-
Internet voting opens the way for vote selling on a massive scale, what David called Vote-ster, after the famous music swapping software.
BBC: Silicon valley and the online election
-
Despite the demise of Napster's free-for-all format, the use of peer-to-peer technology and online music swapping remained a popular endeavor thanks to emerging free sites like KaZaA, Morpheus Music City and Audio Galaxy, to name just a few.
CNN: Top Technology Stories for 2001
-
Napster, the most popular music-swapping program, has amassed 10m users worldwide within ten months of its launch.
ECONOMIST: Napster��s wake-up call
-
The deal is the latest in a series of victories for the music industry which is waging a long running campaign against the swapping of music on the internet.
BBC: Audiogalaxy moves to filter songs
-
Different pickup cartridges produce different types of sound, and some audiophiles like to match their record players' arms to different genres of music without going through the hassle of swapping cartridges.
CNN: The best turntable $64,000 can buy?
-
Hollywood's studios want to provide their own services for downloading and streaming movies - to avoid being hit by pirate movie-swapping services in the way that the music industry has been hurt by Napster-style services.
BBC: Danny DeVito and Martin Lawrence
-
Poor music digitization has bothered Iovine since 1999 when people started swapping pirated MP3 files online.
FORBES: HTC CEO Peter Chou And Beats Audio's Jimmy Iovine On Music, Mobile Devices And Apple
-
On April 29th, the Recording Industry Association of America began sending messages to users of file-swapping programs who appear to be offering copyrighted music for download, warning them that they face possible legal action.
ECONOMIST: How to pay the piper
-
For the first time since a spate of aggressive and unpopular lawsuits almost a decade ago, the music and movie industries are going after Internet users they accuse of swapping copyrighted files online.
NPR: Music, Movie Industry To Warn Copyright Infringers
-
The viral spread of MP3-swapping software such as Napster is changing the way students consume music.
CNN: Music sites turn college students into street marketers
-
About 74% of them are trading music, but nearly 9% are trading videoclips, and about 2% are swapping full-length movies.
FORBES: LimeWire, BitTorrent and BearShare...Oh My!