OFF:Napster.....Death Throes.....

DASLUD at AOL.COM DASLUD at AOL.COM
Wed Apr 11 08:39:47 EDT 2001


Judge Mulls Pulling Napster's Plug

By DAVID KRAVETS
.c The Associated Press


SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A federal judge in charge of Napster Inc.'s fate said
she may put an end to the popular online song-swapping service because of its
failure to do a better job of blocking copyright works.

``You created this monster, you fix it,'' U.S. District Judge Marilyn Hall
Patel said in a terse tone from the bench Tuesday.

``Maybe they should take another look at that,'' she said.

But Patel, who called Napster's efforts ``disgraceful,'' didn't act on her
words. She said a court-appointed expert will review claims by the recording
industry that Napster is failing to remove copyright material from its
service used by some 70 million people.

Meanwhile, the Financial Times reported Wednesday that the company's biggest
supporter in Germany was taking steps to distance itself from the service.

Bertelsmann AG, one of Napster's investors that dropped out of the recording
industry's copyright infringement suit, had planned to help Napster switch to
a subscription-based model. But the German media powerhouse is now talking
with other media groups about forming wider alliances with Napster, the
newspaper said.

But Bertelsmann spokesman Frank Sarfeld on Wednesday said the German company
is still committed to Napster. ``We'll do whatever we can to make Napster
successful,'' he told The Associated Press.

Recording Industry Association of America lawyer Carey Ramos said that of
5,000 songs the record labels on asked to be removed last month, 84 percent
of them are still being downloaded free of charge via Napster.

``Whatever they're doing, it ain't working,'' he said.

Napster attorney Robert Silver told Patel removing the copyright material is
easier said than done. Silver said ``all you need is one file to get
through'' the song-swapping system's filters, which are designed to remove
copyright material, and the protected songs will reappear on the site's
search index.

Patel did not set a new hearing date, but ordered technology expert A.J.
Nichols to study the issue and see if there is any existing technology
available to help Napster abide by the court order to remove the songs.

In February, a federal appeals court in San Francisco said the judge's order
for Napster to remove copyright works shifted too much of a burden on the
Internet site. The appeals panel said the recording industry must first
notify Napster of which works should be removed.

The reason the whole site has not been shut down is because doing so could
violate the rights of artists on the site who have given Napster permission
to use them.

Redwood City-based Napster has hired 15 more people to weed out unauthorized
music, and has partnered with Gracenote, a company that tracks multiple
spellings of popular song titles. Its new policy is to kick off users who
continue trading music by modifying the file names of songs.

In total, Napster says it has excluded about 311,000 unique artist-song title
pairs as well as 1.7 million file names corresponding to those artist-title
pairs from its index. Usage has dropped considerably since it began blocking
songs last month, Napster said.

On the net:

http://www.napster.com

http://www.riaa.org

AP-NY-04-11-01 0728EDT



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