Downloading
Music MP3s: Peer to Peer File Sharing
From Paul
Gil, Your Guide to Internet for Beginners.
Now Legal
in Canada
The
Controversial World of P2P File Sharing April, 2005
Sharing
music online: some musicians hate it, some musicians love it. It's barely legal
in the USA. It is partially legal in Canada. And millions of people do it every
day, regardless.
It's
called "Peer-to-Peer Sharing" (P2P). It's based on the cooperative
sharing of thousands of individual users. It works by having participants
voluntarily install special file-sharing software on their machines. Once that
P2P software is in place, these users start to trade music MP3 and AVI files of
their favorite songs and movies. No charge, no cost...it's almost as easy as
doing a Google search. This file trading, called "uploading and
downloading", is the core of the P2P online community. Although the files
are commonly large (from 5 megabytes to 5 gigabytes), P2P software can make
your bandwidth connection achieve amazing speeds.
For
millions of people, it is possible to download an entire music CD in under an
hour, and an entire movie in under 3 hours.
This
controversial habit started with the most famous of P2P networks, "Napster
1.0". Napster flourished from 1999 to 2002, and enjoyed 70 million users
trading music. At its peak in 2002, Napster was estimated to have 85% of the
college students in the USA participating in some way in online music trading.
Something
sad happened to Napster in 2002: the Recording Industry Association of America
sued Napster for copyright infringement, and ordered 250,000 songs removed from
its P2P community. Next: how Napster died, and P2P was revived... Special News
Flash: Canadian Judge Konrad von Finckenstein rules that Canadians cannot be
prosecuted for downloading music and movie files from the Internet