Blocked students find backdoor to Napster

Published: 10 February 2000 y., Thursday
The Recording Industry Association of America_s (RIAA) beef with Napster is that it could create a black market for illegal copies of digital music; the organization is suing to shut Napster down. Universities, on the other hand, started barring students--arguably the most active digital music collectors--from using college networks to tap Napster on the grounds that the program was a bandwidth hog. Although the young Napster still has to square off with the RIAA in court, students at Oregon State University, Northwestern, Oxford, the University of California at San Diego, and other campuses that have banned Napster may have found a way to beat the system. Stanford University senior David Weekly, who irked the software maker when he published online instructions on how the company_s system works, has now posted a tutorial for students that teaches them how to get around their colleges_ roadblocks to Napster. Weekly_s plan will only be helpful to those running Linux and Unix operating systems, but Mac and Windows users can get around the blocks, too, he said. Students must take only a few steps to gain access to a proxy server outside of their universities, which a friend at another school can help them access. Then the banned students can use the remote server as a middleman for getting into Napster.
Šaltinis: Winfiles.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

E-sting nets 2 Russian hackers

FBI alleges pair stole credit info more »

Netscape SmartDownload opens up PCs to attack

A security flaw in Netscape's SmartDownload browser plug-in leaves users vulnerable to attack even if the application is disabled. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

The settlements

Web sites fined for violating children's privacy policy more »

UK Govt shuts e-govt portal

The Government is to shut down its award-winning open.gov.uk Web portal - best described as the front door to Britain's e-government services - in July. more »

Support for additional languages

VeriSign expands domain names to more than 350 languages more »

Webcasting as "leading next-generation IT industry"

Korean Government Backs National Webcasting Industry more »

The agreement

RIAA composes Net radio license for start-up more »

Spy Plane No Longer for Sale

Auctioneer Pulls Listing After a Day more »

Gaping Digital Divide Remains in Latin America

The digital divide, as it relates to both basic telephone service and the Internet, is widening in Latin America, according to Gartner's Dataquest unit. more »