Colleges spurn Metallica request to ban Napster

Published: 29 September 2000 y., Friday
At least three renowned universities have decided against banning the use of the popular Napster digital music file-swapping software on their college campuses. Duke University, Stanford University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology recently rejected a request by lawyers for some major music artists to halt the use of Napster. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) also has declined to impose a ban. Howard King, a Los Angeles attorney who represents heavy metal band Metallica and rap star Dr. Dre, sent letters earlier this month to about a dozen prominent educational institutions asking campus administrators to restrict access to Napster. Similar legal pressure led to Yale University's decision to ban Napster from its networks earlier this year. College students, many of whom have access to high-speed connections on campus, are believed to be the biggest fans of Napster's file-swapping service, which allows people to find and download popular song titles for free. Last year, usage was so heavy on some university computers that systems administrators blocked access to Napster to relieve bandwidth congestion. Critics of Napster, including the recording industry, cite legal rather than technical considerations in calling for a ban on the service. They contend that the company's service and other similar technologies facilitate widespread copyright abuses and the illegal replication and distribution of music. The Recording Industry Association of America sued Napster over its service and won a preliminary injunction this summer that could shut down the music site. That order, which has been stayed temporarily pending an appeal, could take effect by early next month if the judges reviewing the case refuse to throw it out.
Šaltinis: update.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

Antiwar hacker strikes the U.S. Navy

Virus writer and hacker activity has stepped up dramatically since the U.S. and U.K. armed forces started their war against Iraq more »

EU bigwig bangs on about eGovt

A top EU commissioner has been banging on about the importance of eGovernment more »

Al Jazeera launches English service

But within hours, firm suffers denial of service attack more »

Chip cards - in Kazakh practice

Commercial Alliance-Bank will be the first among RK banks implementing a transaction through international chip cards "Visa Smart Debit & Credit (VSDC)" through single processing center more »

A new Internet site

All those interested in British-Polish economic issues now have a new Internet site www.bpcc.org.pl more »

"Tibo’2003"

Minsk to Welcome Belarusian Congress on Telecommunications, Information and Banking Technologies more »

E-Russia threatened by cuts in financing

A drop in federal funding could delay some projects under the Electronic Russia program, which aims to boost the use of information technology throughout the country, the Communications Ministry said Tuesday more »

Belgian consortium heads race to run .eu

The European Commission is consulting its 15 national member governments over a draft decision to pick a Belgian-led consortium to run the long-awaited .eu top-level domain name registry more »

U.S. military computer attacked

Previously undiscovered flaw used to attack Army Web site more »

Banking Solutions at CeBIT 2003

Wincor Nixdorf presents a range of propositions with the spotlight focused on the specific needs and problems facing the banking industry under the key headings of Branch, Multichannel and Cash Management more »