Julian Dibbell on 19 Sep 2000 08:00:08 -0000 |
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<nettime> This Is Your Brain on Napster |
Please be assured the following news item was not taken from The Onion or any other parody Web site. That the RIAA would begin going after random, typical Napster users was entirely predictable, I guess. And I'm only mildly scandalized to see the media joining in by framing the poor kid in the kind of reportage usually reserved for drug smugglers and pedophiles. But man, did they join in with gusto. This truly is a classic of antipiracy kitsch, as ripe as the cheesiest episode of Dragnet or any outtake from Reefer Madness. My compliments to the chef. Monday September 18 5:29 PM ET Oklahoma Student May Face Music Download Charges OKLAHOMA CITY (Reuters) - An Oklahoma State University student could face criminal charges of copyright infringement after police found as many as 1,000 Internet music files on his computer, campus police said on Monday. Police seized the personal computer and a CD recorder from the student's dorm room after university officials were notified by the Recording Industry Association of America (news - web sites) (RIAA (news - web sites)), which is campaigning against the wide-spread practice of copying and moving music over the Internet. University officials said the Washington D.C.-based RIAA, which represents big record companies, had notified the school that it had detected a high volume of music downloads to the campus computer network. ``My understanding is he was maintaining files of all these songs and making them available to others,'' said Chief Everett Eaton of the Oklahoma State University Police Department. A computer forensic specialist has since been busy analyzing the files on the computer's hard drive, said OSU police Lt. Steve Altman. ``The computer specialist feels there may be in excess of a thousand files,'' Altman said. ``That could cause state felony charges to be filed for copyright infringement.'' Altman declined to name the 19-year-old male student, who has not been arrested. The results of the police investigation will be turned over to a d istrict attorney and it could be weeks before any charges are filed, Altman said. Nestor Gonzales, a spokesman for the university, said the student was downloading music using several different Internet protocols including Napster (news - web sites), a program that allows users to exchange music via the Internet. ``That was one of the protocols he was using,'' Gonzales said. ``He may have been using others. It wouldn't have mattered. The high volume of downloads warranted action.'' ``It does not appear he was selling the files or profiting in any way from the downloads,'' Gonzales added. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net