Struggling to make new song-blocking software work, Napster temporarily stopped all file trading on its once-popular service.
Music-swapping company Napster has announced a major deal with music publishers, settling part of its outstanding lawsuit and helping clear the way for its planned subscription service.
No longer the poster child for free online music, Napster's flagging file-swapping service has turned into a testing ground for ways to control other services that are capturing its one-time popularity.
As Napster collapses slowly into a musical black hole, millions of people who once searched painlessly for free music on the Web are hunting for the next online file-swapping utopia. Take a look at the options.
Since the advent of Napster, a constant refrain has been levelled at the recording industry: Give fans more than music, and they might keep buying CDs. Now new software might do just that.
Apple Computer has unveiled its latest line of digital music products, including a long-awaited Internet music store and ultrathin versions of its popular iPod portable MP3 player.
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