Napster falls prey to copycat software

BY P.J. HUFFSTUTTER
AND GREG MILLER
Los Angeles Times

Napster Inc., whose song-swapping software loosens the record industry's 
grip on the distribution of music, is now itself learning how difficult it 
is to control intellectual property in the Internet age. The San Mateo 
start-up developed its program to make trading music files remarkably 
simple. The software, available for free on the Napster Web site, enables 
users to share songs they have, to copy songs they want, and to search a 
gigantic database of music that often is being distributed illegally.

But some consumers have decided they want to use Napster for other 
purposes, and a grass-roots effort among Internet users to hack the 
software is emerging. One such hack, dubbed Wrapster, uses Napster's 
computer servers to help people search and swap any sort of file -- from 
games and movies, to software and spreadsheets. Wrapster began circulating 
among Napster users earlier this week.

Napster executives said they aren't pleased by the hacked version of their 
program, which tricks the company's servers into helping people exchange 
any computer files disguised as MP3s -- the commonly used digital format 
used for trading music online.

Elizabeth Brooks, vice president of marketing for Napster, acknowledged 
that such acts are inherent to ``the nature of the Internet. . . . For 
anyone who works in the Internet space, you know this is business as 
usual.'' Napster officials say they are considering their options.

``Whether we're going to turn a blind eye to it or actively try to disable 
it is something we haven't taken a position on,'' said Eddie Kessler, vice 
president of engineering at Napster.

Kessler said Napster does hold patents on some components of its 
technology, and that it is also developing new versions of the system that 
would enable other kinds of files to be traded. He said the next version of 
Napster, for example, will be able to swap Microsoft Windows audio and 
video media files.

The original program -- which began spreading rapidly on college campuses 
last fall -- quickly became a major drain on campus computing resources, 
with students using Napster sometimes accounting for as much as 80 percent 
of the traffic on university networks. Yet the demand for Napster-like 
applications is growing, fed by the public's desire to find digital 
entertainment in a simple way.

Programs such as Wrapster and iMesh -- a lesser-known program that, like 
Napster, lets people swap music, video and other multimedia files -- are 
just a few of the imitators currently available online.

The music industry, which has filed a lawsuit against Napster, contends 
such programs erode copyright protections on the Net. Advocates insist that 
there are numerous legitimate uses for such technology.

``I'm getting calls from professors who want to use a Napster-like 
technology to swap and search for multimedia files,'' said Mark Bruhn, 
technology policy officer at Indiana University, which barred the software 
last month. ``This is not about music piracy. This is about understanding 
what the technology can do.''

The school's technical staff recently worked with Napster to develop 
changes that would alter the way the program searches for music files to 
become less burdensome on the campus network. Napster aims to reduce that 
burden by routing song requests and transfers along less cluttered avenues 
of the Net. 

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