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

Samsung Galaxy Z

A new smartphone from Samsung has been announced by Three in Sweden, the Samsung Galaxy Z. more »

MySpace sold to Specific Media

News Corporation has sold its ailing social networking site MySpace to online advertising firm Specific Media. more »

Microsoft presents new Office 365

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer promoted company‘s new cloud product Office 365at an event in New York City. more »

SoftStep KeyWorx multi-touch foot controller

Most folks do work with their hands, but what about your feet? more »

Double Research & Development from Manipulator

Company Double Research & Development has developed a new input device that can sense motion and pressure of the fingers. Manipulator "amenbo" find its use in applications requiring detection of users using their hands. more »

British Library makes Google search deal

Thousands of pages from one of the world's biggest collections of historic books, pamphlets and periodicals are to be made available on the internet. more »

Alibaba splits Taobao, China's biggest retail website

Chinese internet giant Alibaba has announced that it is reorganizing one of its websites, Taobao, into three separate units. more »

Facebook hires former Clinton press secretary

Mr Lockhart, who joins Facebook next month as Vice President of Global Communications, represents the company's latest move to enlist Washington insiders. more »

Facebook Valuation Nowhere Near $100 Billion

Facebook is planning an IPO that could value the company at as much as $100 billion, according to CNBC sources. more »

Interactive 3D dashboard map the future of navigation

Audi and MIT's SENSEable City Lab have teamed up to design the car navigation system of the future - a 3D display that will sit on the dashboard. more »