An incremental update may ease the pain over a delayed version 2.0, slated to come out this month. Painkillers, however, won't help Morpheus' legal headaches.
Hundreds of millions of songs may illegally trade hands online every month, but file swapping may actually be causing people to spend more money on music, according to a new research report.
A US company has quietly attached its software to millions of downloads of the popular Kazaa file-trading program and plans to remotely "turn on" people's PCs, welding them into a new network of its own.
In the next stage of the battle to prevent illegal CD copying, digitally protected discs are being released with songs that won't play on PCs.
StreamCast Networks' delinquent licensing bills were to blame for the blackout of the hugely popular Morpheus file-swapping network last week, according to Dutch company Kazaa BV.
It took a boom and a bust to do it, but peer-to-peer technology is finding its post-Napster place in the world.
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