evolution in action (Re: Napster)
Adam Back
adam at cypherspace.org
Wed, 4 Sep 2002 23:36:13 +0100
While clearly the content distribution industry (RIAA, MPAA etc) would
_like_ to suppress file sharing, I think my statistics demonstrate
that in fact they have failed. In fact I would say the content
distribution lobby has lost the fight.
The current day file trading is orders of magnitude larger than during
Napsters heyday. The volume is still growing rapidly.
This is why I said Napsters death was evolution and necessary.
Distributed technologies are hard to suppress. Napsters evolutionary
characteristic which resulted in it's removal from the file sharing
gene pool was it's architecture with centralised control.
The same suppression techniques will not work with many of the
replacement technologies.
Adam
On Wed, Sep 04, 2002 at 10:51:51PM +0100, John R T Brazier wrote:
> The point is not the technology - it's the idea which is being suppressed.
>
> JB