel like a sucker? If you don't, maybe you will once your first bill arrives.
  • Array Westpac bank: AVG's toughest competitor
    The next time you're buying antivirus software, don't go direct to Symantec or McAfee. Don't download free antivirus. And definitely don't see Harvey Norman. Ask your bank — they're quite literally giving the stuff away.
  • Array Will you manage in the exabyte era?
    Mammoth growth in storage volumes is a fact of life, but even so it's helpful to pause occasionally and try and work out whether our information strategies have fallen hopelessly out of step with the pace of technological growth and changes in costs.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured